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bediger4000 an hour ago

Liquid handling in microgravity has always been weird. Big gas bubbles in the fluid, surface tension effects causing liquid to float in balls in the ullage, stuff like that. Turbopumps break if they ingest a larger bubble.

There could be some odd failure modes I would think. Failure to pump the liquid, broken pumps, who really knows? My guess would be that a failure mode would be a big spill, a failure to pump, only partially refilling, or broken turbopumps before an explosion.

MadnessASAP 15 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

For something like a transfer between Starships you can resolve a lot of those problems by (very) gently spinning the 2 craft. It won't take much force for the liquids to settle at the bottom of their respective tanks where you would presumably put the intakes.

pmontra 40 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

A probably very naive question: why not pistons?

labcomputer 23 minutes ago | parent [-]

Because there’s a much, much simpler and easier way:

1. Connect the two ships

2. Connect the liquid valves from both cryo tanks together.

3. Spin the ships about the short axis

4. Open the vent valve for the cryo tank to receive liquid.

5. Lock closed the vent valve for the cryo tank to supple liquid.

Steps 2, 4 and 5 are how you normally transfer cryo fluids between dewars on earth. You just to create pseudo gravity / acceleration in the body frame of the ships to make it work in space.

idiotsecant an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Seems like you could use peristaltic pumps

pants2 43 minutes ago | parent [-]

That would take ages!