Opcn OP t1_j11n3wg wrote
Reply to comment by kslusherplantman in World's first rice seeds harvested in orbit onboard China Space Station return to Earth by Opcn
It's functionally 100%. It's not perfect, because every system leaks, but we are talking 2.5 milliliters per day loss from the ISS as unrecovered humidity.
Composting wouldn't be 100% efficient, but you go through 10-20 crop cycles and the amount of hydrogen locked into the recalcitrant residues is going to be measured in milligrams per kilogram of crop yield.
You keep declaring me stupid but NASA, ESA, CSA, ISRO, and CNSA are all still looking at this process and they absolutely aren't treating it as forgone stupid conclusion like you are. There are a lot of really brilliant and really well educated people who are looking really carefully at this, and building test systems on earth and in space.
What's the better explanation? That extremely well educated people from many different academic and industrial disciplines are all failing to notice the very basic considerations that you would expect an elementary school class to think of in a guided exercise, or that you haven't thought it through?
kslusherplantman t1_j149dns wrote
So what’s a 1% loss on 1500 gallons per system? Per kg… so even 2% loss of 1500 gallons per kg.
60 gallon x 8 lbs per gallon.
Remember 1500 is per kg WITHOUT FLOODING.
1 kg of rice feeds 6-8 people ONE TIME.
So that would feed the space station for two days, and you still have to add additional nutrients.
So let’s say they only eat a half portion per day.
That 1 kg of rice doesn’t even last a week…
Yeah, they aren’t going to be growing it for consumption for a while. Why?
It’s cheaper to move the bloody dry rice than the water for the rice….
It’s all good, you still agreed LONG ago in this thread it’s not going to happen for a while.
Again I’m just being practical on the matter.
Now, do I say it won’t ever happen. Nope…
I said as of now it’s not feasible, especially considering it’s cheaper and more effective to take a kg of rice to space, than to take the water to make the rice.
I notice you aren’t offering any math to the solution, so I’ll put it this way.
I’m being pragmatic about the situation, you just seem to want it to be a reality even if the logic of the situation deems otherwise.
Do we need to be able to do it? Yes
Are we there yet, and still a while in the future? absolutely
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