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Display
Items on Hand 5|03|2010
Our
Artemis Moonbase Exhibit
[photo
of completed exhibit]
[photo of creator &
exhibit at 2003 outreach event] (Peter Kokh)
On 11|12|02 we completed work on a trifold Artemis
Moonbase Storyboard featuring the 24" x 35" color Artemis
Project Poster, along with a moonscape
diorama and a
model of the Artemis Moonbase.
left panel
about the moonbase
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right panel
for-profit Moon missions
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Photos should be available on 11|19|02. We posted
complete illustrated instructions to replicate the entire exhibit,
storyboard, diorama, and moonbase model on the Space Chapter Hub website
in the hope that other Moon Society Outposts would produce their own.
The exhibit will debut on 12|14|02 at the annual holiday
potluck and classic movie event of the Lunar Reclamation
Society (NSS-Milwaukee) at which members of the Wisconsin
Mars Society will be present.
This is the first exhibit produced exclusively by and
for the Moon Society Milwaukee Outpost.
Displays
shared with the Lunar Reclamation Society
Items
acquired or created by the Milwaukee-based Lunar Reclamation Society,
an ASI & Moon Society supporting organization, are at the
disposal of the Moon Society Milwaukee Outpost, if not already
committed for a time-slot. These include:
A
Self-standing display that first debuted at an
"X-Con" science fiction convention in 1987. Made of a framework of
sweated half-inch copper tubing supporting display panels of aluminum
faced half inch foam sheathing, this 7 ft high, 2 ft thick and 8 ft
long display offers 64 square feet of display space and an 8t. square
foot table to hold flyers and informational handouts. The display cost
about $50 to make (back then), comes apart and stacks in a 10" x 3'x4'
package for EZ transport in a wagon or hatch back. It is very
lightweight and can be handled, assembled, and disassembled easily by
one person in minutes. The photos, prints, drawings, and posters
displayed on the unit are periodically refreshed to remain relevant.
The unit has been seen by many thousands of people over the years at
more than 30 public outreach events.
Small
self-standing display, 2' wide, 5' high,
plexiglas two-sided, easily changeable, used to promote workshops and
special events.
Globe
of the Moon by Replogle. (We
would like to acquire
second hand 12" globes of Mars and of Venus, as Replogle no longer
prints them).
We plan to make a
proportionately-sized 2-dimensional photo of Earth in space
as a backdrop for the Moon Globe. "Earth" would be 44' across in
comparison to our 12" Moon. It could go on a 4' x4' piece of half inch
foam core board. We could create this by blowing up an existing print,
mosaic style, at Kinkos. (on this same scale of 12" = 2,160 miles
[11,400,000:1], Earth and Moon would be 110' apart, with a 24" Mars
ranging 3-20 miles away, the closest star 221 million miles distant)
A
multi-fold display, modeled after the one used
by Midwest Space Development Corp. to promote the annual MSDC conference. It is made
of 14 foam core panels, each 20" wide and 40" high. Eight of them are
covered on both sides with portions of two wallpaper
murals* ("Earthrise" - Earth over a lunar
landscape, and "Columbia in orbit" over an Earthscape). The other six
panels are covered (using a fabric adhesive) on both sides with
velcro-friendly blue fabric, for hanging pictures and info-items with
male velcro tabs. The display sets up zigzag fashion, seven below,
seven above, alternating mural and fabric panels. As you walk around
the display, you see alternately just the Earthrise mural, then one set
of info-display panels, just the Columbia mural, then the other set of
info-displays. This unit was prepared in time to promote ISDC '98 in
Orlando at ISDC '97 and has been used only twice otherwise. But the
Lunar Reclamation Society hopes to use it again after new sets of items
to hang on it have been prepared. For example, one side could promote
LRS & MMM, the other side NSS, ASI, and SFF.
* These wallpaper murals come in 8 sections, 4 top,
4 bottom, and have combined dimensions of 8' 8" in height, 13' 8" in
width. We selected a central portion 6' 8" in height and 6' 8' in
width. We bonded them to the foam core pieces using a spray fabric
adhesive. Then we trimmed the edges with half-inch black plastic U
channels (hard to find).
"Z-Vue"
Table model 1/8th scale working
demonstration model of a periscopic picture window unit in a future
Lunan homestead. Produced for ISDC '98 Lunar Homestead Exhibit,
exhibited since at Discovery World Museum (2-day stand). The unit is
24" wide, and about 28" high and deep, and has two 8"x12" mirrors on
45° angles. The object (a model of the Apollo Lunar Lander) appears to
be straight ahead of the viewer.
This exhibit is too big and bulky for travel as it is a fixed assembly.
As of June 2010, it is a chapter project to redo it in
"knock-down 9or IKEA) fashion so that it can travel flat and compacted.
"Earth-Moon
Gravity Brick Set" -- (a) one standard Earth
brick weighing 3.5 lbs, (b) a much larger brick makable on the Moon and
sized to weigh 3.5 lbs. (one Earth brick encased in styrofoam of
negligible weight to the size of a 6-pack of Earth bricks,
fleck-painted to look like ceramic), (c) a bonded 6-pack of Earth
bricks, fleck painted to look like one brick, to show how much mass
would go into the much lighter feeling (b). All the bricks have
handles. This touchy-feely exhibit is very popular as it quickly gets
across the idea of the Moon's 1/6th gravity. Produced in time for ISDC
'98 Lunar Homestead Exhibit, and seen by thousands since at the Deke
Slayton AirFest in LaCrosse.
NOTE: The above set is no longer exhibited. We have
since put together a smaller scale 3
brick set representing Earth, Mars, and Moon gravity. in which the
Earth brick weighs about 10 lbs. as compared to the 21 lb. "6-pack"
described above. This set is much easier for young children to handle.
August 2002, we have modified the
way we make the Moon and Mars bricks so that they are less vulnerable
to handling damage by those who insist on pinching them (we try to make
it clear that they are no actually from the Moon or Mars). The new
bricks were field tested (with flying colors) at the EuroMARS Hab at
Adler Planetarium in Chicago after mid-August 2002.
As of October 2002, some thirty
sets have been produced for other chapters of the National Space
Society, the Mars Society, and the Moon Society, and other
organizations.
October 11, 2002 - We have put
together and uploaded fully
illustrated step by step instructions to produce your own "Earth, Mars,
Moon Gravity Brick Set" with Materials List (and source
suggestions), Tools List, and exhibit suggestions.
September 20, 2002 - We have
uploaded illustrated instructions for making the faster, cheaper set of
"Gravity
Jugs"
"Moon
Manor" -
a table top model of a future modular lunar homestead. Set on a hollow
core 36"x80" door, this spacious "3500 sq. ft." [1' to 1 meter or
roughly 1:40 scale] Lunan Home is constructed of 4" schedule 40 PVC
Modules fleck painted to simulate either glass-glass composite or
fiberglass reinforced lunar concrete.
With cutaways to show the interior, it is
partially covered with three "meters" of regolith soil (sheets of
contour-shaped 3/4" styrofoam).
The home has four periscopic windows (not working) one
facing each cardinal direction, and a half dozen sun-following
heliostats dumping sunlight into a central gallery loop lined with
planter beds fed by toilet wastes (working odor-free system of retired
NASA environmental engineer, Dr. Bill Wolverton).
Spacious, full of sunlight, rich with green foliage
and plant-refreshed air, and with picture windows out on to the
moonscape, Moon Manor is connected to a pressurized sunlit tube-street
to other parts of the settlement.
The interior of the model is lit. Costing about $400
and taking three weeks of effort to put together, this display catches
the eye, and easily gets across the major lessons of how people might
someday be quite at home living on the Moon. Underground, yes. Moles,
no. [See MMM #1, DEC '86 for the inspiration behind this display.]
The display takes two people to handle and weighs
about 80 lbs. At 80" bit long for most station wagon or pickup beds. We
are toying with the idea of shortening it to 72" but this would be a
major job. Moon Manor debuted at ISDC '98 in Milwaukee, was twice at
Discovery World Museum, once at Children's Hospital, once at Moonlink
Headquarters in De Pere and seen by NASA Administrator, Dan Griffin. It
was seen by thousands at the La Crosse airfest in June of '98 and by
hundreds at MarsCon in Minneapolis, in February '99. It was last
ehibited for the showings of the science-fiction films Red Planet and
Mission to Mars in 2001.
Click Here to see
a diagram. We have received requests for blueprints and
assembly instructions, but have been too busy to produce them as yet.
Here are some thumbnail photos of "Moon Manor" on display (click on the
thumbnail to see the larger picture):
In May 2010, the legend matter explaining the exhibit
was redone for ISDC 2010.
Photo taken at ISDC 2010 in
Chicago by Ben Huset, MN SFS - click for larger
image
Diagram of the
Exhibit
This is a
model of a modular lunar homestead that could be constructed of
components made on the Moon. We
used PVC plumbing parts which are an excellent model of a "modular
architectural language." A limited variety of components can be put
together in many very different layouts, enabling a significant variety
to homestead design, or design of other types of lunar building.
This
particular display is a model of a large 3,600 square foot home, or
"great home." The
reasoning here, is that with vacuum outside, it will be difficult to
add room space on afterwards. So why not build a homestead of generous
proportions, and grow into it over time. In the early years one could
rent out part of it, or use the extra space to start a cottage industry
in one's spare time. That is how many enterprises may get launched on
the lunar frontier.
Features:
Shielding. Here
we used layers of 3/4" styrofoam panels, sculpted as needed, to model a
6-12 ft blanket of moon dust. This blanket provides the same essential
services as our own blanket of atmosphere: protection from
micrometeorites, cosmic rays, solar flares, and the micrometeorite
rain. It also helps provide thermal equilibrium. making the homestead
cooler during the hot 2-week long dayspan, and warmer during the 2-week
long lunar nightspan. And, by the way, if it ever got cold enough on
Earth to freeze our atmosphere, it would settle out as about 15 feet of
nitrogen/oxygen snow, making the blanket analogy even more apt.
Features: periscopic picture windows:
There are four of these in this particular model, one facing each
direction. In the second and third photos above, you will see one most
prominently displayed at the right side. Inside the homestead a picture
window in a wall would have an even larger mirror behind it on a 45°
slant, then a shaft up through the shielding to another mirror on a
slant, leading to a window looking outwards. See the "Z-vue" model
above!
Features: Heliostats: This model
is built around a
rectangular hallway loop. Along the top of each hallway you will see
three protruding shafts with angular cowls. These shafts would be
mirror-tiled, and the cowls would follow the sun across the sky on its
two-week long journey from sunrise to sunset, dumping sunlight inside.
The optics would exclude heat-generating infrared wavelengths.
Features: Blackwater treating toilet
systems: at
the right corners of the hallway loop are two side-flushing toilets. In
the model, you will see two long planter systems along the inner edge
of this loop. Next to the toilet, the first section is a tank with
microbes that breaks down the solids and kills any germs. Some swamp
plants will flourish here. As the water under treatment flows from
right to left, above are swamp plants, marsh plants, bog plants, then
regular soil plants. The water exiting the system is 95% pre-treated,
greatly reducing the overall central settlement treatment burden. This
way, as the settlement grows, the waste treatment system will grow with
it. Inside the homestead you have abundant green vegetation, some
flowers, and sweet fresh air. Known as the Wolverton system, the
original has been functioning problem free in the Houston home or a
retired NASA environmental engineer.
Features: entrance onto a pressurized street
- the large tube with cutaways seen running perpendicular to the layout
of the home. Forget about spacesuits, which a pioneer would don just as
we do a fire drill, to refresh the technique of putting on a suit if
need be. Meanwhile pioneers can go anywhere in their interconnected
settlement in "shirtsleeves." Note the smaller homestead to the left of
the street. Need to go to another settlement? Your lunar overland coach
would nose up to an airlock. You would walk in dressed as you are. When
your coach arrives at its destination, you exit into that settlement in
like fashion.
Impact: The idea is to show that
by tucking
themselves under a blanket of moondust, and with the right kind of
architecture and water and air treatment systems, pioneers could make
themselves at home and be quite comfortable on a Moon that without such
know how, would be a mercilessly unforgiving place.
Talking Points:
Above the model (on the inside of the model cover) there is a legend
that tells you what you need to bring from home (tools, seeds, people,
and above all, resourcefulness and ingenuity) and what you can make on
the Moon (building materials, food and fabrics, etc.) Main lessons: the
blanket of moondust; modular construction; modular life support
systems; access to the sun and the views, all that we can make on the
Moon from the elements in moondust! Building materials will include
lunar alloys (metals.) concrete, glass, glass fibers, basalt fibers,
fiber-glass or basalt-fiber reinforced concrete; waterglass-based metal
oxide pigment paints, food and fiber, arts and crafts, etc.
NOTE: For
size comparison, note the sci-fi fan dressed as a Klingon scrutinizing
the model in the first picture
We intend (someday!) to put together a downloadable
"Moon Manor
Reproduction Kit" with Parts List, Source Suggestions, Diagrams,
& Instructions. A proposed improvement is to shorten the
display from 80" to 72" to make it transportable by more vehicles (as
well as a few pounds lighter)
National
Geographic Map of the Moon
- Framed
Artemis
Project™ Poster - Mounted - We are working (October
'02) on a same size (24" x36") companion panel to give more information
about the Moonbase Design and Deployment and about the For-profit Moon
Mission plans of a number of companies. When completed, plans to
replicate this display will be uploaded to the Space Chapter Hub
on this
page.
"Regolith
Impressionism" Paintings Exhibit
In September 1994 we tried to produce a painting with paints made from
elements available in moondust. See this page.
The initial results were exciting, but overtime, the paints delaminated
from the glass pane we used as a canvas.
In May 2010, in prepartion for the International Space Development
Conference in Chicago, we trid again. This time, we again painted
foreground first on the reverse side of a glass pane, but after its
surface had been sandblasted. We also tried painting on a piece of
Duroc™ fiberglass-faced cementboard, a building material we should be
able to make on the Moon for interior walls, etc. Below is a photo of
our exhibit at ISDC 2010 taken by Ben Huset of MN SFS.
click on thumbnail for larger image
new moon_society_flyer.pdf
- published 4/11/2004
What
Do Lavatubes Look Like? - Other
Moon related White Papers
Check out our Current
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