TECHNICAL PAPERS
Apr 1, 1992

Technical Issues for Lunar Base Structures

Publication: Journal of Aerospace Engineering
Volume 5, Issue 2

Abstract

The establishment of a permanent human presence on other planets will require establishing permanent infrastructure in new environments. Civil engineers select, define, and implement solutions to infrastructure design problems in unique environmental contexts. Wind and seismic loading are two examples of constraints long familiar to terrestrial civil engineering. Designing structures for lunar exploration, development and eventual settlement will make use of the same design processes already practiced by the civil engineering profession. However, the extensive experience base resulting from centuries of terrestrial work does not adequately prepare civil engineers for the unprecedented constraints and environmental conditions that are encountered in space. The limited knowledge we already have about the Moon (mostly from the Apollo program) is a place to start. By assimilating and working with this knowledge, those pursuing the design of lunar base structures can begin to produce realistic and valid design solutions. The paper presents technical, operations, and programmatic issues that the writers consider fundamental to understanding the facts of life in this promising new design arena.

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References

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Go to Journal of Aerospace Engineering
Journal of Aerospace Engineering
Volume 5Issue 2April 1992
Pages: 175 - 186

History

Published online: Apr 1, 1992
Published in print: Apr 1992

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Authors

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Brent Sherwood
Sr. Engr., Boeing Defense & Space Group, JW‐21, P.O. Box 240002, Huntsville, AL 35824‐6402
Larry Toups
Sr. Engr., Lockheed Engrg. & Sci. Co., P.O. Box 58561, CO3, Houston, TX, 77058

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