Innovative ideas for exploring lunar caves required.

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What about tried and tested methods?

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Warmbacs are made in Glastonbury - a really good-quality British export, seen in caves all over this planet, at least, and worn in the Thai football team rescue recently. We still make Oldham mining lamps in the UK, too.

See also Survex, Aven, etc. for relevant software.

I suggest they get in touch with the BEC (Bristol Exploration Club) up on the Mendips. That lot are really good at holding their breath for ages (going through sumps). To them, the absence of atmosphere would be a mere nuisance, as long as there was adequate beer available.

By the way, the annual competition between Mendip clubs for the the most newly-discovered cave passage is hotly contested, and the winning margin is often hundreds of metres. So if anybody can...

Sadly I'm too old and decrepit nowadays :-(
 
Couldn't they just develop space suits for Jack Russell or ferrets?

They're tried and tested, cheap to run and the ferrets would keep the astronauts in the spaceship occupied on what must be a long and tedious journey to the moon. And if they took rabbits as well, food would be no problem for the whole lot.
 
Trevanion":wzshfrfk said:
What about tried and tested methods?

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A seismic charge would only detect, and would require a large number of shotgun shells (or larger) to carry them out - and I doubt ESA will be enmoured of the idea - even if they hadn't thought of it, which they probably have.

Need to be repeatable almost ad infinitum - or at least a reasonable number larger than "a few hundred".

No idea why they aren't considering GPR (a-la "time team") or Lidar come to think of it for mapping, which is a proven techinque.

Both of those systems are small enough now to be able to fit them to a rover sized robotic vehicle.

My alternative idea that relies less on complicated electronics that can go wrong would be some kind of "thumper", either dead weight, or better, on a spring system to send out a waveform of regular pulsed shockwaves.

For exploring that is remote, presumably, a drone seems pretty obvious - gas powered jets. Limited use obviously, but you only really need to know if the cave is large enough to warrent a human exploration - as a possible base site I assume?
 
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