Notes From 3rd Annual Space Elevator Conference 469
colonist writes "The Space Elevator: 3rd Annual International Conference was held recently. Blaise Gassend, a PhD student at MIT, took notes. The main obstacle is still the material: transferring the strength of the nanotube to the ribbon. Other topics include: the nanotube tether Centennial Challenge; Elevator 2010, a challenge for a 250 kg climber to climb a 16 km tether; objections and refinements to Bradley Edwards' design; non-equatorial space elevators; replacing the term 'space elevator' with 'space bridge'; testing the space elevator material on cable cars; science; defense and economics."
Incredible idea (Score:2, Interesting)
This will change everything. Transporting to space will be (relitive to rockets) DIRT CHEAP. Props to them for their vision and their crazy idea that jus
Re:Incredible idea (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Incredible idea (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Incredible idea (Score:2, Interesting)
Put a sufficiently heavy mass (like an asteroid) in geosync around the equator (just like the GPS satellites), and connect your ribbon.
Hey presto.
It's a simple enough concept, just the execution of it is difficult.
T.
Re:Incredible idea (Score:4, Informative)
Some augmentation satelites are though.
Jeroen
Re:Incredible idea (Score:2, Informative)
GPS info available here [si.edu]
T.
Re:Incredible idea (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Incredible idea (Score:5, Informative)
Well, actually, a little further out than GEO, so that the center of mass is at GEO.
As for wind -- well, you situate it where the wind is minimal. Remember, since it's synched, it's not generating "wind" by slicing through the air. All you'd have to worry about is the wind that is actually blowing past the (stationary) Earth.
Re:Incredible idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Incredible idea (Score:3, Informative)
It covers things like lightning, meteors, wind and other factors.
Re:Incredible idea (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing.
It's a ribbon. It's literally nearly equal to the weight of an equal width of Saran Wrap.
How much unrolled saran wrap do you have to drop on someone before it hurts them?
How many buildings will be devastated by having something that flimsy dropped on them?
The devastating space elevator fall is bad science fiction. If it breaks, stuff above will stay in orbit, and stuff below the break will fall harmlessly.
Re:Incredible idea (Score:3, Informative)
Playing too much Civilisation (Score:3, Funny)
P.S.
EMACS already does this.
Nothing there yet (Score:2)
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:2)
Maybe I should develop a plugin and sell it. Peeps like grandparent poster prolly couldn't resist buying it to increase reality in gameplay
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:2)
It bloody does. Industrial Sabotage? Poison Water Supply? Plant Nuclear Device?
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:5, Insightful)
And don't forget it'd be a tremendous icon of Western achievement. You'd better believe everyone in the US, or whatever country eventually builds one, would be proud as hell of it. The media would be going on and on about how it'll usher in a new age for mankind, and so on, and so forth. If terrorists could somehow take it out, wouldn't that have tremendous psychological value? Remember that they chose the World Trade Center and Pentagon to strike at us, two (or three) buildings that symbolized, to them, everything that's wrong with the US. Wouldn't a tower that reaches into the heavens (hello, Tower of Babel?) symbolize that even more?
It's quite reasonable to take terrorism into consideration when designing a structure. As long as you don't let it make the decision for you. Saying "We'll increase the no-fly zone from five miles to twenty five to give us time to shoot down hijacked planes" is good planning. Saying "We just can't eliminate the possibility of terrorism, let's just not build a space elevator" is not.
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:5, Insightful)
Remember The Oklahoma Bomb [wikipedia.org]?
Who are "us"?
Who are "them"?
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:5, Insightful)
What really irritates me is that this fear of terrorism is so unreasonable. It's almost akin to the "Won't someone think of the children scenario". The US has been the target of relatively few domestic attacks and of those, one was carried out by a US citizen. Despite this, the fear of terrorism has pervaded the national consciousness so fundamentally that any discussion is now subject to these apocalyptic "what if?" scenarios.
Yes it would be a very bad thing (tm) if someone crashed an airliner into a space elevator, but when that progresses from being a notable, if incredibly unlikely concern, to a point where such fear of the irrational drives society itself, then who cares what the "terrorists" do, they've already won. Of course we should build with the lunatic with a cause in mind, but build we must. This realisation is slowly being eroded. There is a phoenix risen from the ashes of 9/11 filled with hatred and fear, and it is a frightening beast indeed.
Europe has had to live with this for far longer than the US, yet they live in a far freer, far more secure environment than we could ever hope to have. I re-iterate, screw the terrorists. It's the only way we all win.
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:3, Interesting)
Why did the scifi writers think that an asteroid would be used as the counterweight? There's no reason for that. Carbon is cheap - moving an asteroid is not. Just make the cable twice as long, and use the rocket remains as the counterweight. Easy enough. Can we propagate this idea? Here it is again: no asteroid counterweight!
It's quite reasonable to take terrorism into consideration when designing a structure.
Thankfully, the design of the structure takes it
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:3, Insightful)
How have you managed to miss all articles?? (Score:2)
And then you get modded up by others who doesn't keep up?! :-)
Please RTFA/RTFM etc.
Sorry (Score:2)
Sorry. It was funny.
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wrong (and I'm not), but this is primary reason to build the space elevator: to put something up there to begin with. Sure we can add on to the space station but imagine the number of projects that'll open up when their funding support needs suddenly drops by 50% and more.
earpopping? transit entertainment? You're putting people on it? It's a cargo elevator in concept although I suppose you could put people in it if they were proper
Re:Playing too much Civilisation (Score:3, Insightful)
Nothing except the rest of the universe. Or are they adding that in later?
Simple (Score:4, Insightful)
Harsh? Yeah.
Unfortunately (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Unfortunately (Score:3, Funny)
I dont think i'm man enough for that task.......
Re:Unfortunately (Score:2)
THIS is why I bought a forty-gig MP3 player!
Frontiers of Construction (Score:5, Interesting)
OT:Re:Frontiers of Construction (Score:3, Informative)
Alternative names for 'space elevator' (Score:5, Interesting)
space bridge
space way
space rail
'Space bridge' got the most approval from the audience.
Re:Alternative names for 'space elevator' (Score:4, Interesting)
More catchier (Score:3, Funny)
The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:5, Interesting)
So what I'm wondering is, does the same apply to the weight supported by nanotubes and other molecular chains. I figure it has to be less of a degradation due to the ionic bonds involved, but it would seem to me that, unless some Quantum rule is involved dealing with extremely small-scale weight supporting chains, that they might never overcome this problem due to the sheer thinness of the tubes, chains, etc. It might be extremely strong material, but if it's width is only a few atoms wide, wouldn't this material be, at least in single lengths, more or less useless by the time it got to a respectable length? This is, of course, excluding bundles, which make the most sense, I'm really just curious if the same rule applies to nanotubes as applies to rope.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:2)
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:4, Insightful)
But don't worry -- the engineers looking into the starbridge know about this effect and include it. That's how they get estimates of the required tensile strength.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:4, Insightful)
It's the same principle as the chain rule - in that it's only as strong as the weakest link. Think of the rope as a bundle of miniscule chains and you're halfway there.
In theory a nanotube shouldn't have these defects. In practice...yeah right. I figure there will have to be a fairly major degree of over-engineering with regards to stress tolerances in this.
Projects like this are possible - hell even feasable, but humanity needs to pull it's finger out of it's ass to get these up and running. It's really simple - barring a sudden discovery of practical anti-gravity or some other esoteric technology we have until the fossil fuels run out to work out a way of getting bulk loads out of the gravity well. Otherwise, we're gonna be stuck here wallowing in our own filth forever.
We have passed the peak of oil production - easy to get supplies are starting to run low, and the rest of the oil is bound in things like "dirty shale" and are increasingly difficult to access. Time is running short, and posing and posturing do nobody any good.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:5, Informative)
Your example of a chain is flawed and doesn't match what you suggested for the rope - A chains strength doesn't weaken for each extra link because of "small flaws", it stays the strength of the weakest link regardless of number of links.
But the moment you start hanging it down you need to take into account the weight of the chain itself, and the chain, just as a rope, will be able to lift less additional weight the longer it is because the strain on any point of the chain/rope is equal to the weight attached PLUS the weight of all of the chain/rope below it.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:5, Insightful)
It's all about probabilities and statistical averages. And yes, that weight of the rope increases as the length increases, but the weight of the rope is usually trivial compared to the usable loading.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:3, Informative)
Speaking as someone who works in the oil and gas industry, I can say without hesitation that this is untrue. Peak oil has been looming for the last 10 years at least, yet it keeps being pushed ahead by improvements in recovery technology. This trend does not show any sign of slowing, at the moment. Remember, an average oil reservoir still has 85% of its original oil still there. Recovery factors these days have grown from 10-15% to 20-25% and rising. Yes, it is mor
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:5, Informative)
That's why you need a really strong material for a space elevator - if it wasn't for the weight of the "rope" itself you'd only have needed a material strong enough to handle the weight of whatever you wanted to transport up it, but that is a miniscule amount of the total strain on the elevator.
Re:The Sailor's Rope Rule (Score:5, Informative)
Ignoring the weight of the rope itself, probably the main reason for this rule-of-thumb is the difference between dynamic loading and static loading.
If you (accidentally) get something bouncing on a short rope, the bounce will damp out pretty quicky and the period of oscillation is short. If you get something bouncing on a long rope, it will bounce for a while, and the rope is stretched for much longer with each bounce. It doesn't take all that much of a bounce to double the load on a rope, and perhaps take it past its elastic limit.
I'm guessing, but I think that pre-synthetic ropes probably can be briefly overstretched without losing strength because they knit back together again. If you continuously overstretch them, the fibres probably don't get a chance to recover before the slide past each other a little more, and so on.
So my guess is this doesn't apply nearly so much to modern synthetic ropes. In the case of a space elevator, I'd hope they'd try really hard to avoid excess dynamic loading.
Nasa reports research funds for Space Bridge (Score:4, Funny)
Elevator:2010 information (Score:5, Interesting)
The Spaceward Foundation [spaceward.org] is creating the Elevator:2010 program:
Feasibility of the Space Elevator. (Score:5, Interesting)
Anywho. He spoke a couple years ago, subsequent to 3001's release on how at the time of writing, such a feat was nigh on impossible at this stage - as the materials to construct the 'elevator' were yet to be developed. Until now. The carbon molecule Buckminsterfullerene ( C60 ), also known as 'Fullerene', is supposedly strong enough to actually make such a concept a reality - which is in part the reason the space elevator was hurled back into the limelight of late.
I think its a fascinating idea - which until we develop propulsion systems beyond the primative scope of the 1,000+ year old firecracker concept, certainly seems a more elegant way for the species to venture into Space more regulary. Or, at the very least, be the catalyst for what could perhaps become the initial stepping stones to establishing a permanent presence in space which will hopefully later lead to space initiated launches.
Re:Feasibility of the Space Elevator (Score:4, Informative)
What about intermediate designs? (Score:5, Insightful)
Brin's electromagnetically boosted tether design (Tank Farm Dynamo, 1983) would reduce the amount of delta-vee needed for orbit, at least allowing for cheaper shuttles. It's not much of a benefit, but we could build it today.
A rotating tether that dipped into the atmosphere would allow much greater safety margins and have a much less dangerous failure mode. You could practically rendezvous with one from an X-prize vehicle, and you wouldn't need to build a climber... just grab the tether, hold on for one rotation, and let go.
The big problem of course is that extra delta-vee isn't free, and the tether would lose altitude every time it's used (this is a problem for all tether designs, really). So, the throughput rate would be limited by the time needed to re-boost the tether between launches: using a high-efficiency low-thrust drive would be cheapest but require the longest "recharge" time.
Longer term, it would get a boost from de-orbiting mass from space: if you return a ship of the same mass to Earth at the same time as you boost one to orbit the net delta-vee is zero. If you have more ships going up than coming down, bring a nickel-iron asteroid into orbit and just feed a chunk of metal that weighs the same as the ship in from a higher orbit, it'd get de-orbited and released at 100km. Make it in an airfoil shape (a crude glider) and you can recover it... just deliver it to an asteroid-iron junkyard out in the middle of New Mexico or something.
THAT would make Rutan's barnstormer spacecraft a stage in developing a new industry, instead of a stunt.
More info from JPL. (Score:3, Interesting)
Text of "Tank Farm Dynamo" at Orbit 6 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about intermediate designs? (Score:3, Interesting)
The Earth isn't part of the system. The tether as a whole is in freefall and the low end is not fixed to the Earth... in the most practical designs it's actually on a floating platform or terminates outside the atmosphere. The part of the tether that's in contact with the earth is the thinnest and weakest part of the whole system, and can't be used to tug the whole structure around like
Space bridge? (Score:3, Funny)
Won't somebody please think of the hilarious Slashdot jokes?
Killed by tether (Score:2)
Re:Killed by tether (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Killed by tether (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Everything above the cut would stay in orbit. Everything below the cut would fall to Earth. The base will be on the West side of the Atlantic Ocean and will therefore have hundreds of miles of water to its East. Most of the dangerous things that can cut it are in LEO, which is less than "hundreds of miles" away. So more than likely everything that falls to Earth will fall into the Ocean.
2. Just because the cable has high tensile strength that doesn't mean it is indestructible. You can bind a person's hands with speaker wire and no matter how strong the person is, they wont be able to break free. But that doesn't mean the wire is magically indestructible. It's just wire.
3. In the current issue of Discover Magazine, the concept they write about calls for a cable a few feet across, but only as thick as a sheet of paper. I don't know why so many people assume we are talking about an elevator to lift humans. The first several incarnations will be for light cargo only. Anyway, a cable as thin as a sheet of paper will mostly burn up as it falls through the atmosphere. If any of it survives, it will be shattered into pieces (not together as a whole cable) and will have the same terminal velocity as a sheet of paper. It will just flutter to the ground without hurting anyone. If you are lucky enough to live in the debris path, you can collect the stuff up and sell it on ebay.
So many people make the mistake of assuming that there is some horrible danger that only they will recognize. As if hundreds of scientists around the world are diligently studying this and then Frans Faase of slashdot comes along and says, "what about this problem here?" And all those scientists will just throw up their hands and say "oh god, we all have PhDs but we didn't think of that - we aren't as smart as Frans." Right.
What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:3, Informative)
The angular momentum for the orbit comes from the rotation of the earth. If you would launch billions of tons of rock using a space elevator, the rotation of the earth would slow down noticeably.
Re:What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:3, Informative)
When the tether is in place but no payloads move up or down, the top of the tether is directly overhead of the base station, so there is no net force on the top. But when a payload moves upwards, it will create a coriolis force which pulls the tether slightly backwards relative to the rotation of the earth.
Thus the force of the part of the tether below the payload has a component in the direction of the orbital motion of the payload, and the te
Re:What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:3, Informative)
But in all designs I know there is a contact between tether and ground. Since the tether is bent slightly backwards by the coriolis force of the upward-moving climber, there is a force component at the anchor point that is parallel to the motion of the attachment point, so angular momentum is transferred.
Since the payload moves very slowly and is much lighter than the tether, the tether at the attachment point is almost vertical,
Re:What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:3, Interesting)
- Gaining altitude: You still need the same energy in the space elevator
- Gaining orbital speed: This will have to be compensated by propulsion at the top of the elevator, but is also the same as in a regular loss.
- Atmospheric drag: This will be less because the cargo can move slower than a rocket. But still, must of the dynamic pressure experienced in a rocket is during the first minute of launch. After this, there's not muc
Re:What provides the orbital speed of the cargo? (Score:3, Interesting)
Rotovator(tm) (Score:5, Interesting)
Current proposals [tethers.com] for implementation of the Hans Moravec's original design [cmu.edu] rely on a hypersonic air-breather of advanced aerodynamic design like the Boeing DF-9 (that exists only on paper).
Can /. readers think of anything likely come along in the near future that could take
paylods to 100km and mach 12?
Probably the same thing that is driving the bureaucrats to make all this noise about space elevators now [xprize.org].
A key to the Rotovator(tm) is getting hub mass in place to keep it out of the atmosphere while it picks up mass from 100km@mach12 -- but that mass can be any old space junk -- at least at the hub where it counts the most for high strength materials like carbon nanotubes. However, you can do a Rotovator(tm) with off-the-shelf commercially available fibers and still have a factor of 2.
Nice thing about Rotovators(tm) is that they can be built with much lower capitaliztion over a much shorter period of time using existing commercial materials. All you need is a bunch of mass orbiting near earth, some quite-doable tethers, and sufficient manuverability and speed in the atmospheric leg to hook up with the tether as it reaches the nadir.
Mod this up! (Score:3, Informative)
This system [tethers.com] could double the payload capacity of launchers to geosynchronous transfer orbit or pick up small payloads from suborbital trajectories.
This could be built today. Rotovators are also a very good addition
intermediate goals (Score:3, Insightful)
How about something possibly a bit more realistic, like a 250kg climber climbing a 50 meter tether.
The problem that I have with the space elevator fanatics is that they are setting goals well in advance of the science and engineering which usually leads to disillusionment and could scare away investors in what is a promising area of development. Carbon nanotubules hold great promise, but it is still just promise until they can be manufactured in suffient lengths and with sufficient ease to be practical for any use let alone a space elevator.
If carbon nanotubules are going to be useful, we will see them used as building materials for much smallers things first. Perhaps as robotic tendons, or longer bridge spans, weaved into lighter armor for vehicles... I could think of many important applications which could use shorter easier to make lengths of nanotubules and would provide the neccessary experience to determine if a space elevator might be practical.
Sometimes small steps are big.
Re:intermediate goals (Score:3, Informative)
But it's only been a few years since the first carbon nanotubes were created. The first were only nanometers long. Then others reported making some that were micrometers long. And a couple of months ago, there was the first report of millimeter-long nanotubes [azonano.com].
This is rather rapid progress, around 9 orders of magnitude in about a decade. And th
Re:More space elevator details? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:More space elevator details? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:More space elevator details? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:More space elevator details? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:16km tether? (Score:2)
Jeroen
Re:16km tether? (Score:3, Insightful)
16km is a little too high for a helicopter (they top out at about 7-8km), but it's well within the reasonably altitude range for a large helium baloon.
Re:16km tether? (Score:2)
If amateur home made ballon gets 79 809 (feet / kilometer) = 24.3257832 km then multimillion funded carbon nanotube project could make or buy a ballon that could work as counter weight. The problems from winds maybe dealt with small jets attached to it. And problem with fuel... Hmm use another balloon for refuelling. And make balloon REALLY big, as the weight of balloon and the surface area for wind grows R while lift grows R so you could get better fuel ratio for
Re:ho hum (Score:2, Informative)
Better to have a comparably near zero cost elevator than spending gadzillions launching a moonbase into space piece by piece using rockets.
Economic space access (Score:4, Informative)
Re:ho hum (Score:2)
You have a big counterweight in geosynchronous orbit. The mass you launch is significantly smaller.
Once it gets up there it is also in a geosynchronous orbit and you simply let go of it and it will stay in orbit.
Jeroen
Re:Tower of babel. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Insightful? (Score:4, Informative)
But there is archeological evidence for a lot of towers in what is now Iraq and Iran.
Among them some very big ones in babylon.
Jeroen
Re:Tower of babel. (Score:2)
I realise this is almost certainly a troll, but hey, any excuse to add actual information to the discussion.
The Tower of Babel is a legend from Christian mythology. In the very early days of humanity, it goes, people only spoke one language. They decided to build a tower that stretched all the way to heaven. God thought this was presumptious, and prevented the construction of the tower by cursing the people so that they spoke different languages and could no longer u
Re:Tower of babel. (Score:2)
Since then, and particularly since Everest was conquered and modern aviation and space flight have developed, god keeps on moving Heaven higher and higher up since the old "many languages" curse has been quite successfully worked around. Every time astronomers
Re:Space recycling (Score:2)
well, in case you're not joking... How the hell would you gather it up and then, having gathered it, how would you bind it together so you could attach the tether to it?
You know, having typed that reply, I really, really hope you're waiting to be modded funny...
Re:Space recycling (Score:2)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2)
I'm not an expert, but, IIRC, Carbon Nanotubes are very light (there was a plan to reduce a light infantry loadout to 60lbs.), and suitable for armour.
I heard about them a long time ago, so my memory might not be right.
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2)
Even with a no-fly zone it would still be relatively easy to take down the elevator, think missile.
More probably the first elevator will probably be extremely expensive but within a few decades it will come within the reach or more nations and maybe even corporations and amateurs, like we are seeing now with rocket-based space access (well the amateurs aren't there yet but they are certainly trying).
During the conference there wa
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:3, Insightful)
you won't EVER create such a world, there's always going to be someone wanting to spoil the party for the rest(US has even domestic troublemakers). so if you take the attitude that you won't do anything before they're settled down... guess what? you'll end up doing nothing.
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:4, Insightful)
We're talking about an isolated platform in the middle of the south pacific ocean with nothing around it for hundreds of miles..... there have to be better targets for a terrorists with ICBMs at their disposal.
Get real... this is not political.... and it is virtually isolated from any sort of assault, whether it be from China or from Osama...
The only reason the towers were vulnerable is that they were within range of a very short sighted attack... which had no impact on our security, our national security... but only caused devastating damage to innocent families.
Thats assuming: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2, Informative)
Just about 0 Teratons of TNT IIRC. The carbon nanotube ribbon proposed doesn't weigh much and has awful aerodynamics, and for the most part would just flutter down. And that's only the part below the break point, which is going to be pretty low, if it's planes were worried about.
Carbon Nanotubes Are Very Strong (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:5, Insightful)
It'll be more like a 100-mile piece of paper fluttering to the ground. The ribbon will be extremely light. It needs to be, or it can't hold up its own weight. Why don't you go read the Space Elevator FAQ [www.isr.us] before displaying your ignorance?
Re:Practical problems to sort out first (Score:2)
Everything above the impact zone would hang there, or possibly spring upwards.
Everything below the impact zone would fall at terminal velocity. As the ribon is so thin and light this is negligable, no worse then a leaf falling in Fall, and probably more comparable to a snowlfake. The energy on impact per square mile would be less then a fart.
Re:Sadly, Too big a Terrorist Target. (Score:3, Insightful)
how does the shuttle cope with being exploded? it doesn't. how would spaceshipone cope with it? it doesn't. how woul....
they're not going to be able to design it to be invulnurable to everything possible of course, that's where groundside security comes in.. it needs a no flight zone & etc anyways.
Maybe I read too much sci-fi, but... (Score:2)
Assume we have that 16km long fiber and solved the problem, that the fiber won't curl up around earth.
We lift up some cargo to the remote point, let it rotate until it faces the desired destination -- and then cut off the fiber and let the cargo flow accelerated by earth rotation. Might be interesting for probes where travel time is not a real issue.
And if we do it with lot/heavy enough stuff, then we even get longer days as a side effect :)
</sci-fi mode>
Re:Sadly, Too big a Terrorist Target. (Score:5, Interesting)
the military of the country that builds this wonderous weapons platform will let see to the safety of the tether, you can bet on that.
Re:Sadly, Too big a Terrorist Target. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Sadly, Too big a Terrorist Target. (Score:3, Insightful)
Mmmmm, cowardice.
-PS
Re:Van Allen belt destroys carbon nanotubes (Score:3, Interesting)
To quote the original Bradley Edwards paper "The Space Elevator",
"The segments of the cable in Earth's radiation belts will experience less than 3Mrad per year (energetic electrons and protons) [Daly, 1996]. Studies of epoxy/carbon fiber composites (epoxy/nanotube composites would be expected to be comparable or better) have found them to be radiatio