From the desk of
Moon Society President Ken Murphy
Moon Track at ISDC 2012 Washington DC - “Unmitigated Success!”
Sunday, May 28, 2012 was The Moon Society's time to
shine. Our track was scheduled against the Student Track (presentations
from the ISSDC), the Transhumanism & Space Exploration track, the
Living in Space track organized by the Kepler Space Institute, and
General Presentations in the big room. And the lunch went long.
Nevertheless, your Moon Society president started promptly at 2pm to a
full house. His presentation on an overview of cislunar space was
well-received, and set the stage for the following presentations. John
Cserep then gave an overview of an Earth-Moon L1 facility that could be
used to control telerobotic mining operations on the Moon, in addition
to serving other customers.
This led nicely into Jim Keravala's talk on Shackleton Energy's
plans to mine at the Lunar poles to provide propellant to cislunar
space. Dr. Carl Brandon from VT Tech then described their project to
land a CubeSat on the Moon. (continued next page)
We then had our first student presentation. As background, the
National Space Society and NASA Ames run an annual International Space
Settlement Design Competition that draws entries from around the world.
When the track chairs were putting together their tracks, they received
a request from Lynne Zielinski of NSS leadership to make some time
available in our tracks for the students to give presentations. It's
excellent experience for them, and so The Moon Society immediately
agreed to 3 presentations (30 minutes) to incorporate into our four hour
track, with the proviso that they all had to be located in cislunar
space.
Our first was from Tanmay Band, who presented for Team Aris from
India. Their proposal is for an L5 facility with a scalable structure,
allowing for the eventual housing of hundreds of thousands of
individuals. Paul Graham then described OpenLuna's work on
communications and surface transport hardware. The Moon Society has
long had a good relationship with OpenLuna as our efforts are very
complementary, and Paul allowed us to share space on his display table
in the exhibit hall. He's got a great exhibit, but the genuine fake
Moon rocks that were on display from TMS helped draw people to the table
to be engaged in Moon talk. We also showed off some nice selenospheres,
including the new Sky & Telescope Moon globe that uses LRO imagery
for the most up-to-date globe around.
The second student presentation was from Team Plenidus, also from
India. Ashish Chadda, Rajat Kalia, and Deigant Yadava had scripted their
presentation to an movie, essentially a moving ppt, and so were able to
keep right to ten minutes. I can say they had some nice villas in their
design. Next up was John Strickland, from NSS Austin and a long term
leader in NSS, who gave an overview of transportation considerations for
cislunar space. One of the key takeaways is that with depots in LEO, at
EML1, and on the Moon, you don't need more than 4 km/s of delta-V to
either get to the next gas station, or go to/from any destination of
interest in cislunar space. This is a helpful thumbnail for designing
transportation systems.
The last student presentation was from Team Concordia from
Romania. The most notable part of their presentation was their proposal
for retrieving asteroid materials, wherein they would use what I dubbed
a Space Squid. A module latches onto an asteroidal body and then
deploys long arms that wrap around the asteroid. Each arm is laden with
thrusters, which are then used to direct the asteroid to where they want
it. I suggested they go talk to the Planetary Resources folks.
Our last speaker for the day was Dr. David Smith from the GRAIL
mission, who gave an overview of the mission, and shared some of the
early results they're seeing. One notable result is that it looks like
the data might be able to unveil lavatubes, especially in conjunction
with some of the data from LRO. This was the perfect lead-in to our
topic for The Moon Society's theme for their track at next year's ISDC:
Lunar Lava Tubes.
Attendance was good throughout the day, even with very compelling
presentations in other tracks. We were able to hold very closely to the
schedule, and our content nicely interwove to make a compelling case
that cislunar development is important, and entirely doable given where
we are technologically.
As a Thank You to each of the speakers, TMS leadership suggested a
lapel pin and one-year membership in TMS for each of the speakers, so we
just got a small boost in membership. Hopefully we've also helped to
establish some more credibility for our organization as a Moon advocacy
entity. Special kudos go out to our at-large Ambassador of Goodwill,
Dave Dunlop, who is already busy networking for our track at next year's
ISDC, at which the Moon Track will focus on Lunar Lava Tubes. KM