Project Icarus: the Gas Mines of Uranus 155
astroengine writes "When considering the fuel source for a fusion-powered interstellar probe, wouldn't it be a good idea to set up a colony on the moon and start pillaging the lunar surface for its helium-3 riches? Not so fast, says Adam Crowl of Project Icarus, there may be a far more viable source. What about the gas giants? Although Jupiter's gravity could pose a problem and Saturn's rings might get in the way (and forget Neptune, that place is one hell of a commute), perhaps the helium-3 in the Uranian atmosphere could be mined using atmospheric balloons?"
Really? (Score:4, Funny)
The gas mines.... of Uranus.
Please tell me that this story is a joke.
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No no, it's deadly serious. Of coure, we can't just jump in blindly. We'll have to probe Uranus first.
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Exactly, we wouldn't want the Klingons to stop us!
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There are some places that man just wasn't meant to go.
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Re:Really? (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, there’s nothing funny about Uranus. Let’s forget the childish humor and take a serious, scholarly look at Uranus. To many people it’s just a giant cloud of gas where the sun doesn’t shine, but those of us who are enthusiastic about Uranus know that it has many secrets.
Surprising as it may seem, we don’t have all that many photographs of Uranus. Yes, the Pioneers sent back pictures of Uranus, lots of them. But there are very few images that are high enough resolution and quality to show the faint rings around Uranus. Perhaps the excitement around Project Icarus will give us the excuse we need to take another long, hard look at Uranus.
Even if you have no idea how to find Uranus, you can still appreciate its unusual configuration. Scientists still don’t understand why Uranus is tilted sideways. Also, while we know what’s near the surface, we still aren’t sure of the exact chemical mixture deep inside Uranus. Are the moons stable, or are they spiraling into Uranus?
With so much to learn, we must hope that NASA will probe the depths of Uranus soon. Yes, there are many technical issues that will need to be resolved, and problems to be faced—but we put men on the moon, and I’m sure that given sufficient motivation, NASA’s engineers can lick Uranus too.
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Bravo! [applauds enthusiastically]
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Maybe we should speed up the timetable and finally change the name of that planet to Urectum and finally end these silly jokes.
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Isn't the entire premise of the story ridiculous? That somehow, 40 years after we last sent a human to the moon (and we would have to reinvent the technology to do it today), we just just go:
You know, it's too easy to strip-mine the moon, We really should jump into the full-scale mining operation in a much more hostile environment, many orders of magnitude further away. And just to make it a little challenging, everybody will have to communicate only using sign language, so the workplace will be differen
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Urr'-ahnoos, rather than "Your-anus" or even Urine-iss.
'sides, I think that sounds cooler.
YAH RLY (Score:4, Funny)
I felt a great disturbance in the 'net... as if a million voices suddenly cried out in bad jokes, and were suddenly posted on Slashdot.
This story should be fun.
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IT'S A TRAP!
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It's certainly a Joke Mine (Score:1)
nuf sed
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Forget it dude.
Fifty years before any of that tech matures to the point where we could even reliably make round-trips to Ceres and back, the immature version of that tech would have been used to wipe out 90+% of the population and have the rest of us back to harvesting dirt.
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There is a problem with your line of thinking. You're assuming that the solution to our energy problems is guaranteed to be a planet bound solution.
I'm not saying it isn't of course. I'm just suggesting that you are purposely putting blinders on. Your arguments are not informed so I know that you haven't even considered the situation. Does that actually benefit you in some way? Perhaps y
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Even Vernor Vinge, one of the most visionary scifi authors, doesn't see space-based civilization as plausible.
Those of us who know anything about physics can also see that ideas like these are a ludicrous waste of resources.
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EDI: Really, Commander?
EDI: Probing Uranus.
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But Uranus must use natural gas. Solar power doesn't work where the sun don't shine.
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Accountant? Good god no! I'd rather confess to playing a piano in a whorehouse.
Have you applied for the job?
--
There was a loud plosive sound in the ladies' room. Little Bit said "Mom, is that you?"
Helium 3? Not Hydrogen Or Methane? (Score:2)
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There's some around, well, you know... [wikipedia.org]
Ha! *rimshot!*
(sorry, it was just laying there...)
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Not just Uranus (Score:1)
that title (Score:1)
that title is just begging for jokes...
Shocked (Score:1)
Gas in Uranus? Surely nobody would make a joke about that.
Just don't try to dial 9 chevrons (Score:1)
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Who would have thought goatse would lead to such a major scientific breakthrough.
Skip ahead to here (Score:2, Insightful)
whew (Score:1)
Despite the obvious (Score:3, Interesting)
this is actually an interesting article. Certainly more thought-provoking than the latest smart-phone malware.
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Uranus has a gassy atmosphere (Score:2)
Just sayin'.
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Cheaper to make 3He on Earth? (Score:5, Interesting)
Rather than shipping factories to outer planets and extracting helium-3 from a dilute mixture, why not use technology that already exists? Irradiate lithium in a fission reactor, get tritium as a result, and let it decay to helium-3.
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Lots of tritium is already produced in heavy water reactors, like CANDU. Most of it was just released, but I think they are getting smarter and are storing it now.
This is considering He-3 is in huge demand right for cryogenic research.
Anyway, He-3 fusion is much further away than H2+H3 fusion simply because of massively higher energy levels for confinement.. He-3 fusion could only be researched if we are unable to find a solution for the high neutron flux in H2+H3.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITER#Reactor_o [wikipedia.org]
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It would depend on how much you need.
You're right in that it would probably be cheaper to generate it here on Earth. However, there is a finite supply on Earth and lithium, as c0lo mentions, is used in other products. Snagging large chunks of it to turn into Helium-3 may create shortages and increase costs. So at some point, it would become cheaper to make Helium-3 elsewhere.
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ummm... There is a lot of lithium and we are talking about very small amounts of He-3
If we got a a few Kilograms of He3 that would probably be about 1000 time more than we have on Earth now and also probably about a years production from the moon if we mined it there.
So the using up of Li for the production of He3 really doesn't amount to a anything.
And when I say kilograms I am talking about mass at one g not weight.
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Let's put it this way - your method is only slightly more efficient than mining it. In the same way that it's slightly more efficient to swat an elephant with a toothbrush than with a toothpick.
Agreed, Uranus Stinks (Score:2)
In the words of my man Sagan... (Score:3)
"It does seem to be sufficient short-term profit to motivate private industry. If we humans ever go to those worlds than it will be because a nation or a consortium of them believes it to be to its advantage or to the advantage of the human species...
Just now, there are a great many matters pressing in on us that compete for the money it takes to send people to other worlds. Should we solve those problems first or are they a reason for going?"
Re:In the words of my man Sagan... (Score:5, Interesting)
"It does seem to be sufficient short-term profit to motivate private industry. If we humans ever go to those worlds than it will be because a nation or a consortium of them believes it to be to its advantage or to the advantage of the human species...
Just now, there are a great many matters pressing in on us that compete for the money it takes to send people to other worlds. Should we solve those problems first or are they a reason for going?"
No, we shouldn't, thanks for asking. That's a common argument, but unfortunatley wrong. Basically put spin offs from the investment in the space program and other research from after WWII and through the cold war have transformed our technological civilization.
... to the point that landing on the moon was just about a flag. In the case of the Apollo program, $150 billion in todays money was dumped on our brightest minds (about 400,000 people, many highly skilled jobs) top universities and our most cutting edge industry. If it all crashed and burned on the launch pad it wouldn't have mattered, the boost to humanity was awesome.
If you look at list of the problems we need to solve on this planet, they read like a list of technological problems to get to the stars. No 1 might be clean, cheap, unlimited energy that fusion would be a good candidate for. No 2 might be ecosystems - we'll need food and air recycling for long space flight. It goes on. It's the teach a man to fish principal. We need to skip frittering away resources on what seems to be the most pressing and urgent problems and go straight for the big goals.
Dare I say it, we have our problems now, and are poorly equipped to face them because we gave up on spaceflight some time in the 1970s and worried to much about problems to close to home.
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More to the point...we will ALWAYS have problems at home. So the question is...should we...or should we not go to space. I saw we should.
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I like this direction of thinking, personally.
Some of our best and brightest minds in space exploration today have already pointed out that the International Space Station represents a test-bed for sustainability in many ways, and an ecosystem controlled and defined by human activity. Sustainability is one of the greatest goals for humanity, if not the greatest!
Also, to think that all the major advancements in space exploration have happened in, what, the last 40-50 years? What could we do if we really pu
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The amount of money needed to go there is annually something like .1% of the money spent on 'solving' most of those problems. Not that any of them are actually solvable.
Helium-3 ?!? (Score:1)
I would have thought it would be full of methane.
Why (Score:1)
Okay, they're looking for helium in Uranus? (Score:2)
Sorry, no Hynerians here. Just humans. All we produce is methane.
Really "Project Icarus"? (Score:2)
How many space-based projects have we seen just this year called "Project Icarus"? It's as though there's no other popularly recognisable legend/myth with a reference to flight, let alone one that represents overreach & hubris as a spectacular failure at the point of apparent success.
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There's already a Project Prometheus [wikipedia.org], and somehow it's quite fitting - nuclear-powered spacecraft for long duration missions.
never ever ever (Score:1, Interesting)
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That's assuming you use today's technology. We may find a cleverer way to get out that far than just burning chemical rockets. Space travel is less than a hundred years old, after all.
For instance: solar sails. You could propel an autonomous mining ship to Uranus using the solar wind and gravity assist to accelerate. Then, when everything is all done, it redeploys the sails in such a way to decelerate its obit around the sun (and using gravity assist again, it works both ways), making it fall toward the inn
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It cannot be helped if you lack imagination. With your limited logic, yes the plan definitely seems unfeasible.
But let us look at the obvious flaw in your argument. First, define "decent speed". The energy you are actually expending is in achieving escape velocity. Once you are in space and already moving towards Earth, little energy is required. There is no friction so as to speak of, in space, for one thing. And who said the fuel needs to reach us within a week? The ship might take 30 years. Or more. Thin
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I need... mod... points.
Mod this up, guys.
>Folks like you would demand moronic laws in the name of "think of our children" but when it comes to actually making their future a little better, folks like you don't actually give a shit about your children and your grand-children. After all, YOU are not benefiting immediately. Right?
That is exactly what it's all about. It's the driving force behind the tea party. It's what's behind all the "hurr, that's socialism" bullshit. It's the "I've got mine, fuck yo
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What made me angry was the sneering way "Hope" was denigrated.
As if it's something worthless. It's not.
The treatment the word got at the hands of people like Sarah Palin disturbed me.
Sure, it was used as a slogan. It's not a bad slogan to have, though. Like I said, the slogan is on my flag. It's there for a reason. Hope means that tomorrow can be a better day than today. It might not be, but it can.
Hope.... is a bad thing? Hope is to be sneered at? Hope is to be torn up and discarded? Hope is to be
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>current dictator
If he was a dictator, we probably would have had single payer health care (which would have been a good thing), but since he's not, he took it off the table from the get-go.
You're stupid.
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BMO
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The US went from its first human space flight to putting a man on the moon in a decade. If the will to do something is there we can do it, and these days it will be a hell of a lot cheaper too.
JAXA and the ESA both seem interested, so fingers crossed...
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Plus, if you send out a fleet of ships every year for 30 years, with the first due back in 50 years, your company can go bankrupt after 30 and a shell company can re-buy the ships at 10% of their actual cost, multiplying your profit by an enormous factor.
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It took decades/centuries of research and inventions before we got to the point where we actually directly benefit from Wright Brother's initial flight efforts. And at that time idiots like you existed who denounced it all as a waste of money.
Maybe. Maybe not. Historically, people might have said that it was impossible, or improbable, or that the inventors were wasting their time, but I doubt that many claimed it was a waste of money, because all those inventors/discoverers didn't do it with taxpayer mone
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I think the vast distances involved would mess that up. The lasers used to do the retroreflector experiment [usra.edu] between Earth and the moon had a calculated divergence of about 1.04 x 10^-3 radians. Using a 1m laser at Uranus, the divergence would have to be 2.8 x 10^-4 radians just to make the beam the same diameter as the Earth. That's a factor of 4 or so. To get the beam into a circle that covers the same area as the state of Texas you'd need divergence on the
Sooo.... (Score:2)
Damn (Score:1)
Democracy to Uranus (Score:1)
Isn't this a fantasy? (Score:2)
Where to start mining? (Score:2)
So where is the best place to start? At the pole?
Project Icarus? (Score:2)
I would have thought such a title more fitting for an operation near Mercury.
Uranus? (Score:2)
Wrong Direction (Score:2)
No, this isn't another "youranus" joke. It's obviously a bad investment in time, energy and money to drive all the way to Uranus and back with gas just for the relatively small amount of energy we'd get out of it back here. For a much smaller investment we could get enough to power the Earth back from deuterium mining on the Moon as the summary notes. Or, even better, we could put solar collectors across Lunar surface, then beam the energy back to the Earth through a small network of lunar/solar/Earth orbit
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The point about Uranus specifically is that it's in the shallowest gravity well of the four. (checks : 14.536 M//e vs 17.147 M//e) So the presumed primordial concentration of He3 should be most accessible there with lowest energy costs to get it up into interplanetary space. I suspect that that 18% difference would be a sufficient factor even if Uranus and Neptune were to swap places.
Obligatory He-3 rant (Score:2)
We don't even have fusion working yet, and He-3 isn't the easiest fuel to fuse, so it won't be burned by first-generation reactors. So stop talking about it as a primary reason to go to the moon, already! Let's get some kind of fusion working first.
That being said, getting some kind of a ship to Uranus that could collect it would be enough of a technological challenge that we would probably have fusion working by then.
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A Uranus by any other name... (Score:2)
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No, the children of the human species need to grow up.
Quick check - do you know what the actual origin of the name was, without looking it up?
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Bode (of the Law) suggested the name for the planet in explicit reference to the mythology. Unfortunately, he didn't anticipate some tricky beggar putting another new planet further out there, let alone thousands of the buggers (I take the self-spherising definition, unlike the IAU).
Cloud city (Score:1)
Poor choice of a name (Score:2)
Not a Question (Score:2)
This is not a question:
"Although Jupiter's gravity could pose a problem and Saturn's rings might get in the way (and forget Neptune, that place is one hell of a commute), perhaps the helium-3 in the Uranian atmosphere could be mined using atmospheric balloons?"
Question marks mark questions.
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Came for this refrence, and was not disappointed.
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