penny wrote:Steel pipes, pots, pans, equipment, cleaning products, beauty care products. Women's lipstick has arsenic in it. Medicines might contain arsenic. Aluminum pots and pans can be eliminated for better options, for sure. And nonstick surfaces can be flushed (pardon the pun) in favor of steel pots and pans; which will introduce heavy metals. Plumbing from steel pipes and even the reactor will introduce heavy metals.
Why would pipes be made of heavy steel or copper in the first place? First, they should be made of durable but light materials; but second, that's part of the ship's infrastructure. If they were to become a significant source of contaminant over their expected lifetime of 400 years, then the ship should have been designed without them.
Why would also anyone bring their own pots and pans as part of their mass allocation? Those should be part of the common mass allocation for everyone, made out of whatever the ship can carry an excess of, printed aboard for use and recycled. Someone may want to bring some heirloom pots and pans and cutlery sets that date back to $INSERT_CENTURY_HERE, but those would be mostly in storage not in day-to-day use. But the ones provided by or sold in the ship would be made out of materials that are safe for the ship.
But! Cleaning products will be necessary aboard ship. And I would imagine effective cleaning products would be needed. I can't speak for anyone else, but plant based laundry detergents are not my cup of tea.
Same thing: that's not your choice. You're not going to bring cleaning products aboard the ship on your mass allocation, even if you wanted to. There's no claim to "family heirloom cleaning product" and those are often explosive or could be used for other purposes. Cleaning products and tools are going to be supplied by the ship.
And you're not going to be cleaning anyway; bots will.
If those products or the pipes or whatever do contain some trace metals or whatever else that is toxic to humans and couldn't be designed out, then mitigations must be found elsewhere. Either people take inoculations or must go through cleaning or treatment.
Or they're not lethally toxic at all because they can't accumulate, as the supply is, like everything else aboard, limited. They're not churning up land aboard the ship to find new sources of heavy metals that weren't in our food chain yet. So maybe some materials leak out of the water piping system or air vent system over time or hydroponics, but they don't build up sufficiently in people over their 100 years of lifetime (or they do and they shorten that lifespan to 85 years). As those systems are clearly degrading over time, they would need servicing and possibly replacement, which would then replenish the source of material leaking out.
At any rate, I am more inclined to accept that in the HV, a better way to handle the waste has been discovered, and or the sludge is ejected into space. *
I agree on finding a better way.
*Thinksmarkedly, as far as ejected sludge being a navigation hazard, I hear you. However, if the sludge is ejected in its dry state, then only dust will be ejected into space, which will hardly be a navigation hazard. Particle screens are there to sweep dust aside.
Planets don't have particle screens. They do have atmospheres, which work much the same way. But meteors inside a system are travelling at orbital speeds and thus usually have glancing blows on planets. This sludge would be travelling at 0.5c and on a pretty much, straight-on collision course. As E=mv²/2, the relative speed being 3 orders of magnitude more make the energy released 1 million times bigger.
The Chicxulub asteroid was estimated to mass 10¹⁵ kg at the low end. So an equivalent impact at 0.5c would only require a mass of 10⁹ kg or 1 million tonnes total. Or 2500 tonnes per year, or 625 kg per person per year. Or 1.7 kg or 3.7 lb per person, per day.
I don't think the ship would produce that much sludge in the first place because it won't have 1 million tonnes to spare, but it's definitely not ejecting that.
In summary, I just do not think it is realistic to handicap the entire operation by limiting access to the right tools for the job. Industrial strength cleaning agents are necessary. Across the board.
Provided by and controlled by the ship. And used by bots.