Articles like this really float my boat! It reminds me a bit of the discovery of the Wollemi Pine in Australia.
Articles like this really float my boat! It reminds me a bit of the discovery of the Wollemi Pine in Australia.
I suppose the regolith itself could be used as a heat sink. I don’t know what its thermal properties are like?
But yeah, I imagine heat dissipation is a limiting factor. Everything I’ve read suggests the 1st gen reactors will put out something on the order of 10s of kilowatts, so rather modest by nuclear standards but still plenty for a nascent Moon base I imagine?
The trouble with solar on the moon is that the day-night cycle is a month long. You have to figure out what to do during the 2 Earth weeks worth of night.
I suppose with a polar base, you could have several solar farms strategically placed so that at least one of them is operational at any given time, but that’s a lot of infrastructure and this is early days.
I am genuinely impressed that this has happened. Wow.
Dang, that reads like a commercial for pharmaceuticals.
Know better than to be in Kursk?
Nice. I had been using the analogy that an introvert at a party acts as a sacrificial anode consuming corrosive extroversion until they are utterly exhausted. But I like your take on it!
I’ve been on long flights where I wished there had been designated seating for introverts. But then I considered the implications of packing all the extroverts together in one place nearby and thought better of it.
Thanks! I hadn’t heard about that one. Here another article on it. Wow.