Space Rope Trick Experiment Goes Awry 200
Tjeerd writes "An experiment that envisaged sending a parcel from space to Earth on a 30-kilometre tether fell short of its goal yesterday when the long fibre rope did not fully unwind, Russian Mission Control said.
It was intended to deliver a spherical capsule, called Fotino, attached to the end of the tether back to Earth — a relatively simple and cheap technology that could be used in the future to retrieve bulkier cargoes from space.""
Actually... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Actually... (Score:5, Informative)
Tether Enabled SSTO (Score:5, Informative)
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More Cosmic Rope Tricks [strangehorizons.com]
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Re:Tether Enabled SSTO (Score:5, Informative)
In addition, power can be beamed to the Rotorvator from the earth using lasers or microwaves, which further reduces the weight of the entire system.
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Rotavators are tricky; they're not completely immune to drag, either. I did some off-the cuff calculations a while back, and they didn't look promising at all. When you have even a thin cable moving through rarified atmosphere, that helps, but the cable has to be very long, so it still has significant cross-sectional area, and hypersonic speeds are really problematic. Even though the cable
after a thourough scientific analysis ... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:after a thourough scientific analysis ... (Score:5, Funny)
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After a minute and a half on Google. (Score:3, Interesting)
The tether was made of Dyneema.
Wikipedia says this is a synonym for ultra high molecular weight polyethylene
Regarding the weaknesses of UHMWPE, thermal properties are highlighted and consist of the following:
The weak bonding between olefin molecules allows local thermal excitations to disrupt the crystalline order of a given chain piece-by-piece, giving it much poorer heat resistance than other high-strength fibers. Its melting point is around 144 to 152 degrees Celsius, a
Re:After a minute and a half on Google. (Score:5, Informative)
There's no way that they didn't consider the temperature of the tether. You consider the temperature of *everything* that goes into space.
What probably ruined this experiment is what ruined past experiments: oscillations. You can get axial oscillations from all sorts of sources, even things as little as variations in the speed of the motor can build up because of resonance. There's almost nothing to dampen them. We've had tethers outright snap because of this. We've also had tethers snap because of other things, of course. My "favorite" was the tether whose insulation had tiny pockets of trapped gas that expanded in the vaccum of space. The tether had become very high voltage because of moving through Earth's magnetic field, and the leak of gas allowed it to discharge in a plasma arc that cut the tether in half.
Not so simple a process as it at first seems.
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If it's -20C on Earth, a human will lose heat fast. Why? Because the heat will transfer from the person to the surrounding air via conduction.
In space, there's no air (duh). That means you don't lose heat from conduction - only via radiating. Furthermore, if this experiment was done in sunlight (probably), then rather than losing heat energy, the line would almost certainly have been gaining it.
it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Funny)
So that's how UPS plans on routing packages in the future. Perhaps they realize that the only way to achieve more damage per parcel is to actually drop them from outer space.
Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Funny)
Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps they should employ my mum: Free physical and emotional damage.
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But I would still cut off my right hand and feed it to hungry wolves for you. You know that, don't you dear?
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Other than the obvious reason that the book in question is a work of fiction?
I'd imagine parcel companies either don't even see it as profitable yet and haven't done any feasibility studies or they have done feasibility studies and it's not worth it yet. FedEx doesn't have to design a plane it just buys one from Boeing or who ever. Maybe it will change when Lockheed make a working commercial space
Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyways, everything to be destroyed was dismantled and ultimately crushed and scrapped. My friend saw this as somewhat tragic; here were these great feats of engineering that could deliver a payload anywhere on the planet with good accuracy in the matter of time you might spend waiting for a pizza on a busy night, and they were being wasted. Which gave her and some other members of her team an idea; wouldn't that make a great pizza delivery system if it could be retrofit instead? The concept was that you retrofit it with a new heat shield so keep the right temperature for baking, and you put uncooked pizzas in on racks welded into the "warhead". The pizzas bake on reentry, and then it detaches and parachutes down for landing. They even did some off-the-cuff estimates on how much it would cost, and they came up with, if a missile full of pizzas was ordered, a delivery charge of something like then-$20 per pizza -- but what a delivery!
She claims that she told the idea to a Soviet officer, who looked at her like she was crazy.
Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:4, Insightful)
Energy to get information down a gable is not much at all. You are also using an example of information transport (audio) and trying to apply it to physical object transport. The GP's point was that we can transport massive amounts of information in the 3 hours it takes to fly a spaceship across the globe (in said example).
Also since audio messages are information they are amortized with the millions of web pages sent down cables.
An example of things not needing to ship quickly follows:
After 911, MBNA wanted American flags with "God Bless America" to greet all of their workers world wide on the way into the office, this was decided later on in the day on September 11th. We could either print everything locally and ship it out, or get vendors in other parts of the world to print them too. In the past getting people in Dublin to print them would have required shipping negatives (30 years ago) or disks (20? years ago) or Cds (10 - 20 years ago (maybe 15 to 20?). We were able to send the file in an hour and get it produced locally on identical equipment, where previously we would have paid FedEx out the ass (and been delayed however many days for airplane to fly again). Fast physical delivery is far less important than it used to be.
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My point was that quick global transport appears to us now, as the telephone appeared to people in the 1880s. There are even quotes (that I didn't bother to look up) where people question the use of it on the grounds that "we have messenger boys". No one bothers to come up with uses for quick global transport, because it's always been so prohibi
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It's really quite simple. You can have anything delivered, worldwide (in areas with sufficient infrastructure) within 24 hours, often quicker for a (relatively) reasonable price. The faster something gets somewhere offers diminishing returns but exponential increases in cost. Sub-orbital ballistics can theoretically get anything anywhere in about 90 minutes, but at hideously outrageous cost (and in the real world, prep time wipes out any time advantage unless you have the craft & payload on standby a
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A decade ago, I worked at Terre Haute Medlab. We had billing records that needed to be transferred to... I want to say Medicaid, but I don't recall for sure. The center was in Indianapolis. Like most hospitals at the time, we had a nice, fat (for the period) internet pipe. They did too. We could easily have sent them all in short order.
Nope!
Government regulations designed decades prior still governed how we were allowed to send data to them, and it forbid
Fast delivery is extremely valuable (Score:2)
Are you kidding? If I could get products from China delivered here in the US within hours economically that would be HUGELY beneficial. Long delivery lead times are an enormous cost for a huge variety of products. It takes weeks for a ship to cross the ocean. Cut that to days or hours (at a reasonable cost) and you have altered the global economy forever. That's just products. There is a lo
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It takes weeks to ship things from China because people don't want to pay the extra to have things flown over.
Then again, if I order an iPod directly from Apple, I get free shipping from China and it arrives in just a few days. I suspect my iMac order next month will have the same deal.
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I'm an industrial engineer and global sourcing is what I do for a living. Yes having things delivered in hours is hugely beneficial, if not always necessary. It's just not usually economically possible for a lot of products. Just-In-Time delivery exists because of the cost of storage and transport are so high for many products, even durable ones. If air transport was anywhere close to as cheap as sea transport, (almost) no one would use boats
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Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:5, Insightful)
1.) Cost. Sure, you could get a package delivered to Russia in less than an hour, but it would cost 3 million dollars.
2.) Right now, the vehicles we have that are designed for quick takeoff, orbit, and re-entry carry rather more destructive cargo [wikipedia.org]. Maybe FedEx doesn't want the Russians mistaking one of their rockets filled with Barney DVDs for a nuclear attack and triggering World War III. I would have to imagine the PR from that sort of thing would be somewhat damaging.
One more reason (Score:2)
(I had a _very_ bad experience shipping a friend's dog to Turkey recently... they decided to classify a spayed pet coon hound as an "exotic breeding animal" which required a few days of chasing around the proper forms, finding the proper officials to fill them out/stamp them, and of course all the taxes and fees. FIVE days in a box instead of the scheduled tw
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Re:it's funny because it's true (Score:4, Funny)
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That's why Fedex isn't buying spacecraft.
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Sure, getting stuff there quick is good. But it'd just not
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When they see its financially beneficial they will do it you can bet.
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I think you're on to something. With a quick slingshot around the sun, they could start offering 'UPS Yesterday Air'
DHL are working on it (Score:2)
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Others will bring the cost down, and when they do, then you'll find the parcel shippers interested in buyin craft.
FedEx Satellites (Score:4, Interesting)
Federal Express spend *billions* on the system, and it failed utterly. What happened was the same companies that helped them develop the Group III standard made their thermal machines cheap and interoperatable. Soon, everyone had them, and the thermal paper wasn't too bad. You could always photocopy it once if you wanted a more permanent record. That, and falling long distance phone prices made it overall cheaper to fax a document than to have FedEx do it for you.
To sum up, FedEx has already been to space. They are looking at it, and it's always way too expensive for any kind of regular service. (except some data)
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INCOMING!!!
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The image I have of the UPS is that of an abject, mindless, clueless, arrogant and destructive company. I mean, heck, USPS gets the job done for far less, and yet the parcels are not mangled, punctured or delivered weeks later. If USPS, FedEx, DHL, GLS etc. etc. can all do it, why can't UPS?
WTF is wrong with UPS Finland?
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Delivery failed? (Score:3, Funny)
Is a 30km rope (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Is a 30km rope (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:Is a 30km rope (Score:4, Interesting)
Given that LEO is at least 200km, the object would still be at 170km when released, and would have to survive the entire brunt of the re-entry problems. I'm not sure how lowering something on a tether is more economical/effective than using thrust to de-orbit, though.
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From what I could tell, from my armchair scientist opinion, is that they're using a combo of gravity and air friction to drop the ball.
One plus to this method is it doesn't require the package to have fuel and engines, which thrust would require. Just shove everything into a really heat resistant ball and let it go.
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*Yes, I have taken space guidance and navigation courses at both the graduate and undergraduate level. Thanks for asking.
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e.g. combine a long tether with a hypersonic high-altitude aircraft, mate the payload with the tether at the altitude where tether and aircraft overlap (or a small engine to get from aircraft alt to tether alt) and let centripetal force launch the payload into the higher orbit. Then (magic
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Maybe that's the point. The ball
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Yeah, I can see how that would require less energy than just imparting delta-vee. Thanks.
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IANAOM (orbital mechanic), but the tether forces the object to maintain the same velocity as the station. Since the object is at a lower altitude, the gravitational pull on it is stronger, and the object is pulled towards Earth -- but it can't speed up relative to the station because the tether is holding it back, so it keeps moving downward. The pull on the tether
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The reverse is also potentially possible, and is discussed as a way to reboost satellites without fuel.
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Re:Is a 30km rope (Score:5, Funny)
You don't know anything about space, clearly, so just shut up. Leave this stuff to us experts.
(aside: Hey Bob, I have an idea why our space tether idea didn't work our right, get this: what if we used MORE than 30km of...)
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Close call (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Close call (Score:5, Funny)
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what? (Score:2, Interesting)
So much for... (Score:5, Funny)
Previous try (Score:5, Interesting)
Story is not complete (Score:5, Funny)
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I heard that they barely beat out YoYoDyne unwinder contract.
The Proper Way to Do It (Score:3, Funny)
Spooling is hard (Score:5, Interesting)
Managing big spools of line is surprisingly difficult. Oceanographers run into this all the time, as they try to lower a few miles of line into the ocean. The textile industry runs into it when they try to use very large spools so they can run machinery longer without splicing. Designing something to unspool 30Km of line under near-zero tension in zero G is non-trivial.
Here's a discussion of spool winding [amacoil.com], if you're really interested. There are even companies that specialize in spool winding [independentusa.com].
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then put a heavy weight on the other end.... DUH. why dont these scientists think of these things!
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I assume you were being sarcastic. At least I hope so!
Weird reversal of space pen gag (Score:4, Funny)
"It could be that the tether got stuck," (Score:2)
They were actually pretty close (Score:3, Funny)
Ah wait...
This isn't NASA.
Nothing to see here, move along.
Russian mission control, but ESA Student satellite (Score:2, Informative)
According to the article [esa.int] at ESA:
Pushing rope (Score:3, Funny)
Sounds impressively dangerous (Score:3, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Space Elevators endanger EVERYONE. (Score:5, Funny)
We're trying. STFU.
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Yeah, let's go back to the days when science didn't create problems like this so that we can all die of the plague as nature intended. You science types, how dare you think that you can continue to dicker in my affairs.
I'm outta here. I need to go chop wood for 12 hours a day so I don't freeze to death this winter.
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Duh, that's why we're building a space elevator!
Yeah, germ theory, that polio vaccine, seat belts, and global communications (like the internet) are evil. Those bastards. /sarcasm
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I guess "I'm sick and tired of the freewheeling science geeks" was only against scientists, not science itself. My mistake.
Both vaccine research and automobiles were described as dangerous and useless in the beginning (Don't toy with nature, you're going to kill u
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Someone's been watching too much of the SciFi channel...
If particle accelerators were able to create black holes, those black holes would be so minuscule as to dissipate immediately (we do not have anywhere near the level of technology needed to create non-transient black holes, and if we did, we'd also have the technology to create them away from existing gravity wells). As another poster pointed out, space elevators could be designed such that they fail upward, just as we can now design nuclear fission
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One of the common observations about orbital collisions is that space is big, but by the time you start restricting yourself to practical orbits and orbital distances, and then deploying objects whose longest dimension is very long compared to its volume, it may not be so big after all.
Re:Space Elevators endanger EVERYONE. (Score:4, Funny)
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