Well, with the usual lack of hope of a reply from inconceivable...
The one thing that gets me about the radiation question is about the space suits. They offered layers of protection for the body. But the most critical part of a human is the brain and the helmet provided the least protection to the astronaut.
Really? What data do you have regarding the shielding effectiveness of the polycarbonate (most definitely not glass) helmet plus the additional layers used during EVA with all the visors
etc.?
Lab tests on mice have concluded that mice lost cognitive skills with an equivalent of 10 day exposure to charged particles 16O, Ti48.
1: Citation please.
2: How closely does this replicate the environment in space?
3: How many astronauts are outside the spacecraft for anything close to 10 days?
4: How does the effect on a mouse's brain compare to a human brain?
How much protection can the glass in the helmet provide other than UV protection?
It's not glass.
If Apollo missions helmets offered this much protection,
How much, against what? Your argument makes no logical sense in the absence of anyhting resembling data.
shouldn't they make spacecrafts out of glass for deep space missions?
Thank you for demonstrating once again you have little interest beyond yanking chains here. The necessity for tradeoffs based on mission requirements and the lack of an ideal material that meets all of them has been explained repeatedly on this thread.
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