2. The rovers have a max speed of 500 meters a day, run out of power frequently(I'll mis you, Spirit) and are screwed every time a dust storm happens. Also shading increases energy absorbtion, so it doesn't help. It just increases overheating.
This came up the other day. Can't remember which rover it was (Sojourner, Spirit or Opportunity), but when one of them landed, the power it collected was (IIRC) 900Wh. Then the dust started to build up, and it fell, fell, fell, down to 350Wh. 250Wh would have been "death", they think. Then a wind came along and dusted the panels clean. And because of a more favourable elevation of the sun, at that latitude in that particular season, the panels actually produced
more power than they had upon landing. They had to schedule an afternoon "siesta" for the robot to prevent the electronics from overheating, having now more than enough power to run the robot for far longer than they could actually make use of it for.
A shade would absorb light and itself heat up, yes, (unless it was reflective, of course), although you needn't have the shades conducting heat towards anything you don't want (either anchored in regolith or free-floating in orbit). But, hey, why not just tilt the panels? Louvre them according to the need for power, using the same mechanism that would normally track the sun for
best energy conversion to take them
off the optimal perpendicular?
Anyway, this station has a guy with a brush stored in the airlock, if that's still a problem. And spare bits and pieces ready to be fixed if something like Spirit's semi-broken wheel happened to a bit of base equipment.
Ah, hang on, we're on Space Stations again, aren't we, I see...
3. Orientation mechanics clash with the fact that the station has to rotate. This combined with a large size means that the pannels will suffer severly from centrifugal force. After all, in order to get decent efficiency you have to point your cilinder at the sun, and only use one layer of pannels (any next layer would just be shaded by the first) This means that they have to extend a long way from the station, hence enormous centrifugal force. They'll tear the station apart.
You're designing the station wrong. Even if you
had to set your panels further out from the station, plenty of Earth structures withstand 1G, and can handle more. It's quite possible to ensure that you can make the station withstand the centrifugal or centri
petal forces, as necessary, for quite a range beyond the 1g 'nominal'.
I'd set up a stationary solar array station in close proximity (to allow some form of Broadcast Power to be easily used and coordinated) and not bother spinning it, if it were actually troublesome (and I don't think it is) to attach most of the panels to the rotating wheel/cylinder/whatever...
4. A space station always needs to be in orbit of something. Otherwise it's crashing into something, or wasting ridiculous amounts of energy for maintaining it's position.
I'd never even consider the latter 'station-keeping' effort as practical. Being in freefall, of some kind, is going to be a given, whether that be in a stable/semi-stable Lagrange point (a little bit of station-keeping may be needed, but only a little, as long as you keep it under control), pretty much any standard orbit you care to mention or some kind of 'resonant' orbit ('horseshoe' around two barycentre-sharing bodies, or a carefully-timed inter-body transfer orbit between co-orbiting bodies of a parent mass).
And then there's the outwardly-going hyperbolic freefall path of a future inter-solar exploration vessel. (But I wouldn't consider counting on solar power for
that mission... I'd start by equip ping the hollowed-out asteroid/minor planet with something nuclear, I think... But it'd depend on the contemporary tech available near the time of launch, really...)
The only thing angular momentum does is creating artificial gravity and allowing the spacecraft to maintain it's current heading. It doesn't supply any force to negate gravity. (If it did that, It would either need to slow down or be producing infinitive energy)
I sort of understood where you were at with your original response here. I thought you'd probably misunderstood what was meant (i.e., you can move space-stations around, doesn't need to be stuck in LEO at all), but where you're going with what you just said, I don't really know.
Are you, perchance, conflating the angular momentum of the station's own frame of reference ('artificial gravity', by way of applying centripetal force to the soles of those standing inside the wheel) with the angular momentum of the station
travelling in whatever orbit/freefall path it is currently instanciated in?
I get the idea you have no bloody idea what you're talking about.
I think, perhaps because you're misunderstanding things that I
think I understand, but that you're seemingly interpreting quite differently, I'm perfectly entitled to fire that statement back at you. However, I'm going to restrain from saying that you misunderstand
your understanding, because there may still be more confusions at my end, regarding one or more bits of what I've snipped...