THE_BALROG:
"Recent missions have found water and ice on the moon's surface, which could have been carried there by giant molecular clouds or bits of comets.
But in a new U.S.-led study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on Monday, the scientists not only concluded that water may be, "ubiquitous within the lunar interior," but also "indigenous to the moon."
"For over 40 years, we thought the moon was dry," said the lead author of the findings, Francis McCubbin of the Carnegie Institution of Washington.
"We found that the minimum water content ranged from 64 parts per billion to 5 parts per million - at least two orders of magnitude greater than previous results," he said in a statement. There is so much water within lunar rocks that if all of it were extracted and put together, it would be more than enough to fill the Great Lakes, McCubbin told CNN.com.
Another way of looking at it, he said, is, "if we were to put it over the surface of the moon, it would cover the moon in about a meter-deep thickness."
Vody je tam zrejme opravdu dost...
Vsechny ty vlivy a zareni se pak daji pohodlne merit po ceste na Mesicni zakladnu... ;)
Vazne potrebujes, abych ti vypisoval vyhody staticke budovy pevne spojene s podlozim oproti nezakotvenemu levitujicimu objektu leticiho prostorem?
...dobre, co treba kapacita? rozloha? v podstate nicim neohrozena diskretnost? Coz samozrejme do jiste miry plati i o ISS, jen ten rozmer jaksi, ze... nedostatek mista na poradny pokusy a testovani, rychle vznika tlacenice a provoz je drahy. Na mesici by se pohodlne vesli vsichni, kyslik extrahovali z mistni H2O, kterou by si i cistili a recyklovali, elektrinu sklizeli solarama a zili by z hydroponu.
Neco tady proste nehraje... ;)