Space Elevators Could Be Lethal 428
Maggie McKee writes, "A new study reports that passengers on space elevators of current design could be killed by radiation. Even traveling at 200 kilometers per hour, passengers would spend several days in the Van Allen radiation belts, long enough to kill them." Looks like the elevator scientists will get this one solved before liftoff.
tinfoil hats (Score:5, Funny)
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Who put all that junk in your trunk?
Re:Math error? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Math error? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Math error? (Score:5, Informative)
Saying the cable is in geosynchronous orbit is analogous to saying that the cables on a suspension bridge are "flying".
Re:Math error? (Score:4, Funny)
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Perhaps if they played light, pleasant music continuously in the background, it would calm the passengers and make them think tranquil thoughts.
Aqua viva (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Aqua viva (Score:4, Insightful)
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'Course that'll tend to block the windows.
Unless we start making transparent aluminum in space.
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I'll just take my water and my covered wagon and settle up there...you guys can cook on the return trip if you like. I'll be busy testing zero-G alcohol abuse.
Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Funny)
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Sure, why not? It worked for Apollo. The expensive part of a spaceflight is liftoff, and that's where a space elevator really helps. Even if you've got to bring along a capsule to come home, you've still saved the costs of a Bloody Huge Rocket to get to orbit in the first place.
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And no, I'm not joking; if farms are at all feasible, you'd want them, not just to supplement the diet of the population in space, but also to regenerate oxygen from carbon dioxide.
Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Insightful)
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"Hey Doc, everytime I use my space elevator to go to geosync orbit I die of radiation in the Van Allen belt!"
The doctor looks at him and says, "Then don't do that!".
Just let the humans off at LEO and keep sending the Sats and such up to GSO.
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No, you fool! (Score:5, Funny)
And just where do you think you're going to get pizza for the return journey. No, my friend, these are critical protective pizzas, not for eating. In space, there are no wood-burning ovens. Or mozarella.
Order the pizzas frozen from Domino's so you won't be tempted to actually eat them.
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The pizza shield would be extra thick, for extra safety and to ensure a reasonable amount could be eaten without endangering the passengers.
And just where do you think you're going to get pizza for the return journey.
Once we have the space elevator, lifting an automated pizzaria into space would be relatively cheap.
Re:No, you fool! (Score:5, Funny)
I forsee a Pepperoni gap between us and the Russkies.
Re:No, you fool! (Score:5, Funny)
Yes! Space-based pizza infrastructure doesn't have the inherent weight problem that a ground-based one does, so we could theoretically build truly gigantic pizza ovens, powered with nuclear weapons. Let's ressurect Cold War tech for the Cold Pizza War!
I forsee a Pepperoni gap between us and the Russkies.
I'm afraid it's the Italians we'll have to be worried about. I hear they're already planning a space-based pizza-pie so large that with it's crust side facing earth it would appear as large and bright as the moon from the ground. It's codenamed Amore, and I hear they already have a nationalistic song about it.
We could go on for days
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Isotopes go away. Pull the ionizing radiation away and the radiation goes too. Neutron flux is a different
story, but in that case, you're altering the atomic structure and causing isotopes to form...
Gah... Isotopes go == Ionizing radiations go (Score:2)
Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Interesting)
Radiation - unlike radioactive particles - won't cause any further radioactivity within water.
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Hard water may be a problem here, but have you had to drink heavy water?
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Heavy water is unable to sustain cell division, by not forming hydrogen bonds necessary for our biochemistry with the same ease. But apparently, it doesn't really interfere either.
Re:Aqua viva (Score:5, Insightful)
Your right. I mean look at the lamp next to you pumping out radiation when you turn it off it doesn't just go away!
Actually most of the radiation in the Van Allen belts would possibly heat the water a little. a tiny amount might convert some of it to deuterium and maybe He3.
Another option would be to use really powerful magnets to shield the car. The radiation in the belts is there because it is charged and is earth's magnetic field keeps it deflects it. Can you say superconductors?
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You'll definitely have a carrer in Engineering once the Federation starts up. I'm pretty sure they frequently ran out of this stuff in all five series.
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Why? who needs humans! (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem it solves is CHEAP transport into space for cargo. NOT people. robots will be better than humans for nearly all space work. It will be a long time before we NEED human space transport.
Re:Aqua viva (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Yeah - Like China will build a 4000 mile long wall."
"Yeah - We are going to build a tunnel under the English Channel."
"Yeah - We are going to dig a ditch to let boats cross America."
"Yeah - The Egyptians are going to build a gigantic pyramid that will still be standing in 4500 years."
"Yeah - We will propel a highly explosive cargo ship to the moon carrying people."
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"Yeah - And I'm a Chinese jet pilot."
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snarkd
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Oh, the horror! (Score:4, Insightful)
Everybody panic! Apparently, "a little more expensive" == "potentially lethal"!
I guess people should buy from Wal Mart instead of Target, since the latter is "a little more expensive". Obviously making a purchase at Target will kill you. I love sensationalist headlines.
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Potentially lethal because of the radiation, which in turn makes it a little more expensive. NOT potentially lethal because its a little more expensive.
I really hope you were trolling
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Re:Oh, the horror! (Score:5, Informative)
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The full, in-context quote is: "I'm confident that we can solve it," Jorgensen says of the radiation problem, "but it's going to make things a little more complicated and a little more expensive."
=Smidge=
Who cares about it being a little more expensive (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Who cares about it being a little more expensiv (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, unlike other get-rich-in-space-schemes like tourism, a Space Elevator would be a major revenue generator, and not just a novelty. With the ability to safely lift tons of material into space on a daily basis, a lot of industries would become viable: mining, solar power satellites, regular interplanetary travel, zero-gravity factories, non-trivial space stations, etc. Oh yeah, tourism too.
Space right now is like the Wild West before the invention of the train. You can send a few people out there, sure, but it'll never really be settled in any non-trivial way until there is a bulk-shipping infrastructure in place.
Jeez (Score:2)
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Of course article and Wikipedia all agree that adding complete shielding isn't impossible.
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Water shield? (Score:2)
Now I will go RTFA.
ya think? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Rockets for humans, elevators for cargo (Score:3, Insightful)
And the downward trip is easy - drop capsules with parachutes are a lot simpler and more reliable than fancier rockets like
Thank you, whistleblower!! (Score:5, Funny)
Thank you Maggie McKee, for planting a seed for the grassroots "Space Elevator Safety" movement!!
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I'm suprised. (Score:2)
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Rockets? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Rockets? (Score:5, Funny)
How much thrust could a rocket thruster thrust if a rocket thruster could thrust rockets?
No significant difference (Score:3, Informative)
Acceleration toward an object due to gravity is given by g = GM/r^2, where G = 6.67e-11 is the gravitational constant, M is the mass of the object, and r is the distance from the center of mass of the object. The mass of the earth is about 5.97e24 kilograms, and its mean radius is about 6.37e6 meters. Thus, the acceleration due to gravity at the planet's surface is
Was this widely known? (Score:2)
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As for going down, if we've started mining the asteroids, it'd make sense to replace the water tank/jacket with one of ore, instead of crashlanding the ore in the ocean. Alternately, until we ship up water-reclamation facilities, they could send wastewater back.
flame on! (Score:2)
Lack of caffine has rendered me unable to come up with other Van Allen refs from SF etc
Anyone?
The two rubs (Score:5, Informative)
The article says that you may not want to add shielding because of the added mass. Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] says that "an object satellite shielded by 3 mm of aluminum will receive about 2500 rem (25 Sv) per year." I don't know how this would translate for people going through the area, but 3 mm of aluminum doesn't weigh much.
Re:The two rubs (Score:4, Informative)
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Either your information is out of date or is for a specific state (in which case it is trumped by the federal limit). The federal limit is 100 mrem (1 mSev) per year [anl.gov] (not the actual legislation but references the federal limit, I believe the number was last changed in 1998). If you know anything about radiation then you know that the federally imposed limit is absolutely ridiculous, it i
Plenty of time (Score:3, Insightful)
You betcha they will. Compared to the problem of running a cable tens of thousands of miles straight up, and strong enough not to tear under its own weight, this sounds downright trivial. We're still a dozen orders of magnitude off.
Go Fast (Score:2)
Re:Go Fast (Score:4, Funny)
MadCow.
Stupid headline (Score:5, Funny)
So can regular ones [timesonline.co.uk]. Your point?
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space elevator - environmental impact (Score:2, Insightful)
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Just use a Mass Driver (Score:5, Funny)
C'mon, COMMON SENSE! (Score:2, Interesting)
For all the engineers here: why would you want to build a cable tens of thousands of miles long out of currently UNAVAILABLE materials (unobtanium) to slowly ratchet up one payload at a time? It's a horrid idea, and it STILL takes just as much actual energy to put anything in orbit...just it does so pathetically slowly.
The plan is to use PHOTOVOLTAIC PANELS to receive the energy being beamed from the ground. That is a pathet
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There's something else you've overlooked: A car coming DOWN can use regenerative braking and feed power INTO the rails. If we're going to be mining for metals in space, we might wind up generating more electricity from the cars coming down than we'd spend in bringin
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Re:C'mon, COMMON SENSE! (Score:5, Informative)
I don't think you've thought it through. Of course angular momentum isn't free, but that doesn't mean that you have to send things down the cable to keep the elevator from deorbiting. Once a unit of payload mass is lifted past the center of gravity of the cable, it effectively becomes part of the counterweight, increasing the amount of mass the space elevator is capable of lifting from then on (up to the point where the increased tension would cause the cable to snap, anyway).
So where does the "non-free" angular momentum come from? From the angular momentum of the Earth, of course... every time something goes up the elevator, the Earth spins a tiny bit slower -- similar to how an ice skater spins more slowly after she extends her arms. Fortunately, the Earth is massive enough compared to us humans that we'd never conceivably make a noticeable dent in Earth's momentum reserves (famous last words?
That said, a second parallel "down" elevator near the "up" elevator might be useful at some point, for more efficient round trips. But that's for later, the first task is to get a one-way elevator working.
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And that's just deliberate sabotage or attack : accidental losses could cut the cable at any time. Once it's cut, we start over.
My proposed array of lasers on the ground, working in parallel (there would be a _LOT_ of them, at least 10,000 separately powered and housed la
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Why would we research unavailable materials? To make those materials obtainable. After they are obtained and the structure built, most of what you are bitching about will be trivial. You don't beam power up to the transport module. You have a power generator in deep space where it is free and plentyful and then you send it back down the cable to the surface where it can power cities. Along the way, the transport module can tap into that and use it for a constant acceleration for a realativly speedy ride up
Re:C'mon, COMMON SENSE! (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it doesn't. Most of the energy used by a rocket goes into the exhaust's temperature and velocity, not into the payload's velocity. Better yet, much of the energy that goes into a space elevator payload comes from the Earth's angular momentum, not from the beamed power source.
You're right that laser launch may be a good idea, and you're right that the materials necessary to build a geosynchronous tether on Earth do not exist in bulk and may never be good enough... but there's obviously still a gap between the amount of passion you've spent learning about both subjects and the amount you spend speaking about them. Calm down, take a deep breath, and back slowly away from the Caps Lock key...
Other risks! (Score:5, Funny)
Hybrid solution (Score:4, Informative)
We've made it through the Van Allens before, we'll figure out how to do it again.
And, anything can kill you, really, so long as it's an action. Space elevators aren't lethal in and of themselves. Organ failure due to blunt trauma, rapid depressurization, radiation poisoning; these can kill you. An elevator cannot. It's an inanimate object. Well, unless you're on acid. Then you're on your own, kid.
Stupid argument (Score:2)
Yes, radiation is OCCASIONALLY an issue, when the sun starts to get excited, so you have a shielded area that you restrict movement to when that happens. The sun telegraphs it's bad moves, generally giving us more than enough time to get to shelter. It is what they do on every Space Station ever created, and there is no reason they could not do the same on the elevator.
Well - DUH! (Score:2)
Question: will passing through van allen belts without shielding cause harm to humans?
Answer: Yes.
Next time you need a stupid answer to a stupid question, I'll provide it free!
I simply can't understand why this would be news of ANY type! I mean, come ON - if it wasn't DEAD OBVIOUS, what would be?
So, the solution is to ensure that humans travel inside a tank, which is surrounded by 50cm of water, or 30 cm of polyethylene.
BIG HAIRY DEAL!
1) Take clean water UP.
2) Bring dirty
Well known effects of Van Allen Belt radiation... (Score:5, Funny)
Forget the passengers -- worry about the structure (Score:5, Insightful)
High doses of radiation do strange things to materials -- increase cross-links, damage coherent structure, add skillions of crystal defects. If you lower a nice flexible, white piece of polyethelene plastic into a nuclear reactor for a while, you are liable to pull out a yellow, harder, brittle, fragile piece that has the same overall shape.
If I understand the nature of the space elevator right, each particle "hit" would tear apart a carbon nanotube, gradually shortening the average tube length and weakening the whole bulk structure. I'm sure someone has thought of this effect, but we haven't seen much of it in the space elevator press packets.
Earning the Penthouse Suite (Score:4, Interesting)
The other solution they're not considering in that article is to engineer the elevator car to travel inside the cable, rather than outside. Use the mass necessary for tensile strength for radiation shielding, too.
These are 30 second solutions. I'm sure the next decades before we actually deploy the spacehooks will find lots of better solutions.
Killed? (Score:5, Funny)
You guys can't fool me, I saw that documentary about those people on the space station. I wanna be the one who can be all stretchy!
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Also, the thickest part of the cable is in the middle, not the ends. it is not pulling away from the earth at all, so the anchor doesn't actually need to support any weight, it is just nice to have a stable place to attach your elevator cars to.
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