Atila Meszaros
We welcome the return of Atila Meszaros from his home country of Peru. Atila is graduate student at the University of Arizona, working principally under SAM Director of Research Kai Staats. Atila completed his first year and a half of classes from the fall of 2022 through the close of 2023, and is now set to engage in 18 months of research at SAM. His research is at the core of why SAM was designed and built—to establish baselines for human and plant studies in bioregeneration. Atila and Luna will be the principal directors of Phase II of our three phase study, with plant CO2 sequestration research starting in March and continuing through 2025.
SAM Surgical Bay Workshop
Bindhu and Kai lead the Surgical Bay workshop at B2 January 17-19. They welcomed five practicing surgeons to Biosphere 2 Friday afternoon, spent all of Saturday at SAM and in the B2 board room designing a medical bay capable of a dynamic array of surgical procedures, all conducted far, far from home. It was a unique event, with all home cooked food and catered meal (one of the attendees claimed Kai’s omelette was the best he had ever consumed!). There was no use of computers or slide presentations with a half day of hands-on design, discussion, and even an engineering challenge with wooden sticks, string, superglue and a few substantial rocks. It was casual, creative, stimulating, and engaging. Bindhu is now following up with the attendees, merging feedback to expand the draft paper written by Kai and Bindhu, while other team members explore state of the art in NAVY submarines and remote terrestrial habitats.
A study of the microbiome
Carter Hollings, University of Arizona undergrad in Biology has completed his first survey of the microbiome at SAM, having outlined several small squares (approximately 20cm x 20cm each) where he sterilized the surface and then a week later compared the swabs and samples. With the incoming APUS crew, our forth at SAM, Carter will again survey this built environment before and immediately following the 10 days mission. We are excited to learn from his first run as we are working in and around SAM, and then following the sealed mission.
New construction!
Daniel and his comedic crew of concrete workers returned to SAM for the third time to pour three slabs (now two weeks ago): new CO2 scrubber room, new IT room, and a new floor in SAM AIR. This was a major accomplishment, giving us foundation (pun intended) for a whole new set of high quality facilities at SAM.
Home Depot away from Home
Kai now officially lives at Home Depot with a record-setting 11.5 hr shopping spree on Thursday, January 23, with three visits to the north Oro Valley store. Kai retrieved the gravity-offset rig from the UA welding shop, which was this evening reassembled, adjusted, and is now fully operational. It is lighter, more stiff, quicker to respond, and far smoother in operation than the original wood and steel prototype.
Hydroponics
Luna worked with Jason, expert in everything plant-based at Biosphere 2, to transplant seedlings for the next hydroponics run in the TM during the APUS mission, February 9-18. While not a science run, this collection of greens (some from B2, some from Home Depot) will provide our visiting crew with a backdrop of edible plants to liven up their stay in SAM.
New IT room
Kai, Matthias, Griffin, and Luna framed in the two side walls and roof structure for the new IT room, located inside the historic 6400 sq-ft greenhouse structure that was originally part of the Biosphere 2 visitor experience. This room-inside-a-room will give us a clean, air conditioned space for the WiFi router, SIMOC Live, and SAM crew email server (with light-travel time delay), as well as data collection for the TM and any other systems we prefer to have at the bottom end of the radio link to Ops. In addition, Matthias and Griffin ran three new circuits to the location of the new IT room: air conditioning, critical computers, and accessories. Eager to install the buckets for lights, sockets, and switches.
A return to the lung
The SAM Lung is the prototype variable volume pressure regulation module that maintained pressure in the Test Module for more than three years of solo experiments while the Biospherians designed and built the Biosphere 2. This was the first structure that Kai and Trent set to renovate in 2021, and remains the last structure to be completed. It’s mostly below ground, difficult to enter, and hard to work on. After several more weeks effort, we are nearly done with one more coat of primer and then two coats enamel paint. Just last week Matthias and Bindhu pressure washed top of the metal pan and it looks much, much better! Ready to be primed .. but then it snowed and it’s too cold.
He’s back!
Master fabricator Nathan returned to SAM three weeks ago and as expected dove directly into a major effort to seal SAM. The number of leaks he has discovered in the 40′ is beyond what we expected, from tiny pin holes to major tears. In our last pressure test it was determined that the A/C unit continued to leak even after a massive amount of silicon was injected. So, we unmounted the head unit and rerouted the coolant and power lines through new hole in the side of the shipping container, allowing us direct access to the port such that we can test for and repair leaks more easily. The bathroom window has been completely removed and replaced with an all new polycarbonate construction. Nathan and Kai applied employed a version of the original Biospherian technique to seal the TM windows, resulting in what we believe will be a perfectly airtight seal. The TM/40 and 40/airlock bridges are fully rebuilt, and a dozen more leaks too. Fingers crossed for the next pressure test!
Patents in motion
While Cameron Smith, Kai Nevers, Trent Tresch, and Ivy Wahome designed and built a prototype tent for backpacking on Mars, Kai Staats outlined a half dozen new ideas for patents around an inflatable habitat for terrestrial exploration, on foot. Given Kai’s sketches and rough draft, Trent is now working to complete the submission of the IP to UA Tech Launch Arizona, with hope that one or more patents will come to fruition.
Trent Goes to NASA!
Our very own Trent Tresch was accepted by NASA to be a part of an 11 day stay in a reduced pressure analog at NASA Johnson Space Center. He will be living and working in a 9 psi (similar to 10,000 feet elevation) environment with increased O2 while conducting various activities and exercises to test for VO2 Max and cognitive abilities.
Well, that’s all we have for the first three weeks of January 🙂