Going Up? 567
jmiyaku writes "The National Post is reporting that NASA has given a Seattle company a $570,000 grant to continue its investigation into constructing a space elevator. Coupled with some production-grade technology from a Japanese car company (carbon nanotube composites), this elevator could be a reality within 15 years..." The Highlift website has some more information.
Environmental impact (Score:2, Interesting)
One thing that worries me about orbital towers is the impact on the weather and the local environment. Something that big must affect local rain patters in some way...
Also what about the risk of it falling down? An orbital tower will wrap about the earth more than once if it falls. The description in Red Mars was particularly though provoking.
Re:Environmental impact (Score:4, Insightful)
The elevator they're proposing is not counterbalanced - this requires it to be even longer than if it wasn't counterbalanced, but it doesn't require a conveniently placed asteroid.
Remember: you're asking what if it falls, right? It is falling. It just happens to be falling at exactly the same rate that the Earth is turning. It's in orbit. In order to make it fall, you'd need to break it.
Re:Environmental impact (Score:2)
Um, it's still counterbalanced - by the outer half of the cable. Cut the cable in the middle, and the bottom half goes "splat" just as effectively as if the counterweight was just a big rock.
Re:Environmental impact (Score:2)
If you can break the cable, then yes, all hell breaks loose.
Re:Environmental impact (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Environmental impact (Score:2)
Yeah but imagine if the cable breaks in the middle,
then 50,000 km of cable is going to hit the earth,
and the remainder is going to fly off into space.
Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to think that this would make space elevators impractically dangerous. However, this turns out not to be the case.
The energy gained by the falling cable will be at most its gravitational potential energy, which is within a factor of two of conventional high explosives (per unit weight). Pick a maximum yield on impact, and you have a maximum cable weight. Use a thin enough cable to meet this weight restriction, and you have an adequately disaster-proof elevator (it'll make a mess, but not wreck the world's climate).
My own calculations with a 10 kT yield/cable weight came up with something that could reasonably be used for space travel and would pay for itself if you could keep the cargo moving.
The biggest problem is figuring out how to move cargo fast enough. I'd be leery of having induction motors mess with the cable itself, and if its a nanotube bundle they won't conduct in the right direction anyways. Winches are much too slow. Sheathing the cable with metal would only be practical for a very thin layer, which ends up being too thin to support the required currents without boiling off (I think). It's an interesting design problem.
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:2)
I say use compressed air. Pressurize below the cargo and let it shoot up the elevator. You could use any power source you wanted to power the air compressors. And if that weren't enough, the elevator "car" could also have wheel-type-things, so that it could climb up the elevator.
What are the chances that whatever the elevator was tied to out in space would throw Earth's orbit off, ever-so-slightly? Would this affect us in any major way?
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:2)
a 100,000-kilometre-long ribbon about one metre wide with the thickness of a sheet of paper
So there goes the air-tight theory...
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:2)
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:4, Interesting)
That is an idiotic design. If you use conventional conductors in the cable, then we can also use the cable as a big powerline from space. We can have a large solar array in space and get the power back to earth via the elevator cable. Proposals in the past for powering earth from space have suggested using microwave transmission, the elevator cable would be a much safer alternative. In addition, if you have a powered cable you can use energy return brakes on the climber, so when it comes back down the motors function as generators, returning power to the system. With the aforementioned solar array, the elevator can be an energy producer rather than an energy consumer. Not to mention the fact that it is terribly inefficient to convert the electricity to light (laser) then back to electricity on the climber. It would be much more efficient to run power in the cable itself.
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:3, Interesting)
Isn't that cute... but it's WRONG!
The top of the cable has something much more powerful acting on it than gravity alone: the bottom of the cable. The top will be moving just as fast as the bottom, accellerating downward just as much as the bottom. So you have a miles-high structure coming towards the earth at a relatively steady 9.8 m/s/s. This is far worse than mere gravity alone.
Re:Impact on the environment (and the ground) (Score:3, Funny)
I got a solution: Use rocket engines. In fact, skip the cable and just use the rocket engines alone! I am sure scientists can find a way to keep them pointed stable enough for flight.
Wait a minute......
Re:Design Problem? Here's the design problem: (Score:3, Informative)
I don't understand these people who think you can build an elevator into space. Can't anybody understand that you cannot just "tie" a cable from Earth to something in orbit in space?
I really hope you're deliberately trolling, but just in case...
The only possibility of maintaining an actual elevator cable is if it is hooked onto something in geosyncronous orbit with the Earth. The only problem there is that the object would have to be 40,000 miles away from the Earth to maintain constant orbit with a fixed position on Earth. Good luck.
Err, yes? Thats exactly what people are proposing, in fact people have been proposing this for many years. See this NASA Summary [nasa.gov] for details for the current ideas. You'll notice that they specifically say that the elevator will be to geo-stationary Earth orbit (GEO) in the first sentence.
Al.Re:Environmental impact (Score:2)
GoDaddy croaked, try here (Score:3, Informative)
Guess who can't wait for this!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Going up? (Score:3, Funny)
Think About It (Score:2)
Virg
Re:Think About It (Score:3, Interesting)
fifteen years? (Score:3, Interesting)
Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, Yucca Mountain leaves a whole lot to be desired. I suppose the best thing to do would be to shoot the radioactive waste into the sun. You could lanuch self-guiding ships full of the stuff straight into the sun...the sun sure wouldn't care. But how do you get the stuff in space safely?
Perhaps this space elevator? I think it should be safe(r). Use the elevator to take the radioactive waste top the space station, then build a craft to launch the waste into the sun. No more radioactive waste problem! And it would probably be cheaper than the current proposed solution, plus it would be really great for the space program and scientific development. Is this a good idea?
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2, Funny)
Also a good idea for getting rid of those annoying polititions/celebs etc.
I think the sun was used for this in a Simpsons episode somewhere?!
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:5, Insightful)
Basically the problem is that any object we lift from the Earth has energy, and angular momentum. If you want to hit the sun, and not just put it in a very eccentric orbit, you need to remove a lot of energy from the object, and the space elevator wouldn't help - it pulls you out of Earth's gravity well, not out of Earth's orbit. You'd require massive amounts of fuel to get it there.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
Consider: we have to make the elevator extend past geosyncronous orbit (otherwise, what would be holding it up?) and connect it to a counterweight at the end. The smaller the counterweight, the farther it must extend. Now, if you are positioned at the counterweight, you are moving at supra-orbital velocity (your angular velocity is the same as it the angular velocity of something in geosynchronous orbit, but you are farther out. Also, tangential orbital velocity goes down as you go out.)
Therefore, if you let go of the space elevator at the counterweight, you will continue on tangentially to the orbit of the counterweight, but you will be in a very eccentric Earth orbit. The space elevator's utility would be much reduced it the tangential speed at the counterweight was not escape velocity for the Earth, so we could (reasonably) assume that it would be greater.
Now, if you release from the counterweight at just the right time, you will be heading in the opposite direction that the Earth is moving in, relative to the Sun. This means that you will be put in an eccentric orbit around the Sun, with your new perihelion much closer to the Sun than the Earth's.
If the elevator is long enough, then no further action need be taken, otherwise, a retrograde (I think that's the word) burn immediatly after release from the elevator can bring the orbit into one that intersects the Sun. There are more or less energy efficient ways to do the burn, but the point is that you already have a good kick from the elevator.
So, no you are not at all incorrect about the amount of energy requred--it takes a lot of energy to impact the Sun--but the elevator helps tremendously.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
The difference in tangential orbital vel. is minimal here: you're talking about the difference between the Earth's position wrt Sun, and the top of the Elevator's position wrt Sun. They're identical, as far as anyone cares: it's six orders of magnitude difference.
But, anyway: figure it out. OK. Cable's 100,000 km long, right? That'll give you 7.3 km/sec let go at the highest point. You're right: that is a good fraction of the 30 km/sec needed to impact the Sun, but it's not all of it. And that remaining amount is just plain friggin' huge. You can figure out the amount that needs to be removed to hit the Sun (rather than direct impact) but it's still not going to be efficient.
There's another problem here, though: the elevator is located at the equator, and it is not rotating in the same plane as the Earth is wrt the Sun. It's rotating 23.5 degrees wrt the ecliptic. So you'll build up 7 km/sec, but of course, a large fraction of that is out of the ecliptic, which doesn't help you at all: in fact, 40%! So really, the elevator only helps you out with ~ 4 km/sec against the 30 km/sec you're traveling. Plus now you're moving out of the ecliptic, so that additional 3 km/sec actually adds to the amount you need to get rid of, if only slightly.
Bottom line: 26 km/sec vs. 30 km/sec: it still sucks.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, no. There are some waste products that should only be desposed of in this way--whatever the cost. For example: Richard Simmons [richardsimmons.com]
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
Light goes out radially: how would you slow it down using this? It's constantly pushing it outwards.
I've always been confused about this: how exactly would you move radially inward against something that's moving radially outward? This isn't like sailing where you have something else to push against. I can't see anyway to get a net velocity inward.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
Figure it out: what's the circumference of the Earth's orbit? Divide it by one year in seconds, and poof, you've got your orbiting speed: 30 km/sec. They're talking about 120 - 160 km/h (hour!) or 0.04 km/sec. Then you've still got to eliminate 30 km/s. At that point you might as well have launched from Earth's surface: the additional benefit of the elevator is meaningless.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:2)
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:5, Informative)
That whole 'spiraling into the sun' thing bugs me.
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:3, Insightful)
The subducting seafloor idea sounds much better to me. Drop in into a hole in the ocean floor, and it is pushed into the mantle. No loss of mass for the earth, no huge expenditure of energy, and the waste is taken care of.
Re:Good idea for nuclear waste? (Score:4, Funny)
In case you couldnt tell, i was being sarcastic ;-)
Sheesh.. (Score:2, Funny)
Fountains of Paradise (Score:3, Informative)
Fountains of Paradise [amazon.com]
Re:Fountains of Paradise (Score:3, Informative)
Earth was screwed so the only way out was up.
Re: Kim Stanley Robinson: Mars Trilogy (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Fountains of Paradise (Score:2)
Elevator vs. Launch (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Elevator vs. Launch (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it, really: the Shuttle is really a very advanced glider on its downward trip - that's all you really need. I imagine you could probably send a few reentry gliders or capsules up the space elevator if you need to.
Anyway, getting up is the important part. We've pretty much got the "getting down" part pretty down pat. Getting up's much harder. Once it's in place, you could start shuttling things upward to build a space station at the top, and then work on downward-bound cars.
First step is to get off this rock.
Re:Elevator vs. Launch (Score:3, Insightful)
Not only Clarke but Hamilton! (Score:2)
Yes, of course, if you haven't read it - you simply MUST!
Better 'mass construction' project (Score:2)
Re:Better 'mass construction' project (Score:3, Insightful)
A space elevator is a cute idea: it's quite safe, since, well, it's in orbit. It just happens to be in orbit above one spot over the earth (geosynchronous) and really long, so that one side of it touches Earth. And practical? Man. Launch costs go from "huge" to "free". The world would change in a year after this thing being built. Seriously. It'd look like science fiction in no time: space hotels, lunar bases, Martian missions - everything becomes easy.
Re:Better 'mass construction' project (Score:2)
Re:Better 'mass construction' project (Score:2)
Location, location, location (Score:2, Funny)
People need to read the FAQ... (Score:5, Informative)
This talks about what will happen if it falls, what terrorists can do to it, etc. It actually seems fairly honestly done, not all marketing-speak.
Re:People need to read the FAQ... (Score:2)
Re:People need to read the FAQ... (Score:2)
This was an interesting FAQ. Now I think we should make predictions as to its location, based on what they described:
Re:People need to read the FAQ... (Score:2)
Re:People need to read the FAQ... (Score:2)
When do i get my prize?
Many poorly dodged questions there. (Score:3, Informative)
If I remember correctly, the reason they don't want to deal with the lightning question is because running a huge electrical charge through a carbon nanotube will make it explode into a cloud of graphite, severing the connection.
So, the question becomes, what do they plan on doing when (not if) bad weather comes for the orbital elevator. Can it be moved?
Another unanswered question is what they plan to do about space debris.
Cheap (Score:2)
This does blow your average $1 million for a five day rocket based space holiday out of the water.
Oh, well.. (Score:2)
No matter, this nano-material they're plugging should be quite useful for a few real-life applications right now. If there's no "well, you see.." about it somewhere.
Re:Oh, well.. (Score:2)
short circuit (Score:2, Interesting)
Size and Composition (Score:3, Informative)
Virg
The original NIAC paper (Score:2)
There are a lot of funky stuff going on there. But, here's the original space elevator paper [usra.edu]. I personally thought it was an interesting read.
Problem. (Score:2)
Houston, I think we have a problem.
beam me up (Score:2, Funny)
"Scotty one to beam up."
"I'm doing the best I can captain but the elevator is stuck on floor 3."
Atmospheric Conductivity Issues (Score:3, Offtopic)
Highly Conductive... the article also states that they are looking for a region of the planet for the anchor where storms and high winds are uncommon. I'm not so sure this is going to eliminate any risks. It seems to me they are going to have to develop this thing so that it can withstand being struck by lightning many, many times. A perfect solution would be something that could actually store and use the power generated by multiple lightning strikes.
My point is just that we don't really know everything about lightning, and just assuming that because there aren't many storms in the region the cable will not get struck doesn't seem smart to me. A highly conductive lightning rod extending into space seems to me something that would attract electricity, no matter what the weather conditions. I'm just picturing something like a Van de Graaf generator attracting all the loose electrons in the area. They need to develop the system so that it accepts lightning and other electric charges and distributes them somehow, causing no damage, even while cargo is in transit.
is it just me... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why wouldn't we have a bunch of satellites in the same planar orbit?
I'm assuming that the elevator gives the sats a ride up, and then simply releases them. Is there another release mechanism that "points" the satellite in the right direction?
Also, could you use the elevator for geosynchronous orbit birds?
Re:is it just me... (Score:2)
Re:is it just me... (Score:2)
For that matter, if getting the sats from the elevator to their proper orbits becomes a common problem, you could have a fleet of high-orbit unmanned vehicles whose sole job would be to take satellites off the elevator and ferry them to where the are supposed to go, more or less, and let the sats handle just their own fine tuning once they're in place.
15 years - yeah right (Score:2)
$570,000??? (Score:2)
Isn't that a wee-bit expensive for a dog-eared copy of Fountains of Paradises ????
My favourite part of the FAQ (Score:2, Funny)
The elevator can be funded privately, publicly, or with a combination of the two.
In other words "We don't know".
The Web Between Worlds (Score:2, Informative)
they need to get their costs right (Score:2, Funny)
About red mars... (Score:2)
The book described the cable as being 10m in diameter. I always thought of this being ludicrous.
Look at the FAQ. It talks about a ribbon 1cm wide.
Re:About red mars... (Score:2)
It's only 1cm wide below 10km altitute.
"The ribbon of our proposed 20,000 kg capacity elevator will have a 2 square millimeter cross-sectional area, be 1 meter wide and microns thick on average."
That catapult idea again. (Score:2)
NASA must be obsessed with catapults [uncoveror.com]. Every plan they come out with seems to make use of one in some way.
Just asking for trouble... (Score:3, Funny)
I don't buy it (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I still do not buy the argument that getting into space will cost virtually nothing once a space elevator is built. Sure, in pure energy, the costs are low. But what about the entire support infrastructure?
Right not it would cost me about $100 to take the train from Ottawa to Toronto, a 4 hour trip. With a space elevator we are talking about a trip 100 times farther and 50 times longer. Applying some hand waving math, we would be looking at $10K to $20K for a trip up the elevator. Maintenance costs for the elevator are going to be a *lot* more than those for a strip of train track, so it would not be unreasonable to multiple this estimate by a factor of 10.
Yes, that is a lot less than $1,000,000 but also far from virtually nothing.
Old idea with problems.. but promising.. (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a great idea, but it has one big problem. It isn't energy - The idea of generating energy by dangling something into the atmosphere from space has been explored and proven that it will work [nasa.gov].
The problem is this: With every gram of matter you chuck into space (or even lift from the surface), the rotation of the Earth slows in direct proportion to the cargo's mass relative to the mass of the Earth. In other words, every time we throw something in to space,the Earth will slow down just a bit, no matter how small the load. Proving yet again that there's no such thing as a free lunch.
Fine, you say. It'll take a TREMENDOUS amount of mass to be lifted into space to stop the rotation of the Earth. I completely agree. However, if the Earth slows
Just to sate your curiosity, the earth weighs about 5.98 X 10^24 kilograms (or, 5,980,000,000,000,000,000,000 tons, metric, roughly speaking. Source. [enchantedlearning.com]). That said, it would just take us lifting 59,800,000,000,000 trillion tons into space to affect the aforementioned change. Again, a tremendous amount, right?
Consider this: New York city alone produces 13,000 tons of residential waste a DAY, and they've run out of places to put it (Again, Source [fathom.com]). That's 4.7 Million tons a year. And they're currently paying PA to dump is for them. There are other cities with the same problem. Exactly how long do you think it will take for someone to decide to move the waste even farther away? Like Space? And that's just residential.
That's only one example. Let's add Yucca Mountain's 77,000 Metric tons of waste and 100,000,000 gallons of high level radioactive waste water (Call Claire at the Yucca Mountain Project (dept. of civilian radioactive waste mgmt. for more info -Link [ymp.gov] or 1-(800) 225-6972). Okay, lets add the "extra" garbage of all of the other states, countries, provinces etc who have run out of places to put their waste. It adds up REALLY quickly.
And that's not including the actual mass of the elevator itself, including it's anchor.
Mind you, I still think we should build it, I just don't think we should use it as a tool to get rid of our problems that's we're too stupid to fix, but smart enough to move out of sight.
You're wrong, do the math. (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, yes, actually.
Consider this: New York city alone produces 13,000 tons of residential waste a DAY, and they've run out of places to put it (Again, Source [fathom.com])... It adds up REALLY quickly.
You're using your intuition, and it's wrong, wrong, wrong.
It doesn't add up. Assume everyone in the world produces as much trash as a New Yorker City resident, and that we double that for non-residental, and that we send all of the trash in the world into space.
That's 13K*(1/.002)*2= 13 million tons of trash a day. To achieve the slowdown you mention (.1 second/day) would take about 1.2*10^16 years. Tidal effects are slowing the earth much faster than that. More to the point, the sun will have blown up by then, making the rotation of the earth moot. Hell, I'm not sure all our protons won't have decayed by then - anybody know the numbers on that one?
Re:Old idea with problems.. but promising.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Just a nit in this discussion, but there is not any problem at all in terms of space for waste. I forget the figures, but basically you could put all the waste generated in the US for a century into a spot something like 10mi x 10mi. I live in the middle of a desert where the nearest large city outside of the one I live in (Phoenix) is 120 miles away! LOTS of room for rubbish. For that matter, we have huge retired open pit copper mines around here. We can use the rubbish to restore the scenery (although open pit mines are pretty cool to look at, and the Arizona town of Bisbee is built in one).
Other than that, I'm glad at least someone did the math so I didn't have to.
Why doesn't anybody listen? (Score:4, Interesting)
1.) If it falls, bad things will happen. As I type this there are probably at least 10 posts to this article moderated way up that point out how "safe" this thing would be coming down. Every single one has two flaws:
2.) People will now respond to this post saying that it won't fall down because the top will be in orbit. In order to keep the bottom of the beanstalk from whipping around the circumference of the earth every 90 minutes, you must be talking about putting the center of gravity into geostationary orbit. I've done the math. If you want to put the center of gravity of a cable with uniform density into geostationary orbit, it puts the top of your beanstalk well beyond lunar orbit (inverse square againt). And when the moon snaps off that top guess what happens.
To sum up: Not on my planet!
Re:Why doesn't anybody listen? (Score:3, Interesting)
The ribbon is 1 cm width from 0-10km, because that's where the atmosphere is important (winds) and it reduces wind drag. Everything higher than that is much thicker. It isn't important being thin at that point because it doesn't need to withstand impacts (the atmosphere shields it) and you don't need to worry about it burning up on reentry (as it's only 10 km).
As for the mass issue, look, this is trivial, and it's been done. Check out the FAQ, check out the proposal. It's 100,000 km long, and the top counterweight is only about 30,000 kg. Carbon nanotubes are reaaaallly light and strong. They rule.
As for the windspeed issue, at height, the air density is less as well, therefore the actual amount of force they place on the ribbon will be minimal.
Regarding your numbers, you have to remember that everyone's planning on tapering this thing: it doesn't have a constant density. Without a counterweight, a tapered ribbon would need 144,000 km to work - not the distance to the moon.They're planning on putting up a counterweight which is of order the size of the ribbon, bringing that down to 91,000 km. The density profile of the ribbon they want to use is pretty complicated: it'd take a bit of work to calculate it out, but go ahead: you'll find that they're right.
Space elevator CONFERENCE in Seattle today! (Score:3, Informative)
And yes, ny the way, they had a dinner last night at the Space Needle
Re:Easy target? (Score:2)
If you cut its connection with earth it will just hover there.
Re:Easy target? (Score:2)
Re:Easy target? (Score:2)
I would think that it could be controlled militarily. The obvious way would be for any nations that use it to either provide some kind of military forces (several countries have aircraft carriers, for instance, many others have submarines), or they could pay a 'security fee' to help support the operations of the other nations. I definitely think it's feasible.
You are right, though, the catastrophe if it snapped would be enormous. Perhaps you could make the bottom detachable in an emergency, so if you saw an attempt to break it in the middle, you could break the connection at the base and let it float off into space.
Just my $0.02
Re:Easy target? (Score:3, Informative)
Why don't you all just read the FAQ ? Let me quote:
For the portion that doesn't burn up in a fall- what effect will it have on the environment?
Honestly, it will make a little bit of a mess. But New York City tickertape parades have made bigger messes. Comparatively it will put much less dust, dirt, debris and chemicals into the environment than wildfires of the American west, any one of the large expendable rockets, or a month of natural meteors hitting Earth. The ribbon is light (7.5 kg/km) so, any pieces that fall to earth will slow down, in the air, to about the same terminal velocity as that of an open newspaper page falling. It will not have enough momentum to cause mechanical damage when it comes down. We have considered other health risks such as inhalation of very small fragments and believe this will not be a problem but we are conducting studies to make sure this isn't a problem. Since we are aware of the possible problems now we can design the elevator to avoid these problems.
Re:Easy target? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Optimistic (Score:2, Insightful)
>>this elevator could be a reality within 15 years...
Does anyone else think this is really really optimistic?
I guess this is why he said "could" and not "will"
Gravity WILL bring you back down (Score:2)
Think about it....
Re:Gravity WILL bring you back down (Score:2)
Geosynchronous orbit is right where the centripetal force exactly balances the force of gravity
This is true of orbits in general.
Geosynchronous orbit means that the orbital period is 24 hours. If the orbital plane of the satellite is not the same as the earth's equatorial plane, the satellite ground track will be a figure 8 pattern.
Geostationary orbit means that the orbital period is 24 hours and the satellite stays in the plane of the equator, so that it always sits above the same spot.
Re:Cool (Score:5, Funny)
Illinois, Ohio, and Toronto have found that the best place to stash garbage is in Michigan! They only charge $10 to $20 a ton to dump there (but up to $65 a ton elsewhere). You can't honestly tell me that transporting all the garbage to the middle of the Pacific ocean and launching it into space is actually cheaper than that.
Yearly, out of state garbage dumped in Michigan alone totals almost 10 million tons. This elevator will only lift 250 tons per year. I don't think that launching garbage or nuclear waste into space is very feasible.
Re:Very Unlikely (Score:2, Informative)
A Miasma of Bad Science (Score:5, Insightful)
Wow. There are so many scale errors here it's hard to tell where to start. First, What strain exactly would "snap the elevator in half"? It's a ribbon, and while it's certainly possible to break the ribbon, it's not likely to happen under normal operation, and the design specifies that they'll set it up in a location that minimizes the likelihood of high winds or lightning. Second, "Earth's rotation would slow down"?!? You can't be serious with this. The mass of this thing is so much less than that of the Earth that the slowdown would be indetectable with the most sensitive instruments we have, if we were actively looking for it. To take your example of the figure skater, imagine her spinning, then letting out a one inch long piece of the finest hair you can find. How much do you think she'll slow down? And last, why exactly would slowing Earth's rotation cause us to head for the Sun? The day would get to be more than twenty-four hours, but the speed the Earth moves around the Sun (that's "revolution", not "rotation") would not change in the least.
Go buy a book on physics.
Virg
Re:wow... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great news, but (Score:5, Insightful)
Point 1: Neo to attach to. Unnecessary. You can achieve the same thing with a really long teather and a 1 kg weight on the end. Did you not notice that the cable was 100,000 km long, when geosynch orbit is only 36,000 (miles or km I can't remember, but even if it is miles that would make it 57odd thousand km up, far less then the 100,00 required) the extra thousands of km are used to provide leverage and a decent ratio for the mass to be lifted.
Although I am curious to know what you mean by strong enough. All you need to do is get an object, in geosych orbit, move it to an outer orbit but keep it at the same angular velocity (how long it takes to orbit the earth) and the resulting centripetal force can be used to pull against when pulling up mass. 'Strong' neos aren't needed, a collection of cotton wool would do it, if there was enough and it was far enough out.
Point 2: Constant height. Not actually necessary, the water level is pretty flat (aside from tidal variations due to the moon and the sun) BUT the cable is under constant tension thus would forgive a certain amount of play. In fact the cable has to be at over 5 tonnes of tension at the base to be able to lift the mass required.
Point 3: Energy required for lift. Actually you are wrong again, the energy required is less. When you use a reaction engine fully half the energy required to boost you is wasted throwing mass out in the opposite direction. HOWEVER along with this is the fact that they are going to be using lasers to drive photovoltaic cells to drive electrical motors, and this could (in theory) be purely sunlight driven.
Point 4. Location. The ocean isn't too bad, a simple cargo ship deliver the cargo and it lifts. Sure its not rail or lorry but its good enough. Most of the oil the US needs is shipped via tankers, why can't a few satelites?
Point 5. Anti-gravity. (Ignoring the racist angle) this is an unproven experiment, and it should be noted that 2% is a little different to lifting the item into orbit.
As an aside, the cable itself will weigh in at a stunning 750 tonnes. Of that 480 tonnes (metric) will be above geo-synch orbit (assuming 36k km or should that be Mm???) and not likely to crash down.
I applaude them, but hope it does all work even though I have my doubts...
The tensile strength of the cable needs to be huge.. 7.5 kg per km, and that needs to hold around 270 tonnes, its a hell of a challenge....
Z.
Re:Great news, but (Score:2)
1. There's no NEO tether at the other end; rather, the cable stretches out thousands of km beyond the geosynch point.
2. It's attached to a floating platform in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
3. South Africa...whatever. Check your atlas.
4. Energy. A space elevator would be far more efficient than a rocket, so yes, Virginia, it would use much less energy.
5. Real-time adjustment of earth end: no idea what you're talking about here. The weight of the cable counterbalancing the bouyancy of the submerged portion of the platform would keep the platform stable. This is how all boats float.
Re:Great news, but (Score:2)
Read the article - it's not going to be tethered to anything on the space side. It's going to be kept in place by a combination of gravitational force on the Earth side and centrifugal force in the space side.
Computer control to keep the Earth end at a constant height (which essentially requires solving the n-body problem where n = several dozen) in real time is impossibly hard.
I'm sure the gravitational effect of Io will not be enought to distabilize a structure hold in place by centrifugal force (Want more centrifugal force? Make the line longer!!!)
Not to mention the fact that the engine to lift the elevator car has to put out the same energy that a rocket engine does (conservation of energy, heard of it?).
You sorta forgot that rockets go up with a lot of useless stuff that ends up falling down again - like fuel, 1st and 2nd stage engines, and basically most of the payload of the rocket at lift-off.
Also, and acording to the article (did i mention you should've read the article?), the lift will move cargo (and eventually passengers) at between 120 and 160 km/h.
Drag (which is a way of loosing energy - conservation of energy, remember?) is proporcional to speed. Any rocket trying to achieve low earth orbit will need to achieve a speed of around least 17,500 miles an hour (Space shuttle low orbit speed - http://seds.lpl.arizona.edu/ssa/docs/Space.Shuttl
Even assuming these issues could be magically fixed somehow, we have the socio-political issues. In order to be geosynchronous it has to be over the equator. Which is either in the ocean, in South Africa or in the middle of the Amazon. The ocean is inconvenient for mass transit on the elevator. The Amazon is needed for biodiversity. Which leaves South Africa--a political hotbed. Not that they'd want it--it'd be a huge eyesore, hovering on the horizon from hundreds of miles away. Even if we paid them to take it the PC crowd would say we were "exploiting the poor blacks" in SA.
The lift will be anchored to a floating platform in the middle of the Pacific ocean. (Did i mentioned that you should read the article?)
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I don't know who's worse - the author of this article or the moderator that rated it Interesting (at least it wasn't rated Insightful)
Research (Score:2)
Check the article. The phrases "floating platform" and "equatorial Pacific Ocean" are prominently featured.
Virg