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Using Sling Shot Power to Hurl Into Orbit

the_2nd_coming writes "space.com has an article about a new application of a very old technology. NASA is putting money into Momentum-eXchange/Electrodynamic Reboost tether technology -- MXER for short -- an innovative concept that if implemented would station miles and miles of cart-wheeling cable in orbit around the Earth. Then, rotating like a giant sling, the cable would swoop down and pick up spacecraft in low orbits, then hurl them to higher orbits or even lob them onward to other planets."

9 of 310 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Been there, done that by podperson · · Score: 4, Informative

    Those both were space elevators -- a different technology NASA is also exploring.

  2. not a sling shot by proj_2501 · · Score: 4, Informative

    A sling shot is not the same as a sling.

    A sling shot uses a rubber band to propel its payload.

    A sling uses the sudden stop of centripedal force.

    Sling shot = Dennis the Menace.
    Sling = David killing Goliath

    Slings are good for hunting small animals, apparently.

  3. Borrowed from good sci-fi... by praedor · · Score: 4, Informative

    By Gregory Benford. In either "Great Sky River" or "Tides of Light" Benford (physicist and astronomer at UC, Irvine), can't recall which, there is an organism that does this...only its ends actually come much farther down into the atmosphere than NASA's proposal. This organism was even used by the main character in the story to hitch a ride into space.

    --
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  4. Re:Cable Strength by foolish · · Score: 4, Informative

    The people making the tethers, TUI (www.tethers.com) are making it out of Spectra fibres. You can check out their website for the full gist, but they have fabrication down pat.

    So, yes, this is the real deal, not something 'down the road 5 years'.

    --foolish

  5. Important differences by f97tosc · · Score: 4, Informative

    In the works you site they build an elevator all the way from surface to space; in other words it is extremely long.

    In this case, the craft is much shorter and already in space. Rather than lifting something all the way along a cable, you accelerate it by swinging a shorter cable and throw it off.

    From an energy perspective, you exchange rockets working inefficiently for a short time for solar-powered engines working efficiently but slowly for a long time. In the space elevators you mention, you rather use more conventional engines like in an electric train.

    Tor

  6. Re:Been there, done that by crmartin · · Score: 4, Informative

    And, in fact, Tethers Unlimited, the company proposing this beast, was founded by scientist, engineer and science fiction writer Dr Robert L Forward. Sadly, Dr Forward died last September.

  7. Re:A waste of time? by Tmack · · Score: 4, Informative
    Maybe this stuff will be strong enough to overcome the limit. Its definately a step in the right direction. Im too lazy to run through the material engineering aspects of it all right now and actually figure the needed strength/weight ratio needed. Im sure its something insanely strong.

    Tm

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  8. Re:Degrading Orbit by Fjord · · Score: 5, Informative

    This thing is definitely cool. The other posters were right in pointing out that it regains the energy via converting solar energy into momentum by applying a current to the Earth's Magnetic field. I just wanted to point out the purpose of the devices name:

    Momentum-eXchange: this refers to how the tether adds momentum to the spacecraft

    Electrodynamic Reboost: this refers to the mechanism that recharges the orbit

    The one poster is right about the momentum-exchange working both ways in that spacecraft coming back could tether down and reboost the device. However, in most cases the craft will be leaving a payload up there (such as a satillite, or even just burned fuel/oxygen) so it would never regain as much momentum as it lost. The electrodynamic reboost ensure it keeps flying.

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    -no broken link
  9. Re:Are they serious? by barakn · · Score: 4, Informative

    At least part of the cable has to be conductive. That's the Electrodynamic Reboost mentioned in insufficient detail in the article. They run a current through the cable, and the Earth's magnetic field then exerts a force on the cable that pushes it up into a higher orbit. Each cable will have multiple layers.

    --
    "I'm so moist I'm sticking to the leather." -Kermit the Frog on The Late Late Show