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Revision 5 as of 2018-10-09 03:12:16
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||  RPM || 1 || 2 || 3 || 5 || 8 || 10 || '''15''' || 20 || 30 ||
||  radius (meters) || 3575 || 894 || 397 || 143 || 56 || 36 || '''16''' || 9 || 4 ||
|| '''RPM ''' || 1 || 2 || 3 || 5 || 8 || 10 || '''15''' || 20 || 30 ||
|| '''radius (meters)''' || 3575 || 894 || 397 || 143 || 56 || 36 || '''16''' || 9 || 4 ||

Centrifuge RPM

Centrifugal acceleration and RPM versus radius. Radius is to body midline for similar head-to-foot hydrostatic pressure compared to 9.8 m/s² gravity). This neglects subtle long-term Coriolis effects, besides the obvious and well-known vestibular effects of motion in a rotating acceleration field.

a = \omega^2 R ~ so ~ R = a (gees) / \omega^2 = 9.8 / ( \pi RPM / 60 )^2 = 3575 / RPM^2 meters for one gee

RPM

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radius (meters)

3575

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397

143

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9

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One paper claims vestibular adaptation to 30 RPM(!) within a week, for a limited range of motion. A conservative guess is that 15 RPM will suffice for most practical long term needs, assuming training and procedural accomodations.

A cylinder 16 meters radius and 10 meters wide provides 1000 square meters of floor space. Three meters of polethylene shielding around that is a polyethylene volume of π (16*38² - 10*32²) m³ ≈ 10,000 m³ ≈ 9,000 tonnes of PE.

Centrifuge (last edited 2018-10-09 03:12:43 by KeithLofstrom)