Mining On The Moon
The Night Watchman writes "This article on Yahoo News outlines the latest plans in the works for a handful of private companies to begin lunar mining missions within the next 10 years."
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It amazes me that so many allegedly "educated" people have fallen so quickly and so hard for a fraudulent fabrication of such laughable proportions. The very idea that a gigantic ball of rock happens to orbit our planet, showing itself in neat, four-week cycles -- with the same side facing us all the time -- is ludicrous. Furthermore, it is an insult to common sense and a damnable affront to intellectual honesty and integrity. That people actually believe it is evidence that the liberals have wrested the last vestiges of control of our public school system from decent, God-fearing Americans (as if any further evidence was needed! Daddy's Roommate? God Almighty!)
Documentaries such as Enemy of the State have accurately portrayed the elaborate, byzantine network of surveillance satellites that the liberals have sent into space to spy on law-abiding Americans. Equipped with technology developed by Handgun Control, Inc., these satellites have the ability to detect firearms from hundreds of kilometers up. That's right, neighbors .. the next time you're out in the backyard exercising your Second Amendment rights, the liberals will see it! These satellites are sensitive enough to tell the difference between a Colt .45 and a .38 Special! And when they detect you with a firearm, their computers cross-reference the address to figure out your name, and then an enormous database housed at Berkeley is updated with information about you.
Of course, this all works fine during the day, but what about at night? Even the liberals can't control the rotation of the Earth to prevent nightfall from setting in (only Joshua was able to ask for that particular favor!) That's where the "moon" comes in. Powered by nuclear reactors, the "moon" is nothing more than an enormous balloon, emitting trillions of candlepower of gun-revealing light. Piloted by key members of the liberal community, the "moon" is strategically moved across the country, pointing out those who dare to make use of their God-given rights at night!
Yes, I know this probably sounds paranoid and preposterous, but consider this. Despite what the revisionist historians tell you, there is no mention of the "moon" anywhere in literature or historical documents -- anywhere -- before 1950. That is when it was initially launched. When President Josef Kennedy, at the State of the Union address, proclaimed "We choose to go to the moon", he may as well have said "We choose to go to the weather balloon." The subsequent faking of a "moon" landing on national TV was the first step in a long history of the erosion of our constitutional rights by leftists in this country. No longer can we hide from our government when the sun goes down.
If guns kill people, then CmdrTaco's keyboard misspells words.
I think we should finish screwing up our own planet first before we go on and screw up others. Slow and steady does the job.
"I have not failed. I've simply found 10,000 ways that won't work." --Thomas Edison
The only thing worth mining on the moon is ice, if it really truly exists at the poles. The reason it is worth mining ice is that it can be broken down into hydrogen and oxygen via electrolysis and then you've got fuel and oxidizer for a Mars mission located at the bottom of a shallow gravity well. It's been a while since I ran the numbers (I used to work for Boeing in an advanced projects group) but running a Mars mission with lunar fuel and oxidizer makes a BIG BIG BIG difference in the feasibility of it. Say you have a Mars ship in Earth or lunar orbit with empty tanks you've got to fill. From Earth you use the Shuttle, and it takes a full external tank and hundreds of millions of $$$ to get a Shuttle-cargo-bay-sized slug of liquids into your Mars ship tanks - many many shuttle missions and $$$ to fill them. It takes a LOT fewer pounds of fuel to lift the same hydrogen / oxygen from the surface of the moon to fill those same Mars ship tanks. It's the same as running a war - everybody wants to be on the tank that rolls into liberate the city, but in reality the war was won months before by the logistics and supply lines that made that final push possible. So remember, boys and girls - forget platinum group metals, the real lunar riches are its ICE...
Sure people would die, but gold would be raining down from the sky!
Sure maybe the mining companies have a lot of money, but consider this for a moment:
Just how are ordinary decent tree-hugging nature-loving separitist activists like myself expected to get up to the moon to protest?
And speaking of unfair, what is there to chain ourselves to up there?
And, also, how are we going to play Woodie Guthrie and smoke Mother Nature's loving green herb without atmosphere.
TOTALLY UNFAIR!
The cost in 1960s dollars to return 1500 pounds of cargo was 340 million, or about a quarter of a million dollars per pound (in Y2K dollars, about 1.7B, and a bit over a million dollars/lb). Of course, if we did not use man-rated systems, and use lightweight robots instead, we'd save a lot of weight and costs.
/. flamefest, I looked up the weights of some typical mining machines and they are astounding.
But -- if we achieved hundred fold increases in pounds returned per dollar over 1960s figures by eliminating the man rated systems and using advanced techniques unavailable then, you are still talking $10,000 per pound, or about $685/troy ounce (at the price we paid for the Apollo missions more like 68K/troy oz). Aluminum and titanium are out of the question even with the optimistic hundred fold improvements. So is Gold, at current rates of about $275/troy oz, and platinum at about $440/troy oz.
As an optimist, you might think that if Pt doubled in price, and we could achieve hundred fold increases in monetary efficiency for retrieving it, then we could go to the moon to get it. This is true, but only if we could just go there and pick it up lying around. However, as the article points out, there is no volcanic activity to concentrate metals in veins, and no erosion to break it up into convenient nuggets to find. So, you're going to have to mine it, and you'd have to process a huge amount of material at that because you aren't going to find many rich veins.
This means mining machinery. During the last
A small crushing machine weighs over thirty english tons. Granted if you were to make a machine to be transported via spacecraft, you would do everything you could to make it lighter. However, we are talking about crushing rocks here; cleverly reinforced tinfoil and carbon fiber are not going to do the job. You'd also have to pack a fairly powerful nuclear reactor, since even this small machine requires well over a hundred kilowatts to operate. This means the reactor would have to be packed to survive launch accidents. Cassini's RTGs, for example, provide well less than a thousand watts when they are fresh. Some Russian designs for space flight produce 5-6KW, still an order of magnitude too small to run a small crusher. You would need much larger reactors, properly shielded and packaged to survive launch accidents.
Furthermore, this example machine is a small machine, and the lack of volcanically concentrated ore veins means you have to have a machine with a lot of capacity. It would be just barely feasible to put one of these small machines on the moon with a Saturn V (6.1 million pounds to deliver about 45 english tons of payload to lunar orbit).
I don't want to be a wet blanket here. The point is that mineral wealth does not seem to me at this time a sufficient reason to go to the moon (although these people may have found clever ways around these obvious objections, and all bets are off if we look outside the next twenty years or so). It seems to me at this time only commodities which are lighter and more precious than metals can justify the cost -- things like knowledge, and prestige.
If somebody was going to put a research station onto the moon to use its unique environmental properties (moderate gravity, hard vacuum in large quantities) I would be less skeptical. I'd be even less skeptical of a scheme to put super rich tourists on the moon, or if a single ultra wealthy individual like Bill Gates announced he was going to spend his fortune on a visit to a moon. Clearly it is technically feasible to go there and back, it is just not financially feasible to do it for ordinary kinds of massy commodities.
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