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As we have seen in such things as Babylon 5 Earth Alliance and Nexus: The Jupiter Incident rotating sections is the poor mans way of getting gravity on a starship, so my question is this why if it is as simple as a rotating section does the US not crank out space ships with rotating sections?
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Not entirely sure but here are some reasons I can imagine:
- the "zero g" environment is preferred for lots of things:
-- some experiments are specifically designed for zero g. Yes, you could place them at the exact center of the craft, but true zero g only exists at a point.
-- making the robotic arms and mechanical things requires much less power/strength. If there were centripital forces needed to be overcome, in practical terms, this means more weight=more money=less payload for other things.
-- reorienting the ship/craft takes less thrust. To overcome gyroscopic forces created by rotation requires more fuel =costlier, less payload, etc.
- the "gravity" will decrease to zero at the center; making it somewhat cumbersome to manage placement of things. (see 2001: Space Odessy for a pretty realistic portrayal)
- in order to simulate earthlike gravity, either the rotational speed or the radius must be increased. But in general the size of the ship/station would need to be larger to make "gravity" somewhat uniform; =costlier, etc.
Perhaps if humans were to undertake a long space journey there would be another solution to simulate artificial gravity. Picture this: A large spacecraft with a huge funnel "scoop" in the front. The scoop would catch residual hydrogen to use as fuel and accelerate at 1g toward the destination. This way the crew lives under 1g all the time. At the halfway point, the crew section and the engine (not the scoop) is rotated 180 degrees and the ship is decelerated at 1 g for the remaining half of the trip. The crew still sees 1g toward their feet during the second half of the trip. I just thought of this, so there are probably a million things that make this just as impractical. (edit: like exceeding the speed of light in a short time...)