NASA Now Accepting Applications From Companies That Want To Mine the Moon 251
cold fjord writes "The Verge reports, "NASA is now working with private companies to take the first steps in exploring the moon for valuable resources like helium 3 and rare earth metals. Initial proposals are due tomorrow for the Lunar Cargo Transportation and Landing by Soft Touchdown program (CATALYST). One or more private companies will win a contract to build prospecting robots, the first step toward mining the moon. Final proposals are due on March 17th, 2014. NASA has not said when it will announce the winner."
I need NASA's permission to mine the moon now? (Score:5, Insightful)
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NASA's premise is clearly that they OWN the moon, and in order to mine it, you need to ask them, nicely.
Re:I need NASA's permission to mine the moon now? (Score:4, Interesting)
Due to the landmark case Finders v Keepers [wikipedia.org], I'm pretty sure NASA owns the moon.
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I'm pretty sure NASA didn't find the moon. In fact, I'm quite certain that humans knew it was there long before they even knew the American continent existed let alone a nation state that borrows the same name.
In fact on that note America, you didn't "find" that name either, so it's not yours to use, in fact for most of you it's not even your country to live in as you didn't find it. It belongs to the native Americans, the Scandinavians, or the British who all found it previously.
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I don't read it that way at all. This sounds more like NASA is trying to find a company to build some lunar mining robots for NASA to use.
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I need NASA's permission to mine the moon now?
it's more likely you need vladimir putin's actually... even nasa uses russian rocket motors
Can we just mine the dark side? (Score:4, Funny)
I mean I'd rather not look up at night and see a strip mining operations on the moon.
Or maybe all mining has to be underground, no above ground mining. You're allowed one small area to be your entry point and that's it.
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Well, first off, there is no "Dark side" of the moon.
Secondly, since the moons in tidal lock with the earth, the side facing us pretty much gets the least amount of light with the exception of the full moon. So, if light were a concern to them, the majority of the mining would be done outside of our view. Also, I believe most of the resources they'd be interested in are at the 2 poles. So again, it's unlikely you could see it from earth.
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blah blah blah, you know what I'm talking about. Stop being pedantic :p I think everyone knows what I'm talking about... Mine the side that we don't have to LOOK at.
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Actually, both sides of the moon get about the same amount of light - they're in direct sunlight half the time.
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*about* the same amount of ligth
I think the delta because of lunar eclipses counts in the 'about' neighborhood.
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Matter of fact, it's all dark.
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Well, if they use a lot of industrial lighting to illuminate the operations a new moon could easily become a sparkly moon...
May be pretty at first, but I like the way it looks now.
Re:Can we just mine the dark side? (Score:4, Informative)
I can't tell if you think that is a possibility, or it you're just trolling. Look at this picture of how far away the Earth is from the moon: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2... [theregister.co.uk] The moon is both incredibly large and incredibly far away. The idea that we could affect it to the extent that you could see it from Earth is completely ridiculous. Look at the "dark side" of the Earth as seen from the moon: http://sciencenordic.com/what-... [sciencenordic.com]. If all the lights on Earth don't make an impression to the moon, then nothing we'd even think about putting on the moon will have any noticeable difference to us.
Re:Can we just mine the dark side? (Score:4, Interesting)
if they use a lot of industrial lighting to illuminate the operations a new moon could easily become a sparkly moon
We're too far away to see those lights without strong telescopes. And considering the mining would probably be done by robots, we might not even need visible spectrum lights.
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Hmm, a strip mine on the moon that was 10km on a side would be about 1/38440 radians wide from Earth.
Which is about the same size as an airplane window appears to be from the ground, when passing overhead at cruising altitude.
So, when was the last time you could pick out an individual 767 window as a plane flew overhead at cruising altitude?
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I mean I'd rather not look up at night and see a strip mining operations on the moon.
I think seeing strip-mining on the moon before I die might be the greatest thing I could have ever imaged.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't we need to talk with other countries first? (Score:3, Interesting)
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They don't and they know it, but science fiction fans are an important part of the public support that keeps their funding flowing, and this is just the kind of thing that appeals to that demographic.
Space 1999, Sorta (Score:5, Interesting)
Okay, am I the only one have flashbacks to 13 September 1999, when the nuclear storage facility on Moonbase Alpha exploded sending the Moon hurtling out of orbit?
So, mine the Moon, ship the material to Earth... Um, won't this change it's mass and as a consequence, it's amount of gravity in generates and then it's orbit? Sorry for being all Doom & Gloom here.
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Okay, am I the only one have flashbacks to 13 September 1999, when the nuclear storage facility on Moonbase Alpha exploded sending the Moon hurtling out of orbit?
So, mine the Moon, ship the material to Earth... Um, won't this change it's mass and as a consequence, it's amount of gravity in generates and then it's orbit? Sorry for being all Doom & Gloom here.
So does sending a rocket up from Earth. Hey, if you shine a flashlight up in the sky, some of those photons will escape all the atmosphere and due to conservation of momentum actually push Earth in the other direction.
Re:Space 1999, Sorta (Score:5, Insightful)
There are entirely different reasons [amazon.com] why you should worry about huge masses of rock being produced on the moon and thrown down to Earth.
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Your link was the first thing through my mind. You have to be careful when you decide to "throw rocks." TANSTAAFL.
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Note that a few million tons will be transferred to the Earth.
Entropy (2nd law of thermodynamics) and energy conservation are pains in the arse of course.
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And in such cases, the first equation can still be used and will give the correct answer, it's just that it's easier to use the second one when the lighter body is completely negligible.
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As in any orbital system, they orbit each other. The greater the mass imbalance, the less the lighter body matters, but that is still true. The equations aren't in and of themselves going draw a distinction between the two.
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I looked up some figures (http://www.infomine.com/minesite/) and found that some mines operate at 63,000 tonnes per day. Let's assume that Mine Base Moon ramps up to that level fairly quickly. The mass of the Moon is 7.34767309 × 10^22 kilograms. 63,000 tonnes = 63,000,000 kg. At this rate, it would take 1,166,297,315,873,016 days (or 3 trillion years) to use up the entire Moon. We'd be in greater risk of the Sun going red giant first.
Of course, we don't need to "use up" the Moon. Let's assume we
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And now I know, and knowledge is power!
Sorta figured with Moon's smaller mass and the fact that we would be removing that mass some sort of effect might occur. Just didn't expect the impact to be that trivial. Factor in that while the mine may process 63K tonnes/day, we wouldn't be shipping ore only the cracked, smelted, processed material and it becomes even more so.
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Just to add some more to the mix, NASA has some information on asteroid sizes ( http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/planetary/factsheet/asteroidfact.html ). Let's assume we picked a small asteroid, Castalia, and mined that at 63 million kg per day. We'd "use it all up" in just over 21 years. (Again, this is assuming the "perfect case" of the asteroid being entirely made of materials we'd want. No waste products produced at all.) A larger asteroid like Ida would take us 4.3 million of years to use up. Remember,
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How could that have possibly happened, given that in 1994, a runaway planet hurtled between the Earth and the Moon, breaking the moon into two big chunks, unleashing cosmic destruction, and casting man's civilization into ruin. [youtube.com]
And while it would be good to get rid of mining operations on Earth, replacing it with space mining, the main advantage of mining in space is that you do not need to use a giant rocket to get that stuff into space; it's already up there, and can be used for industrial purposes in situ
Tritium ? (Score:3, Funny)
Mining tritium on the moon ?
not a good idea.
If you bring it back and it explodes in the athmosphere during reentry, we are all dead.
BTW, slashdot beta is shit.
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But there ain't no whales, so you'll just have to tell tall tales and sing a whaling tune.
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Are you REALLY suggesting that reentry produces enough energy to initiate fusion???
If so, might want to look at some actual numbers for a change...
Deuterium-tritium fusion requires about 100,000 eV. Which translates to a reentry speed in the vicinity of 1800 km/s, assuming that basically everything were perfect to induce fusion.
Note that reentry speed from the Moon is about 11.2 km/s.
Note further that everything will NOT be perfect to induce fusion.
The only danger from dropping tritium from the Moon
"rare earths" (Score:3, Interesting)
Rare earth minerals aren't rare at all- they are just costly and polluting to process.
Also with a lack of geologic processes such as volcanism and water I doubt minerals will be concentrated anywhere.
Seems like more of a publicity stunt than anything.
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And Helium-3 is rare, but worthless until we make massive advances in fusion research.
There is absolutely no reason to go to the moon in the near future.
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It has plenty of oxygen and aluminum, which would be useful. Near Earth asteroids are probably a better bet, however.
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You know what else has plenty of oxygen and aluminum? Earth.
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There is enough demand for small $100M+ worth of production, which might still be too small to come anywhere near fixed costs with setting up a lunar mining situation.
That's at least two orders of magnitude too small to warrant lunar mining.
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Although pollution and interfering governments would be no issue, since there is no environment to pollute in the first place (unless you're a geologist concerned about the destruction of some interesting rock formation).
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Enough with the euphemisms (Score:3, Funny)
I think "mining" is a pretty damn euphemistic way to talk about viscious slaughter of all the moon's whales.
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They will not harm the whales. Only the petunias.
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Haven't you been to the theme park?
There ain't no whales.
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If I were to justify my misspelling as an attempt to invent a new word that includes the meanings of both "vicious" and "viscous" would you call my bluff? Oh shit, I mean: what if I asked you that, but didn't say anything about it being a bluff?
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It's "self-sustaining" until you run out of whales. They say that by the year 3000, there won't be any of them left up there. This isn't some virtually limitless resource like sardines, which are capable of supplying all the oil we'll ever need.
My team is ready to go (Score:3)
Clones of Sam Rockwell.
I'm reminded of GURPS Terradyne (Score:3)
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Shout out to GURPS.
Even a high sustainable moon base wouldn't have manufacturing facilities for things like computer chips. Even if they can eat and breathe indefinitely, they will not be able to be truly independent of Earth.
Rare Earths? (Score:3)
OK I must be COMPLETELY misunderstanding something.
First I keep hearing about "the Chinese have a monopoly on rare earths".
Now NASA is talking about people mining rare earths on the moon?
(Both the article, and it's original referent at Phys.org refer to 'rare earth elements', although I'm inclined to believe that Phys.org *may* have been using an unfortunately-confusing term for 'elements that are indeed rare on earth' like He3.)
RARE EARTHS ARE (largely) NOT RARE AT ALL.
They simply don't exist in concentrated veins. The processing is dirty and polluting, which is the only reason China might be considered to have a 'corner' on the market - they don't give a shit about their pollution.
As much as we NIMBY rare-earth refining, it can't be so bad that we're seriously willing to go to the MOON to do it?
so NASA/the US owns the moon now? (Score:2)
Is it really upto NASA/the US to say who can and can't mine the moon?
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actually it sounds like they're offering a partnership, not permissions. you need NASA's permission to launch from their facilities, use their resources, and work with them on getting there and back.
China didn't need permission for Jade Rabbit, so I think this is just for american companies to work WITH NASA, not in competition with NASA...
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Though I would guess youre right, since when does NASA launch rockets again? NASA these days also relies on Russians. I wonder why these companies would want to team up with NASA, instead of SpaceX.
Good luck with the UN (Score:2)
mining an asteroid or comet is one thing... but the moon? Good luck. Maybe if you kept your activities to the dark side and left even that as subsurface?
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What's the UN gonna do? Send some blue helmets to guard lunar regolith?
Antarctic and Lunar Treaty obligations? (Score:3)
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If it gets to that point, any country that objects is free to have the UN send up a few "peacekeepers" to stop it.
Nope. (Score:2)
Nope, that would be the Moon Treaty [wikipedia.org]
Nope. No country capable of reaching orbit has ratified the moon treaty.
There is the Outer Space Treaty [wikipedia.org], but that one doesn't bar NASA from regulating moon mining.
from the book "Moon Rush" (Score:2)
Who gave NASA the authority? (Score:2)
I mean really, where does NASA get off parceling out the moon?
If you believe... (Score:2)
In related news... (Score:2)
On Moon Banking (Score:3)
While mining may sound exciting, the first business on the moon will probably be off-planet banking. Just incorporate your business in the Sea of Tranquility, set up a Dark Side irrevocable trust, and manage your on-moon account remotely from anywhere in the universe. With no court system, no law enforcement, and no way to serve process, what better place to store your electronic currency? And by electronic currency, I'm talking US dollars, British Pounds, Euros, Yen, etc. Bitcoins have the potential to be held and transacted anonymously, but all currency these days is electronic. And the moon can't be any worse than Cyprus.
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Can't wait to see the scars on the moon's surface and the eventual "oops" that screws up the orbit.
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Re:I'm afraid this means war (Score:4, Funny)
Hey - TANSTAAFL.
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That's harsh.
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Re:I'm afraid this means war (Score:5, Funny)
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Meh - we've been mining and messing with Earth for millenia. We still haven't screwed up its orbit nor leave almost any detectable changes visible from orbit (at least not without magnification). The moon won't be any different.
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I highly doubt we'd ever mine enough to cause anything to happen - it'd take ~682 billion years of mining at the capacity of the world's largest coal mine to move it all. That said, the moon's surface is less than that of Asia's and it's mass is ~1.2% that of Earth's. To put that in perspective, to fully cover the surface of the moon with mines you'd only need 317 Alberta tar sands (total area). How much can one remove before gravity shifts just enough to cause something bad to happen? Do we know where
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You're joking, right? There are huge changes to Earth visible from space even if you completely ignore the really obvious changes if you're looking at the nightside. Do you have any idea how many man-made deserts there are in the world? Then there's the 16,000 square miles or so of "reclaimed" land in the Netherlands that used to be underwater. All the areas once covered by forest that are no longer covered by forest. The Aral sea is practically gone, having lost an area close to the size of the state of Ma
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No, it won't.
Read the 1967 Outer Space Treaty. No one may own the Moon, but you get to exploit it. You just can't stake a claim without working it.
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Matter of fact, it's all dark.....thump thump....thump thump...
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Indeed. And this is also in reponse to the dickhead Anon Coward below (you
know who you are): China will sooner bury you.
The moon is not mine to mine, it's not yours to mine. The NASA understands that.
They just want your money, that is going to the NSA right now (not te missing A).
They have become a PR machine, launching ideas such as these now and again,
just to entice non-thinking though plenty aggressive fools -- such as you, anon.
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The moon is not mine to mine, it's not yours to mine. The NASA understands that.
This is ridiculous. If we can't mine anything in the solar system, how do we ever expect to get off the planet? The moon can mined until there's some presence there that can enforce property rights...or until we have an agreed upon set of laws that state we all agree not to mine the moon.
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Don't you mean Netherlands? [xkcd.com]
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The US paid for 75% of the space station.
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The US paid for 75% of the space station.
Amazing. So?
Greece paid for Germany's banks, but Germany never paid back the assets they looted from Greece during WW II ...
"What have you done for the Moon lately?"
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You state that the US has "zero space stations". That's not true. We have a majority stake in the space station.
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I bet we could get Kevin Spacey as the basis for GERTY's voice. :D
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I love the fact that the USA thinks we own the universe
What about this article implies this?
Shouldn't we encourage a gold rush to the moon? I have no idea what you're getting at here. If we allow this model I predict that other countries, companies, will mine the moon and we'll have like one company that will be doing exploration of some barren piece of non mine-able area.
Who cares if other countries mine the moon? What "model" are you referring to here, and why do "we" have any authority over it?
The USA really needs to get rid of this elitist attitude that we are the best and control everything
What about this article implies an elitist attitude? NASA is taking applications for ideas to work with NASA. Not selling permission to go to the moon.
because we are falling behind other countries on everything... I think the love of our country is clouding reality.
Certainly not on space exploration. NASAs accomplishments have not been reproduced by anyone else. Besides it's a scientific endeavor, not an international dick waving contest. It's worth doi