Calling the Space Elevator 72
CornfedPig writes "SPACE.com has an article that suggests building an elevator to a 100,000 km-high penthouse could be possible within the next few years at a cost of about $5B US. Widespread availability of low-cost carbon nanotubes appears to be the gating factor. Existence of such an elevator could drop the cost of lifting things (satellites, people, CowboyNeal) into orbit to a couple of hundred dollars a pound. Anyone remember Clarke's The Fountains of Paradise?" Space elevator stories come along every few months; we never seem to be getting any closer to actually doing it. I imagine it will happen at some point in my lifetime, but...
There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1, Troll)
Remember what is required, first. The thing has to come reasonably close to the ground in order to be useful. And the center of mass has to be at geosynchronous orbit height, 100 km up. That's a huge amount of mass spread over a very large area. This incurs several problems:
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:3, Informative)
Voltages? I don't think anyone knows what would happen with that, as far as I know it wasn't mentioned in the original paper either. It might be soluble. Lightning strikes could spoil your whole day that's for sure.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:3, Informative)
One solution is that the place where he proposes building it has on average 3-4 lighting strikes per year which is the lowest in the world. It also has the lowest number of storms in the world per year. Also, ocean currents make a sort of tidal pool area and hurricanes do not go into this section of the Pacific.
Another nice thing about the design is that it will not be nearly as destructive as what everyone thinks of when they mention falling space elevators. One of the requirements for the glue for splicing the nanotubes is that it have a melting point that is below the heat experienced in re-entry. This means that all of the re-entering elevator except for the lower 60 to 100 miles of it will break up into little pieces each less than 10 cm in length and they will burn up on re-entry. The 60 to 100 miles that does not will fall into some of the emptiest ocean in the world.
Also, to deal with winds, the shape of the cable is a cresent shape designed to face into the wind so that it does not flutter.
As Mr. Clarke says "A space elevator will be built 20 years after everyone stops laughing."
I'm not laughing, are you?
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1)
But what about the cargo? I guess it's doable, to at least make sure that the cargo carriers break up on re-entry or have some sort of emergency survival option (especially if they are manned!) but that will be a lot more complex than the fibre itself simply breaking up.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1)
In a worse case scenario the cable would break before the pod reaches orbit (60 miles high if I remember correctly) and would become a falling projectile. However, in this case it would land in empty ocean. If it is above 60 miles then it would burn/break up and probably fall in the middle of the Pacific.
Right now I can not remember the link to the pdf file the report was in but if you wish to read it, email me and I will send you the link.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:2)
The problem with using ONLY this solution is that, seeing as this is nothing but a giant grounding wire, every single of those 3-4 lighting strikes would hit the elevator.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1)
In the report there is an analysis of all the different problems he and his team could come up with and multiple solutions for each of them.
Right now I can not remember the link to the pdf file the report was in but if you wish to read it, email me and I will send you the link.
Rich
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:2)
I've stopped laughing by the way. So clock is ticking.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1, Insightful)
2. That makes a BIG navigation problem for all the satellites in low-earth orbit. Imagine a 36,000 KM cable going from the ground to Geosynchronous orbit, right through the path of thousands of assorted satellites, space junk, and the odd space station or two. All of the objects in low earth orbit will have a small, but ever present, chance of hitting our space elevator on each orbit.
We'd have to make a tough elevator cable and actively defend it from such debris.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:3, Informative)
The suggested building method is to put a bulky object (eg captured asteroid) in geosync orbit and lower the cable down, moving the 'roid back up slowly to ensure the centre of mass remains geosync.
How thick do you think this thing'll be? I think that it *not* being visable is going to be a larger problem. ISTR that the core will only be of the order of a few centimetres diameter, you'd not see it at 100m, hardly a problem across "much of the Earth's surface"
Voltage potential? You think the Earth circles the Sun because we're +ve and it's -ve? The only real issue would be a conductor moving through the Earth's magnetic field.
You should call yourself PhysicsTroll, not PhysicsGenius...
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:2)
We will probably use a superstrong nanotube rope, instead. It would go out past GEO orbit. A weight, such as a smallish asteroid or something, would tethered past GEO. This would create tension on the rope, due to the counterweight wanting to fling off into space. This way, you would need no tower.
Tidal forces of the Earth on the structure call for superstrong material. Side tidal forces from the moon require it to be flexible as well.
Really? We would need a superstrong material to build 50,000 miles high?
How do you build it? Not in place...
We pretty much know how to do it. We just have to improve our carbon nanotube manufacturing process.
Imagine that thing towering over your neighborhood. Pretty scary. Now realize that it is going to be visible from much of the Earth's surface and add NIMBY into the equation.
It would be extemely doubtful that it would crash. With the counterweight, should it become detached from the ground, it would fly off into space!!! Also, this thing is badass. IWLTH1IMBY(I would love to have one in my backyard)
The voltage potential from top to bottom is going to make this thing deadly deadly deadly without ultra-secure precautions.
You mean, kind of like a powerline??? If you touched a powerline you would be just as dead, if not moreso. Just put a fence around it.
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:2)
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1)
Re:There's a reason we don't build them (Score:1)
It can be built in place by adding from the orbital node up and down. Using small counterweights at each end, the ballance could be kept (though what keeps them from orbitting faster at the bottom and slower at the top escapes me...)
High voltage problems? Use insulators every kilometer or so and use the differential to power the lift. I'm sure we have insulators with a much better dialectric than air.
NIMBY is no problem at the equator if you build in at sea. (what's a kilometer of water after 100000 Km of vacuum and air?)
Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:1)
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:1)
First off... their plans will only be a little over half of a hundred-thousand miles...
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:1)
I'm pretty sure that this space elevator won't available for normal civilians to take joyrides either (at least not for a very long time).... its not the airlines... All they would have to do is secure the ground section... and even more specifically the entrance to the elevator to make sure no unauthorized people get anywhere near it...
...they don't need to secure the whole thing...
Nearly *possible* to secure (Score:2)
If you read the article, the current proposal is to put the earthside connection somewhere on a platform in the middle of the Pacific Ocean -- this should not be that difficult to handle.
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
Yes, because if somebody snaps the line at the base, then we have the horrible result of...
nothing at all happening. The line just hangs there, and it has to be reattached. Anybody heading up the line continues with no problem. No effect whatsoever.
--
Evan
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
Yes, because if somebody snaps the line at the base, then we have the horrible result of...
nothing at all happening. The line just hangs there, and it has to be reattached. Anybody heading up the line continues with no problem. No effect whatsoever.
Yeah if it leaves the structure in a stable state, but if you happend to break the structure in the middle, then it's not going to be stable. At that point you have a structure many miles high crashing into the ground.
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:1)
How exactly will you break a 100 mi thick ribon of nanotubes????
Simple: space elevator means easy access to space, means lots of small spacecraft flying around. Any one of these spacecraft can be pointed at the space elevator. I expect that this will happen from time to time until we get a military/police force monitoring the areas around the space elevator.
BTW, the ribbon would only have to be ~40cm across, not 100mi. And an impact would be a shearing stress, not a tensile stress, and I don't think we know the shearing capabilities of carbon nanotubes
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:1)
Whats wrong with a nofly zone?? They have tons of those all across our country over military bases...
Invasive search? The only people going up on it would be trained astronouts, engineers, technicians.... all working for the government in some way or another, prescreened, and fully qualified to go up. It would be the same as shuttle launches... and does the average civilian go up there regularly???
The general public won't have access to it for quite a while, if ever.
The security will be fine for this... the only thing to worry about is someone breaching the nofly zone.
If you're worried about other countries attacking it, forget it. This would more than likely be an international method of transportation, and shared with everybody like the international space station. The only people you have to worry about is terrorists... if they have a reason to attack it at all...
Re:Nearly impossible to secure (Score:2)
The general public won't have access to it for quite a while, if ever.
I would beg to differ. There are only so many cheap satellites you can throw up there, and what not before that industry plateaus(sp?), i'd say maybe 10 years after the first one goes up. After that happens they will start looking at other uses for this. At that point it will most likely become a people mover.
I wonder if this would look like.... (Score:2, Interesting)
For those of you who do not live out here, all I can say is that tv and photos simply do not do memorial any justice. It provides a humbling sense of scale when looking up into the infinity to which it rises.
Re:I wonder if this would look like.... (Score:1)
Dr Fish
Re:I wonder if this would look like.... (Score:1)
The flesh is willing but the fiber weak (Score:3, Informative)
Technically, the bottom line is:
No we can't do this right now. The fibers aren't strong enough to do this without bankrupting the global economy. An exponentially tapering fiber can theoretically do this at any time, but it would be wayyyyyy too big and heavy to install. (e.g. a steel cable would be ~hundred meters wide at the thickest point, and >38000km long...)
For the suggested construction technique, the carbon 'rope' needs to be able to give 72.5 Gpa strength, plus safety factor (typically 2). A single fiber gives about 73 Gpa right now. So we've no safety factor at all... but:
Joining the individual fibers together- nobody has done this whilst maintaining enough of the strength. Splicing normally soaks up 15-30% of the strength, and so we're now 15-30% down on the required strength, and nobody has even managed to do splices this good with carbon fiber.
Only a little percentage off then, but this pushes the mass up incredibly when you do the maths.
Still, we're very close. 3 reasonably simple(?) breakthroughs (one to gain strength, one to splice the rope, one to actually scale up production from one 3cm fiber to trillions of 3cm fibers in a reasonable time) and we're saying 'Hi!' to the rest of the solar system.
Lifting CowboyNeal (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Lifting CowboyNeal (Score:2)
Re:Lifting CowboyNeal (Score:2)
This means that as you climb the fiber, the fiber takes on a westward lean, as the earth tugs on you to help you speed up. So, the cowboyneal affect is real, although rather exagerated
I'll end my next development proposal this (Score:1)
WOW! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WOW! (Score:4, Funny)
> the entire mass of our planet into space?
The Earth is already in space. Amazing huh?
Re:WOW! - Hahaha (Score:1)
Re:WOW! (Score:1)
Re:WOW! (Score:1)
Re:WOW! (Score:1)
A few hundred more elevators and we could all leave I suppose, although it could take a while. I don't feel like doing the diffyq for this but it is rather striaght-forward to solve for the time to empty the planet.
Re:WOW! (Score:1)
For the consideration of others. (Score:3, Funny)
Thanx,
-The managment
Stabiliy ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Are there any astro uber geeks that can comment on the stability of this system from the standpoint of
Upper Atmosphere wind force (Score:2)
Although the atmospheric density and pressure is much lower at these altitudes (50-1000km+), the wind force is a factor, and it makes me wonder how a geo-stationary elevator shaft could be designed to withstand the energy of such wind forces.
If it could work, it'd probably kick off a revolution in space industry.
Re:Upper Atmosphere wind force (Score:2)
Really, wind force no matter at what altitude is usualy, but not always, the same as felt down here. Higher altitudes have higher winds but less force.
Two excellent SF books with space elevators.... (Score:1)
Dr Fish
Hypersonic Tethers will come first (Score:3, Informative)
materials strong enough for an elevator all the
way to geosynchronous orbit, so it's a bit too
soon for anyone to claim we could build one in
the next 10 years.
HOWEVER, we do have materials strong enough for
a "hypersonic tether". This'd be a much shorter
tether, only a few thousand km long, and moving
at a good clip around the Earth, with the lower
end just above the atmosphere.
With this in place, you could use cheap sounding
rockets, just barely capable of making it out of
the atmosphere, to rendezvous with the tether as
it swept past. The cargo would be grabbed by the
tether and snatched up into low orbit, while the
sounding rocket fell back to Earth.
There aren't any good online references, but you
can find USENET discussions of the technology on
Google Groups, keywords "hypersonic tether".
Re:Hypersonic Tethers will come first (Score:1)
Tethers are slightly more real than the space elevator, granted. But there are far better ways to do SSTO that are even closer to reality...
Re:anchor? (Score:1)
Re:Yeah, but could it withstand a 767? (Score:1)
Lowcost Carbon Nanotubes... (Score:1)
Cheaper than the Big Dig! (Score:1)
An interesting opinion... (Score:1)
Re:An interesting opinion... (Score:1)
REAL CUTE.
Financial Aspects (Score:2, Interesting)
So say if i had a significant amount of money.. like $1million (hell, $500,000 or $100,000) and invested in the construction of this thing (or invested in a company that is constructing it by buying shares), would this be a wise investment, with good return?
Would direct investment by supplying monies for construction and then demanding a % share of profits operating the elevator forever into the future be better then just buying shares in a company that is producing the elevator?
Any thoughts?
I'm always wondering what would be a very good sure bet for investment with VERY good returns, and something like these seems to be an ultimate one. The benefits of a space elevator are simply amazing, and the elevator will be in use for decades if not centuries, until replaced by something better, or a better elevator..
Martin.
Love in a Space Elevator (Score:2, Funny)
"Oh, hello Mr. Tyler. . . going down?"
$5 billion is nothing! (Score:1)
Since development started in the early 1970s, the U.S. has spent over $180 billion on the space shuttle program. And what do we have to show for it? Certainly not reliable, low-cost access to space!
$5 billion for a space elevator would be the bargain of the millenium.
What about the frequent flier miles? (Score:1)
Another A C Clarke book (Score:2)
Beanstalks (Score:1)
Dr. Robert L. Forward in his 1995 book Indistinguishable from Magic, provides quite a treatise on the concept of Space Elevators or "Beanstalks" as the particular chapter is called.
Forward has the scientific credentials to justify the idea with excerpts from existing studies to determine the physical and structural specifications of the tether.
Forward also describes a variation on the tether idea that he calls a Rotavator- and that I've seen elsewhere called a skyhook; a rotating cable 8500 KM long in orbit at 4250 KM that dips down into the atmosphere moving at such a rate to allow it to pick up cargo/passenger modules from the earth's surface and swing them up into orbit for release at the apex of the swing either to go into orbit or meet up with an orbiting terminal.
...Probably the most lucid explanation of the physics and material requirements for space elevators that you'll find in print...
[silent once more]