Venturing in to space useless?
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- BlackLiger
- Posts: 1371
- Joined: 05 Oct 2004, 21:58
- Guessmyname
- Posts: 3301
- Joined: 28 Apr 2005, 21:07
If we got a man on the moon, do you think the bill for his stay untill we got the agridomes up would be small? Look how long its taking to build the international space station, that wont be self sufficient either.
And zoombie, what about getting to mars and back? It'd take quite a long time to generate all that fuel on mars to get back, during which you need to sustain yourself, and then there's the initil cost of getting there to begin with.
However we are aware of numerous resources in space thatre worth going after. Industry in space would cost a lot less once infrastructure is in place, numerous methdos such as crystal growing become thousands of times more effective, chinese research shows space grown plants have far greater nutritional value than those grown here aswell as greater sizes.
However I doubt mars will be on the agenda in 2040. I beleive we're stuck in our small subsolar system, and our expeditions to mars will be a reminder of what happened when we first went to the moon, expensive, short lived, and full of fanfare and political showmanship.
And zoombie, what about getting to mars and back? It'd take quite a long time to generate all that fuel on mars to get back, during which you need to sustain yourself, and then there's the initil cost of getting there to begin with.
However we are aware of numerous resources in space thatre worth going after. Industry in space would cost a lot less once infrastructure is in place, numerous methdos such as crystal growing become thousands of times more effective, chinese research shows space grown plants have far greater nutritional value than those grown here aswell as greater sizes.
However I doubt mars will be on the agenda in 2040. I beleive we're stuck in our small subsolar system, and our expeditions to mars will be a reminder of what happened when we first went to the moon, expensive, short lived, and full of fanfare and political showmanship.
I really enjoy going to http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/ everyone once and a while and checking on the rovers, it just blows my mind that we got some robots out there on an empty planet. Fuck sending a lifeform that needs a bunch of expensive shit to stay alive, send some god damn rovers to the moon.
As i understood it, we couldnt get a man to mars with conventional propulsion, as the time spent in zero g would weaken the skeletal structure to the point that it couldnt survive the gravitational field of Mars (or Earth for that matter)
I have no sources for this "fact" and have no idea where it popped into my head from, anybody know anything about this?
I have no sources for this "fact" and have no idea where it popped into my head from, anybody know anything about this?
From what i know its not entirely true. The body would weaken because of the eased weight, but not to that degree. Also, if you spin the rocket or whatever, the centrifugal force will create artificial gravity. (with the coriolis force as a dizzying sideeffect of course)pintle wrote:As i understood it, we couldnt get a man to mars with conventional propulsion, as the time spent in zero g would weaken the skeletal structure to the point that it couldnt survive the gravitational field of Mars (or Earth for that matter)
I have no sources for this "fact" and have no idea where it popped into my head from, anybody know anything about this?
I think space elevators are probably going to be machinary only for quite a while after they're first built due to the effects cited from the van allen belt.
However an elevator would allow cheap movement of industrial equipment to space allowing an explosion in the capacity up there and a drastic reduction in the price of entering orbit.
However an elevator would allow cheap movement of industrial equipment to space allowing an explosion in the capacity up there and a drastic reduction in the price of entering orbit.
Didn't we have a dozen discussions on this before? A space elevator isn't in the realm of feasible given current technology, resources, and functional physics. Even if one is erected, there is virtually no possibility of resource payoff for waste given the understood limits of space travel and energy/mass conservation.
- Felix the Cat
- Posts: 2383
- Joined: 15 Jun 2005, 17:30
You may have reached that conclusion, but that doesn't mean that everyone else did.neddiedrow wrote:Didn't we have a dozen discussions on this before? A space elevator isn't in the realm of feasible given current technology, resources, and functional physics. Even if one is erected, there is virtually no possibility of resource payoff for waste given the understood limits of space travel and energy/mass conservation.
- BlackLiger
- Posts: 1371
- Joined: 05 Oct 2004, 21:58
I think the cannon idea would be good for launching stuff from the moon, or asteroids. Much lower escape velocity.
If you look at it economically long term, the space industry when setup would be much more cost efficient once it's established like this. Since launching stuff from low gravity places is much easier, and also the general cost savings that always kick in once stuff get more mass produced etc.
Would be interesting indeed if something could be setup so robots/ships mine stuff (roids) and build more robots, could grow endlessly and then we have huge big ships and stations everywhere. Then we can have cool space wars and everything.
If you look at it economically long term, the space industry when setup would be much more cost efficient once it's established like this. Since launching stuff from low gravity places is much easier, and also the general cost savings that always kick in once stuff get more mass produced etc.
Would be interesting indeed if something could be setup so robots/ships mine stuff (roids) and build more robots, could grow endlessly and then we have huge big ships and stations everywhere. Then we can have cool space wars and everything.
A catapult involving circular spinning on a tether and a release would indeed be a very cheap method of movement through space, but for ti to work on earth would be unfeasable.
A space elevator should be feasable but I'd expect it wont be till 2020 or later for the technology to have advanced far enough for cosntruction to be feasable at any rate.
Currently the construction of a space elevator today is estimated at $20billion.
A space elevator should be feasable but I'd expect it wont be till 2020 or later for the technology to have advanced far enough for cosntruction to be feasable at any rate.
Currently the construction of a space elevator today is estimated at $20billion.
- BrainDamage
- Lobby Developer
- Posts: 1164
- Joined: 25 Sep 2006, 13:56
the runaway speed on earth (it doesn't consider air viscosity) is 11Km/secmanored wrote:Wouldnt something like a big cannon/catapult work better than a elevator? We would just need some sort of bullet-shaped ship to resist the forces... :)
now imagine the amount of power needed to impress such force momentum to a fairly decent mass (i'm too lazy to do the calcs atm)
now imagine that force applied, not just to the projectile, but to all it's content for the 1st dynamic principle
everything will arrive in space like broken eggs
speading the applied force over a protracted amount of time prevents to apply too much force in a particular moment
I think AF actually means trillions.
US: million, billion, trillion, ...
UK: million, milliard, billion, ...
"Hello, sis is se shermen coastguart."
"MAYDAY! Are you hearing us? We're sinking! We're sinking! MAYDAY! WE'RE SINKING!"
"Hello... vat are you...sinking about?"
US: million, billion, trillion, ...
UK: million, milliard, billion, ...
"MAYDAY! MAYDAY! WE'RE SINKING! MAYDAY!"BlackLiger wrote:Und ven ve get to Germany, ve vill be checkink it tvice.Caydr wrote:You're on my list.
"Hello, sis is se shermen coastguart."
"MAYDAY! Are you hearing us? We're sinking! We're sinking! MAYDAY! WE'RE SINKING!"
"Hello... vat are you...sinking about?"
Last edited by rattle on 09 Jul 2007, 23:36, edited 1 time in total.