Still More on Space Elevators 41
parseexception writes "The NYTimes is reporting
Not Science Fiction: An Elevator to Space. Not a whole lot of technical detail but good read. It is interesting to see alternatives to current space technologies being explored."
Happy Google linky no reg (Score:5, Informative)
Fountains of Paradise (Score:5, Informative)
Right now, as Clarke envisioned, carbon nanotubes are the only engineering material that could be used to make this elevator. The basic technological question is whether we will ever be able to make cheap and long nanotubes. Despite the enthusiasm for a space elevator in the NYT article, we really have no idea how to do that. And any cost estimates like "$6 billion" are very immature without that kind of detail.
Re:Fountains of Paradise (Score:1)
The simplest form of a space tether is essentially a high-tech version of that bronze-age weapon, the sling. A tether for sending satellites to higher orbits, or spacecraft on lunar or planetary trajectories can be achieved with *existing* materials, like kevlar or spectra.
This form of tether concept is being investigated by NASA.
A second form of space tether -the hypersonic skyhoo
Cool (Score:2)
The good publicity drumming up the imaginations of people in this country can only get this thing built faster. The technology needed for the ribbon is almost perfected. In 5-10 years or so (maybe after all this terrorism and war bs has ended) this thing might really get off the ground and the m
Re:Cool (Score:1)
pun intended?
Re:Cool (Score:2)
All we need is for the ball to get rolling... (Score:4, Interesting)
My theory has always been that once we have a hotel on the moon, due to it's gravity, people will not have as much of a hard time adapting to it for their vacation, more hotels will open up in competition. Initially, a lot of money would be spent setting up, but the costs of everything would continue to go down. Before we knew it, we would have faster propulsion technologies, better gravity-like technology, and we would be off to Mars for our next resort, resulting in even better competition for innovation.
space elevator [amazon.com]
Re:All we need is for the ball to get rolling... (Score:1)
Space elevator old news? (Score:3, Funny)
Space elevator news (Score:5, Informative)
I've put in a request... hopefully our headlines will be added as a slashbox here soon.
This "Space Elevator" seems cool and all, but (Score:4, Funny)
Not [slashdot.org] one [slashdot.org] thing. [slashdot.org]
Re:This "Space Elevator" seems cool and all, but (Score:1)
From signage found only on California elevators... (Score:3, Funny)
kind of funey (Score:1)
Re:kind of funey (Score:2)
Balance (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Balance (Score:1)
Re:Balance (Score:2)
Re:Balance (Score:2)
If the shuttle approached the satellite from along its orbital path (the path of its velocity) or the path perpendicular to it, then it wouldn't change (in front of/behind it, or left/right of it). If it approached along its radial vector, it would change (above/below it).
If it grabbed along the radial vector, the shuttle and t
Re:Balance (Score:1, Informative)
Orbital paths are dictated by velocity and altitude.
Any objects,regardless of differances in mass, at a given velocity and altitude will orbit along the same path.
Re:Balance (Score:2)
Orbital paths are dictated by velocity and altitude of the center of mass.
Move the center of mass, you change the orbit of the object. So the point that he made is valid, if not for the reason he thought (or you thought that he thought).
This isn't a problem in this case, as others have pointed out, for many reasons. First, it's a trivial mass compared to the elevator mass. So it's not going to significantly change things at all.
Second, even slightly altering the center of mass like this wou
Re:It's all about balance! (Score:2)
Actually I would suggest some liquid movement tanks high and low on the counterweight to maintain the balance without actually having to shorten the cable/distance to the balance point. Or you could have some type of elevator/freight system moving large plugs/masses of rock up and down to do the job. Better yet, both, having a dual system (or even ternary) would make sense considering the importance of balancing the system...*GRIN* I would do a great deal of work making it as foolproof as possible cause go
Re:It's all about balance! (Score:2)
6 hours? No way. 2 weeks, nominally.
The whole reason a space elevator wins over a rocket is because you can avoid air resistance by going slow. In 6 hours, you might as well be using a rocket. You're talking about 60,000 km, so roughly 10,000 km an *hour*.
There's another problem with a 6 hour trip, too - the speed of sound in the elevator produces about a 7 hour natural vibration. A 6 hour trip means that you're actually travelling su
Re:It's all about balance! (Score:2)
Damage to the ribbon is a good re
I hope (Score:3, Funny)
escape velocity? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:escape velocity? (Score:2)
At a very basic level.
Remember that the Earth rotates--right now, you're moving at, what, about 2,000 mph? As you go straight up, relative to a point on the surface, your speed increases because you're still completing one rotation / day. Once you get up to geostationary orbit, you've got (at least) the necessary escape velocity. (I also suspect that e.v. goes down as altitude increases, but I'm not certain.)
As for the black hole--if you managed to place a ca
Re:escape velocity? (Score:2)
Remember that the Earth rotates--right now, you're moving at, what, about 2,000 mph? As you go straight up, relative to a point on the surface, your speed increases because you're still completing one rotation / day. Once you get up to geostationary orbit, you've got (at least) the necessary escape velocity. (I also suspect that e.v. goes down as altitude increases, but I'm not certain.)
No. Escape velocity is what you get when you set kinetic energy = potential energy. Kinetic energy is T = 1/2 mv^2, po
Re:escape velocity? (Score:2)
There is no way you could build a space elevator out of a black hole
Given everything we know, yes. But "it's impossible" has never stopped hypothetical science fiction before
Re:escape velocity? (Score:2)
They are. The event horizon is not a true discontinuity in space. To an observer moving inward, nothing weird happens at the event horizon. The singularity is a discontinuity in space, and an indestructible 'observer' would see something weird happen at the singularity.
H
Re:escape velocity? (Score:2)
I don't remember saying that... that's definitely not true. The Schwarzschild solution has an event horizon even if it's static.
The problem is that you've got to worry about reference frames quite a bit here. For the observer at infinity, space and time seem infinitely stretched out as you approach the event horizon.
For the observer falling INTO the black hole, nothing weird happens at all near