Showing posts with label spaceship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spaceship. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 4, 2018

Workers In Space Will Live In Igloos


Courtesy Kordite at flickr



The mining of asteroids will begin in earnest within the next 10 to 100 years. The asteroids chosen for retrieval and processing will almost certainly contain water because water will be one of the most valuable commodities in space, if not the most valuable. Not only does water contain hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel, humans need it for survival; and it is very efficient at stopping many types of radiation. 

If a current or future corporation is going to make a decision on which asteroid to go after, the metal content of the asteroid may not be the deciding factor. Asteroids with little or no water will be passed up for mining at least in the early phase of the industry. If our civilization remains technically and economically viable into the 22nd century, the asteroid mining industry should be hitting its stride and keeping economic growth positive for several hundred years. Even after this maturation, the industry will favor those space rocks containing water simply out of habit and tradition unless some special material is needed that can’t be found in combination with water. Another outlier would be a leap in engine technology, such as a compact fusion drive, that would mediate the reliance on water as stored rocket fuel.


Use those plastic grocery bags again. Save money. Save the world. Here’s how. 


Let’s say some future company is evaluating two different asteroids for mining. One, 1999 JM8, is a nickel, cobalt, and iron asteroid worth $45 trillion dollars. It is fairly large at 4.35 miles in diameter, but only .024 Astronomical Units away at its closest approach to Earth, approximately 2.2 million miles or about ten times the distance from the Earth to the Moon.

Another asteroid, 1950 KA, is worth only $33.4 trillion dollars and is .097 AU at its closest pass to Earth, nearly four times that of 1999 JM8. It has a couple of things going for it, though. It is only 2.17 miles in diameter and has a composition of nickel, iron, cobalt, water, nitrogen, hydrogen, and ammonia. 

This company will pick 1950 KA because of the water, hands down. Once the robotic retrieval craft gets to 1950 KA, it can mine water; and, with the abundant solar energy available in space, split it into hydrogen and oxygen for rocket fuel to move that mass back to Earth.

Courtesy NASA


After 1950 KA is parked in orbit near Earth in one of the Lagrange points L4 or L5, the real fun begins. Using many specially designed, semi-autonomous robots, the asteroid is scraped, tunneled, bored, melted, smelted, hammered, drilled and crushed to extract its treasures. In the early going of asteroid mining, however, it will not be done without humans. We will be there to direct the overall strategy and change tactics when necessary, not to mention repairs and hands-on inspections. This is only because artificial intelligence will not yet be up to the autonomous decision making required of mining asteroids. 


Plastic grocery bags prefer this as their second career. 


Human workers need a safe, even comfortable place to stay while performing these chores. Safe by logical necessity and comfortable to attract the type of person needed for this work given how long they will have to be in space. Money can only go so far as an incentive. Intelligent, athletic, engineering and scientific types only need apply, similar to astronauts in education and ability. 

Here is where the water comes in. These people will be shielded from radiation by a wall of water, actually ice. As I mentioned above, water is very efficient at shielding many types of radiation, including that from solar flares, gamma radiation, and cosmic radiation. Although NASA has been working on a lightweight polyethylene plastic called RFX1, it has some serious problems in competing with water. One, you can’t drink it. Two, it has to be hauled up the gravity well of Earth. 

Exactly how will water be used as a radiation shield? Three feet of water or ice will intercept and diffuse almost any radiation, including gamma rays and cosmic rays. Since there is plenty of water available from the asteroid, it makes sense to protect the entire facility instead of providing a vault or other safe area that people have to go to. At some point, an unexpected sleet of radiation is bound to sweep through the area. This way everyone will be protected all the time unless they are doing something outside of the habitat and not working inside the asteroid.

The geometry of the habitat will resemble a thick hockey puck. This will rotate to provide simulated gravity to the inhabitants. On the unit shown in the drawings, eight rotations per minuted will provide nearly one g at the outer wall or "lower" level. The second level will provide three quarter g, and the "upper" level one half g. The center on one side will have a docking facility. The center of the other side will sprout a boom about as long as twice the diameter of the pancake. At the end of this boom will be thrusters that can point in almost any direction. These thrusters will be powered by, you guessed it, electrolysed water in the form of hydrogen and oxygen burning to form, once again, water.

CLICK TO ENLARGE


Not only is it a habitat, but it can move around as required to view different parts of the asteroid or move equipment that is not self-motile. It will pick up and drop off people at the orbital end of the Lunar Space Elevator. It will be a habitat, taxi, and tug. Some may call it the "Ice Palace", but it’s a given the majority will nickname it the "Igloo."

CLICK TO ENLARGE


This three foot barrier of water will remain frozen because space is cold. Solar energy hitting the outside envelope of the vessel may have some effect, but as that surface rotates into shadow, it will become frozen again. The inside surface of the ice barrier will be in a constant state of melting. The human habitation will necessarily give off heat. No matter how thick the insulation, it will eventually melt this inner surface. This water, through centripetal forces will be routed to the outer surface where it will be refrozen. This ice barrier is a good buffer between the 70-75 degrees Fahrenheit in the habitat and the minus 450 degrees F. of outer space and will probably vary in temperature, getting colder from the inner to outer surfaces.

The lure of infinite wealth and energy will be too strong for capital to resist. A lot of money will be spent on this endeavor. Hopefully, it will be spent wisely, and progress will be swift and beneficial not only for those companies involved but for the rest of us as well. The bottleneck is the gravity well barrier that is currently so expensive to vault. Space is kind of like Vegas; what happens there stays there. However, companies like Obayashi Corporation are working on building an elevator to space. This would drastically reduce the cost of sending stuff into orbit and bringing it back. Their plan is to have it built by 2050, waiting only for the successful mass production of carbon nanotube fibers long enough to use. Hopefully, their prediction will not become similar to the refrain of nuclear fusion developers of having a practical fusion generator within thirty years … every year. While the industry can have some success with rockets, it will grow by leaps and bounds with a working space elevator.

Other articles you may enjoy:






















Thursday, August 2, 2018

The Military Values High Ground - Space Is the Highest


Moon being bombed by asteroids - courtesy NASA



The energy of the Sun near Earth is about 1368 watts/meter squared. The Falcon Heavy will be able to lift a directional mirror into space with a variable focus length of about 50 feet to thousands of miles. Its 332 square meters could focus 455,000 watts onto a spot the size of a baseball, vaporizing whatever has the poor fortune to be there at the time. 


Paper bags take 5 X the water to make and 7 X the fuel to transport than plastic bags 



Why would someone want such a machine? To mine asteroids. To mine the moon. To melt lunar regolith and asteroid material into shapes to build habitats in space or on the Moon. To power crucibles making steel and aluminum and other metals in space. To vaporize space debris that has become a hazard. Such power is handy in space, but there is a dark side. 



Asteroid being mined with solar mirror - courtesy Dan Brown on flickr



What if someone wanted to use such a mirror to do damage to a particular country or city for military purposes? One could set fire to or melt just about anything on the Earth or Moon with such a machine - cities, missile silos, air fields, ships, cities, individual buildings. No satellite in orbit would be safe. It could destroy the International Space Station. Keep the keys to the space mirror in a safe place.

There is a lot of money invested in the idea of moving an asteroid near to the Earth and mining it for metals and minerals. The acceptable location for such a huge mass of metal would be one of the lunar Lagrange points L4 or L5 where it would rest in a stable orbit about the Earth. Getting it there is the trick. It would require a robotic space tug. 


It costs $4000 to recycle ton of plastic bags worth $500 on open market. 



What if someone deliberately sabotaged the space tug’s guidance system and sent a kilometer diameter chunk of iron hurtling toward the Earth? The damage could be incalculable. From treasure trove for the future of mankind to the fall of civilization for some poor region of Earth, perhaps the whole planet. Or someone could attach such a tug to a smaller asteroid and program it to come fast out of the sun. Undetectable until it is too late. 

Asteroid being moved by space tug - courtesy Korite on flickr


These examples are besides what may be already in orbit or planned to go into orbit. This includes EMP (electromagnetic pulse) bombs and “rods of god”. Since 1967 it has been illegal to park atomic weapons in orbit, but that may not stop the likes of North Korea. To get around the orbital nuclear bomb ban, the U.S. has come up with a simple rod of tungsten dropped from orbit. The one foot diameter by twenty feet long cylinder of metal reaches ten times the speed of sound by the time it hits and mimics a small nuclear device in its devastation. It penetrates hundreds of feet into the ground, destroying underground bunkers and silos - something a nuclear weapon cannot do. 

That is not the only kinetic weapon available. Combine several NASA HiPEP ion thrusters with a TOPAZ style nuclear reactor, a guidance system, and a few tons of xenon (all properly armored against cosmic radiation); and you have a weapon that travels for light years and builds up a velocity that is an appreciable fraction of the speed of light. Besides targeting other planets for destruction, the truly paranoid might put such a device, perhaps several, in a long elliptical orbit around Earth, coming close to Earth on a periodic basis. In a form of mutually assured destruction, a country under attack could threaten to have one of these hit the Earth instead of continue its normal orbit. The affect would be similar to a super volcano eruption. Actual destruction might cover a continent. The weather effects could destroy the rest of civilization over the next few years.


It takes 7 trucks to move the same number of paper bags as one truck moving plastic bags. 



Another thing about having control of weapons in space is that it would allow an interdiction of anyone else coming into space for commercial or exploratory purposes. The entity in control of such weapons would be the arbiter of who comes and goes in space, who gets the benefits, who prospers and who doesn't. This is a very powerful position. This is the kind of lopsided power that starts wars.  


On June 18, 2018, President Trump directed the Pentagon to create a new division of the military - the Space Force. “My administration is reclaiming America’s heritage as the world’s greatest space-faring nation. The essence of the American character is to explore new horizons and to tame new frontiers. But our destiny, beyond the Earth, is not only a matter of national identity, but a matter of national security,” he announced. “[I]t is not enough to merely have an American presence in space. We must have American dominance in space.”

It seems the President may have been ill-informed about the advisability of a new branch of the military devoted only to space. The reason is that dominance of space means true dominance of the Earth. Other countries know this. The military has always valued high ground and space is the highest. That makes the President’s statement, “We must have American dominance in space,” one of the most nakedly aggressive of any leader of a nation on Earth regarding the frontiers of space. If any other large nations are taking him seriously, they will be making plans to counter aggressive actions taken in the last frontier.

With all of this death and destruction possible from outer space, it should be obvious that the exploration and exploitation of space should be done in joint ventures with as many countries participating as possible. This will cut down on paranoia about what any one country may be up to in space and prevent physical confrontations on Earth surrounding this subject and possibly prevent the use of space as the ultimate militarily strategic high ground. 

Other articles you may enjoy:






















Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Energy and Space; Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum



courtesy NASA

by Glen Hendrix

There is a substantial cadre of people and organizations that are very interested in the space industry. The whole industry is currently worth about $350 billion dollars, but Bank of America predicts 30 years will see an increase to nearly $3 trillion dollars.

While mostly concerned with Earth-orbiting satellites, a small portion of the industry is seriously considering the mining of asteroids on the assumption of a tremendous payback from the presence of metals and minerals in these floating mountains. 

NASA has missions scheduled in 2021 and 2023 to explore 16 Psyche, an asteroid that contains a lot of resources. It is a 130 mile diameter nickel and iron asteroid thought to once be part of the core of a planet.

The material of this asteroid is similar to that at the center of the Earth, mostly iron with some nickel and traces of other metals. It’s the other metals I would be interested in, but the iron alone is, according to the article, worth $10,000 quadrillion. 

Let’s think about that. If you did manage to bring this space mountain into  Earth orbit, nobody on Earth would buy a pound of it. It is iron, but it still needs to be melted down and turned into useable shapes, so it is essentially high grade ore. Iron ore is going for $70 per ton but this has been pre-smelted by the fiery center of a now-defunct planet so let’s give it a round figure of $100 per ton. 

Plastic grocery bags prefer this as their second career. 


There is about 1,150,000 cubic miles of iron. A cubic mile of iron weighs about 36 billion tons and is worth $3.6 trillion dollars. So the whole caboodle is worth only $4,000 quadrillion, not $10,000 quadrillion. Hah! Caught ya! Who cares. It’s a lot. 

When you go to sell it, though, no one on Earth wants it. It currently costs $10,000 dollars per pound to get something into orbit and, therefore, $10,000 per pound to get something back to Earth. Your ton of high grade ore jumped to $20,000,100 per ton on the open market because of transportation cost. Buyers on Earth would rather pay the $70 per ton. I don’t blame them. You grifter! 

There are only two options; sell it to someone that is going to use it for construction in space or figure out a cheaper means for getting it down to the Earth’s surface. Discussion of the latter will be the subject of another article.

No one is building enormous structures in orbit … yet. Your asteroid is like that 1000 acres the family owns outside of Phoenix. You know that someday it will be worth a lot when developers are ready for it. You need money now, though, to pay the bills. It doesn’t help that it cost nearly half a trillion dollars to get it back to Earth and it is really your great grandchildren who will reap the benefits because it would take so long to move that much mass. 

To give you a financial break let’s say the asteroid is not 16 Psych but 162173 Ryugu. This is a rock that comes within 6,000,000 miles of Earth (very close) in December of 2020. It is a more manageable size (1km diameter) and contains not just nickel and iron but cobalt, water, nitrogen, hydrogen, and ammonia as well. Here is a great site for picking out your asteroid. That’s where I found 16217 Ryugu. 

A Falcon Heavy delivers your 30,000 pound asteroid retrieval robot spaceship named More In That Vein from Cape Canaveral into a high Earth orbit. More In That Vein unfolds its solar arrays and begins the electrolysis of water, burning the hydrogen and oxygen in thrusters. 

It arrives at Ryugu six months later. The apparent rotational velocity of the surface of the asteroid is only one quarter mile per hour, no problem for the agile More In That Vein to match up to. The spaceship’s interface adaptor frame comes into contact with the surface at a pre-screened, structurally sound spot and sixteen explosive bolts penetrate the surface and expand slightly to provide a solid connection between the ship and the asteroid. 

Saving the world one plastic bag at a time. Recycling genius.  


Robotic crawlers explore the asteroid for water and methane. Finding a major deposit of ice, it mines this to top the tanks off for the trip home and sets up an automated refill schedule. Meanwhile, More In That Vein has de-spun the asteroid to zero rotation and plotted the quickest journey back to Earth orbit. Its swivel-mounted engine swings to the calculated coordinates and fires up gently so as not to disturb some slight structural faults uncovered by prospector bots and heads back to Earth with its treasure. 

The artificial intelligence of More In That Vein constantly adjusts the course of the asteroid, micromanaging it into place at the L5 Lagrange point of the Earth-Moon gravitational system. This is a stable point 239,000 miles from both the Earth and the Moon.

Yeah! But you still can’t sell anything. It is too expensive … wait … my phone. Let me get this. It’s for you. The Chinese want one million tons of shaped steel for a facility orbiting the Moon and a ten year option on three more million. Lucky you. Someone on Earth has just announced a breakthrough in fusion technology making it commercially feasible. The Chinese are going to build a Moon base and space elevator to extract hydrogen-3 (tritium) from the Moon’s surface and sell it on Earth to make those new fusion reactors purr like kittens. 

courtesy NASA

Obviously, no one is going to retrieve an asteroid on speculation. The initial investment is too much to leave to chance. There will be a lot of wheeling and dealing. If you hear of a robot asteroid miner being launched you will soon hear of a major orbital space project being planned for the Earth or the Moon.

Energy and asteroid mining are intertwined. Whether its mining the Moon for hydrogen-3; or building giant mirrors to gather solar energy, convert it to microwaves, and send it back to Earth; or finding water to split into hydrogen and oxygen to burn for rocket fuel; the basic economic reason we will go into space will be for energy. There is simply so much of it, and it is so cheap there will be no way for the uber rich to funnel all of that energy wealth into their pockets. Their pants would catch on fire. Energy needs to be available in vast, non-polluting, inexpensive quantities for the lifestyles we are accustomed to on this fine blue marble to be maintained without detriment to the environment. The resources we extract from asteroids are an important part of that equation. 

Other articles you may enjoy:
























Sunday, September 25, 2011

Transmat World is Here

I know I promised "how to fit out a Space Egg". That is still in the works and will be well worth the wait. But right now I have to announce something. Transmat World is now available on Amazon.com.

Nine hundred thousand years ago in a galaxy right next door--the Greater Magellanic Cloud-- an artificial intelligence is created to be a hunter’s prey. An accident produces an maniacal machine that destroys the civilization that created it and proclaims itself the Prime Mechanical and Supreme Arbiter of Known and Unknown Existence. With a space ship the size of the orbit of Mercury and an army of strikemechs, it prowls the Milky Way for sentient organics.

In the year 2045, the asteroid Isadora strikes off the west coast of Java, killing billions. Post-Hit Earth comes to realize the capricious nature of the cosmic weather forecast and begins to plan accordingly. Just when things are looking up, along comes Transmat (the first teleportation device) and the world's economy collapses. The inventor is assassinated, leaving his son, Vince, to deal with a planet that hates him and a fast-approaching Supreme Arbiter.

Transmat World is not just a trans-temporal, trans-galactic scifi adventure with teleportation booths, stasis fields, and AI machines. It incorporates ideas for future technologies that are more down-to-earth. Things we can use in the near future. Things I've blogged about here, like the asteroid herder and the space mirror.

Click on Transmat World to take a peak at the future.