Tuesday 17 June 2014

Want to design a Mars base for Nasa? Now’s your chance

Science Focus

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A submission called "DasDome"
Pierre Meyitang

Would you like a 3D printer? Of course you would. Would you like to collaborate with Nasa? Please, we won't insult you while waiting for an answer. MakerBot has launched a competition tailored for you then, in collaboration with Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory: MakerBot Mars Base Challenge. It wants you to deliver inspiration for a human base on Mars, considering future visitors will have to combat extreme temperatures, radiation spikes, dust storms and the whole you-can't-breath-on-Mars thing. The brief provided is to design, with all these considerations in mind, "a utilitarian Mars base that can withstand the elements and maybe even make you feel at home, despite being 140 million miles away from Earth, on average". And if you win, they'll give you a MakerBot Replicator 2 Desktop 3D Printer.

Of course not every entrant will have the astrophysics background required to tick all these environmentally challenged boxes, but Nasa is looking for anyone thinking outside of the box to provide another viewpoint, and possibly inspire the next generation of astronauts that will live in these abodes one day.

The competition opened on 30 May, and will close on 12 June, and already there have been 70 CAD file submissions on Thingiverse. Pierre Meyitang, an engineering graduate "just trying to make things better through technology" has submitted the somewhat beautiful DasDome, a huge dome housing Mars-dwellers surrounded by solar panel arrays that can fold in on top of the dome to protect it from the elements. Ice from Mars is dropped into the stainless steel spheres that contain steam powered electric generators, to create energy for spinning turbines and heating up the colony. "All parts have dual purposes," he says.

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