Although SpiderFab never ended up in space, scientists from the Shenyang Institute of Automation in northern China say they have built the key technologies to reach a similar goal.
The team first made the building blocks from a carbon-fibre composite, shaping it into long, hollow tubes using heat and pressure. They then added 3D-printed connectors, bonding the tubes to the joints with lasers to create strong, lightweight links without bolts or glue.
The researchers built a scaled-down antenna structure in the lab to show that the idea worked, they reported in the journal Space: Science & Technology on April 3.
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“Building structures in orbit removes the need to fold them into rockets or worry about size limits. Parts can be made, joined and assembled directly in space – potentially a core technology for next-generation space systems,” the institute said.
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Today’s spacecraft are built on Earth and launched into orbit, but transporting them by rocket imposes hard limits. Rocket fairings can only hold objects of a certain size, and the intense force of launch restricts the shipment of delicate structures. That makes it hard to build systems stretching hundreds of metres or more.
