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Space Elevator Going Up

Adlopa writes "The Guardian newspaper reports on scientists' efforts to realise the space elevator, as first described by Arthur C Clarke in his 1979 novel 'Fountains of Paradise'. Advances in materials science mean that 'a cable reaching up as far as 100,000km from the surface of the Earth' is no longer an impossibility and 70 scientists and engineers are discussing the idea at a conference in Santa Fe today."

684 comments

  1. what i really want to know is... by knowles420 · · Score: 5, Funny

    will it have a 13th floor?

    --
    -knowles
    1. Re:what i really want to know is... by Zoop · · Score: 1, Redundant

      For an elevator that goes up to 36,000 km, the question will be, will it have a 666th floor?

    2. Re:what i really want to know is... by atchertha · · Score: 5, Funny

      will there be an elevator in the elevator so that people of average human height will be able to reach all of the buttons? seems like there'd be quite a few...

    3. Re:what i really want to know is... by letxa2000 · · Score: 1
      No, this goes to 11...

    4. Re:what i really want to know is... by slonkak · · Score: 0

      You know some moron pilot is gonna take this thing out...

    5. Re:what i really want to know is... by Tap-Sa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are only two practical floors for average people. Earth and GTO. Getting off before GTO would send you plummeting back to earth. Getting off after GTO would send you to either elliptical orbit or even escape velocities to Moon, Mars etc. but that is not for an average person.

    6. Re:what i really want to know is... by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      That reminds me of a classic brainteaser:

      Joe lives on the top floor of his building. Every day, he gets in the elevator, pushes the button for the ground floor, rides down, and goes to work. But when he comes home, he gets in the elevator, pushes the button for the eighth floor, gets off there, and takes the stairs for the other 4,992 floors to reach his apartment. What's going on?

    7. Re:what i really want to know is... by elemental23 · · Score: 1

      So what's the answer?

      --
      I like my women like my coffee... pale and bitter.
    8. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He can not reach all the buttons. :-)

    9. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He can reach the 1st floor button, and not his floor. but with his umbrella, he can go up to his floor.

    10. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sure, the bottom floor - tera firma.

    11. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Joe's a midget

    12. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the 666th floor ???

    13. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like his ass can't jump.

    14. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously Joe's elevator doesn't go all the way to the top (as they say).

    15. Re:what i really want to know is... by PD · · Score: 1

      I don't know about your house, but both floors of my house have air.

    16. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Joe's pushing the buttons with his penis.

    17. Re:what i really want to know is... by uncoveror · · Score: 1

      The Space Elevator seems about as plausible as the X-4000 Launch Aparatus.

      --
      The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
    18. Re:what i really want to know is... by AtrN · · Score: 1

      Wrong band.

    19. Re:what i really want to know is... by websaber · · Score: 1

      Joe is a dawrf (height challenged?) he can't reach the top buttons.

      --
      "A good friend will bail you out of jail. A true friend will be sitting next to you saying, 'damn....that was fun!'"
    20. Re:what i really want to know is... by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Getting off after GTO would send you to either elliptical orbit or even escape velocities to Moon, Mars etc. but that is not for an average person.

      People would usually prefer geo-sync sure, but cargo? I haven't taken the time to work out if the orbital mechanics make it feasible, but dropping packages off the end of a space elevator at the right time might not be a bad way to send things into a lunar transfer orbit if you wanted to ship non-perishable supplies (i.e. water, vitamins, electronics) to a moonbase. You would likely still need to add some delta-V to catch it and put it on a lunar space elevator, but it would probably save you a fair bit of money over using a pure propellant solution.

      Perhaps you might have a couple of those floors depending on where you wanted to transfer to: the moon, L2, L4/L5, Mars/Asteroid Belt

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    21. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what a dumb comment...

    22. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and yours was worse due to the lack of content.

    23. Re:what i really want to know is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are spelling errors in your comment AND sig. Please fix, as it makes you look really dumb.

  2. Seems like by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Any excuse to hang out in Santa Fe is a good one.

    1. Re:Seems like by Illbay · · Score: 2, Funny

      In this case you could potentially hang UP above Santa Fe.

      --
      Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
    2. Re:Seems like by The+Dobber · · Score: 1, Funny

      70 scientists and engineers are discussing the idea at a conference in Santa Fe today

      Translated: 70 geeky guys are prowling about looking for cheap women and booze. And on somebody elses nickle.

  3. 1st lift by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uhh.. I still do not think this is a wise idea. It will be a target.

    1. Re:1st lift by cyberlync · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh lord not this again. Yes, we must not do anything that may be a target for terrorists. Dont drive your car because there might be a car bomb. Dont fly becuase the plane might be hijacked. Tell you what, why dont you hide under your bed while the rest of us continue on with life and the building of civilization.

      --
      I'm a programmer, I don't have to spell correctly; I just have to spell consistently
    2. Re:1st lift by cosmo7 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Dude, now the terrorists know about his bed.

  4. Kind of scary. by grub · · Score: 0, Redundant


    Imagine a 100,000 km cable falling to earth.. I wouldn't want to be under it.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Kind of scary. by knowles420 · · Score: 0

      Imagine a 100,000 km cable falling to earth.. I wouldn't want to be under it. imagine falling 100,000 km to earth, while you're at it. ick.

      --
      -knowles
    2. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Imagine the fact that the tip would accelerate as it fell...most of it would end up burning up in the atmosphere. Also imagine how little of the earth's land area lies along the equator. Not much. It might cause some localized devastation, but it's not a world-breaker.

      --
      blog |
    3. Re:Kind of scary. by fredrikj · · Score: 4, Funny

      Imagine the fact that the tip would accelerate as it fell...most of it would end up burning up in the atmosphere.

      That's true, the risk of the thing falling down and crushing people is almost zero. But there is another problem: if it burns, will the resulting particles be hazardous for us to inhale? There's research going on about that.

    4. Re:Kind of scary. by jackb_guppy · · Score: 3, Funny

      But But But

      When a cable under stress breaks it can cut right thought metal...

      When this long whip breaks, it will slice right thought the earth!!

    5. Re:Kind of scary. by register_ax · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Imagine a 100,000 km cable falling to earth.. I wouldn't want to be under it.

      I don't mean to sound too condescending, but really, the centrifugal force of earth's rotation makes that impossible. I would have been humoured if you would have stated imagine a 100,000 km cable being hurtled at the moon when I move there. For it to fall to earth would mean the earth would stop spinning...highly unlikely given what we know.

      You might be able to argue that inertia from the atmosphere would allow it to operate like a whip, but even that is farfetched. I doubt they would implement such a system without properly addressing such an issue.

      Be more afraid of Near Earth Objects. Of course those things fall from roughly 4.7E17 km. Why the hell don't people imagine that?

    6. Re:Kind of scary. by lylum · · Score: 1
      >I doubt they would implement such a system without properly addressing such an issue.

      But you have listened to the new about NASA during the last few months?
      I wouldn't trust them to change a light bulb anymore ;)

    7. Re:Kind of scary. by grub · · Score: 1


      If the cable broke, wouldn't the end attached to Earth fall back? The center of gravity has been changed and the far tip of the broken end wouldn't be moving fast enough to provide the force needed to keep the cable pulled in place.

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    8. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I swear to god, if my eyes roll any harder, they're going to fall out of my head.

      It's not like we're talking about a high tension cable here. The cable's structure will be balanced by gravity -- the center of gravity will rest at the geosynchronous point, meaning that the bottom half will be falling toward Earth while the top half will be moving away at an equal rate. (Disclaimer: my degree is in English and I'm relying on this thing called "high school physics class"...)

      Really, it depends on where the cable snapped and what the nature of the accident was...

      --
      blog |
    9. Re:Kind of scary. by merlin_jim · · Score: 3, Informative

      Imagine a 100,000 km cable falling to earth.. I wouldn't want to be under it.

      The cable is actually pulling up. Catastrophic failure at any point along the cable results in it leaving earth.

      Basically, you put the center of gravity of the cable right at geosynchronous orbit (ideally you want it to be a little higher than that)

      If it's at geo orbit, then the cable stays still even if you cut it off. A hurricane would push the cable sideways, tidal gravity is enough to keep the cable taut by itself. It's a non-stable equilibrium however; eventually the cable will drift enough to escape earth gravity. Unless it hits a mountain first. But even then, EVERYONE is under it. It'll wrap around the earth at least once before it's done falling...

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    10. Re:Kind of scary. by csimicah · · Score: 2, Funny

      It _is_ pretty scary to think about a paper thin ribbon of material falling on your head. It would probably get in your hair and necessitate a shower and a vigorous shampooing.

    11. Re:Kind of scary. by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But there is another problem: if it burns, will the resulting particles be hazardous for us to inhale?

      Carbon nanotubes are primarily, well, carbon. Burning up would create the same stuff that charcoal makes, CO2. Potentially less toxic than second hand cigarette smoke. There may be some other chemicals in there, but the whole idea is to make the tube out of a single material, the nanotubes, to make it strong. So, yes, research is good, but toxicity is probably not the biggest issue.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    12. Re:Kind of scary. by Docrates · · Score: 3, Informative

      God Damnit... because of people like you Clarke once said "the elevator will be built 50 years after people stop laughing".

      Would you please document yourself, make the appropriate research, concentrate for 2 seconds on the topic at hand before you open your hole and spill out the first fearful thought that comes to your mind?

      - It would be built in the middle of the ocean on a floating platform
      - If it broke, most of the 100,000Km would NOT fall to earth (junior high physics can tell you that), and most of the piece that would, would burn in reentry
      - What remains would be much more harmless than your poisonous, unscientific whining.

      You're like those people that hear the word "nuclear" and immediately thing BAD BAD BAD

      --

      There are two kinds of people in the world: Those with good memory.
    13. Re:Kind of scary. by wulfhound · · Score: 1

      Probably. Then again, the atmospheric pollution expelled by a typical rocket launch is also hazardous for us to inhale. Very. Not to mention the crud emitted when a satellite (or, worse yet, a Space Shuttle) burns up.

      Fortunately, rocket launches and re-entries are a relatively rare event, and most of their nastiness is dumped high enough in the atmosphere that it gets dispersed well before anyone breathes it in. The same would be true of burning-up bits of elevator.

    14. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure those Islamic Terrorists are already planning to blow it up, and take as many innocent civilians with it.

    15. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good god you're a thick cunt, aren't you? It can't fall unless the earth stops spinning, and I think that would be more concerning that some cable falling.

      Why is Slashdot populated by so many uneducated wankers like this guy?

    16. Re:Kind of scary. by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Sigh.

      Who modded THAT insightfull?

      "Imagine an accident. I wouldn't want it to happen to me!" Is not insightfull.

      We get these inane comments with every article about transport.
      Electric cars: Imagine getting electrocuted.
      Supersonic planes: Imagine a supersonic collision with a building.
      Space elevator: Imagine it falling on you.
      Ship: Imagine it sinks.
      Train: Imagine it derails.
      Etc, etc, etc.

      We don't need to have those modded up! They're not saying anything original.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    17. Re:Kind of scary. by MasterofVoid · · Score: 1

      And God knows the concept of showering is scary enough to the average /. reader..

      --
      *You are not allowed to read this*
    18. Re:Kind of scary. by wulfhound · · Score: 5, Insightful

      a) Carbon nanotubes are strong but very, very light. They have a high surface area per unit mass. In the lower atmosphere, the cable would float to earth like a piece of fishing twine; in the higher atmosphere it would just burn up.

      b) Not really. Airborne traffic is smart enough to deal with comms towers, skyscrapers and hurricanes. This thing does not move - all you need to do is fly around it.

      c) Yes it does. In order to advance space traffic, we need to get to geosynchronous and LEO MUCH cheaper, allowing us to loft the larger masses necessary for more ambitious space missions. Getting big tonnages out of Earth's gravity well cheaper and more reliably than is currently possible would be a BIG win for space travel.

    19. Re:Kind of scary. by Pharmboy · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you read the article, they are looking at the Pacific ocean as the base of the ribbon. If there was a real problem, and they needed it, it would be possible to cut the ribbon on the earth side, and this would force the cable UP instead of down. Not necessarily the best thing to happen, but it could burn up (carbon) in the atmosphere on the way back.

      This stuff is pretty light, and they are looking at a RIBBON, not a cable. So the air resistance would prevent a 100 ft piece (for example) from accellerating to a speed that will cause any major damage. At least that is how I understand it after reading the article.

      Same reason if you throw a sheet of paper off a tall building, no one is hurt. You throw a marble instead, and you can split a skull.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    20. Re:Kind of scary. by krb · · Score: 1

      The cable is actually pulling up. Catastrophic failure at any point along the cable results in it leaving earth.

      not if the point of failure is beyond the midpoint, causing the center of gravity to shift below GEO and draw the cable down.

      that being said it wouldn't likely be dangerous due to it being lightweight, wide and thin. A sheet of flexible cardstock does about the same damage dropped from 100 feet or a 100 thousand.

      --
    21. Re:Kind of scary. by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

      -5, Ignorant of laws of physics
      +1 Funny

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    22. Re:Kind of scary. by John+Allsup · · Score: 2, Informative

      Think about it. If it breaks at the centre of gravity, you're left with the bits being pulled down ONLY, and nothing to tension the cable from above. The outer part of the cable will indeed fly off into space, but the rest will still present a problem. Similar considerations will apply if the cable breaks somewhere else: the bit on the earth side will no longer be pulled away from the earth strongly enough.

      --
      John_Chalisque
    23. Re:Kind of scary. by krb · · Score: 1

      hear hear.

      --
    24. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes it does. In order to advance space traffic, we need to get to geosynchronous and LEO MUCH cheaper

      Ah, yes. The old argument for the space elevators.

      That argument, however, completely sidestepps the fact that beam-stalking stuff to the LEO takees away funding from the development of more efficient and cheaper propulsions systems we truly need in the future.

      As I said, we can already get to the LEO but from there on we've got a problem. Diverting funds from the propulsion science does only us a disservice.

    25. Re:Kind of scary. by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2, Informative
      Um, no. Only the bit above geosynchronous orbit pulls away from the earth, the rest is hanging down. So if you break the tether at or below geosynchronous then the lower part falls, the upper part heads off towards the asteroid belt, depending on where the break is (I'm not actually making that bit up- if you lose the very tip it could even reach Jupiter!). The lower part just falls. However the section a bit above halfway can end up in a stable elliptical orbit; the rest will reenter.

      The cable is only epoxied together, so anything past 100 km or so above the earth would fall apart into fibers during reentry (you'd probably blow it up into sections to help it melt correctly). Nobody knows what effect breathing these fibers in would have.

      Incidentally everyone envisages the cable as being made of metal- it actually would weigh on order 1kg per kilometer, so it's not going to hurt you (although I wouldn't want to motorcycle fast at a section for obvious reasons.)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    26. Re:Kind of scary. by jE · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't this idea result in the largest grass trimmer ever build ? The velocity at the outer edge must be huge. And the centrifugal force at the bottom would probably rip up a big chunk of paradise before any lifting device could ever be attached to it.

      Hell, even the outer rings of Saturn are lagging.. and they weigh nada-squat..

    27. Re:Kind of scary. by wulfhound · · Score: 1

      A valid point, but it strikes me that the types of propulsion system we'll need for deep space vs. the types needed for getting in to orbit are radically different anyways.

      Most of the promising high-efficiency propulsion technologies for deep space either rely on relatively small forces applied over a long time, or nuclear propulsion. Neither is remotely suitable for launching from Earth.

    28. Re:Kind of scary. by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 3, Funny

      Carbon nanotubes are primarily, well, carbon. ... Potentially less toxic than second hand cigarette smoke.

      What if it was made of marijuna nanotubes? Imagine a fatty from here to the moon? That would be some serious toking.

      With condolences to Tommy Chong.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    29. Re:Kind of scary. by Fizzlewhiff · · Score: 1

      What happens when the earth flips on its axis and the platform becomes one of the poles and the ribbon is twisted like a giant rubberband? Have they addressed this yet?

      --

      'Same speed C but faster'
    30. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      I swear to god, if my eyes roll any harder, they're going to fall out of my head.
      Really, considering the near-symmetric encompassment of your sockets around your eyes, and the juicy friction-reducing fluid your eyes are lubricated with, I fail to see how any angular momentum of your eyeballs would result in translational motion away from your head.
    31. Re:Kind of scary. by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      How much does that much cable weigh? Imagine all that kinetic energy being returned to the planet surface. Imagine it coming down in a huge rolling compression wave that wraps around the equator again and again. Imagine the tsunami. It'd be a bad day do own property on the coast.

      Think that magnitude of disruption might disrupt the weather patterns a little?

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    32. Re:Kind of scary. by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1
      So the air resistance would prevent a 100 ft piece (for example) from accellerating to a speed that will cause any major damage

      Except that most of the ribbon is doing its acceleration in space. 40 km of atmosphere, 50,000 km of earth-side ribbon. After a few minutes, whatever section of ribbon that is entering the atmosphere will be doing so at some truly wicked velocities. Given its highly un-aerodynamic shape, though, it'll burn up at the first wisps of air.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    33. Re:Kind of scary. by yintercept · · Score: 1

      Just because something is made of carbon doesn't mean that it will "burn up." This is especially true for stable forms of carbon like diamonds and, say, nanotubes.

      Many of the deadliest things on this planet are basically weird variations of carbon.

      I suspect that such chains would break, but create a really weird dust...they would not actually burn into CO2.

    34. Re:Kind of scary. by canajin56 · · Score: 1

      They have discussed that sort of thing before. If it snaps, everything above the snap point will fly off into space. Everything below will fall. The "cable" would be more like a ribbon. A few feet across, but only a micron thick. It would have a surface area:weight ratio WAY higher than newspaper, and a dropped newspaper isn't very danagerous. A dropped STACK of newspapers may be, but they said that the design would not withstand the lateral stresses of falling down sideways (Since every inch of it would be falling at a different speed) and it would break apart. So you would get nasty black confette. You may say "Sounds danagerous, it is so thin it could cut you!" but there would be nothing to exert the force required to cut you, since it is so light.

      Plus, this would have to be on the equator. So if you anchored it somewhere on a small island in the Pacific, it would mostly fall over water, anyways.
      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    35. Re:Kind of scary. by gears5665 · · Score: 1

      They address the human element. Everyone can relate to the visual of some giant cable snapping at one end and it falling on you. Fear is a reality and a human constant. If our ancestors weren't the most cautious of our species we probably wouldn't be here today.

      Yes I know it doesn't explain the Aussies...;-P

    36. Re:Kind of scary. by 955301 · · Score: 1

      They're not saying anything original.

      Well, now, imagine what would happen if they had said something original! That would have stopped everyone from reading the rest of the comments because they would be entrenched in thought about the original comment, and then we would all be stuck here, on Slashdot, and unable to do anything else!

      Imagine that, huh!? Oh, and while you are, imagine that the article is a dupe article.

      --
      You are checking your backups, aren't you?
    37. Re:Kind of scary. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Same reason if you throw a sheet of paper off a tall building, no one is hurt. You throw a marble instead, and you can split a skull.

      THIS is a job for: Empirical experimentation!

      -1 Jailbait ;-)

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    38. Re:Kind of scary. by whereiswaldo · · Score: 1
      Ironically, though, a comment which sums up unoriginal comments *is* insightful.



      ;)

    39. Re:Kind of scary. by rpresser · · Score: 1

      The velocity at the outer edge would be larger than orbital velocity is at that distance. That's part of the point! Just by climbing to the top of the cable and letting go, your spacecraft not only gets out of the gravity well but gets hurled completely out of orbit! centrifugal force at the bottom would probably rip up a big chunk of paradise ... No. Tidal forces on the cable make it want to stay vertical. The center of gravity is in geosynchronous orbit; therefore the bottom end of the cable stays above one spot on the earth, even while it's still descending.

    40. Re:Kind of scary. by borg389 · · Score: 1
      a) Carbon nanotubes are strong but very, very light. They have a high surface area per unit mass. In the lower atmosphere, the cable would float to earth like a piece of fishing twine; in the higher atmosphere it would just burn up.

      well, actually, the space elevator would be composed of not simply a single nanotube line, but thousands of them twined together. A single nanotube line, although stronger than steel, wouldn't be strong enough to support much weight. It could support itself, which steel can't for that length, but not a whole lot more.

      So you have to imagine a rope made of lots of twine falling to earth. This would fall a bit faster than a single piece of twine, and be a lot heavier.

      Otoh, most of it would probably burn up pretty quickly, and a thick thick rope falling from 50k up probably wouldn't do much damage.

    41. Re:Kind of scary. by slamb · · Score: 5, Informative
      It's not like we're talking about a high tension cable here.

      Actually, yes, we are. That's why advances in materials science were necessary before they could even think about building this thing. I quote from the article:

      The biggest technical obstacle is finding a material strong but light enough to make the cable; this is where the carbon nanotubes come in. These are microscopically thin tubes of carbon that are as strong as diamonds but flexible enough to turn into fibre. In theory, a nanotube ribbon about one metre wide and as thin as paper could support a space elevator.

      The cable's structure will be balanced by gravity -- the center of gravity will rest at the geosynchronous point, meaning that the bottom half will be falling toward Earth while the top half will be moving away at an equal rate.

      Being "balanced by gravity" means there's a huge amount of tension here. In fact, that basically says that the top half (by mass - by distance probably a very small proportion of the thing) holds up everything below the center of mass at the geosync point. (Or from the other perspective: the bottom half holds down the top half, which would fly off into space otherwise.) It does that with tension in the cable, and we're talking about a lot of tension in the cable.

      Let's put concrete numbers on it: carbon nanotubes are pretty light, but we're still talking about 35,785 kilometers in the bottom half (by mass) of the elevator - that's geosynchronous orbit around the earth. Say the elevator is 1 kg / m (very conservative, I think), which we'll call lamba (normal for linear density). Now gravity changes along the length of the cable (that's sort of the point), so we need an integral to calculate the force of gravity pulling the thing down:

      F = \int GM dm/r^2 = \int GM \lambda dr / r^2

      (where dm = \lamba dr). From my Physics I book, r_e (the mean radius of the Earth, which is a bit higher than sea level but not too bad) is 6.37 * 10^6 m. M (the mass of the earth) is 5.98 * 10^24 kg. And G is 6.67 * 10^-11 N*m^2 / kg^2. So the integral becomes:

      F = \int_{6.37 * 10^6 m}^{6.37 * 10^6 m + 3.58 * 10^7 m} (6.67 * 10^-11 N*m^2/kg^2) (5.98 * 10^24 kg) (1 kg / m) dr / r^2 = 5.3 * 10^7 N = 53 MN (mega-Newtons)

      ...which I think is the require tension right above that point. I can't think off-hand exactly how geosync works, but essentially the stuff above that is being sped up and the stuff below (and the Earth itself, though not significantly) is being slowed down by that tension.

      Disclaimer: I'm an undergrad physics student with a headache. I very well may have made a mistake above, but I guarantee it's closer than the parent post.

    42. Re:Kind of scary. by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      Nanotubes aren't all that stable. In fact, one of the design issues the engineers face is how to protect the ribbon from oxidizing.

      The cable will need a protective coating of some kind, which itself probably won't survive re-entry. Also bear in mind that the cable is supposed to be very light and strong - more like a ribbon. What doesn't burn up from being dragged through the air will flutter like sheets of paper and won't accumulate enough energy to do any real damage.

      For dust to become a problem, it would have to shatter or be ground up or something, but I don't see how that would happen outside of normal wear and tear.
      =Smidge=

    43. Re:Kind of scary. by JebusIsLord · · Score: 1

      Nooo.... I thought he meant it would be an elevator made from a single molecule...

      Obviously it would be bundled, it just wouldn't be all that heavy for its size.

      --
      Jeremy
    44. Re:Kind of scary. by bryanthompson · · Score: 1

      damn straight. you rock.

    45. Re:Kind of scary. by d3faultus3r · · Score: 2, Funny

      Ah, but what about centrifugal force. If his eyes were rolling very fast the resulting heat from the friction would destroy the eye socket and the eyes would simply roll out, no longer secured to the body.

      --
      read my blog
      musings on politics and technol
    46. Re:Kind of scary. by spectrokid · · Score: 1

      Cows would stop giving milk you know...

      --

      10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then

    47. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It might cause some localized devastation, but it's not a world-breaker.


      Especially given the fact that none of the affected areas belong to the US... Not a world-breaker indeed.

    48. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      b) Not really. Airborne traffic is smart enough to deal with comms towers, skyscrapers and hurricanes. This thing does not move - all you need to do is fly around it.

      I don't think he was talking about planes accidentally flying into the cable...

    49. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck hitting a target that small. (It's only a meter wide, and the thickness of a sheet of paper)

      Planes aren't made to fly that precisely. Even with the WTC crashes one of the planes almost missed, and there we're talking about huge skycrapers.

      Besides, what would be the point? You're not going to kill lots of people, and you're not going to inspire shock and awe in the populace, since most people just don't care about spacetravel. The goals of terrorism don't seem to match a target of this category. At the very least, there are plenty of other targets that are much more interesting to terrorist (imagine a plane hitting the statue of liberty, do you think they'd go for the space elevator INSTEAD of that?). And with security it's not about being absolutely safe (which is impossible), but being relatively safe.

    50. Re:Kind of scary. by yintercept · · Score: 1

      I wasn't trying to raise alarm...just pointing out that organic compounds don't just "burn up." They continue to react with the environment. For that matter, what we call "burning up" is reacting with the environment. Burning up means a state change...and not necessarily a state change for the better.

      I pretty much stick with the whole conservation of energy and conservation of mass point of view. That is, all the matter that we work with will pretty much end up back in the environment, and that you have to think about how things really react and not just say...oh, it will burn up, or, oh, we will just bury it...

      Fluttering like rather strong sheets of paper sounds a lot more like what would happen. Sci Fi books often have strings of fiber which are extremely dangerous as they tend to slice through people rather quickly...aka Ringworld... The scifi alarmist would have this 3 inch pieces of string floating around in the world slicing everyone to piece...worse than asbestos in the lung.

    51. Re:Kind of scary. by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      No, I think it is possible. Just snip the cable at the top. Now instead of one object with a center of mass in geostationary orbit, you have two objects, one above GEO and one below. The only thing holding up the cable in the first place was the counterweight.

      Nor would it be Earth's atmosphere causing the "whip" effect. It's simple conservation of energy. If an object is in orbit, and you push it straight down, you've done nothing to slow it in the direction of the orbit. Since it's going too fast for the orbit you tried to put it in, it simply gains altitude until it's back in the original orbit.

      But in the case of the cable, it can't go back up because the downward pull never gets released, so it moves faster and faster, picking up more and more energy.

      But I do agree that this issue will be properly addressed before it's built. I always figured the cable could be segmented via explosives or some chemical process, so that most of the cable pieces would simply stay in orbit.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    52. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 1

      I'd imagine that as the end of the cable gained velocity, the resulting atmospheric friction would incinerate it before it got a chance to hit.

      --
      blog |
    53. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 1

      Thank you for clarifying the above. I dunno what I was thinking -- yeah, obviously, there's going to be a lot of tension on the cable. But this "slice through the earth thing" was so laughably stupid I couldn't think clearly.

      --
      blog |
    54. Re:Kind of scary. by KillerLoop · · Score: 1

      Personally I'd say that the opposite is true. If our ancestors weren't as bold and daring as they were, I guess we would still huddle in that secure cave somewhere in Africa.

      Fear in it's current giantic dimensions seems to be a pretty recent phenomenon. I don't think the world was explored by the most cautious of persons.

    55. Re:Kind of scary. by Pii · · Score: 1
      You're on crack. The WTC trajectory was difficult not because it's hard to hit a building with an airplane, but rather, it was trying not to hit anything else that loomed between the plane and the eventual target. Flying a jumbo jet through a city trying to hit a specific building is a difficult task. Flying a jumbo jet into a tall object surrounded by nothing else would be a piece of cake even to an unskilled pilot.

      It's not like trying to hit a 1 square meter target... It's hitting a target 1 meter wide, but for all practicle intents and purposes, infinately long.

      Pilots line up to hit the center of a runway every time they land. You don't think a terrorist could easily hit this thing within the width of a given airplane?

      As far as your other point, regarding the "attractiveness" of this target from a terrorists perspective, I'm with you on that one. It's not a sexy terrorism target. Very few casualties, if any... Very low visibility on most people's radar.

      It'd be a waste of time and energy for terrorists.

      --
      For those that would die defending it, Freedom
      has a sweet taste that the protected will never know.
    56. Re:Kind of scary. by tgibbs · · Score: 1
      Same reason if you throw a sheet of paper off a tall building, no one is hurt. You throw a marble instead, and you can split a skull.

      THIS is a job for: Empirical experimentation!

      Actually, dropping marbles (carefully) from multi-story buildings is an amusing experiment. What one learns is that glass is remarkably strong (dropped upon cement, most of them bounce) and elastic (the height of the bounce compares favorably to the best rubber balls).
    57. Re:Kind of scary. by hey! · · Score: 1

      most of it would end up burning up in the atmosphere.

      It had better.

      Imagine the difference between a neatly wound spool of string in your kitchen drawer, and the same string unspooled and thrown in willy-nilly.

      Oceanographers already deal with this problem with cable deployed instruments. Sometimes the cable tangles, and although it fit neatly onto a spool on the deck of the ship, the tangle can sometimes be several times larger than the ship.

      If ten or fifteen miles of cable made it to the ground, it could still be an enormous enginering problem to clean up.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    58. Re:Kind of scary. by NickFortune · · Score: 2, Informative
      Doesn't matter - the energy still has to go somewhere. It's not going to pretty if that happens.

      For one thing - this is strong stuff we're talking about - incineration is garuanteed. If it breaks up that might sound like an imporovement - but the it's like being shot with a shotgun. It may be loaded with pellets, or it may be loaded with solid rounds. You may spead the impact a little, but its the kinetic energy that'll kill you - and you still get all of that.

      Not scared yet? Let's put this in perspective.

      according to its website the Golden Gate bridge weighs 380,800,000 kg and spans 1966m. That's probably comparable to the weight/length ratio for a space elevator. It uses hi-tech materials, but it has to support its own weight across its entire length, and its going to be long! According to Nasa (google cache) the elevator is likely reach 36,000,000m. That's 18,311 times the length of the GGB

      So taking the golden gate bridge as a guide, we can estimate the total weight of the cable at 18,311 x 380,800,000kg = 6.97 x 10^12. Seven gigatonnes - lighter than I expected.

      How hard is it going to hit? Well, at least terminal velocity. I say "at least because the upper reaches will be going faster and have to be slowed by the atmosphere. Also the cable will be considerably denser than a human, so we can reckon it's terminal v as being rather more than a human's. Human terminal v is about 50m/s so let's go with that for the time being. We're being conservative..

      Kinetic energy = 0,5 x mass x velocity x velocity
      = 6.97294 x 10^12 x 50 x 50 / 2
      = 8.716175 x 10^15 joules

      And to put that in perspective, one megaton comes to about 4.184 x 10^15 Joules.

      So if the cable came crashing down it'd release about 2 Megatons of kinetic energy - either as heat as it burnt up, or as shockwaves on impact.

      Doesn't sound like much? Well, the Hiroshima bomb is reckoned as being 20 killotonnes yeild. So 200 hundred hiroshima bombs going off in a ring around the equator in fairly rapid succession.

      and it it hits faster than that... well that's a square term. 100m/s give you 4 time the energy or 800 hiroshima bombs. 200m/s (not unreasonable) gives 16 times - 3,200 x hiroshima.

      Don't get me wrong - I'd love to see a space elevator. Just let's bear in mind that this is dangerous

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    59. Re:Kind of scary. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Actually, dropping marbles (carefully) from multi-story buildings is an amusing experiment.

      You tried it?
      Did you try with different sizes of marbles? Because I know the small ones are pretty hard to break, but when I was a kid I had some large ones break in my marble bag...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    60. Re:Kind of scary. by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      incineration is garuanteed
      *sigh*
      I meant "incineration is not garuanteed. Been a long week... :(
      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    61. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We hear a giant "twang" sound and everyone starts singing the Peter Gunn theme as rendered by the Art of Noise.

      The people on the elevator at the time shout "Yee Haw!!!" and fly off into the depths of space on a fabulous new voyage of discovery, and everyone on earth sheds exactly one tear artfully from the corner of their eyes for those crazy mixed-up kids on board.

      David Bowie then leads everyone in "Major Tom" and then we all go out for smoothies.

    62. Re:Kind of scary. by rjoseph · · Score: 1

      Clarke once said "the elevator will be built 50 years after people stop laughing".

      This morning he was so bold as to say that this might actually be the time when people have stopped laughing, but then he promptly redacted and reducded the figure to 10 years from now instead of 50. So there is still hope, and all the conference attendees are quite excited about that hope.

    63. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't end up "piled up"...because the earth is rotating beneath it, it would spool around the planet. And assuming that the cable was 20m thick, fell and wrapped around the Earth why not just build around it as necessary?

      --
      blog |
    64. Re:Kind of scary. by superdan2k · · Score: 1

      Bear in mind, though, that the cable isn't guaranteed to come straight down onto the orginating point... It's going to come down at an angle, probably with the rotation of the Earth -- the lower half would, anyway.

      The force of the impact will change along the length of the elevator cable, depending on two factors: the speed of that section and the mass of that section.

      See, it's not all going to hit in one place at once -- an object will take a LONG time to fall from geosynchronous orbit to the surface of the Earth.

      So let's say the elevator gets cut at that point. Immediately, the cable goes slack (nothing above geosynch to pull on it) and begins to collapse. Now, if it's anchored to the Earth and the Earth is rotating beneath it, the first portion of the cable is going to fall to the west, and it going to continue to fall westward. You have to view the cable, however, as a chain of points...each point having a certain mass and a certain velocity, both of which will change.

      The velocity will change based on how long that segment had to fall before hitting the surface (point 0 on the cable doesn't have to fall at all) PLUS the velocity added to it as the segment before it pulls it closer to the surface. Pretty complex, eh? As an example, if the length of the cable were such that it could wrap around the equator twice and atmospheric friction were not a concern, the second wrapping of the cable would go markedly faster than the first because the remaining cable to fall would be less massive than what was already on the ground pulling on it.

      In regards to mass, the acceleration due to gravity would be consistent, but the cable can still lose mass through atmospheric friction, plus the fact that large segments are already on the ground elsewhere and are not contributing to the force of the impact at a given location.

      Don't get me wrong -- if this thing were to fall, it would be messy, but let's bear in mind that the energy expended would be spread out across the lenght of the cable, and not a localized effect. Would it be messy? Undoubtably. How messy remains to be seen, of course. I just think that the two factors of the velocity of the impact and the mass impacting at a given location changing over time is going to play havoc with your calculations.

      But then again, I have an English degree...what do I know? :-)

      --
      blog |
    65. Re:Kind of scary. by Thjorska · · Score: 0

      You think that's scary? What if it has muzak?!

      --
      Current Karma Status: Roadkill
    66. Re:Kind of scary. by Mooncaller · · Score: 1

      I did an analysis of the tension way back when Clarks book came out. Hard to imagine that was in 79. I can still visualize buying it, like it happened yesterday. Boy I feel old :( Anyway, you need to balance the force of gravity, with angular momentum. The class of problems this belong to is called differential gravitation. Look for discusions about the analysis of "Tidal Force".

    67. Re:Kind of scary. by Lord+Prox · · Score: 1

      Ya know, thinking about this I don't think that in the event of some kind of failure we are going to have any kind of "re-entry burn up". IANAOrbital Mechanics Engineer but re-entry burn up is caused by something entering the atmosphere traveling in a lateral motion reletive to earth surface. This thing is in GeoSynch orbit. It has 0 lateral motion relative to surface and hence 0 motion relative to air that causes friction) it would not burn-up, Right?

      What did come to mind is this thing IS going to be crossing the ionispere. With all those charged particals running around up there aren't they going to see this thing as the mother of all grounding/lightning rods?

      [humor]We could ground out the entire natural earth electrical system. CHAOS! PANIC! No more schumann resonance! We will all go insane![/humor]

      Seriously, what are the considerations for this? Anyone? Anyone? Class. Anyone?

    68. Re:Kind of scary. by jackb_guppy · · Score: 1

      I been having problems with ground faults.

      Now, I have to worry about sky faults too!!

      And with 75 Mega-new-Tons. If this thing gets a short, it will be Hiroshima all over again.

      Make world stop, I want to get off.

    69. Re:Kind of scary. by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      It is complex - and I don't pretend to understand all of it. However you look at it though, you're still raising 7 gigatonnes an average of 18,000 kicks out of the gravity well. So if we assume the upper reaches cancel out the lower ones then we can calculate the potential energy due to gravity.

      There's useful web based app here which, using my previous assumptions, gives a total potential energy for the entire cable of 67 x 10^15 Joules

      So, given 1 megaton is approx equal to 4x10^15. that still works out at about 16 megatonnes. The difference this time is that the calculation is of the potential energy due ot gravity of the cable. If it comes down - this is how much energy will be released.

      As for speed, remember that different parts of the cable all want to travel at the orbital velocity for their height - so the earth's rotation will tend to wrap the cable around the equator, accellerating all the time as you pointed out. It might take days - I have no idea how to calculate it. I doubt it would take more than a week all told.

      But my degree is in software, not hardware. Any rocket scientist want to set us both straight?

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    70. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Nice job. However for carbon nanotubes, people have already calculated tension to be in the order of 0.1 TN (65 GN, to be exact), about three orders of magnitude larger than you estimate. I guess the culprit is not that you are using an incorrect density estimate (which won't chane the result even by a single order) but you are missing the rope's mass profile: it will be V shaped to be light at low tension regions and thick and though at high tension regions.

    71. Re:Kind of scary. by mpaque · · Score: 1

      Please remember the cable is under TENSION, from the anchor mass. A break in the atmosphere or low earth orbit (from that plane or low orbital junk) will result in most of the mass moving away from the Earth, rather than toward it.

      Second, the energy from whatever part of the cable is 'crashing down' will be dissapated over the length of the cable, and over a period of time as the cable fragment strikes the atmosphere. That is very different from the near instantaneous point release of energy of a weapon.

    72. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A 100,000 km long dube would be great! Where do I sign up?

    73. Re:Kind of scary. by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      OK - so if it breaks at the terrestrial anchor point it'll probably whip into space.

      Similarly, if it breaks from the orbital anchor point then thge whole thing comes down.

      If it breaks somewhere along its length then we get a mixture of the two. This is the most likely scenario. How many petajoules do you want to wager?

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    74. Re:Kind of scary. by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 2, Funny
      This thing is in GeoSynch orbit. It has 0 lateral motion relative to surface and hence 0 motion relative to air that causes friction) it would not burn-up, Right?
      Wrong.
      While it has 0 lateral motion WRT the surface, it is still in orbit.
      As sections of the cable drop lower, their orbital velocity will increase WRT the ground, and the cable will try to "wrap" itself around the planet.
      By the time that most of the cable hits thicker atmosphere, it will be going at a pretty good clip, and will burn up (even the light, "fluttery" ribbon sections).

      Here is an experiment that you can try in the safety of your own home to verify this:
      1. Evacuate all of the air from a room (to prevent stray air currents from skewing the results).
      2. Drop a ball from a height of, say, 6-10 ft or so.
      3. Note where the ball landed WRT its release point.
      You will see that the ball landed several microns East of its release point (and a few microns toward the equator, as well).
      A few microns might not sound like much, but multiplied out to 36,000 miles, that's a lot of microns.
      --
      Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
    75. Re:Kind of scary. by Lord+Prox · · Score: 1

      ummm. Still not getting it. Why should it increase its angular velocity. At lower orbits (ie shuttle) you have to have higher angular velocity to maintain orbit. We don't want the end of this rope to maintain orbit, we want it to lower down. the angular velocity would remain the same 360deg/day.

      have any thoughts on the ionisphere issue? I'll think some more on your experment. I am thinking that it is not quite the same. It would be more like lowering a rope from the top of a tall building. A really tall building. The top of the building has a slightly faster linear velocity than the base relative the the gravity well but the same angular velocity. The rope dosen't care, it just wants to get to the bottom of the gravity well. Your ball being dropped is not being influenced by anything during transit from top to bottom (except grav) but the rope is. Hmmmm. I'm not getting this.

    76. Re:Kind of scary. by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      ...we can estimate the total weight of the cable at 18,311 x 380,800,000kg = 6.97 x 10^12. Seven gigatons...

      Except that the GGB is make of steel and concrete, and the space elevator ribbon would be made out of a nanotube/epoxy material. Which, according to ISR, would weigh only about 7.5 kg per km.

      If the space elevator is 36,000km - which is kinda short if I'm not mistaken, so let's be conservative and say it's 100,000km - would weigh only 750,000 kg... (about 850 emperial tons).

      Following your math: 750000 x 0.5 x 50 x 50 = 937,500,000 Joules.

      So you're only off by a factor of 4.5 million.

      And not only is the TOTAL energy about 0.0000002 times what you thought it was, but such a relatively light (7.5 grams per meter! That's practically tissue paper...) and FLAT, THIN ribbon would have horrible aerodynamics and dissipate much of it's energy in churning the air. I'd say a conservative terminal velocity for this stuff would be no more than 5 m/s. So now it's kinetic energy drops by another factor of 100!

      Here's an experiment, with Halloween not too far away... throw a roll of toilet paper so that it unwinds and watch how fast the ribbon of paper falls even with a heavy weight (remaining roll) on one end of it. Now imagine something that has about the same density but is at least five or six times wider (not thicker)...

      Given that, whatever was out in space (no air resistance) will probably reach a speed fast enough to burn up, but the majority of it will probably make it to the ground. And when it does, I think the damage would be pretty minimal... ...you don't work for NASA, do you?
      =Smidge=

    77. Re:Kind of scary. by chl · · Score: 1
      b) Not really. Airborne traffic is smart enough to deal with comms towers, skyscrapers and hurricanes. This thing does not move - all you need to do is fly around it.

      *cough* Sep 11 *cough*

      chl

    78. Re:Kind of scary. by Bob+Munck · · Score: 1
      The first space elevator is going to weigh about 800 tons. We may someday do big, heavy-lift elevators that weigh as much as 10,000 tons. Your calculations start out being off by eight orders of magnitude, and get worse.

      It's much more correct to say that the only way we'll be able to detect that the elevator has fallen is by noticing that it's no longer there.

    79. Re:Kind of scary. by Tokerat · · Score: 1


      What the hell are you talking about? Last time I checked, the Earth has been rotating around the same axis since....the beginning of time?

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    80. Re:Kind of scary. by some+guy+I+know · · Score: 1
      Why should it increase its angular velocity. At lower orbits (ie shuttle) you have to have higher angular velocity to maintain orbit.
      OK, don't look at the orbit with respect to the ground.
      Assume that the Earth doesn't rotate at all, and you have a cable that is hanging from 36,000 miles, but not touching the ground.

      Now, an object in higher orbit will orbit the planet more slowly than one in a lower orbit.
      (For example, the space shuttle, in LEO, orbits about once every 90 minutes.)
      What about an object in a severely elliptical orbit?
      Its orbital period will be somewhere in between.

      What causes an orbit?
      The gravitational attraction of the planet pulls an object down.
      The object is traveling forward.
      The deflection of the forward velocity makes its path circular.

      Take a rocket sitting in high Earth orbit.
      Fire the rocket directly toward the Earth.
      (This will be equivalent to the lower parts of the cable pulling on the upper parts.)
      The rocket will travel toward the Earth, but it still has its forward velocity.
      It will thus be deflected into a lower Earth orbit.
      An object in a lower orbit travels faster than an object in a higher orbit, so the new (now elliptical) orbital period must be smaller (i.e., faster).

      But, let's assume that this doesn't happen.
      Let's assume that the cable falls straight down.
      When it hits the lower atmosphere, it will start to flutter.
      As it does this, it will be traveling at great velocity.
      Friction with the lower atmosphere will heat it up, and it will burn up.

      I guess the point is, now matter how it falls, most of the cable will be traveling at such a high velocity when it hits the atmosphere that it will burn up.

      One final thing: Most pictures of the space elevator show the cable hanging straight down from its upper base.
      I don't see how this is possible.
      I think that the cable will hang down in an arc, and the base of the elevator will not be directly below its top.
      But I don't know much about orbital mechanics, so I could be wrong.
      --
      Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
    81. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "In the lower atmosphere, the cable would float to earth like a piece of fishing twine; in the higher atmosphere it would just burn up."

      And (considerably-heavier-than-fishing-twine) traffic on the cable?

      Would it float too?

    82. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When we all know it's GOOD GOOD GOOD! ;)

    83. Re:Kind of scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I swear to god, some people really ought to recognize a freakin' joke when they see one.

      Didn't the "Funny" tag tip you off?

    84. Re:Kind of scary. by Fizzlewhiff · · Score: 1

      Last time I checked, the Earth has been rotating around the same axis since....the beginning of time?

      Then we are long overdue for an axis tilt. There have been some geological discoveries that made some scientists question if there was a polar shift. I tried finding it on google but can't. It wasn't anything like the sahara once being fertile farmlands and a 1 degree change made it a desert. What I saw a few years ago talked about magnetic rock found where north didn't point to magnetic north, which made geologist think the earth did a 180. I wish I could find it.

      --

      'Same speed C but faster'
    85. Re:Kind of scary. by AlecC · · Score: 1

      Why should it increase its angular velocity.

      Constant linear velocity. Decreasing radius. Therefore increasing angu;lar velocity.

      The equator is travelling at about 1000 mph (24000 miles circumferencce, one day to get back to the start point. Something on the end of a peice of stringis travelling faster, just to stay above the same point on the earth. As it falls, it doean't lose that speed, so it will get ahead of the original fastening point.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    86. Re:Kind of scary. by AlecC · · Score: 1

      Its not the earth which flipped, it is the magnetic field. Every now and again, the eaths magnetic field drops to zero and re-emerges the other way up. Irrecularly, but about every 125000 years and taking about 5000 years to do it.

      Continental drift might be more of a problem - in a hundred million years or so we might have to move it out of the way as Australia motors past. However, I think this one is far enoug off that we can leave it to the next generation

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
    87. Re:Kind of scary. by sharkdba · · Score: 1

      I swear to god, if my eyes roll any harder, they're going to fall out of my head.

      Really, considering the near-symmetric encompassment of your sockets around your eyes, and the juicy friction-reducing fluid your eyes are lubricated with, I fail to see how any angular momentum of your eyeballs would result in translational motion away from your head.


      Yes, this is exactly the type of reply I would expect here on /.

      Keep it up guys!

      --
      The purpose of life is to find the purpose of life.
  5. this would be sweet by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 0

    though it would have to be at the poles for stability sake.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    1. Re:this would be sweet by grub · · Score: 1


      though it would have to be at the poles for stability sake.

      How do you propose to have a geostationary orbit at the poles?

      --
      Trolling is a art,
    2. Re:this would be sweet by Pyromage · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why would it have to be at the poles? I can't see any reason whatsoever for that restriction.

    3. Re:this would be sweet by The+Silicon+Sorceror · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it would be awesome to have the counterweight crashing down on top of Antarctica.

      Idiot.

      --

      ~ Give me 101 plastic soldiers, and I will conquer the world.
    4. Re:this would be sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      -1, Retard

    5. Re:this would be sweet by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      geosync orbit.

      otherwise, you would have an elivator that flys through the atmosphear at amasing velocity and is almost imposable to step onto with out going fast yourself.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    6. Re:this would be sweet by donutello · · Score: 1

      Why would it have to be at the poles? I can't see any reason whatsoever for that restriction

      Because you don't want to deal with the centrifugal force associated with stuff at the equators.

      An object on the surface of the earth travels at a speed proportional to its distance from the axis that the earth rotates in. An object in geostationary object above that same object has to move at a much faster speed to keep up because it is circumscribing a bigger circle. So if you built the elevator at some point other than the poles, you have to make sure you provide transverse acceleration to any objects you send up the elevator.

      On the other hand, at the poles, the whole elevator is in line with the earths axis and you don't have to worry about accelerating the objects you are sending up.

      --
      Mmmm.. Donuts
    7. Re:this would be sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post brought to you by the "back-to-high-school-physics department."

    8. Re:this would be sweet by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 2, Informative

      It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to post and remove all doubt.

      Guestion for you - what do YOU think would hold this thing up? Maybe you expect a bunch of Indian Fakirs to be sitting around the base blowing on flutes? (reference to Indian Rope Trick for those who were wondering...)

      To answer my own question, the fact that one end of the cable is moving faster than the other end makes the part that is moving want to fly off in a straight line - but the tensile strength of the cable keeps the two hooked together. If the cable were at either of the poles, there would be a bunch less difference in speed between the two ends - and the system would be more UNSTABLE.

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    9. Re:this would be sweet by IRandom · · Score: 1

      It has to be over the equator in order to be in geosync orbit.
      Objects that are in a distance of 36,000 km from earth will complete one orbit every 23 hrs 56 min, so if it will be over the equator and move in the same direction as earch it will be over the same position on earth

    10. Re:this would be sweet by wulfhound · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually the centrifugal force is -exactly- what you want. The object is accelerated by the taut cable as it climbs it, so that when it reaches geostationary orbit it is travelling at the appropriate velocity. Remember that escaping the Earth's gravity well is about velocity, not just plain altitude.

    11. Re:this would be sweet by amorsen · · Score: 1

      The "centrifugal force" is what keeps the whole thing up. Build it at a pole and it will just come down immediately. Duh.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    12. Re:this would be sweet by m1a1 · · Score: 1

      that's a great idea!!! geosynchronous orbit at a pole!!!

      keep on living in your own little world there buddy.

    13. Re:this would be sweet by apdt · · Score: 1

      Because you don't want to deal with the centrifugal force associated with stuff at the equators.

      Er... actually it's the centrifugal forces at the equator that make this work. If you built it at the poles, what would keep it up; gravity would just pull it all back down.

      It needs to be built on the equator so that that it will circle the center of the earth, and will remain geostationary (i.e. stationary relative to the surface of the earth). The centrifugal force caused by the spinning of the earth will keep the 'rope' taught, and allow you to climb it.

      --
      I lay awake last night wondering where the sun had gone, then it dawned on me.
    14. Re:this would be sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geosync orbit is impossible at the poles!

      The elevator would just fall straight down...

    15. Re:this would be sweet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Big friggin' rockets going full bore all the time.

      Duh.

    16. Re:this would be sweet by The+Evil+Couch · · Score: 1
      it's not totally impossible.

      you ever see a yorkshire terrier spin around trying to catch its tail? put that little guy in space with a really long leash and he'll be able to maintain the needed tension on the elevator.

      of course, if the leash gets caught up in his legs while something's getting transported, the whole thing's screwed.

  6. and then by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they discovered crack.

    Yeah right, wake up.

    1. Re:and then by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      And how many people thought that blacks would always be slaves, or that we would never need more than 64 K of RAM for PCs, or that women would never be astronauts?

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
  7. Up and Down ? by gustgr · · Score: 0

    After leaving the atmosphere how can one determine if it is going up or down ?

    1. Re:Up and Down ? by perreira · · Score: 1

      Look at the display: if it says 100003 ...100004....100005 you go up.

  8. Re:Yahoo!!! by Justin205 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sorry, 7th post, and no, it isn't enough. Make a GOOD commment, and that will get you modded up.

    --
    "Your effort to remain what you are is what limits you."
  9. Re:So what happens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I imagine they would have SAM emplacements all around the island where this thing would be tethered.

  10. Idealism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    It's all very well wanting to build things that appeared in Sci Fi novels, but they fail to take into account the reality of the modern world. If someone's willing to topple a couple of 107m tall towers, what do you think they'd do to a 100,000km high space elevator? Ignore it?

    That said, it is a neat idea, and if we can realise it, then great. But is now the best time to be building this kind of stuff?

    1. Re:Idealism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oops, I meant 107 storeys tall, not metres.

    2. Re:Idealism... by KillaMarcilla · · Score: 1

      You'd have to be at the top of the cable to do anything particularly harmful to it

      Think of it as a cable hanging down from geosynchronous orbit, not a tower

    3. Re:Idealism... by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      It's been discussed many times that if such a thing failed, damage would be minimal:

      1. Depending on what happens it might simply fly into space.
      2. If it falls, most of it would burn in the atmosphere.
      3. If it reaches surface it'd be somewhere in the ocean anyway, so damage would be minimal.
      4. Targeting a thin wire somewhere in the middle of the ocean is much harder than two giant towers.

    4. Re:Idealism... by ericman31 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Most of the "Golden Age of Sci Fi" writers were/are scientists and engineers. The things they wrote/write about actually have some basis in physics. Heinlein spent days and sometimes weeks

      calculating orbits by hand (this was before the advent of the PC, remember), for example. Much of our scientific and engineering achievement today was first written about by Sci Fi authors, including personal computers, world wide networks, men traveling in outerspace, satellites, genetic engineering, waterbeds and much more. I personally hope we continue building what Sci Fi writers write about. Idealism and dreams lead to greatness. Pragmatism and "being realistic" lead to boredom and stagnation.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    5. Re:Idealism... by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So the terrorists have already won: we can't build something because someone might blow it up?

      New continents were found, the sound barrier was broken and even space flight was developed at the cost of human life. Yet, it was worth it.

      As a species we have become too concerned about safety. We are afraid to such extent that testing new discoveries (medicinal, chemical and physical) are becoming so burdened by the hysterical safeguards, governmental red tape and the associated costs that nothing ever gets done. To my mind, this development threatens the very progess of our species.

    6. Re:Idealism... by wulfhound · · Score: 1

      This thing is not going to be in a crowded, public access zone. It'll be in the middle of an ocean, hundreds of miles from anything, presumably with the US Navy's finest patrolling the surrounding area. Can't see al-Qaeda and their like getting anywhere near.

    7. Re:Idealism... by S.Lemmon · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're number four I disagree with. There's more than just the line itself. I'm sure the base would be fairly easy to spot and in a well-known location. After all this would be a major supply line into space.

    8. Re:Idealism... by vadim_t · · Score: 0

      Ok, but in any case it's going to be somewhere in the middle of the ocean, probably in a restricted zone. I don't think they'll let people go there without a good reason, so it can be well protected, and it's definitely not a city, so it'd be much easier to shoot planes down in that area.

      Since the cable itself will be made from the strongest stuff on earth, it should require quite a lot of effort to break. The base will probably be heavy as well.

      Regardless of all this, I think that when we start getting so nervous about what terrorists might do, we have to start wondering how the heck do we let a small group of undertrained and underfunded morons affect the development of the technology in the country that's got the strongest army.

    9. Re:Idealism... by footNipple · · Score: 2, Insightful
      As a species we have become too concerned about safety. We are afraid to such extent that testing new discoveries (medicinal, chemical and physical) are becoming so burdened by the hysterical safeguards, governmental red tape and the associated costs that nothing ever gets done. To my mind, this development threatens the very progess of our species.

      Mod this parent up...way up! This is indeed the present human course that will threaten us the most.

    10. Re:Idealism... by PhB95 · · Score: 1

      In "2001 a space odissey" i've once red "Earth is man's craddle, but you don't stay in a craddle forever" (sorry if it's badly translated, i red it in french). A very true idea...
      We need this thing, among many other uses, to build spacecrafts in orbit. If it becomes technically possible, it should be made. How many conventionnal rockets, space shuttles comprised, have crashed ? Did it stop us from using them ? How much cars did kill people ? did we all revert to walking ?

      --
      One of those Europeans...
    11. Re:Idealism... by bobtheowl2 · · Score: 1

      So your saying we should just forgo possibly one of the biggest breakthroughs in space technology because there is a possiblity of a threat from some terrorists , living in caves ,that may or may not be alive?

    12. Re:Idealism... by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the fact that it'll be anchored far away from any of the regular air and sea traffic lanes. Any attempt to approach the cable (or rather, the first 10 kms of it since the rest is effectively out of reach) will be spotted well in advance.

      If the unthinkable happens and someone does manage to damage or break the cable, it will either float off or come down, burning up in the atmosphere. The people contemplating this elevator have already thought out such scenarios and published them. Even the cost of replacing the cable would not be all too high, once the technology and industry to manufacture the cable is there.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    13. Re:Idealism... by betat · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I personally hope we continue building what Sci Fi writers write about."

      I'm just waiting for my light-saber.

    14. Re:Idealism... by Fenris+Ulf · · Score: 1
      I'm just waiting for my light-saber.
      He said Sci Fi, not Fantasy.
    15. Re:Idealism... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >You'd have to be at the top of the cable to do anything particularly
      >harmful to it
      >
      >
      Cutting the cable from within the atmosphere would do quite a bit of harm, especially to those who are either going up or down the cable when it was cut. The kinetic energy imparted by the earth's rotation to any object traveling along the cable when it was flung free would be enoromous. Ever play "Crack the Whip"? Let the whip repensent the broken Space Elevator Cable.

    16. Re:Idealism... by dancing+blue · · Score: 1

      Even before Heinlein and the golden age. Find a copy of the 1927 film metropolis. Written by Fritz Lang and Thea von Harbou, they've got computers, video phones, underground cities and flying cars even.

  11. What what what by The+Silicon+Sorceror · · Score: 4, Funny

    At about a third of the way along the cable - 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to complete a full orbit.

    Uh oh...

    --

    ~ Give me 101 plastic soldiers, and I will conquer the world.
    1. Re:What what what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well technically from the objects point of view, one orbit around the earth is a year, just like how for us, on earth, one orbit around the center of our orbit, the sun, is one earth's year and one orbit for the moon around us is a moon's year.

      But then again if said object completed it's orbit in 1 earth second or 100 earth year's, then 1 earth second or 100 earth year's would be one object year :)

      So the obvious conclusion is:
      It's a stupid typo.

    2. Re:What what what by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

      I can only presume that they mean a full orbit relative to any point on earth. In LEO, you do it in about 90 minutes. GEO, never, since you hover over the same spot all the time.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    3. Re:What what what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can only presume that they mean a full orbit relative to any point on earth

      That's gonna be hell on that cable they're dragging!

    4. Re:What what what by jelle · · Score: 1

      People use many different definitions of what 'a year' is:

      From The Devil's Dictionary (1881-1906) [devil]:
      YEAR, n. A period of three hundred and sixty-five disappointments.

      but in the most commonly used definition the year is defined by the orbit time around the sun, not just any object orbiting another.

      With your logic, it takes years for many YoYo tricks to complete, and in atoms, a lot of time is spent by the electrons when orbiting the clumps of protons and neutrons, and I can have sex nonstop for years on end on a ferriswheel.

      (hhmm, I couldn't paste the wordnet 'dict' output here, because the 'postercomment'/'lameness' filter thought it was lame...)

      --
      --- Hindsight is 20/20, but walking backwards is not the answer.
  12. Re:Yahoo!!! by losttoy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Dang!! Fscking net lag!!

  13. hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wouldn't the ozone layer burn the cable...this doesnt make much sence.

    And imagine if the thing broke and the cable fell~

    1. Re:hmm by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 1

      No, actually you're thinking of the fart zone. Hold your breath for that stretch of cable.

      --

      They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
    2. Re:hmm by michaeltoe · · Score: 1

      No, because it's not going to be moving thousands of miles per hour.

    3. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither does your post. Neither does the Chewbacca Defense. You must acquit. Look at the monkey. Look at the silly monkey.

  14. Error in article: by earthforce_1 · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the story:
    ----
    A space elevator would make rockets redundant by granting cheaper access to space. At about a third of the way along the cable - 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to complete a full orbit. If the cable's centre of gravity remained at this height, the cable would remain vertical, as satellites placed at this height are geostationary, effectively hovering over the same spot on the ground.
    ------

    Actually, at 36,000 km from earth, objects take a day, not a year to complete a full orbit. The moon takes about 28 days to complete an orbit, (one lunar cycle) and any object far enough out from the earth to require a year in order to complete an orbit would passed the instability limit, where it would be captured away by the sun's gravity, and would no longer orbit earth.

    --
    My rights don't need management.
    1. Re:Error in article: by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the article's byline also refers to it as an "escalator" which is so stupid I don't know where to start, so I won't bother. Once again a craptacular article. Couldn't the submitter find some other mention of the conference to link?

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Error in article: by mblase · · Score: 1

      Actually, at 36,000 km from earth, objects take a day, not a year to complete a full orbit.

      Yeah, that bit made me wonder, too. Glad I wasn't the only one to catch it.

    3. Re:Error in article: by John+Allsup · · Score: 1

      Reference to it as an 'escalator' comes from the original term ('space escalator') coined for the idea. It seems to have stuck, irrespective of the fact that there won't be moving stairs anywhere on this thing.

      --
      John_Chalisque
    4. Re:Error in article: by John+Allsup · · Score: 4, Funny

      Whoops. Sorry. BrainNotWorkingException();
      Indeed, the article should be talking about space elevators, not escalators.

      --
      John_Chalisque
    5. Re:Error in article: by Man+of+E · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's because the Sun rotates around the Earth, and it takes a full year to complete the orbit. Wouldn't it be easier to anchor the top of the elevator to the celestial dome and not have to worry about how fast it turns?

      --
      Ceci n'est pas une sig
    6. Re:Error in article: by Xzzy · · Score: 1

      > Actually, at 36,000 km from earth, objects take a
      > day, not a year to complete a full orbit

      That's a heck of a relief, I'd had to imagine what happened if the top of the elevator was stuck in a one year orbit and the bottom was forced to "orbit" at the speed the earth revolves.

      I imagine it would end up being like cutting wet clay with a wire.

      And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how the moon was REALLY formed.

    7. Re:Error in article: by Purosesuchi-Zu · · Score: 0

      Perhaps we should anchor the elevator to the sun then, as opposed to the earth. However this poses another question: Would the so-called "space elevator" collide with mars?

    8. Re:Error in article: by thre5her · · Score: 1

      Probably not, since Earth orbits between Mars and the sun. We should be more worried about the cable colliding with our own moon.

    9. Re:Error in article: by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Actually, at 36,000 km from earth, objects take a day, not a year to complete a full orbit.

      Well, sure, to orbit the Earth. The article was clearly talking about the full year it would take the space elevator -- anchored to the Earth -- to complete a full orbit around the Sun. Duh.

      Just in case: :)
  15. For more info on Space Elevators by Phoenixhunter · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.spaceelevator.com/ About the only place I could find with all the information piled into one spot.

    1. Re:For more info on Space Elevators by ShadeARG · · Score: 4, Informative

      Here is some more information, with some interesting images.

    2. Re:For more info on Space Elevators by Quaelin+PoD · · Score: 2, Informative

      Also check out LiftWatch.

    3. Re:For more info on Space Elevators by pavon · · Score: 3, Informative

      The Institute for Scientific Research site has a bunch of good information about the space elevator including the initial report by NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC).

  16. Yes, and all we need next... by michaeltoe · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...Are giant robots with ray guns

  17. Re:hmmm by gustgr · · Score: 1

    It would be more interesting to bind the cable to a monster truck and pull the cable down

  18. Re:So what happens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Shredded plane. (strong cable - duh)
    And the lowest note ever twanged.

  19. Not Up Yet by SEWilco · · Score: 1

    It's not going Up until we can look up and see it...whether it is going up or down during construction.

  20. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by inertia187 · · Score: 1

    IANAUE (I Am Not An Uber Engineer), but I should hope that they'd design the thing to have a way to eject the whole thing away from earth. If there was some problem, they could detonate explosives at the base, and the whole thing would centrifugally fly away from earth rather than fall back down.

    --
    A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
  21. Reminds me of.... by lylum · · Score: 1, Interesting
  22. Not an impossibility? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 5, Informative
    The state of the art is not quite strong enough or long enough.

    Quote from the article:

    "Until some of the basic science concerning how to connect nanotubes together and transfer load between them in a composite is understood it will remain elusive, but a lot of progress is being made."

    Basically, the state of the art with carbon nanotubes is that you can build them a few centimeters long, of almost/just about the right strength (72 Gpa); but nobody has made or can make a rope even 1 foot long with the right strength (ideally 130 GPa including a 50% safety factor).

    State of the art carbon nanotube ropes are down under 3GPa (less than Kevlar strength). To oversimplify the problem nanotubes are very slippery and hard to join with any strength. Splicing rope out of threads traditionally loses 20% of the strength, but nanotubes are too slippery, and not strong enough anyway for that right now.

    Still, enormous progress has been made; and it looks surprisingly promising; but it's impossible right now.

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    1. Re:Not an impossibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Not an impossibility? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2, Informative
      Not according to this article

      If you read that article really carefully you'll note that they said it was stronger than steel, but tougher than any material. Steel isn't massively strong (Kevlar is stronger), however toughness is journalistic speak for 'how much energy can it absorb before it snaps'. That's cool, but for an elevator you need tensile strength, not energy absorption; you're not catching flies with it :-)

      (And don't even think about catching space junk- it's going way to fast for that!)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    3. Re:Not an impossibility? by Ugmo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Why can't nanotubes be built through some kind of biological process like celluose fibers or wood fibers? Aren't long chains of molecules pieced together in cells by various enzymes? Shouldn't a process exist to genetically engineer a bacterium to extrude a nanotube out its but as long as sufficient raw materials and energy are supplied to it? It is not like nanotubes are chemically complicated, it is just carbon, carbon and more carbon?

      Any one know of any projects using an organic approach instead of a chemical approach (which is what I think is being used now?)

    4. Re:Not an impossibility? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It might be possible, but no known organism builds them. It's probably a very energetically intensive process, so any organism that stumbled across the right process to build it probably wouldn't keep the genes to do that; since other materials are cheaper and do nearly as well (spider silk is probably better for catching flies than nanotubes would be, since it's more stretchy.)

      Just because it's made of carbon doesn't make it easy to build. I don't know of any organism that makes diamond either (although if I did, I probably wouldn't tell anyone anyway :-) ).

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    5. Re:Not an impossibility? by rainwalker · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are correct, however, the current proposals do not envision using a single nanotube, or even a nanotube rope. Rather, they intend to use a nonetube composite material, hence the 1m x 0.3m dimensions of the elevator "cable." The site formerly known as Highlift Systems is apparantly the ones behind the proposal that's being discussed, and their site has some interesting info on it. They describe the composite material as "..be[ing] composed of individual fibers 10 microns in diameter lying side-by-side. The fibers will be interconnected by tape sandwiches spaced every 10 cm along the length of the ribbon." Amusingly, they expect Japanese car manufacturers to invent the materials for them in the very near future.

    6. Re:Not an impossibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, humans are organisms that make diamonds.

      Yes, that's a tad facetious. But also true. Humans would do well to remember they're just as "natural" as everything else.

    7. Re:Not an impossibility? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not quite.... found this on a google search.

    8. Re:Not an impossibility? by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1

      In Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars, they bonded the filaments with a double helix of diamond, which seems like an interesting solution.

      --
      Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
  23. Wow by lateralus · · Score: 3, Funny

    Thats the longest extension on a CAT-5 I've ever heard of, I'd go with wireless instead.

    You'd also have God's wrath to deal with when he trips over it when going to the fridge for a midnight snack.

    --
    If you outlaw the law, only criminals will have laws
    1. Re:Wow by mblase · · Score: 1

      Thats the longest extension on a CAT-5 I've ever heard of, I'd go with wireless instead.

      Brings a whole new meaning to "satellite broadband", too.

      "Where d'you want us to send the cable into your house?" "Oh, just drop it straight down through the chimney, same as everyone else."

    2. Re:Wow by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      Actually they are planning on using wireless to power the elevator (probably laser power)- wires would be far too heavy; and you need a lot of energy to climb that high.

      So far as I know the data connection technology for the car has not been speced yet, so I don't know how they intend to get Slashdot :-)

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    3. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are fucking religishitty. Destory your signature

    4. Re:Wow by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

      Surely electric would be best ?, you could have a load of solar panels connected to the space station and the cars could recharge whenever they get to the top before they descend.

    5. Re:Wow by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      No, the batteries would be much too heavy. Not even fuel cells. Surprisingly, nuclear might work (you're going to need lots of shielding anyway for the passengers- the elevator goes right through the Van Allen radiation belts), but that would be an unpopular option I would expect.

      Incidentally, you don't need to recharge before you descend, you can just run a generator off the cable as you fall. It takes lots and lots of energy to push you up the elevator cable, so on the way down you get it back again and so you've got more energy than you know what to do with. Your brakes are going to be hot.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    6. Re:Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "you're going to need lots of shielding anyway for the passengers"

      No particular need to use it for manned journeys anyway, just use the russian idea of having different vehicles for bulk-load, and manned journeys. Then optimise each for the task they need do.

  24. harnessing the public interest by mblase · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One unlikely problem could be capturing the public's imagination. "When we actually start launching this it's going to be kind of boring," Dr Edwards said. "There's no smoke, there's no pillars of fire and there's no loud rumbling noises. There's just this thing that slowly ascends the ribbon into space."

    This problem would be neatly solved once the initial expense of the elevator was recouped. At this point it would be much cheaper to send objects into orbit, including people... ride up the chain, get on a space suit, get out on your own nanotube cable and float around 36,000 km above the earth without ever needing to learn how to help fly a space shuttle.

    I foresee an enormous tourist interest, to the point that someday several elevators will be sent up exclusively for tourists to use.

    1. Re:harnessing the public interest by amorsen · · Score: 4, Informative

      The ascent is going to be very very slow. Imagine going at 100km/h, a speed that would impress most normal elevator designers. 15 days for the ascent, 15 more for the descent. (Admittedly the descent could be done quicker).

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    2. Re:harnessing the public interest by r00zky · · Score: 1

      Why only 100kph?
      Maybe in the first 10km it makes sense to go slow, cause of friction with air, but after that? I don't see any limiting factor to go faster there...

      --
      I'm a chainsmokin' alcoholic sociopath, so-ci-o-path
    3. Re:harnessing the public interest by NoInfo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      One unlikely problem could be capturing the public's imagination. "When we actually start launching this it's going to be kind of boring," Dr Edwards said. "There's no smoke, there's no pillars of fire and there's no loud rumbling noises. There's just this thing that slowly ascends the ribbon into space."

      This just means we have to reverse the viewing of the 'launch' to be from a camera mounted from the object. It'd be really neat to see the world as this climbs up above it.

      As for tourists, I imagine this could put that miniscule 'Space Needle' to shame.

    4. Re:harnessing the public interest by gfdnnkob · · Score: 1

      Mr Clarke - who once said a space elevator would only be built "about 50 years after everyone stops laughing" - was due to address the scientists at the Santa Fe conference today by satellite link from his home in Sri Lanka.

      This would definately be an interesting address to see, any chance it has been/will be posted anywhere?

    5. Re:harnessing the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      limiting factor? how about c?

    6. Re:harnessing the public interest by ericman31 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The ascent is going to be very very slow. Imagine going at 100km/h, a speed that would impress most normal elevator designers. 15 days for the ascent, 15 more for the descent. (Admittedly the descent could be done quicker).

      It isn't going to be even close to 15 days to get to the top. Some very simple physics tells us that if we accelerated at 1 g for 1 second we would be traveling at a velocity of 9.8 meters per second (gravity on earth equals 9.8 m/s/s). If we then traveled at that constant speed we would reach the top of the cable in a little more than 11 days (do the math and see). Since we are operating under the influence of the earth's gravitational well we couldn't just accelerate for one second and then coast at constant velocity.

      However, much more likely is that we will accelerate the "elevator" at 1/10 g to the halfway point and then decelerate it at 1/10 g to the top. And if we have two "elevators", one going up and one going down, it will be basically a system with little to no external energy requirement. Initially we have to invest the amount of energy required to lift one elevator and the other components needed for the station in orbit. Then we have to expend the energy to put the cable in place. Once that is done we start the top elevator down and voila we have the energy to start the bottom elevator accelerating up. There's a bunch of engineering involved to do this, but it's overall pretty basic physics.

      If you do the math you will see that if we accelerate at 1/10 g to the halfway point, then decelerate at 1/10 g to the top, it will take a very short time to travel 100,000 km to the top of the elevator.

      Let's round 9.8 m/s/s to 10 m/s/s to make our life easy. This isn't accurate, but it makes the equations much simpler. So, 1/10 g is 1 m/s/s. The formula for velocity while accelerating is:

      v=a*t where v=velocity, a=acceleration and t=time.

      So, while accelerating at 1/10 g after 10 seconds we are traveling at a velocity of 10 meters per second, or 36 kilometers per hour, or 21.6 miles per hour. The next question is how far have we traveled? That formula is:

      d=.5*a*t^2 where d=distance.

      So at the end of those same 10 seconds we have traveled 50 meters. So, how do we figure out how long it takes to get to the halfway point? Simple substitution:

      50,000 km = .5 * 1 m/s * t^2

      Now solve like any other algebra equation. Remember to convert kilometers to meters.

      t^2 = 50,000,000/.5*1

      So t= 10,000 seconds, or roughly 2.8 hours traveling at a velociy of 10,000 meters per second (36,000 km/hr or 21600 mph). When we decelerate everything becomes negative and it takes the same amount of time to go from a velocity of 36,000 kph to 0 as it did to accelerate to that velocity. If you aren't sure just substitute a negative value for acceleration of -1 m/s/s and check me :-).

      Bottom line, with a 1/10 g acceleration you will reach the top of the "elevator" in less than 6 hours, assuming constant acceleration. In all likelihood we won't accelerate constantly because our vehicle would burn up in the atmosphere. Probably we will boost to a constant velocity, flip at the halfway point and decelerate when needed. Even doing that we will reach the top in less than a day.

      And we will generate all the energy needed for acceleration and deceleration within the system. Pretty neat!

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    7. Re:harnessing the public interest by amorsen · · Score: 1

      I can do the math myself. Now do the same constant acceleration while staying attached to the cable. For extra points, figure out a way to transfer the energy from the braking of the elevator going down to the elevator going up. Oh and you have to use the cable for propulsion, otherwise you have just invented a strange kind of tethered rocked and you are not saving any energy. Good luck.

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      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    8. Re:harnessing the public interest by Idarubicin · · Score: 3, Interesting
      So t= 10,000 seconds, or roughly 2.8 hours traveling at a velociy of 10,000 meters per second (36,000 km/hr or 21600 mph).

      Eek. We have enough trouble building a horizontal railway that travels faster than a few hundred kilometres per hour--now you want us to build a vertical one that reaches a speed thirty times greater? One little hiccup in your track mechanism (presumably some sort of magnetic suspension) and the moving cargo drags against the elevator cable at ten kilometres per second. Suddenly, you have a much shorter cable...

      I'm prepared to accept a slow and stately climb at four or five hundred km/h, even if it means it will take ten days to ascend.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    9. Re:harnessing the public interest by ericman31 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately some people wouldn't believe me without the equations and the answers in black and white. Sorry for insulting anyone's intelligence who understands how acceleration and velocity work.

      Actually, you don't have to use the cable for propulsion. All you have to do is harness the energy of the descending elevator in order to propel the ascending elevator. The largest quantity of energy expended is in getting the cable and the "top" elevator into space in the first place. I would expect that once you get the cable past 36,000 km above the earth the cable would mostly pull itself up from that point on.

      Unfortunately I only took the physics needed for a computer engineering degree while in college. What I know of advanced physics comes from reading for fun and pleasure. So, I do know that my answer is right, but can't easily prove it myself. I'm sure I could find the answer using Google pretty quickly.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    10. Re:harnessing the public interest by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      "Dr Edwards said. "There's no smoke, there's no pillars of fire and there's no loud rumbling noises. There's just this thing that slowly ascends the ribbon into space." "

      Well, I don't know about you...but after Nasa's last brush with space.....I would personally prefer there be NO 'pillars of fire' and 'loud rumbling noises'. Or foam.

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    11. Re:harnessing the public interest by SiliconEntity · · Score: 2, Funny

      I foresee an enormous tourist interest, to the point that someday several elevators will be sent up exclusively for tourists to use.

      Yeah, but imagine the security screening they'll have to go through... Probably make an alien abduction feel like a casual glance....

    12. Re:harnessing the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When one elevator is at the top, and one is at the bottom, gravity exerts more force on the one closer to earth. Therefore, even if you gave the bottom one a small upward push and the top one a downward push, it wouldn't set both in motion.

    13. Re:harnessing the public interest by amorsen · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Actually, you don't have to use the cable for propulsion.

      Actually you do. It's the whole point of having the cable there at all. You need something to push off of. The only alternative is to throw stuff backwards really fast. The purpose of building a cable is to avoid that method.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    14. Re:harnessing the public interest by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Once the possibility for a plethora of cheap satellites are built for 500 channels of HDTV and unlimited satellite broadband, I think the public will "buy in".

      Also, the space elevator would make NASA and Congress's lofty "inter-planetary" goals feasible by eliminating the costliest and most dangerous process, launch.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    15. Re:harnessing the public interest by willtsmith · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, you don't have to use the cable for propulsion. All you have to do is harness the energy of the descending elevator in order to propel the ascending elevator.

      The envisioned plan doesnn't have two "shafts". Nor do I believe such a arrangement would be possible.

      Rather the designers have envisioned a laser based power transmission system. The moveable platform would likely contain a nuclear reactor to power a very powerful laser. The laser would be beamed to the climber which would contain a receiver that converted the intense laser light into elecotricity.

      Of course adaptive optics used by the miliatary for exotic anti-missle systems would probably be necessary to hit the spot accurately on a rapidly ascending climber. Additionally, the ribbon cable would also likely be "flapping" in the air so a sophisticated tracking system would be necessary.

      As you've pointed out, the descent stage needs no power. However, apparantly venting heat will be a problem at high speeds.

      The material science will likely need a lot of work. However, I don't believe that the auto industry will invent the necessary processes. Rather, I believe that the defense industry will invent the processes to turn raw carbon into super-light, super-tough armor for aircraft, ships and tanks.

      The last century was the century of steel. The next century will be the century of carbon. Remember the new diamond sythesis techniques that are currently practical. Expect a lot of work in these areas.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    16. Re:harnessing the public interest by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      Actually, the most heat intensive area is high in the atmoshpere where the air is thin. The flight characteristics become less like aerodynamics and more like sandblasting. The SR-1 Blackbird was designed to diffuse terrific amounts of heat and was reportedly 6-inches longer in full flight than on the ground.

      For satellite transportation, I'm sure that 2-3 day transit times would be more than acceptable givin the vastly decreased risk.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    17. Re:harnessing the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And if we have two "elevators", one going up and one going down"

      A counterweight wouldn't be of any use here: think of the length of cable it would require, and then of the difficulty in launching even one length of cable.

    18. Re:harnessing the public interest by ericman31 · · Score: 1

      The last century was the century of steel. The next century will be the century of carbon.

      Hopefully this century will be the century of energy. Learning how to move energy between its various forms in order to gain the benefits of a closed system rather than our current open system would do more for productivity, standard of living and quality of life than any other single advance in science, technology and engineering I can think of.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    19. Re:harnessing the public interest by ericman31 · · Score: 1

      You need something to push off of

      Correct, I was forgetting basic physics. Unfortunately it's been a long time since I took physics, so....

      I do think that my basic assumption that the system should not be a net energy user after the initial lift of mass is correct.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    20. Re:harnessing the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The SR-1 Blackbird was designed to diffuse terrific amounts of heat and was reportedly 6-inches longer in full flight than on the ground.

      That's funny.... so am i!

    21. Re:harnessing the public interest by ckimyt · · Score: 1
      There's just this thing that slowly ascends the ribbon into space.
      I thought the "proper" way to make a space elevator was to park a construction facility in geosynchronous orbit (over the same spot on Earth) and simultaneously lower and raise the cable from both sides, one side down to Earth and another to balance the orbit, out into space.

      Thus there's just this thing that slowly descends the ribbon from space.

      --

      Putting the sig back into +1, Insightful since 1995!
    22. Re:harnessing the public interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And we will generate all the energy needed for acceleration and deceleration within the system. Pretty neat!"

      Every Engineer should be saying BULL

      You have just described a perfect machine, which cannot exist.

    23. Re:harnessing the public interest by onomatomania · · Score: 1

      C'mon, this is crap. You're assuming that this "acceleration" exists in an inertial reference frame, i.e. a flat horizontal frictionless surface. You can't just apply some acceleration to get to a velocity and then maintain a constant velocity the whole way up until you want to decelerate. The whole time that you are going up this elevator you are resisting the force of gravity, just like a normal Earth-bound elevator. You say "we'll accelerate the thing at 1/10g" but to do that you need to overcome gravity by that amount, which means you need a force equivalent of "11/10*g*m" which is not small at all. This thing will be lucky to have enough force to overcome gravity, let alone exceed it. In other words it will be moving at a more or less constant and slow rate the whole way up.

      This whole deal is the equivalent of shooting something straight up into the air, only instead of having to give it the entire push at the start, you can slowly climb upwards. Put it another way, the Shuttle and all other launch vehicles have to spend an enormous amount of energy to get into orbit -- propelling thousands of tons to 14,000 mph is hard. This is no different, it requires the same amount of energy. Except, you can supply that energy with electricity and you can spend it at a much slower rate. Think "kid climbing up a rope in gym class" verses "kid trying to jump to top of gymnasium in one leap." In both cases it takes "m*g*h" Joules of energy to get to a given height (and that's a very big number) but in the case of the rope climb you can expend that energy slowly but surely.

    24. Re:harnessing the public interest by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 1
      I do think that my basic assumption that the system should not be a net energy user after the initial lift of mass is correct.

      Try this experiment:

      Suspend a 5lb weight from the ceiling with fishing line or something.

      Stand with your back against the wall and pull the weight until it just touches your nose. You've just lifted the elevator up to geosynch. orbit.

      Let go of the weight, being careful not to give it any thrust. Swinging out, it's your "down elevator", swinging back in it's your "up elevator."
      What should happen?

      Well your "basic physics" will tell you that it will swing out, and then back, stopping about 1mm from your nose. So far, so good.
      Now wait 5 minutes. Why isn't it swinging near your nose anymore? Figure out the answer to this and you'll see why your "basic assumption" is wrong.

    25. Re:harnessing the public interest by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

      the descent stage needs no power. However, apparantly venting heat will be a problem at high speeds.

      I don't see why the principle of "regenerative braking," used by most other electric vehicles, couldn't be used to generate power as the elevator descends. While it may be impractical to store this energy on board, it could be beamed by laser or microwave to the station at the base of the elevator, or to an ascending car on a nearby elevator.

      No need for the elevator to radiate lots of waste heat like a Pentium!

      --
      That that is is that that that that is not is not.
    26. Re:harnessing the public interest by Sulihin · · Score: 1

      They're talking about using the elevator, not constructing it. The climber ascends the ribbon when 'launching' and descends when 'landing.'

    27. Re:harnessing the public interest by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      I share your hope.

      However, the powers that be actively do anything they can to squash it. The dirty secret of the WTO/World Bank is that their fundamental basis of reform is selling of power and utilities to private interests that jack up the costs (like in California). This has been played over and over again all over the world.

      The reasons are obvious, co-opt a captive audience with no alternative. That way you can charge whatever you like. Ultmately, I think air pollution by these same industries will provide them with an added bonus. Selling canned/purified air (as depicted in 'Space-Balls'). That's what President Bush calls a 'Tri-Fecta'

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  25. What about the static electricity it will generate by pair-a-noyd · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nasa played around with dragging wires through the atmosphere to generate static electricity.

    This thing will could possibly generate HUGE amounts of SE as the atmosphere whizzes past it 24/7. Are there plans to capture and use this electricity or what??

  26. Anyone see the good in this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Everyone is bashing this, but can you see the good in it? Elevators don't cost millions of dollers to launch. They don't explode in midflight. Most of all, they are cheap. My only problem with this is where the hell the elevator goes to. Does it just...go up?

    1. Re:Anyone see the good in this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And... it's a cheat.

      It does not serve the fundamental purpose of space flight: to get us out of this planet so that our civilization may live on when the Sun goes nova.

    2. Re:Anyone see the good in this? by catbutt · · Score: 1

      Presumably there would be a big station at the top, which would get bigger and bigger as more materials are shipped up there. Eventually we might have a complete ring shaped station circling the entire earth above the equator. Ok that would probably take a long time and a lot of elevators (since it would be, what, 170,000 miles in circumference?).

      Whatever is up there, if you wanted to go further in space, it would be a far better starting point than down on terra firma, since you don't have to waste all the effort simply getting into orbit.

    3. Re:Anyone see the good in this? by mark-t · · Score: 1
      It does not serve the fundamental purpose of space flight: to get us out of this planet so that our civilization may live on when the Sun goes nova.
      Uhmm... okay, it's nice to be forward looking and all, but that's taking it just a bit too far.

      We have more time left before we need to worry about that than the entire time that the Earth has existed as a rock-like planet. We no more need to be concerned about getting out of this solar system now than prehistoric man needed to be concerned with the development and harnessing of atomic power.

      Baby steps, man... baby steps. If we don't start somewhere, we'll never get anywhere.

    4. Re:Anyone see the good in this? by falzer · · Score: 1

      In Clarke's 3001 he writes about a huge structure that circles the entire Earth at geosynchronous orbit. A few towers, several kilometers wide, attach Earth to the ring.

  27. 7 billion USD? by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Fuck Iraq and let's cough up roughly 12 space elevators instead.

    1. Re:7 billion USD? by nagora · · Score: 4, Funny
      Fuck Iraq

      Okay, done. What's the next step?

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    2. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Profit?

    3. Re:7 billion USD? by CGP314 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Okay, done. What's the next step?

      The rest of the middle east :(

    4. Re:7 billion USD? by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

      I think the current list is...

      Iran
      Syria
      N Korea
      France

    5. Re:7 billion USD? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      Nah, you guys go ahead and bail out Iraq. At least it'll be money well spent. We Dutch could fund this elevator in your place, if we
      - Stopped building the High Speed Train Line segment between Rotterdam and Amsterdam. Let the train ride on regular track at regular speeds. We will save 3,5 billion Euros and add only 10 minutes to the Amsterdam-Paris journey.
      - Stopped building the 3,5 billion Euro freight train line from Rotterdam to, uhhh, nowhere. The usefulness of this line ends at the German border, where it connects to a branch unsuitable for freight traffic... and the Germans are not in a hurry to upgrade it. Besides, most shippers in Rotterdam have already stated that they will not use this line and use river shipping or trucks instead.

      So we, as a tiny country, are pissing away 7 billion Euro (roughly the same in Dollars) building two utterly useless railroads... when we could have had a freaking space elevator!

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    6. Re:7 billion USD? by xSauronx · · Score: 1

      he gave both steps. its bad enought people dont read the article, but jesus, at least read the whole post you reply to!

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    7. Re:7 billion USD? by Dark+Lord+Seth · · Score: 1

      Space Elevators are most efficient near the equator. Although it clearly seemed otherwise last summer, we do not live on or even NEAR said equator. Besides, wasting money on silly projects is the only thing our current goverment is good at. That, and kissing Bush' arse.

    8. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot one.

      Iran
      Syria
      N Korea
      France
      California

    9. Re:7 billion USD? by elemental23 · · Score: 1

      PROFIT!

      --
      I like my women like my coffee... pale and bitter.
    10. Re:7 billion USD? by register_ax · · Score: 1
      7 billion

      I got the paper the other day...I thought it was 58 billion?

    11. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Space Elevators are most efficient near the equator

      Maybe you wealthy Dutch could pay to have the equator move a little closer.

    12. Re:7 billion USD? by SEE · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You know, if you guys had been nicer to your colonies, you'd have a friendly country straddling the Equator to build the thing in.

    13. Re:7 billion USD? by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      By the time we're done it will be worth 100 space elevators. Mostly pumped into firms like Halliburton and Exxon Mobile.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    14. Re:7 billion USD? by willtsmith · · Score: 0, Troll

      Personally, I believe the cuts to the Air Marshalls and lack of Airport security may be a clever ploy to enduce another terrorist attack through which he can justify another attack on another defenseless nation like Libya.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    15. Re:7 billion USD? by Bob+Munck · · Score: 1

      Actually, when you have one in place, building a second space elevator is a lot cheaper. For the cost of a year of the Iraq War, you could probably build two or three dozen elevators, and the Earth would begin to look like a pincushion. It would probably be cheaper to go to geosynchronous orbit for your vacation than to go to Disneyland.

    16. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, when I did research on this, it was only 5 billion USD, but SOMEBODY screwed up the economy. Not pointing fingers or anything. TEXAS!

      Honestly I think Iowa should be runing the US, we have so much more sense, or perhaps the arch bishop of cantibury.

    17. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck America?

      Oh, wait...

    18. Re:7 billion USD? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck Iraq

      Okay, done. What's the next step?


      Profit!

  28. WHY WAS THIS MODDED DOWN? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent post seems like a legitimate question to me? Something as huge and expensive as a space elevator will no doubt make an attractive target to those who are willing to kill to make a political statement. How do we plan to keep safe something like this?

  29. So..... by Sphere1952 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Which equatorial country is the U.S. going to invade?

    --
    Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
    1. Re:So..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and deprive a southern state of a hefty pork project?

    2. Re:So..... by Sphere1952 · · Score: 1

      I guess you're right, even if it's going to be a bitch pulling the cable over.

      --
      Big Brother Bush is doubleplus ungood.
  30. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Finally, someone with a decent idea rather than a bunch a yahoos playing chicken little. "Space is falling! Space is falling!" Christ.

  31. Next step ? by Krunch · · Score: 1

    Elevator to the moon ? mars ? other galaxies ?

    --
    No GNU has been Hurd during the making of this comment.
    1. Re:Next step ? by Limburgher · · Score: 1
      Great idea! Now all we have to do is reduce the relative velocities of those objects to zero, and we're all set!

      You WERE kidding, right?

      --

      You are not the customer.

    2. Re:Next step ? by gears5665 · · Score: 1

      hopefully you don't mean attached to the moon, mars, etc. That would probably be poor planning to have a fixed point on earth and a fixed point on another celestial object...

    3. Re:Next step ? by rpresser · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, building a space elevator *ON* Mars could be a very good idea. Mars is lighter, yet rotates at about the same speed, so synchronous orbit is much lower. This means the elevator is much shorter, meaning we can use weaker materials. And we get cheap access to the surface of Mars! Ok, nobody knows why we might want cheap access to the surface of Mars yet. But if we ever do ... BTW, the moon would not make a good platform for a space elevator. It rotates far too slowly, making lunar synchronous orbit ridiculously far out.

    4. Re:Next step ? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Actually, a space elevator from the moon wouldn't be such a bad idea. The trick is that you have to be moving at a pretty good clip to grab the tail end of it. Then it's a free ride all the way up.

      Why would we want cheap access to the surface of Mars? I can think of a few reasons. First, it would be a good mock-up for the Earth-based elevator. Second, it might make mining profitable. Finally, we could meet some hot Martian babes. The green skin is a real turn-on, though I don't know how I feel about the antennae.

      You need to start watching more television.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  32. Huh? Re:What what what by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1

    Yeah it takes one day to complete a full orbit at 36000km! That's the whole point! :-)

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    1. Re:Huh? Re:What what what by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 2, Informative

      Read it again, I am sure you will eventually get the funny.

      Oh hell, I will help you:

      At about a third of the way along the cable - 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to complete a full orbit.

      You are right, "it takes one day to complete a full orbit at 36000km", BUT THAT IS NOT WHAT THEY SAID!

      --
      Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
    2. Re:Huh? Re:What what what by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1

      That makes IT SO FUNNY!

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    3. Re:Huh? Re:What what what by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      The only remotely funny thing here is that the cable, if it took a year to go around in it's orbit would wrap itself 364.25* times around the earth. Trouble is, it doesn't, because the guy who wrote the piece put the word 'year' where he meant to say 'day'. And I got that. But I also knew that 36000km is geosynchronous orbit radius... so even the dumbest person knows that the guy screwed up. Oh wait...

      * - see if you can work out why it's not 365.25 (why aren't I holding my breath, love the caps by the way, tasteful).

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
    4. Re:Huh? Re:What what what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      365.25 times, actually.

      Think about it: If the elevator takes one year to orbit the earth, and is initially at opposition from the Sun, then one day later, it is still at opposition; after one month, it is still at opposition; and after one year (365.25 solar days) it is still at opposition. In the meantime, the Earth will have revolved on its axis 365.25 times, relative to a line drawn from the center of the Sun to the center of the Earth (said line will also always pass through the space elevator's position).

      Suppose this were on Mercury, where one year is zero solar days (or one sidereal day). Would it wrap around Mercury zero times or one time?

    5. Re:Huh? Re:What what what by meiocyte · · Score: 1

      Except that 364.25 * the earth's circumference (c. 40,000km) is about 14.5 million kilometers, and the space elevator is not that long. The article says the elevator would be 100,000km long; so that's only enough to wrap itself 2.5 times around the earth. Now, you may resume asking people how long that would take. :)

      --
      The thing in the box has no place in the language-game at all; not even as a something; for the box might even be empty.
  33. What happens when... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What happens when the terrorist group du jour flies a plane or missle into it?

  34. problems... by lemist · · Score: 1

    Am I the only person that sees the obvious negative consequences of this? How hard would it be to sabotage this elevator and have the thing either fall down on Earth, or fly away from Earth (I don't know how gravity would affect it, I'm not an expert or even a novice on that). I see it as a really bad idea because it can go wrong very easily.

    --
    "Anything that's invented after you're 35 is against the natural order of things" - Douglas Adams
    1. Re:problems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, you aren't. However, it appears to be a non-issue. Also, if we let the threat of someone destroying something prevent us from doing something, why do anything at all?


      It's trite and overused, but don't let the terrorists win.

    2. Re:problems... by amorsen · · Score: 1

      So what? It breaks, we build a new one. So far the most credible threat from a break is that there would be microscopic carbon particles left over from when it burns up in the atmosphere. Those might be harmful. Guess what? Diesel exhaust contains lots already.

      --
      Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
    3. Re:problems... by gears5665 · · Score: 1

      bait. Might actually be a good thing to draw all of the people who want to do us "harm" to one location. Hmmm. Maybe that's what we're doing in Iraq.

      We'll just build a secret second cable at the, hmmm, umm, North Pole! No one will notice...

    4. Re:problems... by arhavu · · Score: 1

      Am I the only person that sees the obvious negative consequences of this? How hard would it be to sabotage this train/skyscraper/internet/power plant and have the thing either explode or otherwise be destroyed (I don't how that would happen because I'm not an expert or even a novice in anything). I think this is a really bad idea, because it could go wrong.

    5. Re:problems... by c4ffeine · · Score: 1

      If I'm not mistaken, the cable will basically be suspended from Earth orbit. It will not need to be supported Earthside. Even if a terrorist was able to, say, set off a nuclear weapon at the base of it, it wouldn't do jack shit. it would destroy 3 km of a cable 100 000 KM long. i'm probably wrong, tho. feel free to corect me

      --
      "73% of quotes on the Internet are made up" -Ben Franklin
    6. Re:problems... by smokin_juan · · Score: 1

      How about the problem of wicking the atmosphere into space. Like breathing?

  35. Insert lame joke here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Pretend that I posted a lame joke about listening to elevator music for a very long time. Then mod me up as "Funny". Half of the so-called "Funny" posts aren't, so this one will fit in nicely.

    1. Re:Insert lame joke here. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Pretend that I posted an insightful comment about the vulnerability of a really expensive space elevator to hijacked 757s being flown into it, but be annoyed that I attached it in a karma-whoring fashion to a standalone post that had been modded +5 Funny. Be on the fence as to whether to mod it Insightful or Off Topic, since many posts modded as one are also the other.

    2. Re:Insert lame joke here. by WhiteDragon · · Score: 1

      Fortunately, I think that if the cable is strong enough to support its own weight, the extra tension of a plane running into it will not break it. Also, planes can't go very high relative to the CM of the cable, so they could just reel out / manufacture in orbit a few more kilometers of cable.

      --
      Did you mount a military-grade, variable-focus MASER on an unlicensed artificial intelligence?
  36. Correction by merlin_jim · · Score: 4, Informative

    A space elevator would make rockets redundant by granting cheaper access to space. At about a third of the way along the cable - 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to complete a full orbit. If the cable's centre of gravity remained at this height, the cable would remain vertical, as satellites placed at this height are geostationary, effectively hovering over the same spot on the ground.

    Objects take one DAY to complete a orbit at 36,000 km... and if that orbit is in the same direction as the earth turns, then you can orbit continuously over a spot on the equator. There's actually a minor perturbation, but those forces are minor compared to the other forces a space elevator would have to deal with...

    BTW, a nice recent sci-fi novel on the subject of space elevators is _Rainbow_Mars_ by Larry Niven, of _Ringworld_ fame.

    --
    I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    1. Re:Correction by Have+Blue · · Score: 1

      While you're reading books involving Mars changing color, check out the trilogy from Kim Stanley Robinson. Lots of good stuff about space elevators in there too.

    2. Re:Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems like the perturbation would only be small if the elevator was anchored at the equator. If the orbit weren't aligned with the equator (or perhaps your not exactly at the equator) then the end of the elevator would seem to oscillate from north to south once a day. A coulpe months ago i heard there was someone talking about building one in australia which makes me think that the dynamics and stability issues of this thing have not been resolved with any hard math by anyone.

  37. Boring is ok with me by Pharmboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the article: "When we actually start launching this it's going to be kind of boring," Dr Edwards said.

    After watching rockets (and shuttles) explode into spectacular fireballs, boring is just fine with me. Considering the majority of mass on any rocket is used to just get it to a level of orbit, this could be a nice way for us to start working toward the moon (and eventually beyond) again.

    The really exciting will no longer be GETTING into orbit, but rather what we can do once we get there.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    1. Re:Boring is ok with me by isorox · · Score: 1

      I thought the majority of mass was getting us up to orbital velocity? Going straight up and back down is a lot easier

    2. Re:Boring is ok with me by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I thought the majority of mass was getting us up to orbital velocity? Going straight up and back down is a lot easier

      Well, ya, but the purpose of the velocity to begin with is to get beyond the majority of gravity. 25k footpounds I believe. If you want to get a satalite to orbital velocity, it is much cheaper to do so once it is in orbit, free of 98% of the earth's gravity than it is to do this along the way.

      Haul it up to 36k feet, and then it takes a relatively trivial amount of energy to get it to a speed for orbit, since it isn't fighting a stronger force (gravity) at the same time. Also, if you are patient, and can take a week or a month to get the unit up to speed, it will take a very small engine (ie: efficient) to build up the necessary speed.

      Also, for probes headed toward the moon/mars/space, orbital speed may not be a factor, except as needed to 'slingshot' the unit. IAMARS (i am not a rocket scientist) but it seems to me that you would have to save 70% of the energy needed by going to 36k km slowly, then positioning. The most important feature is that not only do you save the weight of the extra fuel, but you also the save the extra fuel needed to move that extra fuel. It may actually be more than 70% of the fuel.

      Another interesting question: What fuel is used for getting the unit into space (36k km) to begin with: To power the elevator? Obviously it will not be rocket fuel. The cool thing is, if they used technology that harnesses ocean waves then they would not need oil generation units :D Since they talked about putting this platform deep in the pacific ocean, this would be a perfect place to test and perfect this technology.

      The secondary benefits of this space elevator could eventually be greater than just cheaper satalite launches.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    3. Re:Boring is ok with me by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

      Another interesting question: What fuel is used for getting the unit into space (36k km) to begin with: To power the elevator?

      Well you can get most of your fuel the easy way; counterbalances.

      Except instead of using a rope and pulley system to connect the counterbalance, you just store the energy electrically. The same system that propels mass upwards could be used to get energy from mass coming down, and store it until its needed. Then you could setup asteroid mining or comet mining operations or zero-G fab factories or whatever you want up in space and actually MAKE a return on shipping the stuff, in terms of energy costs.

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    4. Re:Boring is ok with me by CowboyMeal · · Score: 1

      And will we be able to make fuel cells that big?

      --
      Your credit card information wants to be free.
    5. Re:Boring is ok with me by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

      And will we be able to make fuel cells that big?

      That's been one of the fundamental technologies that needs to be addressed before building it...

      The solution I liked the best was basically building two cables side by side; the cost of building a space elevator is not in the materials but in the technologies, and you can use the first cable to lift the second cable cutting down on launch costs.

      Then you basically put a voltage potential across them, and manage all your energy needs at the base station. The beauty of this system is that if your motors and inductors and whatnot are built right, then you don't even need a base station if you're dropping and lifting mass at the same time...

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    6. Re:Boring is ok with me by fname · · Score: 1

      There are some slight inconsistencies in your post, but this is a complicated problem and largely counter-intuitive. One common misperception is that gravity is greatly reduced in orbit; it isn't. The force of gravity at typical orbits is about 90% of sea-level; I think that's at ISS altitudes. At geosynchronous orbit, the gravity is much less.

      Anyways, once something is at the end of that cable, it will have already achieved orbital velocity, that's the beauty of the system. We think of there not being gravity in orbit b/c it's a weightless environment. You're in free-fall, which leads to the weighless sensation. But without gravity, ISS etc., would quickly leave orbit and head into the solar system.

    7. Re:Boring is ok with me by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but gravity is inversely preportional to the distance to the center of the earth. This is an interesting explaination. At 300 meters, you would feel .912 gs. At 35,000 km, it will be significantly lower. There is a formula on that page, to calculate it. A quick calculation showed .24gs at 35000km, but that still sounds too high.

      Anyways, once something is at the end of that cable, it will have already achieved orbital velocity

      Someone else pointed out that not all satalites are geosynchronous.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    8. Re:Boring is ok with me by fname · · Score: 1

      Those numbers seem about right, but it's actually .912g at 300 kilometers, not 300 meters. And 0.24g, while significantly reduced, is certainly non-trivial. And of course, not all satellites are geosynchronous; it's probably the most populare orbit these days, although there are a about 100 miles for things like taking pictures of the planet. And the point of the space elevator isn't just to put satellites into orbit, it's to provide a head-start for spacecraft going elsewhere.

    9. Re:Boring is ok with me by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      The base is intended to be MOBILE so that they can navigate away from bad storms that could damage the cable or interrupt operations.

      I would anticipate that such an operation would be nuclear powered. Shipping fuel to the vehicle would cost way too much.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  38. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    read the article dumbass.

    the counterweight is just to add some tension so the vehicles climbing the elevator don't pull it down.

    initially the counterweight would just be the satellite that lowered the elevator in the first place - which would be added to by the weight first vehicles climbing to it to release their payloads to allow larger vehicles to climb after them.

  39. Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...estimates it would take about $7bn (4.4bn) to turn the concept into reality...

    So how exactly do you come up with a budget for a project that calls for an unknown (but massive) amount of nonexistanium, delivered to orbit no less?

    1. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by ericman31 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So how exactly do you come up with a budget for a project that calls for an unknown (but massive) amount of nonexistanium, delivered to orbit no less?

      The same way that NASA came up with the budget for the space program in the early 50's and 60's. They had to create a huge number of things that did not exist in order to put a man on the moon. From things as mundane as food and drink and holders that could be used while weightless to as science fictiony as computers small enough to fit in an Apollo space craft. Somehow they managed to not only do all of that, but to budget for it as well. Not only that, all of that R&D was very good for the economy, returning, depending on who you believe, as much as $7 to the economy for every dollar spent.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    2. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1
      So how exactly do you come up with a budget for a project that calls for an unknown (but massive) amount of nonexistanium, delivered to orbit no less?
      The same way that NASA came up with the budget for the space program in the early 50's and 60's.
      The difference between then and now is that the U.S. was competing against another superpower. Nowadays the ESA and other space agencies seem to be taking the lead -- it would take another presidential speech like Kennedy's (I don't see that happening anytime soon), and feverish, direct competition with another space agency or two to get the ball rolling again here in the U.S.. Sadly, our collective mindset (and maybe attention span) right now falls too short to allow this to happen.

      I completely agree with your post otherwise...
    3. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by EpsCylonB · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well maybe China's plans to take up residence on the moon will motivate american politicians to take space seriously again.

    4. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by ericman31 · · Score: 1

      The difference between then and now is that the U.S. was competing against another superpower.

      I should have been clearer. I didn't specifically mean the U.S. and NASA. I meant to give that as an example of how you create the project and the budget. I think that the Manhattan Project and the Apollo Space Program are two of the best examples of how you build a project to do something that has never been done before.

      I agree that the U.S. today probably can't achieve this, or any other major scientific/exploratory advance. Sadly, while a significant segment of the population of the U.S. is still eager to take risks, to learn and to grow, the oligarchy that runs this country is unwilling to go out on a limb because it might jeopardize their political future and let some other ultra-cautious member of the oligarchy replace them.

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
    5. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by EpsCylonB · · Score: 1

      ermm... that wasn't supposed to be a funny comment.

      even if you doubt their technical ability I don't think it would be wise to underestimate their will and determination.

    6. Re:Looks like the pointy haired boss at work again by Jon+Abbott · · Score: 1
      ermm... that wasn't supposed to be a funny comment.
      Yeah, it looks like the moderators are on nitrous oxide again today... I agree that China may be a worthy competitor in the space race. With China we could have the same communism vs. capitalism thing all over again, in order to drive the space race. :^)
  40. I want one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I had one, I could do cool things like drop stuff from 10,000 miles up and see what happens.

    Hey, let's do an open source version. If the government can do this for 10 billion, then we ought to be able to for about 10 thousand. Put the case moders on it, they will figure out how to make it with some plexiglass they found in a dumpster instead of carbon fiber.

    I mean, we liberated cryptography, why not space travel? Imagine RMS writing a free license to protect the whole universe.

  41. Re:Um...... by csimicah · · Score: 1

    1. Invent ridiculous, incorrect hypothesis about proposed system. 2. Make fun of NASA for having such a ridiculous invention. 3. ??? 4. Profit!

  42. Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 feet by jerryasher · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From the article.... "The biggest technical obstacle is finding a material strong but light enough to make the cable; this is where the carbon nanotubes come in. These are microscopically thin tubes of carbon that are as strong as diamonds but flexible enough to turn into fibre. In theory, a nanotube ribbon about one metre wide and as thin as paper could support a space elevator."

    I know the fiber is as strong as diamonds, and I understand that along it's 100,000 km length it's flexible enough to dodge objects.

    But how will they protect it from, well, planes at altitudes below 100,000 feet?

  43. Re:Um...... by Angram · · Score: 1

    It wouldn't have to equal the mass of the Earth - we're not trying to make the cable the center of an Earth-counterweight co-revolutionary system here. It just has to be massive enough that the centrifugal force on it would be enough to hold taut the cable. Tie a rock to a string and swing it around - the string remains taut, but the rock isn't your weight!

    --

    GL
  44. Mutant life forms by iCat · · Score: 1

    Won't ants and snails and stuff be able to climb up this thing? And what happens when they get zapped by all the radiation up there?

  45. Re:A world without Hurricanes by isorox · · Score: 1

    Actually, the nanofibres might be a health hazard on inhalation

  46. Mars Trilogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Read the Mars trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson and this idea might not seem such a great idea given the current global political climate =/

  47. Cool scene in near-future films by PimpNinjaWannaBee · · Score: 0

    This gives a whole new perspective on the scene in films where the guy grabs the beutiful woman by the waist, the cable (going up) with the other hand, and cut the elevatorcable.

  48. Re:Um...... by brarrr · · Score: 1

    at this 36000km mark, would be the center of gravity for the cable itself (and elevator)... so the counterweight in space needs to only equal the weight of the earth side cable and machinery. the reason they put it 1/3rd of the way along the cable is so that less weight needs to be lifted into space to act as a counterweight (16.7% less?). additionally since the cable in space does not need to support its own weight, only the tension between the counterweight and the center of gravity, it does not need to be as strong, requiring less material.

    i've used weight instead of mass, because well, thats what most people understand in the vernacular, so don't bother flaming me about that.

    --
    to email me: take my /. handle and append .net preceded by charter.
  49. Why I dislike space elevators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    I'd simply like to add to this that I dislike space elevators at a personal level.

    Space flight should be about space flight. Not about climbing some friggin bean-stalk.

    The idea is just so - I don't know - demeaning. It's like cheating in an exam.

    1. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know what you mean. The Apollo craft didn't fly, they were simply capsules that couldn't even land properly. No the space shuttle--that was a real spacecraft.

    2. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by AZDean · · Score: 1

      Don't think of this a different form of space flight. Think of it as a construction crane. With this, you can ship up into space all the cool stuff you need to build space stations, inter-planetary probes, REAL space ships, etc. I always thought it was real cool myself. The only problem is the stupid terrorists. But then, they are a problem regardless of whether we build cool things like this or not. Hech, they're a problem even if we all go back to living like cavemen!

    3. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
      Not about climbing some friggin bean-stalk.

      No way, man. If they put some rock-climbing holds on this thing I'd be there so fast. Man, that'd be like a 2,000,000 pitch climb. Better bring my climbing tent. Better buy one first.

    4. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by Surlyboi · · Score: 1

      Need a belay partner?

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
    5. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by jsoderba · · Score: 1

      The Apollo went far further into space than any space shuttle ever has. I fail to see how being a shitty aircraft increases a veichle's spaceworthiness.

    6. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by KillerLoop · · Score: 1

      Then don't terrorize people to avoid that they get so pissed that they blow themselves up into your face just to make the point of disliking you.

    7. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

      Apollo was lame. Gemini was the real space capsule, with real pilot control, and - once docked to an Agena target vehicle - serious orbital maneuvering ability. Gemini could have gone to the moon, carried up to twelve passengers, and - with stubby wings - made gliding landings on runways.

    8. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      That's the spirit. We don't need no stinking space elevator. What worked in 1965 will work today...

      Actually, I've seen this book in my local bookstore. That's what we need: hydrogen bomb powered spacecraft. (BTW, is The Orion Project well written?)

    9. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1

      Yep, it's definitely well written, and a fascinating story too. If you are at all interested in the topic, grab it for sure!

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    10. Re:Why I dislike space elevators by AlecC · · Score: 1

      So you dislike steps up into an aircraft and would prefer to pole vault in from the ground? The elevator is just a way to get to the start point. It is no more part of spaceflight than the crawler from the VAB to the launch pad, or a runway is to an aircraft. Get out of the gravity well, then go space faring.

      --
      Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  50. Re:Um...... by CharonX · · Score: 1

    Nope, it should just be heavy enough that the force caused by the rotation of the weight keeps the cable straight and also any weight it might carry.
    Think spinning cicles with a jojo, if you spin fast enough the jojo-string will be nearly horizontikal (and it does not matter how heavy you are ;)...

    --
    +++ MELON MELON MELON +++ Out of Cheese Error +++ redo from start +++
  51. I thought the main problem was... by Epistax · · Score: 1

    ... Coming up with a way to make enough carbon fiber (er nanotubing?). Like an industrial process wasn't developed yet--? I'd like a response, screw karma ;)

    1. Re:I thought the main problem was... by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Nanotubes as such are strong. The problem is connecting them up into a rope or ribbon, because the connections between adjacent tubes are usually much weaker. If there were nanotubes long enough for the full length of the ribbon, then we would not have this problem. Then again it's unlikely that we can build 36000-km long molecules.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:I thought the main problem was... by Theobon · · Score: 1

      This talks a bit about the advances in nanotubes. HiPCO is gaining a lot of headway.
      If you have IEEE journal membership there are a lot of papers on it.

    3. Re:I thought the main problem was... by Epistax · · Score: 1

      Couldn't that be solved just be using short ones, and winding them as a rope is done? In a rope, it hardly matters how long any individual strain is. Then again, that depends on the tightness of the rope, and I suppose the friction of the hemp/other strain. I'd still any more anyone's got :)

  52. Space elevators great. Becareful of the nanites! by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    A 100,000 km cable of pure buckminsterfullerene nanotubes -- a surprisingly simple structure amenable to being built and extended by nanomachines. Nanites.

    Becareful of the nanites though, eventually, they always turn sentient and demand a piece of our action!

  53. Been done before... by Chapium · · Score: 1

    I think there is a historical account of this early on in the Bible...

    1. Re:Been done before... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are an idiot.

  54. Re:Um...... by isorox · · Score: 1

    No, it would need to be a few tons. Put a blob of bluetack on the end of a string and whizz it round your head. Does if fall down? No. Is it 150lb? No.

  55. The Web Between Worlds by StarEmperor · · Score: 1

    The same year that Clarke published his novel, Charles Sheffield published "the other space elevator novel," The Web Between Worlds. You can read the first few chapters at Baen Books' web site.

  56. Sources by starbuzz · · Score: 3, Informative
    The novel by Clarke is a nice read. Clarke is not the source of the idea, though, as he acknowledges himself in the appendix of Fountains:

    This apparently outrageous concept was first presented to the West in a letter in the issue of Science for 11 February 1966, "Satellite Elongation into a True 'Sky-Hook'" , by John D. Isaacs, Hugh Bradner and George B. Backus ...

    That's in Science vol. 151(3711), p. 682 (1966).

    ... It was later discovered that the concept had already been developed six years earlier - and on a much more ambitious scale - by a Leningrad engineer, Y. N. Artsutanov (Komsomolskaya Pravda, 31 July 1960). Artsutanov considered a "heavenly funicular", to use his engaging name for the device, lifting no less than 12,000 tons a day to synchronous orbit.

    Interestingly, Clarke envisioned the thread leading up (or down) the skytower to be nanodiamond, while these days nanotubes are all the range. The difference in the materials is that in diamond carbon atoms have four neighbours but in tubes they have only three, as in graphite, yet at about the same formation energy. That makes their chemical bonds actually stronger than in diamond and gives nanotubes their extraordinary tensile strength at low mass - perfect for engineering a space elevator.

  57. Re:Um...... by efflux · · Score: 1

    Yeah, becasue to keep a sling taut you need a rock that weighs as much as you. Maybe you just need enough centripetal force to counteract any weather (or other extraneous forces) since the position of the center of gravity would allow it to stay in a geosynchronous orbit disregarding forces outside of the system.

    --
    Do I contradict myself? Very well, then I contradict myself, I am large, I contain multitudes. -- Walt Whitman
  58. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by isorox · · Score: 5, Informative

    The atmosphere (and the earths magnetic thing which induced the current in shuttle tethers) wont whizz past it, because the cable will not be moving relative to the earths surface. Charge from the atmosphere using the cable as a conduit is all covered in the space elevator faq's on numerous sites.

  59. caution: atmospheric EMF by mikey573 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From what I've head, a space elevator is a bad idea in the sense that the atmosphere has a singificant EMF gradient between the surface of the earth and far up in the atmomsphere. Completion of such a device would case the world's largest lightning bolt ever. You'd be basically creating the largest "short" ever. :P

    1. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by volsung · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One man's lightening bolt is another man's elevator power source.

    2. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by gears5665 · · Score: 1

      sounds like a great way to take the energy out of apporaching hurricanes, tornados, tsunami, etc.

      And if we can harness that electricity to create hydrogen fuel we might even have an endless planet supplied clean renewable energy source. Bye Bye Bush's oil industry.

    3. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by falzer · · Score: 1

      I've read and thought about this EMF gradient you speak of. Even if unpracticable to build, could Very Tall power stations harness this potential energy?

    4. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by merlin_jim · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You'd be basically creating the largest "short" ever.

      Not unless you made it out of superconducters! Even the best conductor we know is going to have a significant amount of resistance along the kinds of lengths we're talking about.

      And depending on the exact carbon nanotube technology they settle on, the elevator won't be all that conductive to start with... it could very well end up being less conductive than the air around it...

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    5. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by Theobon · · Score: 1

      You remove the energy from hurricans and other storms and you reduce the purpose of weather and turn the earth into a zero-world. A world that obeys the same weather laws as our current one but has no energy and doesn't cycle and is incapable of supporting life as we know it.

    6. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what I've read on the subject, because you have a conductor that is always there, you would dissapate any charge before it got big enough to cause a lightning bolt. The only reason that lightning is so violent is because you need a huge potential difference to arc from the atmosphere to the Earth. If there is a low resistance conduit, i.e. a carbon nano-tube cable, the charges dissapate before you get this violent reaction. You would actually have less lightning and the potential difference would be reduced at a low rate, so you don't need to worry about the heating affects associated with high voltage transfers in a short period of time.

    7. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

      From what I've read on the subject, because you have a conductor that is always there, you would dissipate any charge before it got big enough to cause a lightning bolt.

      Hollywood scriptwriters: Don't let the plausability of the above comment get in the way of that great sfx scene.

    8. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Removing electrical potential and removing momentum are two different things that you might be confusing. Also, What do you mean by "dosen't cycle." The motion in the atmosphere is from the motion of the earth and the thermal energy added from the earth itself and from the sun. I don't see how removing excess electrons from the atmosphere to the earth or viceversa is going to end all life as we know it. Besides, that kind ofthing happens all the time, its called lightning.

    9. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by dharmawan · · Score: 1

      didn't nikolai tesla dream about this?

      i have a feeling it would be a really bad idea to connect the upper atmosphere and ground with something like this. the current would be huge, much bigger than a lightning bolt since this is far higher

    10. Re:caution: atmospheric EMF by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Lightning bolts are static electricity resulting from clouds dragging against each other.

      Nothing to do with height or any atmospheric emf gradients.

  60. Your US Tax Dollars At Work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Much of the initial research was funded by NASA. You can access the report at:

    http://flightprojects.msfc.nasa.gov/pdf_files/el ev ator.pdf

    It discusses all of the problems and issues discussed thus far; a great read if your interested.

    A book by Dr Edwards, titled The Space Elevator, provides even more details, just search your favorite on-line book seller.

  61. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Scrameustache · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But how will they protect it from, well, planes at altitudes below 100,000 feet?

    3 words: Restricted air space.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  62. Clarke didn't invent this!!! by thorgil · · Score: 5, Informative


    According to A. Clarke himself the space elevator was invented by Jurij Artsutanov from St. Petersburg.

    (3001, The final Odyssey, under sources)

    --
    Warning: This sig contains a small bug. ==> *
    1. Re:Clarke didn't invent this!!! by eric.t.f.bat · · Score: 1

      Yes, well... there are a significant number of /.ers who think space opera was invented in 1977 by George Lucas, aliens crossbreeding with humans was first thought up in the sixties by Roddenberry, and no one had ever heard of using a command line to control a computer before Linus Torvalds invented the idea for Linux 1.0...

      --
      I have discovered a truly remarkable .sig block which this margin is too small to conta
    2. Re:Clarke didn't invent this!!! by RobertB-DC · · Score: 1

      According to A. Clarke himself the space elevator was invented by Jurij Artsutanov from St. Petersburg.

      I remember the days, before the wall fell, when the running joke was that anything invented in the West was invented years before, in the USSR. "Liquid Paper? That was invented by a little old lady in Leningrad after the Great Patriotic War, when she mixed horse manure with old German shell casings!"

      Was that Kruschev (sp?!) that was known for "we did it first"?

      It's so sad... here I am in my '30s, and all I know are ISR jokes.
      Speaking of which... IN SOVIET RUSSIA, Space Elevator goes up YOU!

      --
      Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
  63. The thing that really sucks... by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...about the space elevator is when the kid who launched his satellite just before you mashes every button before getting off.

    1. Re:The thing that really sucks... by debrain · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't there only be two buttons?
      * Earth
      * Space

    2. Re:The thing that really sucks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is also an emergency button. It breaks the cable and sends you to hell.

  64. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by wulfhound · · Score: 1

    It's geostationary... the atmosphere whizzes past at ~0mph.

  65. Omg! Why don't they think of the consequences... by CharonX · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can only shudder when I think about the new pick-up lines that arise once it is complete.
    "Hey Sweetie, wanna see my Space Elevator"
    or
    "Guess what is 3 feet long and DOES NOT reach into space"
    and
    "Let's play Space-elevator; I've got the cable, and you're gonna be the counterweight"
    ;)

    --
    +++ MELON MELON MELON +++ Out of Cheese Error +++ redo from start +++
  66. Waterbeds! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    smooth, I love how you stuck that in there. Invented by Heinlein in '30's IIRC, He was trying to design a better hospital bed. I don't believe he ever actually built one, though.

    1. Re:Waterbeds! by ericman31 · · Score: 2, Informative

      No, he didn't actually build one. He designed it because he was hospitalized and bedridden in the 30's. He described it fully in "Stranger in a Strang Land".

      --
      In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
  67. We need a new moderation code (or two) by Linker3000 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    My god, they've all crawled out of the woodwork on this one:

    IMHOBait

    AmateurScientistBait

    NotQualfiedToPostButIWillAnywayBait

    ConspiracyBait

    IfGodHadMeantUsToBait

    IKnowMoreThanTheExpertsBait

    --
    AT&ROFLMAO
  68. the infamous nanotubes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    that everybody is talkin about but nobody is actually making them in any reasonable quantity, no has even made a piece of string yet let alone miles long of the stuff

    vapourware again

  69. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by inertia187 · · Score: 1

    Ok, here's another idea. Why don't they make a fleet of garbage collecting space robots that go out and find materials to make the cable on orbit? Then, they just launch the factory fleet, order them to begin work, then sit back and wait for the cable to come down in a few decades. The only real obsitcal is finding suitable materials on orbit. But there's so much junk up there, maybe it's possible.

    --
    A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
  70. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by jerryasher · · Score: 2, Insightful

    9/11, 3-4 stolen lear jets evading 1-2 F-16s, ground hugging L-39s, heat seaking shoulder mounted SAMs aimed at elevators climbing the cable, Sharks with friggin laser beams (mounted in van filled with salt water) ... ?

  71. Going up... by Foozy · · Score: 3, Funny

    "3rd floor; stereos, TVs, radios..."
    "203rd floor; binoculars, range finders..."
    "56,304th floor: parachutes, hang gliders..."
    "124,202nd floor; helium baloons, oxygen tanks..."
    "973,404th floor; motion sickness pills, glare filters..."

    1. Re:Going up... by jfengel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And it goes up from there. At 25 feet per story (not uncommon for office buildings) you're talking just shy of five million stories. At a more house-like 10 feet per story, it's more like 10 million.

      I know you were just joking, but I found that number kind of put it all in perspective for a second.

  72. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Alrescha · · Score: 1

    "as the atmosphere whizzes past it 24/7"

    Umn... whizzes? It's going the same speed as the atmosphere...

    A.

    --
    ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
  73. YES! by KRck · · Score: 1
    This is what space exploration has been waiting for. I and my friends have been speculating on this concept for years (with obvious insperation from Mr. Clark). A space cable is one of the true cost effective ways of getting into space. As absurd as it sounds its pure genious. The implications of what this could mean for mankind if they can actually build this structure is undescribable.

    Space exploration has been hindered by cost and gravity, letting us only do a fraction of the exploration that we have wanted to do. Even creating a solution that cuts the cost of getting a hunk of metal into space by 10 times would revolutionize the industry.

    Considering it takes a 300 million dollars to launch the shuttle, which averages about $4,600 per pound to get a hunk of metal into space, being able to reduce that to $12 a pound means you break all the bearers of financing. Futurists, and scientist have been saying that to really break into true space exploration, and the commercilization of space travel, mining etc.. you have to be able to break the $40 a pound barrier.

    7B is nothing even if it costs twice that it still nothing with amount of costs it will save in the long run. All I can say is I hope I get to see it in my lifetime.

    --

    Serenity|Chaos

    1. Re:YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope your friends know how to spell "genius" and "inspiration". Do you know how insulting it is to someone to be called a "genious"? Its like having having geeks as your only football fans when you're an NFL quarterback. Learn to spell, it goes a long way toward your credibility in a written arguement.

    2. Re:YES! by KRck · · Score: 1

      Stupid spell checker, yes that is my fault, just went over it too quickly this morning. Thanks for pointing that out.

      --

      Serenity|Chaos

    3. Re:YES! by Adrick42 · · Score: 1

      Space exploration has been hindered by cost and gravity

      Well, I vote we get rid of that pesky gravity!

    4. Re:YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check it again. He missed more than two words.

  74. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Airspeed at the cable is only zero if there is zero wind near it: unlikely.

  75. Re:Um...... by William+Tanksley · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why are you speculating that anything would have to mass the same as the earth? The Earth orbits the sun, but doesn't mass the same as the sun!

    The physics are simple: you just have a cord that stretches out beyond geostationary orbit. At geostationary, the cord's mass is in a precise orbit (zero pull towards or away from Earth); beyond that, the cord's inertia pulls it away from Earth. So you don't even need a lead weight at the end -- all you need is enough cord. As a bonus, anything that gets pulled past the geosync point will be accellerated away from Earth; so you can use it as a cosmic slingshot.

    Hoist a chickenfarm to the end of the tether, and you can throw eggs at Mars!

    -Billy

  76. *sigh* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And, pray tell, how are you gonna keep it straight?
    Are you gonna but permanent rockets on the other end to keep on pulling the whole thing up, fighting gravity?

    The reason it has to be at the equator is that the centrifugal force can cancel out the gravitational force, so that the whole thing doesn't come crashing down like Newton's apple.

    And no if you're on it you won't magically get a centrifugal force throwing you off the planet, believe it or not, but the fine people in Quito, Ecuador have both feet on the ground thanks to the force Al Gore kindly invented, namely gravity.

    So you start at the bottom of the elevator where gravity is stronger then the centrifugal force, and you go up by 'climbing' the elevator.
    Gravity gets weaker as you go up and the centrifugal force greater, and at a certain point the forces cancel each other and you have escaped earth's gravity.

    Or you can hang on and let the centrifugal force pull you up and up and up untill you reach the end and have quite some (cheap) speed and then your rockets kick in to bring you further to mars or Your Anus. :)

  77. I Hate the Space Elevator by Mr.+Darl+McBride · · Score: 0, Troll
    So I thought the space elevator was like -- some theme park or something. I show up and I don't see a single damned roller coaster, no cotton candy, nothing but a vending machine with Nutri Grain bars. Fuck!

    Well, a few of those and let me tell you, I had to take a dump something awful. This guy asks if I'm ready to launch a satellite and I'm "Boy, am I ever!" though I'd never heard that euphemism before.

    So I get to the top and there ain't no can or anything, but by then I really had to go, so I just let it fly, and now the fucking thing's in orbit somewhere over Miami. Or -- it was.

    See, I got this fucking huge bill from NASA and it's going to bankrupt me, but that ain't all. See, these guys from the Hubble observatory call and they're all "You set a collision orbit and got schmeck on the lens!" which meant another expensive bill still, but then they had to twist the knife -- "By the way, after looking at this closely (what else could we look at now?) we think you've got worms."

    Damn!!!

    So I'm off to the doc, and he's all pulling on his rubber glove and there goes another space probe and all of my pride with it while I'm squirming on the table.

    Only high point of my whole space elevator affair was that the ass doc sent me flowers the next day. "From irc.efnet.net #gnaa -- hello.jpg to you!"

  78. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by wulfhound · · Score: 1

    Yes, but it's still much lower than the air velocities where NASA was experimenting, or indeed the air velocities generated by aircraft props and helicopter blades (good sources of static).

  79. Think about how this stuff works by Hizonner · · Score: 1
    The propulsion you need beyond LEO is very different from the propulsion you need to get to LEO, anyway. Once you reach LEO, you no longer have to worry about generating >1G of thrust. That lets you use all kinds of nifty, highly efficient, low-thrust, long-term deep space propulsion systems that are useless for a launch vehicle.

    ... and the vehicle itself can be designed for pure space operation, which is a big win.

    Any realistic system is going to use different mechanisms above a certain level (probably just about LEO) than it uses below it. The two problems are naturally separate, they naturally need to be solved separately, and the space elevator is a Really Cool solution to one of them. It's just plain fallacious to claim that a space elevator hurts access above LEO; it makes such access much easier.

  80. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by SillySlashdotName · · Score: 1

    Honest question:

    Is static electricity useful for anything? Can you run an electrical motor with it? I thought the answer was no, but I can not substanciate my reasons for thinking that. Can someone help me out here?

    Thanks

    --
    Acts of massive stupidity are almost never covered by warranty. --me.
  81. Re:The other other space elevator by Ella+the+Cat · · Score: 1

    IIRC there's a space elevator figuring in Kim Stanley Robinson's Red/Green/Blue Mars trilogy.

  82. Oh, yeah by Hizonner · · Score: 1

    I forgot to mention in all the talk about LEO that a space elevator actually gets you beyond LEO, and even beyond geosynchronous, to or beyond escape. The cable is centered at geosynchronous.

  83. LiftWatch - space elevator portal site by Quaelin+PoD · · Score: 1

    A shameless plug for my new hobby site:

    LiftWatch

    A friend and I started this site a week ago because we noticed an apparent lack of a centralized news source for space elevators and related concepts.

    Please check out the site and contribute!

    We're hoping to turn it into the defacto space elevator portal site.

  84. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by p3d0 · · Score: 1

    Static electricity, by definition, doesn't move, so it's useless. If you want a motor, you need an electric current. It is possible to turn static electricity into current though, and vice-versa--that's what a capacitor does.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  85. Re:What goes up must come down/Spinning wheel got by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    Offtopic? When the FAQ at liftport is pages and pages of html dedicated to discussing what could make a space elevator fall down? When a real scenario expressed at the end of Arthur Clarke's Fountains of Paradise is large, spinning wheel shaped, orbiting space cables acting as solar trebuchets? Offtopic?

    Help help! Moderator abuse!

    One rigid assed, never listened to rock, thinks poems must mean literally what they say, ignorant of space elevators and science fiction j/o of a moderator.

  86. How many Americans? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    calling it centerfugal forces before a raging horde of geeks kills everyone because there is no such thing...

    ITS CENTRIPETAL FORCES! a redneck mis-pronunced it and now joe-everyone calls it centrifugal!

  87. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That was terribly rude of you.

    And damn funny. Sadly, according to Liftport's faq, there's no way these cables will obliterate anything, they fall down at the speed of paper and weigh less than 40 pounds per mile of cable.

  88. How cheap is... by AchilleTalon · · Score: 4, Insightful
    a 100 000 km cable made with a yet to invent material, with a yet to invent manufacturing process, with yet to invent deployement mecanism, with a yet to invent protection measures and with a yet to estimate electricity bill (since the vehicles will climb up and down using electricity converted from a laser beam they will received from earth)?

    The estimate of 7 billions $ seems very, very, underestimated.

    And I suppose all known NASA locations are not consider as potential site to build this escalator, most of them are much more to near regions where tropical storms are likely to happen. Because, what would happen to a nice 1 meter large, paper thin, 100 000 km long light weight ribbon under a tropical storm? For sure, it will be hard to align the laser beam on the vehicles.

    --
    Achille Talon
    Hop!
    1. Re:How cheap is... by Hawthorne01 · · Score: 1

      It would seem to me that a vehicle descending the cable might use some form of regenerative braking (much like electric cars and trains do) that creates electricity while it slows down, thus dramatically reducing the power costs.

      --
      "Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former."
    2. Re:How cheap is... by narratorDan · · Score: 1

      Oh, the $7 billion is what it will actually cost. The rest of the $200 billion goes into the marketing and lawyers.

      NarratorDan

      --
      "If you're not confused by quantum mechanics, you really don't understand it." - Niels Bohr
  89. what about Newton's third? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

    OK. You set up the "elevator" tethered to the Earth, with a counterweight at the other end.

    When you exert a force on the elevator to climb up it, won't there be an opposite force pulling the counterweight down? What will keep the counterweight in orbit? If the answer is "rockets" then the elevator will be no more efficient than a rocket, and the whole endeavour is pointless.

    Presumably I'm missing something, but what?

    1. Re:what about Newton's third? by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What will keep the counterweight in orbit is basic physics. You set the whole thing up so that gravity and conservation of energy and so on work for you.

      The question I want to know is what are the osilation modes going to look like. You have a massive string under tention, it is going to vibrate. I'm sure you could figure it out if you had some clue as to the properties of the material.

      --
      Erlang Developer and podcaster
    2. Re:what about Newton's third? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With a traditional rocket launch you waste a ton of energy to air-resistance. So the counterwieght rockets (if that's what they'd use) would use much less fuel. As an added bonus, those rockets would not need to be recoverable, segmented (staged), or aerodynamic.

      However, they probably wouldn't use chemical rockets. Since the counterweight only requires a relatively small amount of force over a long time period, techniques like ion propulsion may be more efficient.

    3. Re:what about Newton's third? by the+Haldanian · · Score: 1

      You unreel a little extra cable from the counterweight. Problem solved

    4. Re:what about Newton's third? by puetzk · · Score: 1

      well, there are several answers. One, it will be a whole lot more efficient than a rocket, because you don't have to carry the fuel up with you, you can pull transport the needed energy via the supporting structure. Given that most of the mass of a rocket is the fuel, that's huge.

      Secondly, it just takes less energy. Besides getting rid of the fuel weight, even the mass of the climber you don't really have to pay for - you get it back when the thing comes back down. You have to devise some way of storing the energy, though one reasonable approach would be to just let the whole thing ride up and down a little bit and store the surplus in the potential energy of the huge orbiting mass.

      Thus, the only energy you actually spend is the actual mass of the cargo times the height to which you lift it. Weigh a shuttle crew & cargo. Now weigh the shuttle, fully fueled, on the pad. Which one is going to take more energy to get to orbit? With a space elevator, only the cargo counts, and even that only if you leave it up there...

      --
      The Matrix is going down for reboot now! Stopping reality: OK. The system is halted.
    5. Re:what about Newton's third? by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

      You have a massive string under tention, it is going to vibrate. I'm sure you could figure it out if you had some clue as to the properties of the material.

      Well I can name the most critical property:

      length=100,000m

      That's a long long way... and with the wing singing against it, it'll definitely be vibrating. I imagine its first order harmonic is really LFE, the kind of stuff from the slashdot article the other day... that makes people hallucinate and see weird shit and stuff.

      But with a string that long and the amount of tension its under, even the thousandth order harmonics will be loud enough to hear, if you put your ear near the elevator...

      --
      I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
    6. Re:what about Newton's third? by GodSpiral · · Score: 1

      At first I thought the answer was that the things that climb up the rope don't pull on the rope. The article said they would be powered by lasers.

      But that does seem non-sensical. If the rope isn't being pulled on to climb, then there doesn't need to be a rope there.

      Maybe the answer is that the structure is engineered to hold the orbital platform and the payload being pulled up to it.

      If the physics say that a platform at sustainable geosychronous orbit center of gravity of the structure will keep it hovering, then if the center of gravity is actually higher than the platform, then it still stays "afloat". Doesn't it?

      So there would be headroom weight that can climb up. Maybe you need counterweights to climb down for the first km up (lifting force required is maximum at base of elevator).

      Perhaps a better location than middle of pacific would be a high mountain top with possible road access. (http://gorp.away.com/gorp/location/asia/india/BIK _HIMA.HTM) is currently the highest road in the world at 4.5km altitude. I wonder if this saves only 13.5km of rope length, or if there are also savings that come from not having to pull stuff up from sea level.

      Another way to look at it, is that the center of gravity for a 100000km ribbon would normally be at 50000km. Putting a big fat space platform at 35000km, puts the real center of gravity between those 2 numbers, and so there is overhead I spoke of above.

      There are 2 big issues I don't understand:

      1. If the cable weighs more at the bottom, and weighs nothing above 35000km, then its true center of gravity will always be lower than 35000km, and it will always fall back down.

      2. If the answer to 1 is that it's rotational force that keeps the counter weight up there, then isn't there a potential drag on earth's rotational speed? Whatever force it is that makes you spin slower when you extend your arms out instead of clutching them to you?

    7. Re:what about Newton's third? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      sorry, but that doesn't answer my question. This isn't like a satellite in geocentric orbit because it will be pulled down by anything climbing the elevator.

    8. Re:what about Newton's third? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      thanks for (unlike the others) at least trying to answer the question. But I don't think your answers pan out:

      1. transporting the energy up the structure means lifting fuel in the elevator, and if I'm right this will pull the counterweight earthwards meaning you need to burn fuel to get the fuel up...

      2. I agree you save because there's no net movement of the vehicle carrying the fuel, but this is hardly a spectacular saving.

      3. the flaw in your argument is that most of the mass of the shuttle and other rockets is fuel

    9. Re:what about Newton's third? by sharkey · · Score: 1
      When you exert a force on the elevator to climb up it, won't there be an opposite force pulling the counterweight down? What will keep the counterweight in orbit?

      The elevators going down, of course. They'll be pushing up to go down, while the ones going up will be pulling down.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    10. Re:what about Newton's third? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      eh? How does unreeling a cable counteract a force? Do you understand my question?

    11. Re:what about Newton's third? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sigh, it was alluded to in several other posts here. There are alot of technicalities, but basically they're making a big sling, using the earth to spin it around. This will keep it taught even against climbing vehicles. If you pulled hard enough I guess you could pull it down, but I doubt they'll be using climbers of that weight.

    12. Re:what about Newton's third? by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      Jesus wept, is there nobody here with something even resembling a clue? You clearly haven't ever been "taut" high school level physics.

    13. Re:what about Newton's third? by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

      Centrifugal force.

      I didn't answer this question the first time I saw it because I knew that as soon as I mentioned centrifugal force, some /. physics pedant would point out that it isn't really a force, it's just a ridiculous liberal myth. (which is technically true, but I digress...)

      The cable would be attached at the top to something massive, like a space station or an asteroid, and the centrifugal force generated by swinging that weight around the earth keeps the cable under tension. As long as the weight of the elevator pulling down on the cable is less than the force of the space station pulling up, the cable stays under tension, and the station doesn't move a centimeter closer to earth.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    14. Re:what about Newton's third? by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 1

      Thats why you put a large weight at the geosync point, and probably a lot of cable out past it in the other direction. That way the fource balances.

      --
      Erlang Developer and podcaster
  90. Re:So..... so what? by Cazis · · Score: 1

    Which equatorial country is the U.S. going to invade?

    Cuba...

    That would make atleast a two-in-one operation.

  91. Stratospheric Diving by Dark+Coder · · Score: 1

    Oooooooooo aaaaaaahhhhhh...

    The thrill of exospheric wake boarding must exceed those of ordinary sky-diving.

    Wait til one hits the cable on the way down.

  92. Re:Um...... by Serapth · · Score: 1

    Now, take the same piece of string, and double the length? What is the end result... you either need to spin it faster, or put more weight on the end to keep in tight. Now, double the length again and repeat... on and on and on. You will notice that as the length of the string increases, so does the effort required to keep it tight. You either have to keep adding weight... or increasing the velocity. Now given that the earth spins at a constant speed... what choice have you got? Adding more weight is about the only option.

  93. Clarke didn't first describe it. by AJWM · · Score: 1

    The blurb says "as first described by Arthur C. Clarke in 1979". Much as I respect Clarke's accomplishments, this isn't one of them.

    The concept may have first been documented by Tsiolkovsky, certainly it had an early mention by Artsutanov ("V Kosmos na electrovoze", Komsomolskaya Pravda, 31 July 1960), and was described in western literature at least four years before Fountains of Paradise by Pearson (Pearson, J., "The Orbital Tower; A Spacecraft Launcher Using the Earth's Rotational Energy", Acta Astronautica, V2, 1975, pp. 785-799).

    I researched the concept a fair bit for my papers on using the idea on Mars as an easy way to export Martian volatiles (eg water) to other bases or settlements in the inner solar system. (I don't really want my server slashdotted so I'm not going to post a link. A google will find it.)

    --
    -- Alastair
    1. Re:Clarke didn't first describe it. by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 1
      That is interesting.

      Do you read Russian? I have immense respect for the Russian scientists and wouldn't be surprised if novel ideas could still be found in the cold war era Soviet journals that nobody in the mainstream science really has read.

    2. Re:Clarke didn't first describe it. by AJWM · · Score: 1

      Do you read Russian?

      Not as well as I used to, not that even that was very good. Enough to get by on a visit to Russia about 10 years ago, and (then) to read articles with a tranlation dictionary open.

      Rest assured, though, that there were plenty of people reading the Soviet journals at the time, if not republishing the material in the popular press.

      --
      -- Alastair
  94. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Pharmboy · · Score: 3, Funny

    Static electricity, by definition, doesn't move, so it's useless.

    Not true. You can harness it's awesome powers to make inflated balloons stick to the ceiling, after you rub them on your head. You can generate it by running your feet on the carpet in the winter, and touching your brother, making him leap 3 feet. It makes pulling clothes out of the dryer much easier: Just grab any one piece, and the rest stick to it.

    Ok, not the most useful applications, but still fun. :D

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  95. Diamonds do indeed burn by core+plexus · · Score: 1
    " Just because something is made of carbon doesn't mean that it will "burn up." This is especially true for stable forms of carbon like diamonds and, say, nanotubes."

    See Here

    -cp-

  96. Diamonds aren't forever. by littleghoti · · Score: 1

    If you throw a diamond in liquid oxygen, it burns. In this case though, I don't think anyone knows.

  97. restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    9/11, 3-4 stolen lear jets evading 1-2 F-16s, ground hugging L-39s, heat seaking shoulder mounted SAMs aimed at elevators climbing the cable, Sharks with friggin laser beams (mounted in van filled with salt water) ... ?

    What in the hell are you alking about? There weren't any planes in restricted airspace on 9/11/01.

    Unless you actually believe the blatant department of defense lies about what happened to them on 9/11?

    Remeber, the pentagon was attacked with a car (well, truck, actually) bomb.
    That what's the news said on 9/11.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:restricted airspace by Eric+Ass+Raymond · · Score: 1
      Remeber, the pentagon was attacked with a car

      Well, I've got an answer for the "why did they pour sand on the lawn?" paranoid bit.

      Heavy rescue equipment. You don't want them to turn the lawn into a friggin mud pit.

    2. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Remeber, the pentagon was attacked with a car

      Well, I've got an answer for the "why did they pour sand on the lawn?" paranoid bit.

      Heavy rescue equipment. You don't want them to turn the lawn into a friggin mud pit.


      Hmmm...
      That's interesting.

      I never shared that guy's interest in the sand though, I was more concerned about the whole "how do you hit the front of a 2 stories building with a plane and nothing else?" bit, the "How come the damage is limited to a hole the size of my living room followed by a small fire when a plane is freaking huge and full of fuel?" bit, and so forth.

      But to have a rational, practical explanation for the sand...maybe you should email him : )

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    3. Re:restricted airspace by gothicpoet · · Score: 2, Insightful
      To quote Monty Python: "You're a looney."

      For these very obvious reasons, the air space around the elevator would be restricted and so would the sea lanes. Remember, this though would be far out in the Pacific, very very far from anywhere (hundreds of miles - not a 15 minute jog). It's not like you could sneak up on the thing.

      I'd like to see those Lear Jets that could evade F-16s in any air space, let alone over the open Pacific. It's not like they can pretend to be Clint Eastwood in Firefox and dive down a canyon or something. Shoulder mounted missiles? Fired from where? A guy bobbing in a life preserver who swam out there?

      Besides, terrorists could blow up airplanes, mine harbors, poison water supplies, gas subways, fly planes into more buildings, put truck bombs on major bridges or in garages of major business buildings... If we're going to worry about the sky falling, we might as well just hang up our guns and slink off into the sunset.

      --
      Quoth he ::
      "It's all academic anyway..."
    4. Re:restricted airspace by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

      I never shared that guy's interest in the sand though, I was more concerned about the whole "how do you hit the front of a 2 stories building with a plane and nothing else?"

      You miss. You aim the plane down at the outer ring of the pentagon and accidentally undershoot by a few feet. The plane hits low on the wall of the building and most of the energy goes into the ground instead of the structure.

      My question for the tinfoil beanie brigade: If the pentagon was hit with a truck bomb, and not a plane, then where the hell did the plane go?

      Bonus question: Why bother faking a plane strike with a truck bomb instead of just hijacking another plane?

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    5. Re:restricted airspace by balthan · · Score: 1

      the damage is limited to a hole the size of my living room

      Did you see the whole section that was replaced? They completely replaced an entire section of the building.

      This shows the damage was more than just the outer wall.
      And this shows which part they demolished and later rebuilt.

    6. Re:restricted airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't there be some debris visible from the outside then? And wouldn't there be some sort of hole from the plane plowing into the ground?

    7. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      To quote Monty Python: "You're a looney."

      Yo, Bub, learn to aim, you replied to the wrond dude here!

      the air space around the elevator would be restricted

      That was my point...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    8. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 0, Troll

      If the pentagon was hit with a truck bomb, and not a plane, then where the hell did the plane go?

      On 9/11, after it becaime clear that the united states was under attack by people using commercial airplanes as bombs, the news made an obvious announcement: A general of the airforce ordered any plane not responding to the order to get the hell away would be shot down.
      Later in the day, a spokesperson from the whitehouse said that that general did not have the authority to issue such an order, and that under no circumstances would the US military ever shoot US civilians.

      where the hell did the plane go?

      I don't know.
      But I know why they needed a cover story.

      Its so you won't ask that question: They premptively gave you an awnser, before you ever thought to ask the question.
      And its not like they never lied to you before, or since.
      :(

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    9. Re:restricted airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You imply that the US military shot the plane down. If this is true, there would have been a report of a plane crash (ala the other plane (90??) that the passengers revolted on.)

      Considering the media frenzy at that time, I would assume it would have been covered in the media if it happened. I don't recall hearing of any such thing.

      Therefore, it did not happen.

      (psst- now it's your turn to claim a massive government coverup, complete with MIBs flashing their 'flashy thingys' in peoples faces. Isn't this fun!?)

    10. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I don't recall hearing of any such thing.

      Therefore, it did not happen.


      I can see why you posted that as AC. Jeez...

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    11. Re:restricted airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know of ANYONE ON EARTH that heard of such a thing?

      No? Then apply Occams Razor and assume it didn't happen, instead of assuming it did happen and hundreds, thousands, or tens of thousands of people are involved in a massive cover-up to protect... what? A General who goofed and shot down a plane?

      Puhleeze.

      (And I'm AC because I'm posting from work.)

    12. Re:restricted airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      where the hell did the plane go?

      I don't know.


      In other words, "Oops, I forgot about that..."

    13. Re:restricted airspace by Froze · · Score: 1

      OK, I did a little computation.
      The height of the pentagon is ~77 feet
      From these pictures under extra info at cnn. The first three explosion shots at a guessed 30/sec frame rate show an explosion expanding at one building height every 2 frames, or 77*30/2= ~1155 ft/sec, not unreasonable for a fuel air explosion. Now, the low end air speed of an approaching plane is 250 and the high end is 600 mph that means that the plane was moving at ~1000 ft/sec at the fastest and should have been viewable for three or four frames. So were are the images of the impacting plane?

      Further the explosion originates at the outer edge of the building and shows no forward momentum in the debris expansion as would be expected of a frontal impact.

      --
      -- The morphemes of your disquisition are ascertainable, but they have eschewed an ambit of transpicuous exposition.
    14. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      where the hell did the plane go?

      I don't know.

      In other words, "Oops, I forgot about that..."


      Er, no.

      In other words: "I do not know the precise location where it crashed (how could I?). I know it is somewhere around the east coast of the U.S.A. because that is where all the action was going on, and I assume that it crashed in water because that would explain why no one found any piece of it."

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    15. Re:restricted airspace by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In other words, "Oops, I forgot about that..."

      Er, no.

      In other words: "I do not know the precise location where it crashed (how could I?). I know it is somewhere around the east coast of the U.S.A. because that is where all the action was going on, and I assume that it crashed in water because that would explain why no one found any piece of it."


      1) Why would the terrorists fly the plane over water? There are no buildings to hit in the middle of the ocean.

      2) Why have no Air-traffic controllers come forward to say they saw the plane over (as you say) the water? In fact, as I recall, the ATCs had the plane on radar up until close to the Pentagon hit.

      3) Why has no one come forward to say they saw the plane blow up/crash. Unless it was FAR out to sea (see #1- WHY?), a mid-air explosion and crash would be easily visible from shore. In addition, the East coast is the most heavily populated part of the US, so it's unlikely to have been missed.

      4) Why has no debris been found on the beach? No luggage, flotation devices, oil slicks, bodies....

      5) What about the jet pilot(s) who shot the plane down? Ordered to remain silent, you say? People have disobeyed orders for less than the guilt caused by killing a few hundred people.

      6) If the plane was hijacked, and flown off course for so long, how come none of the passengers pulled out a cell phone (like flight 90) and phoned home? "Hey, we're supposed to flying west, but we're over the Atlantic and there are fighter planes all around us..."

      7) Again, why the cover-up? To 'save' one General's reputation?!? Insane.

      Once more- apply Occams razor. WHich is more likely:

      A plane crashes into a building in such a way that it (the plane) is incinerated.

      or

      THOUSANDS of people, from Air Traffic Controllers, to beachcombers, to military pilots, to the passengers on the very plane itself, are in on a MASSIVE conspiracy to hide the truth.

      Really, now.

    16. Re:restricted airspace by bsane · · Score: 1

      You obviously have no idea how big the Pentagon is. It is larger than either World Trade Center tower. Its just not very tall. The scale is almost not believable.

    17. Re:restricted airspace by willtsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Remember, the Pentagon is a miliatary structure and was MEANT to withstand attack. It's a VERY solid structure.

      I would dare say it's built like a fort.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    18. Re:restricted airspace by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Remember, the Pentagon is a miliatary structure and was MEANT to withstand attack. It's a VERY solid structure. I would dare say it's built like a fort.

      Good point.

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    19. Re:restricted airspace by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1
      You obviously haven't read many critiques of your little theory then - even Snopes has the same explanation for the sand (as well as, incidentally, a photo of some aircraft debris on the lawn).

      What I don't understand is what faking an airliner crash into the Pentagon is suposed to achieve, above and beyond the real WTC crashes (I suppose you don't deny those were real?). If only the WTC had been attacked, would there have been any less reason to go after al-Qaeda? Or if there was "only" a truck-bomb at the Pentagon, that would similarly be not good enough somehow? And, well, presumably these conspirators arranged the WTC crashes as well? If so, why couldn't they just arrange a real crash into the Pentagon? Why cause the missing airliner to crash somewhere else and then fake the Pentagon crash?

      You conspiracy nuts never see the wood for the trees. You get caught up in these minor inconsistencies and never think to check whether it makes sense in the bigger picture.

      --
      The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
    20. Re:restricted airspace by gothicpoet · · Score: 1
      Indeed! Pardon my "friendly fire"!

      --
      Quoth he ::
      "It's all academic anyway..."
  98. Re:hmmm by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 1

    Remember, the cable is going to mass in the thousands, if not millions, of tons. That's gonna need to be one heckuva monster truck.

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  99. Told ya... by Chuck+Bucket · · Score: 1
    My comments from an earlier post. I think the elevator is a great idea, and it's amazing that ACC thought of it back in the 60s. Of course, if you read his books you'll see allot of things that he theorized that would work back then, and are now in practice. If you want to start on a good one, read Childhood's End, or Rama (which will be a movie directed by David Fincher (seven, fight club, etc)).

    CB

  100. Now I know I'm very stupid by panurge · · Score: 1
    But anything that goes up the cable still has to be accelerated to orbital angular velocity, doesn't it?

    I'm sure the answer is out there, but exactly how do we do this? Because any force that is applied between payload and cable to accelerate the payload along it is parallel to the cable, whereas the force needed to produce the angular velocity is normal to it. Someone who hasn't forgotten physics please explain.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      IANAP

      When the climber goes up, it's moving too slowly for its new height. So it starts pulling on the cable, which pulls back (tension in the cable).

      It's like a rubber band. If the top is attached to a big friggin' rock, and the bottom is being held by gravity, anything that pushes parallel to the ground is going to increase tension in the cable.

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    2. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by Medisilvanus · · Score: 1

      I guess normal rockets would be used to accelerate (that is, at altitudes below geostationary altitude; above they would need to decelerate). I think the idea is that you only need to carry fuel for that, which is little compared to what's needed for the ascent. In today's rockets most of the energy goes into lifting the fuel itself off the ground.

    3. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by Free_Meson · · Score: 1

      But anything that goes up the cable still has to be accelerated to orbital angular velocity, doesn't it?

      I'm sure the answer is out there, but exactly how do we do this? Because any force that is applied between payload and cable to accelerate the payload along it is parallel to the cable, whereas the force needed to produce the angular velocity is normal to it. Someone who hasn't forgotten physics please explain.


      When you go up a normal elevator, you speed up as well. This isn't somehow a special case just because the elevator is a lot taller. The key to accelerating the elevator perpendicularly to the the cable is just going slow enough so that the magnitude of the acceleration is small. you'd probably also have the largest part of the cable parallel to the rotation of the earth so that you could move the elevator car as quickly as possible. Once the load reaches 36000 km, though, it already has orbital velocity and can move freely away from the cable under its own power.

      It's important to remember that F=ma, so you can control the force on a body that is accelerating a mass by controlling the acceleration. It is probably this which limits the capacity of these elevators, but I've never really looked seriously into them.

      I'm a materials scientist and i'm afraid i don't entirely share the optimism that some have for the properties of very large nanotube structures. A nanotube a few millimeters long is much less likely to have a defect than a nanotube a few hundred kilometers longs, and a single defect could greatly reduce the strength of these structures. I doubt there would be much plastic deformation, so you'd end up snapping the tube at the defect. turning the material into a textile (ribbon) would greatly reduce this effect, but the expense is overall strength and the nanotubes still break, but the ribbon holds together. the end result of this is you would have a 1m wide ribbon that was really only as strong as a .7m wide ribbon, for example, both for the purposes of supporting load and for the purposes of supporting its own weight.

      I've also read (above) that these lab-grown millimeter/centimeter length nanotubes have a UTS (as i understand what was written) of 72 GPa. The writer of that post also said that putting them in a rope should improve that, but i'm afraid that person does not know of what he is talking... A gigapascal is 10^9 N/m^2, and if you string two of these guys in parallel you should get the same reading. the only way that could not be the case is if the nanotubes are already defect-rich on that scale, making the idea of a 100,000 low-defect nanotube rather ludicrous. Either way, i find these plans for a nanotube structure highly dubious. my intuition tells me that nanotubes will evaporate into so much hype, and be a very effective reinforcing material but little more. Glass is also very strong at small length-scales and useful as a reinforcement, but it is very weak in larger samples. Any structure is only as strong as its largest material defect will allow...

    4. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Materials improve with time and research. A few hundred years ago, people probably said the same things about steel. "Oh, it's great for knife blades and other little things, but anyone who would try to build a tower out of the stuff is nuts!"

    5. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by Fenris+Ulf · · Score: 1
      But anything that goes up the cable still has to be accelerated to orbital angular velocity, doesn't it?


      No, because if you think about it, anything that goes up to geosynchronous orbit is already at orbital angular velocity, without requiring any tangential force at all.

      That's what geosynchronous orbit is, after all. The stable orbit with no velocity relative to the earth's surface below.
    6. Re:Now I know I'm very stupid by panurge · · Score: 1

      I'm going to reply to myself and say thank you for the replies, but apparently you've missed the point.
      The rising load will exert a normal force on the cable, and this will tend to pull the geosynchronous object out of its orbit. In fact, a rocket motor will be needed to maintain it in orbit whenever anything is rising up the cable.
      So a supply of propellant will have to be sent up the cable at regular internals to keep the whole system going. The technical problems with this thing are far beyond even the impossibility of making a long nanotube cable and then somehow prepventing it from degradation by cosmic rays, solar flare particles etc.

      --
      Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  101. Re:Kind of scary. -- Asbestosis by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    From liftport's faq I get the impression is the danger is more that of inhaling the microfibers. Remember a single nanotube is small, thin, rigid, ...

    Think of the diseases caused by asbestos, asbestosis....

  102. OOH OOH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these!!!

  103. The conference site is by cryptogryphon · · Score: 5, Informative
  104. Re:So..... so what? by azaris · · Score: 1
    Which equatorial country is the U.S. going to invade?

    Cuba...

    Not only invade it, they'd also have to shift the continental plates around to move the island of Cuba some thousand miles south to the equator. No doubt would this have a devastating impact on the ability of Cuban refugees to reach Florida.

    Isn't Slashdot wonderful! Not only can you get ill-informed opinions on physics but geography too!

  105. Er, moderators by fredrikj · · Score: 1
    That wasn't meant to be funny.

    From ISR's FAQ:

    The debris would resemble long hair and would probably be broken up in interactions with animals, plants, wind, fish and waves. In fiber form it would be much too large to inhale and would probably work its way through a digestive system unaffected. The only debris we have any concern about is if it were reduced to nanotube size. This we don't understand yet, so we will study this to see if there is a problem and then probably also design the ribbon to remain in larger pieces if it re-enters.
  106. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by jerryasher · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dragons.

    I read a documentary about this once. Different colored (gold, bronze, brown, blue, green) dragons shall fly around protecting us from the falling thread. They fly fast, they fly between, and the burn the elevator as it falls.

    Pilots of varying genders and ages ride the dragons, communicating with them telepathically.

    The close telepathic connections, the sensual relationships between dragon and human are corrupting of course to the rest of society, and eventually all become obsessed with the dragon writers of porn.

  107. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Zachary+Kessin · · Score: 3, Informative

    Its not Static electricty. If you run a wire loop threw a magnectic field you will generate current and a drag force, if you push current you will generate a force. This is how electric moters and generators work. So In theory if you had a big wire loop in space you could run a current threw it and use that force to speed up your orbit, which would push to you a higher orbit.

    They have had tecnical problems when they have tried it but they physics is all undergrad E&M.

    --
    Erlang Developer and podcaster
  108. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by p3d0 · · Score: 1

    Ok, I grant you the balloons, but zapping your friend requires an electric current.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  109. I'm a little weak on physics but... by garrulous · · Score: 1

    isn't rate of descent dependant upon density and wind resistance and not weight? Thousands of nanotubes wouldn't be any denser than a single tube. I would think that the basic structure, being an elongated plane would catch a lot of resistance.

    1. Re:I'm a little weak on physics but... by borg389 · · Score: 1

      Well, yes and no. A single thread of a rope would mostly float down, but the rope itself will fall considerably faster. Rip the rope into it's constituent threads and they will float down. Each thread has wind-resistance keeping it up. The rope unraveled means each thread's average wind-resistance is much smaller. So a nanothread alone will float down, but wrap a few million together, and the average wind-resistance has dropped.

  110. An astronauts opinion by MZdoctor · · Score: 1

    For a long time Hollands one and only astronaut Wubbo Ockels (that is if you discount Laurens van den Berg who beat Ockels into space by emigrating to the USA) was an enthusiastic proponent of the space elevator idea. One of his jobs is Professor of Space Science at Delft Technical University. However when I asked him earlier this year how the work was progressing he just grinned and then proceeded to describe a new and grandiose project consisting of whole cities in geostationary orbit that would be strung together like a string of pearls on an ultrastrong cable around the equator.

    Obviously this would put far less extreme demands on the strength/weight ratio of the string material. However the problem of the elevator would remain and he was not aware of any real progress on that front. As a materials scientist I think it's all pie in the sky.

  111. Elevator == Mother of all Lightning Rods by the+Haldanian · · Score: 1

    Isn't the upper atmosphere charged?

    What would happen if you grounded it with, say, a huge conducting nanotube cable?

    And after it'd finished grounding, making the worlds largest fish stew, would we then discover that we kinda needed it?

    There, that should get the panicmongers going nicely :-)

  112. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by rpresser · · Score: 1

    Well, no; it's going the same angular speed as the ground, and each point along its length is going the same horizontal speed as the air would if there were no wind. But there will be lots of wind; there always is; our atmosphere does tend to move around a bit.

  113. Re:So what happens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahh good point... take it seriously though, what if winds, or planes, or other sources of energy set this thing oscillating at a few Hz, say 5-7 Hz...

    Combine that with the recent slashdot article about certain sustained low frequency notes killing people or whatever... this could be a bad thing.

    Not that I think it's actually going to happen, but Tacoma Narrows, you know?

  114. I can imagine it now. by Jellybob · · Score: 1

    Scientist 1: Can we get this to work?
    Scientist 2: Sure, just need enough cable.
    Scientist 1: But will it be worth it?
    Engineer 1: Nope. But it sure was a good idea to get us altogether for a drink.

  115. 100.000 km, hm? That's pretty high. by michiel.h · · Score: 1

    the creation of a space elevator that would deliver satellites, spacecraft and even people thousands of kilometres into space along a vertical track.
    So...

    Where will they be going?

  116. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But its more fun if the rock IS your weight. And you have some Windows tangentially located to the you-rock system...

  117. Not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you use a ring that rotates really, really fast at the pole.

  118. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You would need twice the amount of cable if you didnt use a counter weight at the other end.

  119. No doubt David Blaine... by Linker3000 · · Score: 1

    ...will volunteer to do a couple of weeks sitting on the end.

    --
    AT&ROFLMAO
  120. That's fine but... by mog007 · · Score: 2, Funny

    I live on the fourth floor of an apartment complex and it takes about 3 minutes for the elevator to reach ground floor, another 2 for it go up to the fourth floor. It's faster for me to climb the stairs. How long will it take this thing to go up to the ISS?

    1. Re:That's fine but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've got one slow elevator there. Get somebody to fix it.

  121. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by Madcapjack · · Score: 1

    Watch them start using them to haul garbage away from the planet. I'll call it the end of spaceflight.

  122. Re:Elevator == Mother of all Lightning Rods? by the+Haldanian · · Score: 1

    And while my brane is full of this stuff, why are people looking solely for tensile strength?

    Can't they clamp interlocking magnetic fibres/stuff together and power it with a current running up/down it?

    And if people are still chickenlickening about my early comment, you can suspend a small island from the cable somewhere high enough to not ground itself, but still low enough that you can fly stuff up to it.

    Kinda like Tiphares in the Battle Angel books.
    (God I loved those books)
    (God I'll hate the movie)

  123. Re:Um...... by caluml · · Score: 1
    Yeah, becasue to keep a sling taut you need a rock that weighs as much as you.

    Yeah, I regularly see Palestinians slinging 70kg rocks at the Israeli tanks.

  124. Obligatory South Park Quote by DarkHelmet · · Score: 0, Redundant
    "They're building a ladder to heaven, oh 9/11, 9/11".

    Seriously, imagine what kind of target this would be for terrorism.

    --
    /^[A-Z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z]{2,4}$/i
  125. Power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How would they power the elevator? Couldn't they recover most of the energy during the descent? It probably wouldn't be practical to have several tons of batteries on the elevator to keep all the energy but i'm sure they can work out some scheme to transfer energy both ways.

  126. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by Dashing+Leech · · Score: 1
    ...and the whole thing would centrifugally fly away from earth rather than fall back down.

    Um, not exactly*. It's not really attached to the Earth. For example, the article describes it as "the floating base platform". The base (Earth) end is essentially hanging from the center of mass at geosynchronous orbit. If you cut away part of the Earth end, the part below the cut will fall to Earth and the part above will basically stay hanging.

    If you cut high enough to throw the center of mass away from geosychronous orbit, several things will happen:

    Lots of stuff will far to Earth (you had to cut high enough to do this).

    The whole cable will move horizontally through the air (CG beyond GEO means it is moving slower than the Earth rotates, so the hanging cable will move towards the Indian Ocean).

    The whole mass will probably start to rotate relative to Earth.

    It will move into an eliptical orbit meaning it will move closer and further away from the Earth as it orbits.

    So essentially it should do a bunch of funny motions from our point of view. I'm not sure how air resistence at the lower end would affect it. I think it's safe to say it will not fly off into space. It is in orbit after all, it'd just be higher than GEO. *IANARS, but I do work in the space industry and have taken grad courses in orbital mechanics and dynamics. I also have not studied the actual design, so there may be some effects I've missed or misinterpreted.

  127. Re:Um...... by Man+of+E · · Score: 2, Funny
    Hoist a chickenfarm to the end of the tether, and you can throw eggs at Mars!

    And when we discover life on mars, we'll know the egg came before the chicken.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une sig
  128. Somehow I don't see the point by avalanche75 · · Score: 1

    From where the energy is going to come which will pull (pr push) the elevetor( or the objects in elevator) up? By laws of physics we are going to do (mgh) amount of work, where m is mass of satellite, g is gravity and h is height. To take something at 36000 km above earth surface, mgh is same, no matter what way you choose. Is this much energy it going to come from rockets? Then whatt's the purpose of elevator? Why not use rocket only?. Hope I am making myself clear, we anyway need something to push it up, every time. So how is a cable connected elevator going to help? Probably I am missing some point. Please enlighten me here.

    1. Re:Somehow I don't see the point by i8a4re · · Score: 1

      If you use a rocket to get something into orbit, you have the mass of the space vehicle, mass of the rockets and the constantly changing mass of the fuel. At launch, the mass of the fuel is a huge amount. With an elevator, you only have the mass of the vehicle and whatever device is used to move it up the cable. The energy to move it up the cable is delivered to it. Therefore it does not have to carry it's own fuel.

      --

      If I drive fast enough at the red light, it'll appear green.
  129. Green Mars by panck · · Score: 1

    It will be boring until the NASA funds dry out and no one wants to pay the price to repair the aging Space Elevator Mir, then we'll have that scene from Green Mars (by Kim Stanley Robinson) where the space elevator cable wraps around the planet crashing down like a string of atomic bombs.

    Lessee, Earth's Circumference approx 40,000 Km, this things going to be 100,000 Km long, so it'd rate about a 2.5!

    --
    "What thou shalt not, I shalt did!" -Bart Simpson
    1. Re:Green Mars by juhaz · · Score: 1

      It's carbon. And very light. And if they are still planning on that ribbon type, has plenty of surface area.

      Parts of it will burn and others will be slowed by air drag so much that instead of "crashing down like a string of atomic bombs" it'll flutter down like a piece of paper.

  130. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where's that "-1, Godawful pun" mod?

  131. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Probably at the same place where the "+1, Pure Comedic Genius" is stored that the parent truly deserved.

  132. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

    Nasa played around with dragging wires through the atmosphere to generate static electricity.

    Unless I'm mistaking, you're referring to them draggin wires through the earth's magnetic field to generate electricity, not through the atmosphere.

    In which case there is no problem here; the space elevator is almost perfectly orthogonal to earth's magnetic field, and stationary.

    --
    I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
  133. NASA study by h4x0r-3l337 · · Score: 1

    Note that NASA has already done extensive studies on the subject.

  134. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

    But how will they protect it from, well, planes at altitudes below 100,000 feet?

    The problem isn't protecting it from planes, the problem is protecting planes from it.

    Think not in terms of an elevator, but in terms of a tether. Under tremendous tension. The elevator has 36,000 km worth of tide at the bottom end, and nearly twice that at the top end. The thing is under so much tension that if the edge is thin enough, you could cut steel rebar like a hot knife through butter.

    And it stands that tension all day every day without even so much as a hint of a complaint. A measley plane cannot hurt it.

    Now, the base station is another story...

    --
    I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
  135. Stuck? by Popocatepetl · · Score: 1

    I hope they invlude a stairway in case of a power outage.

  136. How long until spider-dan climbs it? by gad_zuki! · · Score: 1

    Yes, this is all well and fine, but I want to see Spider Dan or that crazy french fellow try to climb it.

    1. Re:How long until spider-dan climbs it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought I heard the crazy french guy died a year or two ago.

  137. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, you'd want the cable on the whole to be slightly accelerating away from the earth, so that the force generated by something climbing the cable doesn't pull the cable out of balance.

  138. What I don't understand... by cr0sh · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Is that at this conference they seem to think that carbon nanotube fibers of any kind don't exist? While a pure nanotube fiber has yet to appear, why wasn't any mention made in the article of this:

    Slashdot - Texas Scientists Spin Carbon Nanotube Fiber

    Other promising research:

    Slashdot - Scientists Crack Silk's Secret

    and

    Slashdot - Nanotube Applications Grow And Grow

    Maybe they did discuss all this and more at the conference - I would like to hope that these scientists and researchers are aware of what is going on in this far-flung field. I only wish they would have made mention of this stuff in the article for the common man, to show that it wasn't all so much "hooey" - that it is something which may be inevitable, and will happen sooner than we all expect.

    We (all of mankind) are rapidly moving in a very funky direction, technology-wise. We have carbon-nanotube fibers. We are looking into other advanced fibers and fiber processes. We have found sea-creatures that make insanely great fiber optic fibers (and with the other stuff, we will probably be able to replicate the process very soon). The gains in communications alone will cause a lot of other gains to be made, because of distributed processing amongst far-apart supercomputing centers that need more bandwidth than they already have (and they have a crapload, but not as much as they want or need). Such fibers may help in the optical-computing dept as well. Remember also the stories of "growing diamonds" - that are so pure they are almost impossible to distinguish from real diamonds - and they have DeBeers quaking at the possibilities to their "markets", maybe destroying them. But these companies don't want the diamonds for prettiness or money (well, they want them for the money, true), but to be able to use them for the substrate of computer chips, instead of silicon, for higher speeds and better heat dissipation.

    Couple that with all the other "funky" advances we have seen - we are all being dragged in a very wierd direction, speeding up the computing and learning capacity of all involved (and even if you are at the edge of the network, like most of us are here, and not where the action is, you will still be pulled in)...

    I don't know where to go with this - except that our current distopia (and if you don't think we are living in a distopia, one every bit as scary, strange, and awe-inspiring as science fiction can come up with - you haven't been paying attention) is going in a new and strange direction, strangely reminiscent of what the "early-years" (which are only touched on) of Neal Stephenson's "Diamond Age" might have been like.

    This is all strange shit, yet very few of us are even seeing it or thinking about the real implications, for some reason...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    1. Re:What I don't understand... by Goldsmith · · Score: 1

      They claim that carbon nanotube fibres don't exist because they don't. The best example is from the group in Texas, where they have strengthened a polymer with nanotubes. Very, very cool, but not quite what we're looking for yet. The inter-molecular forces between the nanotubes in a bundle like that are not as great as the inter-atomic forces within the nanotube.

      My job right now is to grow nanotubes, and if I'm really good I can get some that are millimeters long. We have a long way to go yet. On the other hand there are a LOT of really crazy things we can do with nanotubes that I assure you no one has thought of before. We're pretty far from Diamond Age yet, and the implications of what's being worked on now are unclear. Remember, no one has yet made a commercial device with a nanotube. The theory on why they act the way they do is a decade old, and probably wrong. We have to figure out what we have before we know what's possible.

    2. Re:What I don't understand... by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      If you note, I do write in my second sentence "While a pure nanotube fiber has yet to appear". I realize that pure versions of such fibers don't exist. However, I think a disservice was done by not mentioning such research being done to create such fibers right now. Much of the discussion about "space elevators" seem like so much fantasy and sci-fi to the average person - they don't realize that this technology may not be far in the future, that it may be realized sooner than we think or expect...

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  139. But not down by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... but hey, you can bring a parachute!

  140. SCO ip in Space elv. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    SCO will sue for the use of the SCO ip in the space elevator. (the tall tails copyright)

  141. Re:Um...... by knapkin · · Score: 1

    The physics are simple...

    Angular momentum must be conserved. As an object starting out at the top of this elevator descends, its tangental veolcity would increase by a factor equal to the outer radius over the earth's radius.

    A back of the envelope calculation leads to the conclusion that the object would be going 26179 km/h faster than stationary objects on the surface of the earth when it finally made it all the way down. This is assuming that the cord leaving the earth is in geo-synch. orbit along its entire length (a necessary assumption).

    In fact, I suspect that the change in obrital frequency on descent would be sufficient to cause anything to burn up while dragging the cable around the earth (a cable that could loop around the equator about 2.5 times).

  142. Can't we buy everyone free college first??? by pestihl · · Score: 1, Offtopic


    I mean, 7 billion for a space elevator, and another 3 billion to put a navy around it 24/7 to protect it from FUD.

    And we are still cutting education? I don't understand this place.

    --
    "What do you do with the mad that you feel when you feel so mad you could bite?" - Mister Rogers
  143. Re:restricted airspace OT by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
    the damage is limited to a hole the size of my living room


    Did you see the whole section that was replaced? They completely replaced an entire section of the building.

    Yes, I saw, yes, I know.

    The initial dammage was a hole the size of my living room.
    The explosion started a fire, the fire spread in the building (its what fire does), and dammaged all the burned area visible in that pretty satellite picture you linked.

    Now, find footage of the second plane hitting the second tower. Look (frame by frame as it hits) at the huge plane-shaped hole it punched in the building, then at the gigantic fireball it set off.

    Look at your picture of the pentagon again. If that was a plane that hit, it had a pilot with incredibly good aim, no wings, no fuel, and no fuselage to be left behind.
    I can't find a link to one, but theyre are pictures of jet engines and chunks of airplanes around the WTC from 9/11. Yet, the pentagon's plane mysteriously disintegrated?
    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  144. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd be more interested in using a generated electromagnetic field to stabilise a weaker space elevator. Has anyone done the math to see if a stack of electromagnetically coupled plates is "stronger" (it would actually be weaker, but possible more robust?) than a conventional space elevator?

  145. Orbital Velocity and a Space Elevator by Corpus_Callosum · · Score: 1

    Haul it up to 36k feet, and then it takes a relatively trivial amount of energy to get it to a speed for orbit, since it isn't fighting a stronger force (gravity) at the same time. Also, if you are patient, and can take a week or a month to get the unit up to speed, it will take a very small engine (ie: efficient) to build up the necessary speed.

    I know it isn't intuitively obvious, but the center of gravity of the space elevator is already traveling at orbital velocity, otherwise it wouldn't be stationairy relative to a fixed point on earth. Given this, it would take no (ZERO) energy to get a satellite from that point up to speed.

    Of course, I am not sure where the actual space elevator station would be located relative to the center of gravity and I suppose that could be an issue. But I would certainly think that having it located at the center of gravity would be convenient ;-)

    --
    The reason that it can be true that 1+1 > 2 is that very peculiar nonzero value of the + operator
    1. Re:Orbital Velocity and a Space Elevator by isorox · · Score: 1

      Thats fine for geostationary, however for LEO satelites you'll still need to accelerate sideways.

      The difference in force acting on a satelite at 150km (100m) due to gravity is about 90% that of the force acting at sea level.

    2. Re:Orbital Velocity and a Space Elevator by Tyler+Eaves · · Score: 1

      Well, maybe, but if you can put a sat up into geostationary orbit for the same cost as LEO, I don't really see much point for LEO.

      --
      TODO: Something witty here...
    3. Re:Orbital Velocity and a Space Elevator by isorox · · Score: 1

      Try playing quake through a GEO

  146. OT, sorry for the double reply. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1
    I was more concerned about the whole "how do you hit the front of a 2 stories building with a plane and nothing else?"

    You miss. You aim the plane down at the outer ring of the pentagon and accidentally undershoot by a few feet. The plane hits low on the wall of the building and most of the energy goes into the ground instead of the structure.

    Nope, not what happened.
    You can clearly see that the area in front, around, and behind the small portion that was hit did not suffer from giant-fireball damage nor from kinetic heavy-plane damage.

    Bonus question: Why bother faking a plane strike with a truck bomb instead of just hijacking another plane?

    You're mistaken on who did the plane-faking.
    Hint: It wasn't Oussama or his murdering buddies.
    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:OT, sorry for the double reply. by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 1

      Let me spell it out a little more clearly.

      The "truck bomb at the pentagon" theory doesn't hold up to Occam's razor.

      The US government would have no reason to go along with the fake plane-strike account of the incident, unless some agency of the government were behind the attack. If some agency faked the plane-strike on the pentagon, it stands to reason that they were *also* behind the other plane strikes on the WTC. If said agency was already hijacking planes to crash into the WTC, why would it hijack another plane, disappear it somehow, fake crashing it into the pentagon and use a truck bomb instead? It would be much easier to just use their trained suicide hijackers to crash the last plane into the pentagon.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
  147. Gibberish by shadowj · · Score: 1
    Carbon nanofibers are made our of carbon. Carbon reacts with oxygen to form carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, and a tiny quantity of more exotic carbon compounds. A burning carbon nanotube is about as environmentally dangerous as a burning candle... probably less so, because candles have all sorts of stuff in them besides carbon.

    You're not going to see sliced up half-corpses littering the city streets, either. Yes, science fiction is full of things that can slice through people... but this isn't one of them. A large structure like a space elevator would be fabricated from bundles or ribbons of carbon fiber, which would be about as sharp and dangerous as a piece of clothesline.

    What would happen to a space elevator cable whose counterweight broke away? If left untended, it would eventually start to fall to earth, wrapping itself around the equator. Upper portions would fall faster, in effect cracking like a giant whip, with the end of the cable moving at large multiples of the speed of sound. This isn't likely to be as bad as it sounds, though... while the cable is likely to be strong enough in tension to deal with its life as a space elevator, it's unlikely to be strong enough to resist the stresses of orbital entry... most of it will break off and either fly away, go into some sort of orbit, or burn up. The part that doesn't break off will mostly burn up long before it hits the ground... remember, this is CARBON.

    If you insist on visualizing the sort of disaster that you're worried about, read Kim Stanley Robinson's) "Mars" series... in one of the books he describes a structurally massive space elevator crashing down to the Martian equator with devastating results.

    --

    --Larry

    Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

    1. Re:Gibberish by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

      which would be about as sharp and dangerous as a piece of clothesline.

      While I agree that the ribbon failing poses a relatively minor threat, especially compared to a failing rocket, I'm willing to bet that if I tried I cold cut off your head with a clothesline :)

      A more interesting issue is what about anything climbing on the ribbon when it breaks. That has a much better chance of causing damage (depending on where the car is and where the break is, of course). The car might still have to be built like the original capsules, with parachutes and heat shielding to survive an emergency re-entry.

      Fortunately there's a lot of ocean near the equator to safely land a manned craft in.
      =Smidge=

    2. Re:Gibberish by shadowj · · Score: 1
      A more interesting issue is what about anything climbing on the ribbon when it breaks.

      Well, it would fall, of course, along with the cable. If it's high enough it'll either come down fast and burn up, or leave the atmosphere altogether. At lower altitudes it'd fall back to earth with the cable... and since it would fall along the equator it's unlikely it'll fall on land, and if it did, it's very unlikely it'd fall on anything that would object to being fallen upon.

      I wouldn't want to be in that pod when the cable goes, of course... the chances of survival range from poor to zero, with a nice side order of slow starvation or running out of oxygen if it should happen to reach escape velocity and go flying off to nowhere.

      --

      --Larry

      Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

  148. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by Pii · · Score: 1
    Actually, I think it might be quite the opposite.

    We're always trying to figure out what to do with hard to dispose of, toxic, non-decomposing materials.

    Once a day, we could launch this stuff at the Sun as the Earth makes it's daily rotation.

    It'd be the largest "sling" ever created. David would have been impressed, and had he been armed with it, Goliath might have been a no-show.

    --
    For those that would die defending it, Freedom
    has a sweet taste that the protected will never know.
  149. Explanation of Aussies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia was a prison colony. That means most of its current population is descended from criminals who were careless enough to get caught. QED.

  150. Re:restricted airspace OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a) the pentagon was a much more dense building than the wtc. The wtc was a very lightweight construction on the interior and it makes sense that a plane hitting it would go most of the way through and some parts would come out the other side.

    b) that first image you posted that is being used as evidence of there not being a big hole from the initial impact, is a picture of the area to the side of the impact, not the impact site itself. Compare some of the structual features in that pic to a pic of the whole side of the building.

    c) The pentagon was made of steel and concrete. The WTC was made of a steel outer shell and much lighter materials on the inside. The planes that hit the WTC only had to go through the outer wall then it was fairly clear sailing. The pentagon on the other hand, was much denser construction and a plane blowing through it would have been ripped to shreds. There wouldn't be any large pieces left, and what pieces there were would be buried in the rubble of the building, not laying out on the lawn for everyone to take pictures of.

  151. And waldoes by shadowj · · Score: 2, Informative

    Not to mention remote manupulator devices, of the sort often used in nuclear experiments... they're often called "waldoes", a reference to a Heinlein story called, simply, "Waldo", where he introduced the concept.

    --

    --Larry

    Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by incompetence

  152. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Alrescha · · Score: 1

    "it's going the same angular speed as the ground"

    True.

    The original poster seemed to be under the impression that the atmosphere would be going past at a thousand miles an hour, and I was moved to respond.

    A.

    --
    ...bringing you cynical quips since 1998
  153. Re:restricted airspace OT by CowboyMeal · · Score: 0, Troll

    The plane that hit the pentagon also didn't have 50-70 stories to continue moving away from the crash site before being stopped by the ground. At the pentagon, any remnants of the plane would be right there.

    --
    Your credit card information wants to be free.
  154. You got it right with #2 by spitzak · · Score: 1

    Yes, the earth will slow down it's rotational speed if the elevator is constructed (and made out of material here on earth, not from space).

    And everything sent up the cable will slightly slow down the earth some more.

    Now where does that energy that the earth lost from it's rotation go?

    It goes into lifting the new object into orbit.

    That's why the cable won't fall.

    Fortunatly the earth has a *LOT* of rotational energy, so the losses will be immesuarably small.

    1. Re:You got it right with #2 by BobTheLawyer · · Score: 1

      I agree that if the elevator is perfectly stiff then climbing up will "push" on the earth and leave the counterweight in place.

      But the material the elevator is made from can't possible be perfectly stiff (nothing is). So at least some of the force exerted by someone climbing the elevator will pull the counterweight down towards the earth.

    2. Re:You got it right with #2 by spitzak · · Score: 1

      The cable is under tension, the counterweight (or just the end of the cable if no counterweight) is being swung around the earth at above orbital velocity. So even if you pull the counterweight in a bit, it will "fall" back out to put the cable under tension again. I don't pretend to understand the physics of how the energy is actually transferred, but it does come by slowing the entire earth+cable+counterweight rotation down slightly.

      Of course you could try to raise so much weight that you pull the center of gravity of the cable+counterweight+payload below geosynchronous orbit, in which case the exact opposite happens and it all falls to earth (and earth's rotational speed increases slightly). Hopefully they are smart enough not to do this.

  155. Re:Kind of (not so) scary. by inertia187 · · Score: 1

    ...hanging from the center of mass at geosynchronous orbit...

    The way I read it, this is only the initial phase (38,000 km). Teathers are sent out in both directions, making the total length 100,000 km. When it's done, there's considerable force on the base.

    You make a good point about where the break in the teather is made. But if more of the teather is beyond the 38,000 km mark, there's less of a chance that even a high break would cause a problem.

    Oh well. So much for arm chair orbital mechanics, right?

    --
    A programmer is a machine for converting coffee into code.
  156. Elevator Music by UnixRevolution · · Score: 4, Funny

    So even at 100KPH it takes 15 days up or down?

    I'd imagine that theme would get old on the way up.

    Baaaaaaaa....
    Baaadaaaaa....
    Baaaaaadaaaaa...
    BAAADAAAA BUM BUM BUM BUM BUM BUM BUM

    i mean jeez.

    --
    You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
    1. Re:Elevator Music by Linuxthess · · Score: 1
      Allow me to make a stupid guess;

      Is this "Thus Sprach Zarathustra" of 2001:ASO fame?

      ----------

      --

      I sig, therefore I was.
    2. Re:Elevator Music by RichardX · · Score: 1

      ... and you just KNOW that there's going to be at least one person on it with chronic flatulence.

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    3. Re:Elevator Music by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      As long as they don't play The Girl from Ipanema in the damn thing, I don't mind.

      --Dan

  157. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your simple back of the envelope calculations don't include the fact that mass ascending or decending the elevator will not just get an upward force from the elevator, they'll also get a tangental force either in the direction of earth's rotation or the opposite direction, depending on wether they are ascending or descending. As the mass of the tether and counterweight will be much more than any individual climber, the effect will just be a small push on the tether which will make it swing like a pendulum. All you have to do is time your ascent and descent to put force on the elevator in the opposite direction of the swing and you cancel it out. In the long run climbing the cable will steal energy from earth's rotation (immesurable ammounts unless we lift whole mountains).

  158. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Transcendent · · Score: 1


    Nasa played around with dragging wires through the atmosphere to generate static electricity.

    This thing will could possibly generate HUGE amounts of SE as the atmosphere whizzes past it 24/7. Are there plans to capture and use this electricity or what??


    For one, it's not static electricity... it's just electricity. The current is flowing through the wire (thus it is not static). This experiment was just the shuttle dangling a very long wire from the space shuttle in order to generate electricity due to a neat effect that happends when you move a wire through an electromagnetic field (in this case, the earth's). Sadly, the wire broke and the experiment was dumped (to my best knowledge).

    Since this space elevator will NOT be moving with respect to the earths magnetosphere, this will generate no (non-static) electricity.

  159. It's still a moot point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, what happens when they hit it?

    The ribbon is 100,000 kilometres long and is made to withstand the stress of being tethered to the ground on one end and being tethered to a geostationary spatial object on the other.

    A plane is no match for this thing. "The evildoers" can fly 10,000 planes into it if they want, it means nothing.

    1. Re:It's still a moot point by Pii · · Score: 1
      I'm not sure what you mean...

      Are you saying that flying a plane into will not harm it, or that the effect of destroying it will mean very little in the grand scheme of things?

      The ribbon will have tremendous tensile strength, but that doesn't mean it would stand up to an impact of that sort.

      For example, a fiber optic strand is very strong. Pulling on it from it's ends, it takes a lot of force to pull it apart. However, if you apply just a little force creating a narrow bend, it'll snap with almost no effort at all.

      I don't know enough about carbon nano-tubes to determine how it would hold up, nor to gauge how strong they are in relation to specific types of force, and how those forces are applied.

      That said, I'm pretty sure that flying a large aircraft into it at a speed upwards of 500 mph would definately cause some trouble.

      --
      For those that would die defending it, Freedom
      has a sweet taste that the protected will never know.
  160. Re:So what happens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That long? I'd be amazed if it was even 5 Hz..

    I think we're talking in the .000s here, although I'm too lazy to go look up the natural resonance of a 100,000km cable right now in my physics books.

  161. Re:Um...... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    As a bonus, anything that gets pulled past the geosync point will be accellerated away from Earth; so you can use it as a cosmic slingshot.


    Actually, anything that gets pulled beyond the geosync point will be decelerated away from Earth. The object's inertia would normally keep it moving at a constant velocity away from Earth. However, gravity is still acting upon it, so it will be slowing down as it moves away.
  162. Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "as first described by Arthur C Clarke in his 1979 novel 'Fountains of Paradise'."

    Arthur C. Clarke my foot! Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator (1972) had the earth-to-space transit market covered long before that saucy author put pen to paper!

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0394 824725/104-1459784-2882348v=glance&s=books

  163. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Tony+Hammitt · · Score: 1

    But how will they protect it from, well, planes at altitudes below 100,000 feet?

    Rockets!! Big, impressive, reusable, airplane-shaped rockets with MetalStorm cannons!

  164. Wrong Oxide by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    The problem there is Carbon monoxide. CO2 is not poisonous. It can suffocate you by excluding oxygen but most garages are draughty. Anyway, doesn't your car have a catalytic converter?

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
  165. Re:restricted airspace OT by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    At the pentagon, any remnants of the plane would be right there.

    Right WHERE?

    Look at the width of that hole (that wasn't the original damage, the original damage was much smaller, this is after the collapse during the fire). You do know that planes have wings right? Where did the wings hit? Where did the fireball go?

    Look at footage of the second plane hitting the second tower. You can see what happens when a boeing hits a building, and you can see what happens aftewards.
    Look at the pictures of the pentagon, you can see, with your own eyes that that isn't what happened.

    I'm not telling you to take my word on it here, I'm telling you look for yourself.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  166. Access and Traffic by Snuggles+the+Psycho · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "the floating base platform would be placed hundreds of miles from aircraft routes and shipping lanes and would be in a region of the sea where storms, lightning and high waves are rare." I understand that they are concerned about access, but in reality it's a waste of time and money. Any sufficiently useful transport technology has historically generated growth and traffic around itself. Instead of having to deal with restricted and obscure access routes, these elevators should be dropped into the major trade centers of the world. Ports bring boats, airplanes, highways and trains all into one place. The next logical step is to include access to space. If the space elevator is built in the middle of the pacific ocean, the next great challenge will be to supply a floating airport and direct shipping routes...

    1. Re:Access and Traffic by RevSmiley · · Score: 1

      The reason for the ocean location is that you can manuver the earth base end about in case you need to avoid something in space heading towards it. Space Junk. An impact would damage and perhaps cut the "cable"

      --
      As you can see I don't care about my karma.
  167. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by limejuice · · Score: 1

    As an added precaution, it could be wired up with some bright red blinking LED arrays. =)

    --
    Daniel J. Kelly
  168. What? by Gonoff · · Score: 1

    The cable is under tension. I presume the bit above the break would shoot up into space. The remaining few thousand metres, below the impact, would go down. This lower part wouldn't do a lot of damage. It would be a bit tough on the people on the top end though. They would immediately fall into space!

    --
    I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    1. Re:What? by Bob+Munck · · Score: 1
      They wouldn't exactly "fall." Cutting the ribbon anywhere within the atmosphere only removes a tiny fraction of a percent of its mass; the rest of it will drift up and to the east at a couple of miles per hour. All we'll need to do is reel out a tiny bit more ribbon at the top and the whole thing will drift down and west until it's back where it started. Then grab the end and tie it down. No big deal; probably interrupt service for a week or so.

      Something no one has mentioned is the difficulity of finding that tiny ribbon in the vast Pacific sky. The terrorist flying the jet won't even be able to see it until he gets within a mile or less; can you see something the size of a broomstick from ten miles?

    2. Re:What? by Gonoff · · Score: 1

      Prior to any break, anyone at the top end of the elevator would experience some gravitational force. It would orient them with "down" actually away from the earth. Following a break, they would actually go into free fall. It might be a drift but it would be away from the earth. The actual speed and direction of that fall would depend on the actual height of the top before the break. It would feel like falling...

      --
      I'll see your Constitution and raise you a Queen.
    3. Re:What? by Bob+Munck · · Score: 1
      > Prior to any break, anyone at the top end of the elevator would experience some gravitational force. ... Following a break, they would actually go into free fall.

      That's true for one specific place slightly above the pre-break center of mass at GEO. Further out than that, the perceived force of gravity (produced by centripetal acceleration) will diminish by a tiny bit, but will still be there. Any long, thin object in orbit will be oriented along a line through the center of the earth, in what's called gravity-gradient stabilization, and will have some amount of perceived gravity away from its center everywhere but at the center of mass. Clip off a tiny amount at the bottom end and the center of mass shifts slightly and the perceived gravity changes slightly, but it doesn't go away.

      A break of the SE anywhere in the atmosphere will only reduce the total mass by 1/10,000th or less, but the effect will be somewhat greater because the tension on the anchor will also be lost.

      Note that "free fall" here only means the absence of gravity, not motion in the direction of the earth. In fact, the whole elevator will move up to a (very slightly) higher orbit.

  169. Lots of energy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    would be needed for the ascent and coming back down would be even worse. How will a descending car shed its kinetic energy?

  170. OT Sorry I fed the you-know-what... by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    You imply that the US military shot the plane down. If this is true, there would have been a report of a plane crash (ala the other plane (90??) that the passengers revolted on.)

    Considering the media frenzy at that time, I would assume it would have been covered in the media if it happened.


    The media did report it. They said it crashed on the pentagon.
    </obvious>

    I don't recall hearing of any such thing.

    You haven't heard the story about the plane hitting the pentagon? Where have you been the last 2 years???
    </sarcasm>

    I don't recall hearing of any such thing.
    Therefore, it did not happen.


    Step right up folks! Come see the Amazing All Knowing Anonymous Coward! Only 25 cents ladies and gents! If he hasn't heard of it, it doesn't exist! Step right up!
    </carnie>

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  171. Bouncing marbles by tgibbs · · Score: 1

    I only tried standard size marbles. I didn't have any of the big ones. I forget how many floors up I was. It would be interesting to see how high you could go...

  172. A moon elevator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    would be way more interesting.

    Why stop in earth orbit?

    A ropeway stretching to the moon, anchored to a spot at the north pole would be way more cool.

    Since the moon always faces the earth, the anchoring point there would be easy, but it sure would take a heck of a long time to travel all the way there.

  173. They probably play ... by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    ... No they probably will play 'the girl from Ipanima' a few dozen times ....

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  174. Re:The other other space elevator by ericman31 · · Score: 1

    There's also a space elevator in some Heinlein's later work. Specifically there is the 'Kenya Beanstalk' in "Friday", which was clearly an elevator.

    --
    In my universe I'm perfectly normal, it's not my fault you don't live in my universe.
  175. OT Air speed and such by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    OK, I did a little computation.
    The height of the pentagon is ~77 feet
    From these pictures under extra info at cnn. The first three explosion shots at a guessed 30/sec frame rate show an explosion expanding at one building height every 2 frames, or 77*30/2= ~1155 ft/sec, not unreasonable for a fuel air explosion. Now, the low end air speed of an approaching plane is 250 and the high end is 600 mph that means that the plane was moving at ~1000 ft/sec at the fastest and should have been viewable for three or four frames. So were are the images of the impacting plane?

    Further the explosion originates at the outer edge of the building and shows no forward momentum in the debris expansion as would be expected of a frontal impact.


    Your point being?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  176. Already been done... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    C'mon, has everybody forgotten about Willy Wonka?

  177. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
    You could put the base station at sea. It makes it much harder to sneak up on, and has the added benefit of allowing you to move out of the way of the nastiest weather. Task a couple of aircraft carriers to defending it--a carrier battle group is awfully difficult to surprise. It's still cheaper than conventional rocketry.

    Note also that all of the techniques you described could be used to attack a conventional launch of a Shuttle, too.

    --
    ~Idarubicin
  178. Bad assumption by BerntB · · Score: 1
    Say the elevator is 1 kg / m
    From ISR's FAQ on space elevators, it is: 7.5 kg/km

    Disclaimer: I'm an undergrad physics student with a headache.
    (-: I haven't studied physics since high school, but don't have a headache -- and had the energy to check the FAQ. The moral of this is left for the reader to think out, but probably has something to do about how students should limit alcohol intake. :-)
    --
    Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
    1. Re:Bad assumption by slamb · · Score: 1
      I said: Say the elevator is 1 kg / m

      BerntB said: From ISR's FAQ on space elevators, it is: 7.5 kg/km

      Oops. Noted.

      (-: I haven't studied physics since high school, but don't have a headache -- and had the energy to check the FAQ. The moral of this is left for the reader to think out, but probably has something to do about how students should limit alcohol intake. :-)

      I don't drink, actually. I got this headache all on my own merits.

  179. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    I don't know how much you can move the base station, but it's an interesting idea.

    Bad differences between this and the space shuttle. The space shuttle is really only vulnerable during launch and so we can expect to have 24x7x30 days of high security around. If we lose one that is unmanned, just sitting on the pad, then we are very angry, but it's replaceable. The elevator at $7B per (actually not that much more expensive than the shuttle) is a sitting duck, and vulnerable 24x7xforever.

    Good differences: because it is on one location very far from the mainland, and vulnerable 24x7xforever, it's reasonable to sink lots of money into anti-aircraft weaponry, anti-missile weaponry and the like.

    By the way, I'd love to see this thing built.

  180. OT pentagon structure by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    a) the pentagon was a much more dense building than the wtc. The wtc was a very lightweight construction on the interior and it makes sense that a plane hitting it would go most of the way through and some parts would come out the other side.

    Indeed, you can even see debris flying out of the WTC when the second plane hits.

    b) that first image you posted that is being used as evidence of there not being a big hole from the initial impact, is a picture of the area to the side of the impact, not the impact site itself. Compare some of the structual features in that pic to a pic of the whole side of the building.

    Here's a better pic of the scene.

    c) The pentagon was made of steel and concrete. The WTC was made of a steel outer shell and much lighter materials on the inside. The planes that hit the WTC only had to go through the outer wall then it was fairly clear sailing. The pentagon on the other hand, was much denser construction and a plane blowing through it would have been ripped to shreds. There wouldn't be any large pieces left, and what pieces there were would be buried in the rubble of the building, not laying out on the lawn for everyone to take pictures of.

    Look at the above picture.
    Where did the wings hit?

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

    1. Re:OT pentagon structure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      Where did the wings hit?

      From http://www.snopes.com/rumors/pentagon.htm

      5) Can you explain what happened to the wings of the aircraft and why they caused no damage?

      As the front of the Boeing 757 hit the Pentagon, the outer portions of the wings likely snapped during the initial impact, then were pushed inward towards the fuselage and carried into the building's interior; the inner portions of the wings probably penetrated the Pentagon walls with the rest of the plane. Any sizable portions of the wings were destroyed in the explosion or the subsequent fire. Nonetheless, damage to the building caused by the plane's wings is plainly visible in photographs, such as the one below (note the blackened sections on both sides of the impact site):


      Anything else I can help you with?
  181. Question and Answer with Sir A.C.C. by rjoseph · · Score: 1

    I was lucky enough to attend Sir Arthur C. Clarke's live feed from Sri Lanka: he was in great spirits and answered a myriad of questions.

    My favorite was, when someone asked if he had the opprotunity to be a space tourist, where would he want to end up, and his answer was:

    Mars, of course. I'm convinced that there is life on Mars. New photographs have shown what looks like possible vegetation, and where there's vegtation there's bound to be something nibbling on it.

    And incredible opprotunity to hear such a legend speak so informally to a small crowd, it was worth every minute of getting up at the buttcrack of dawn to see :)

  182. One Problem... by Kardis314 · · Score: 1

    Tower of Babel, Religous Fundamentalisim, nuff said.

    --
    - It was the best of times, it was the blurst of times. Stupid Monkey!!
  183. I don't get it by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    How do you gain traction on the cable without damaging it? Just throwing a rope up isn't enough, you need to be able to climb it as well. If you start with a 1m x 0.3m cable, then sloughing even a tiny amount of cable material as you climb or descend is going to chew though it quickly.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:I don't get it by Snuggles+the+Psycho · · Score: 1

      Maglev? Also, by my understanding the cable won't be 1m x .3m. It will be more like 1m x .0005m

    2. Re:I don't get it by barawn · · Score: 1

      Woah, what the heck makes you think you can rip off a portion of the cable? All you need to do is make sure that the interfacial adhesion is strong enough, and then when you climb, you can push down against it to climb upward.

      What you're probably thinking of is that if you're gripping a cable along its sides, you're essentially trying to rip off the surface of the cable (via friction).

      In order to avoid that, all you need to do is twist the cable through some rollers, and pull down on the cable to pull yourself up. Climbers do this when they twist a rope 90 degrees, and pull themselves up. This way, even if the surface has a low coefficient of friction, you can still climb easily.

  184. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    no, it doesn't. Indoor in the winter is a great time to generate enough static to POP when you touch a door knob, or someone else. It does hurt a little if you do it right. You 'almost' touch them in their under arm area, ear or nose, back of leg, or other sensitive area. If you lived where it gets really cold, you would have done this as a kid.

    We used to surf around the house in socks, sliding to build up static to do this, when the outside temp is low enough (making it relatively hotter in the house, thus, ultra low humidity). It works best if you are just coming inside and you are dry. You only get one or two good times, before your potential levels out. We didn't understand how, we just knew we could, and Mom would get pissed if you do it on purpose :D

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  185. Re:Kind of scary. -- Asbestosis by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

    Think of the diseases caused by asbestos, asbestosis....

    But its pure carbon. And its out in ocean, a thousand miles from anyone. I mean, sure, I'm all ears if you have any data, but you get worse standing in a corn field in Iowa on a clear day.

    --
    Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  186. Just a question, that arises... by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    ... Can anyone tell me what the mass of this cable will be, and either, how we're going to get the carbon to the geosynchronous point, or alternatively how much rocket fuel it'll take us to launch all this carbon up to the geosynchronous point?

    Just a thought here... maybe we want to be doing our first construction upwards for a super-high, wide-base rocketry launch tower, instead of starting in space. That way, we could minimize the amount of fuel we spend building the thing.

    Sorry, I know it seems stupid, but sometimes thinking gets in the way of the reality we want. Still, it might be worthwhile to think this thing through before we beg... aaw, what the hey, let's just do it. If Arnold Schwarzenegger can ignore any significant facts, so can we.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
    1. Re:Just a question, that arises... by SEE · · Score: 1

      Why bother building a platform? Nature's already built a bunch, *and* several are near the Equator already.

      Where? Ecuador, where the Andes intersect the Equator. It's the natural place to launch rockets from.

    2. Re:Just a question, that arises... by willtsmith · · Score: 1

      High altitude launches are certainly an option to consider especially for NASA's new space "escort" vehicle. However, for the heavy lift requirements of the initial "spool" ground launch would probably be the most feasible option.

      NASA is exploring other options like a MAG-LEV assist launcher for satellites. Basically, you would shoot the rocket into the air like a bullet before you ignited the main engines. Rockets don't behave nicely on the launch pad and they waste a lot of fuel while going full blast and tethered to the launch tower.

      --
      -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
    3. Re:Just a question, that arises... by blibbleblobble · · Score: 1

      "how we're going to get the carbon to the geosynchronous point, or alternatively how much rocket fuel it'll take us to launch all this carbon up to the geosynchronous point?"

      Bootstrapping, apparently...

      Take enough mass up to support the raising of one small object, then use that as a counterweight whilst raising a slightly bigger object. etc. etc. until there's lots of stuff at the top, at which point it can be used to raise and release heavy things.

    4. Re:Just a question, that arises... by shaay · · Score: 1

      It sounds like you're referring to Lagrange points. There's a nice schematic here:
      http://www.ottisoft.com/samplact/Lagrange%2 0point% 20L1.htm

      --
      Remember: anything not compulsory is forbidden.
  187. Re:Kind of scary. -- Asbestosis by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    I can't really disagree with you, but I note that liftport thinks it's an interesting question....

  188. Re:Kind of scary. -- Asbestosis by jerryasher · · Score: 1

    As I refrain from arguing with myself I note I really meant to attach that reply to the other response.

    Why are you reading this?

  189. Give some credit to the inventors by Birger+Johansson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Actually, the original article states that the concept "first gained *widespread* attention when the science fiction writer Arthur C Clarke described it in his 1979 novel Fountains of Paradise".

    The concept had been invented independently both in USA and the Soviet Union long before the book was written -Arthur C. Clarke's great contribution is bringing the concept to a wider audience. (The cosmonaut Leonov had actually made a painting depicting a space elevator, but westerners -ignorant of the concept studies being done- thought he was nuts)

    BTW, I was in contact with ACC two yeras ago and asked him about this novel. He mentioned that the scientist who helped him with the facts was non other than Buckminster Fuller, the discoverer of "buckminsterfullerene".

    It so happens that the carbon nanotubes which have the tensile strength to make the cable possible are simply tubular versions of buckminsterfullerene. Fuller himself was not aware of this ironic fact, the nanotubes were only produced in the lab and had their strength measured in the nineties, after Buckminster Fuller's death.

    Yours Birger Johansson

  190. Re:restricted airspace OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
    any remnants of the plane would be right there

    From http://www.snopes.com/rumors/pentagon.htm

    3) You'll remember that the aircraft only hit the ground floor of the Pentagon's first ring. Can you find debris of a Boeing 757-200 in this photograph?

    You'll recall from the discussions above that the hijacked airliner did not "only hit the ground floor of the Pentagon's first ring" -- it struck the Pentagon between the first and second floors and blasted all the way through to the third ring. Because the plane disappeared into the building's interior after penetrating the outer ring, it was not visible in photographs taken from outside the Pentagon. Moreover, since the airliner was full of jet fuel and was flown into thick, reinforced concrete walls at high speed, exploding in a fireball, any pieces of wreckage large enough to be identifiable in after-the-fact photographs taken from a few hundred feet away burned up in the intense fire that followed the crash (just as the planes flown into the World Trade Center towers burned up, and the intensity of their jet-fuel fires caused both towers to collapse).

    Small pieces of airplane debris were plainly visible on the Pentagon lawn in other photographs, however, such as the one below:



    Anything else I can help you with?
  191. We can't let this go on! by smokin_juan · · Score: 1

    That cable will wick the atmosphere out into space. My god, someone stop those idiots before they kill us all.

  192. There are stable 1 year orbits. by Mateorabi · · Score: 1
    > and any object far enough out from the earth to require a year in order to complete an orbit would passed the instability limit, where it would be captured away by the sun's gravity, and would no longer orbit earth

    They are called the Lagrangian points.

    L1-L3 are on the earth-sun line but aren't stable. L4 and L5, which lie in earth orbit +/- 60 dgrees, are! And all of them orbit earth in a year. (of course, the centers of the orbits aren't earth, they're close to the sun, but they still take a circular path arround us every year).

    NASA is currently using L1 (SOHO, ACE) with plans to use L2 for deep space observations.

    Of course none of these are practical for a stationary elivator because the earth spins faster than 1/year (unless the end 'dangles' over the equator and moves east-west). And they are too far away.

    --
    "You saved 1968." - Ms. Valerie Pringle to the crew of Apollo 8

  193. That's not a problem, it's an opportunity! by roystgnr · · Score: 1

    From what I've head, a space elevator is a bad idea in the sense that the atmosphere has a singificant EMF gradient between the surface of the earth and far up in the atmomsphere. Completion of such a device would case the world's largest lightning bolt ever. You'd be basically creating the largest "short" ever.

    If you want to stop the problem, you add a non-conductive section to the elevator every few dozen miles. This reduces your payload weight for a given size elevator (or equivalently requires a heavier elevator for a given size payload), but would let you keep the current flow in the sections between insulators low enough that it would just keep the elevator material warm.

    If you want to exploit the opportunity, you put a battery in each of those insulator sections, and you use the voltage between one section and the next to recharge the battery, which in turn recharges the elevator cars as they pass it on the cable. At the least you could reduce the energy costs (which would still be several dollars per pound of payload) to run the system, and at best you could sell excess power at the base station.

  194. Get Rich Quick by Biff+Stu · · Score: 1

    100,000 km vs 3 cm? So we're only off by 10 orders of magnitude. It sounds like a bit more than "not quite there" to me. However, I don't need to worry about that problem. I'll just be kicking it at my compound in the Bahamas, counting the money that I made by selling time-shares on the space elevator to slashdotters.

    1. Re:Get Rich Quick by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 1
      Actually, it's not 9 orders of magnitude that's the problem; that's only why it would cost umpteen billion dollars. We can probably make a few billion 3cm lengths readily enough.

      No, it's just the splicing problem.

      --

      -WolfWithoutAClause

      "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  195. Re:Um...... by Mt._Honkey · · Score: 1

    I'm assuming that the "troll" rating you got earlier was a misrepresentation, since you haven't been rated as one recently.

    Earth spins at a constant angular rate. By using a 100,000 km ribbon, the velocity at the end is... 7.27 km/sec. Also, you'll note that as you get further out the force from gravity decreases. At that distance, the acceleration due to gravity is around 1/500 the gravity at the surface of the earth.

    You'll notice that planets further from the sun orbit at much lower angular velocities, a couple of hundredths the rate of earth.

    Another example is the Moon. It is a few hundred thousand km away, but it takes 28 days to move around the earth. This thing will be a good chunk of that distance and spin 28 times faster. Seems like plenty to me.

    Satellites in low earth orbit go around once every 90 minutes or so, but ones in the much higher geosynchronous orbits go around only once per day.

    --

    Don't Bogart the fish sticks
  196. Re:restricted airspace OT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    theyre are pictures of jet engines and chunks of airplanes around the WTC from 9/11. Yet, the pentagon's plane mysteriously disintegrated?

    From http://www.snopes.com/rumors/pentagon.htm

    Exterior photographs are misleading because they show only the intact roof structures of the outer rings and don't reveal that the plane penetrated all the way to the ground floor of the third ring. As a U.S. Army press release noted back on 26 September 2001, one engine of the aircraft punched a 12-foot hole through the wall of the second ring:

    On the inside wall of the second ring of the Pentagon, a nearly circular hole, about 12-feet wide, allows light to pour into the building from an internal service alley. An aircraft engine punched the hole out on its last flight after being broken loose from its moorings on the plane. The result became a huge vent for the subsequent explosion and fire. Signs of fire and black smoke now ring the outside of the jagged-edged hole.

    Recall that when the first airliner was flown into a World Trade Center tower on September 11 -- before it was known that the "accident" was really part of a deliberate terrorist attack -- newscasters were speculating that a small plane had accidentally flown into the side of the tower, because the visible exterior damage didn't seem as extensive as what people thought a large airliner would cause.


    also:

    3) You'll remember that the aircraft only hit the ground floor of the Pentagon's first ring. Can you find debris of a Boeing 757-200 in this photograph?

    You'll recall from the discussions above that the hijacked airliner did not "only hit the ground floor of the Pentagon's first ring" -- it struck the Pentagon between the first and second floors and blasted all the way through to the third ring. Because the plane disappeared into the building's interior after penetrating the outer ring, it was not visible in photographs taken from outside the Pentagon. Moreover, since the airliner was full of jet fuel and was flown into thick, reinforced concrete walls at high speed, exploding in a fireball, any pieces of wreckage large enough to be identifiable in after-the-fact photographs taken from a few hundred feet away burned up in the intense fire that followed the crash (just as the planes flown into the World Trade Center towers burned up, and the intensity of their jet-fuel fires caused both towers to collapse).

    Small pieces of airplane debris were plainly visible on the Pentagon lawn in other photographs, however, such as the one below:



    Also:

    5) Can you explain what happened to the wings of the aircraft and why they caused no damage?

    As the front of the Boeing 757 hit the Pentagon, the outer portions of the wings likely snapped during the initial impact, then were pushed inward towards the fuselage and carried into the building's interior; the inner portions of the wings probably penetrated the Pentagon walls with the rest of the plane. Any sizable portions of the wings were destroyed in the explosion or the subsequent fire. Nonetheless, damage to the building caused by the plane's wings is plainly visible in photographs, such as the one below (note the blackened sections on both sides of the impact site):


    Aww, hell, just read the whole fricking page yerself!
  197. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

    On the other hand, the $7B bill is mostly for elevator-building infrastructure, not the elevator itself. Once you've built one elevator the next will be much cheaper. By the time someone sufficiently bitter and twisted destroys the first elevator, it would be an annoyance rather than a tragedy.

  198. I don't see how this thing is supposed to work... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you use a ribbon to climb to a counter-weight in orbit, don't you have to "pull" on the counter-weight, thus eventually pulling the weight into a lower orbit? Wouldn't you need a way to keep the ribbon tight, such as rocket fuel to maintain a certain speed on the counter-weight?

  199. Hint by BerntB · · Score: 1
    Text with "(-:" and ":-)" are considered jokes, OK? :-)

    And, yes, I know that you certainly know that. It was a joke, too. :-)

    --
    Karma: Excellent (My Karma? I wish...:-( )
  200. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by shaay · · Score: 1

    It isn't static electricity, but NASA hasn't given up on uses for cables or the energy they can harness. From the October 2003 issue of Discover Magazine: NASA is funding a joint project with the Harvard Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics to create "ProSeds." In it's simplest form, this is a wire tethered by a cable to a second stage Delta 2 rocket. The wire dangles into Earth's ionosphere and "sucks up electrons." The resulting current causes an electromagnetic "drag" - kind of like a break - that pulls the rocket into a lower orbit. By running a current the other direction, the drag could be reversed and the rocket could be "pushed" into a higher orbit. At least theoretically. There are other proposed applications for the technology, including moving a space station between orbits.

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  201. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    Your also forgetting it's uses in destroying delicate electrical equipment. This is actually a fairly serious concern for the space elevator, grounding the line.

    Oh yeah, one other great use for static electricty is power time machines indicentally teathered to clock towers (Back to the Future) :-) Lighting is a massive manifestation of static electricity.

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  202. Re:Europeans, mod this up! by idsofmarch · · Score: 1

    "we don't have organized, allowed racial hatred groups in Europe...." I just fell off my chair laughing. Nazis, what where? Neo-Nazis, no no not in Europe. Now, I don't agree with your original statement, nor the first reply. But, to say that Europe is now perfect happy little place is rediculous. You have thousands of years of experience and knowledge made up of wars, intolerance and genocide. During the last century Europe was embroiled in more than 20 separate conflicts including the World Wars. Europe was the center of all the colonization and imperial movements with the exception of the Ottoman Empire and is the cause for a myriad of major conflicts currently. Want to know why Afghanistan is still screwed up? Or the entire continent of Africa? Or hey, even the situations in the Middle-East? At the heart of every problem is a European country. Now, the USA should be better, we should use fewer resources, we should eat less, we should actually pay more lip-service to treaties like the Europeans do, and we really need to stop saving the Europeans from themselves. Europe is at a point where it can become a redeeming influence in world politics, but so far it has been content to watch from afar, letting Serbians butcher Bosnians, letting Hutsi slaughter Tutsis, and allowing the Taliban to sink Afghanistan back into feudalism. Just to name a few. Europeans have done nothing but blather and worry, and in those cases when the US has become involved you simply wait for us to make a mistake and then cry "imperialists!" at the top of your lungs. So far, Europe, I am not exactly impressed.

    --
    Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
  203. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    There are other proposed applications for the technology, including moving a space station between orbits.

    Two problems with this.

    First, the space station is in HIGH earth orbit. The required cable would be quite long AND extert a fair amount of drag. The rocket power required to BOOST the the cable to the station would be more than delivering the obvious to the station: rocket fuel.

    Second, electricity does not make propulsion. Some more advanced technology would be necessary to turn electricity into propulsion. Dragging something with a wire is a lot different than PUSHING something with a wire. I guess it would have to be a really STIFF wire.

    Beyond that, I would suspect that SOLAR power could be used to generate a LOT more electricity. Furthermore, deploying a solar sail and the correct orientation could effectivly drag a station into a higher orbit. In one orbit, it wouldn't do much, but over the course of hundreds of orbits, it would probably do pretty well. Whether it would be cheaper than PORF (Plain Old Rocket Fuel) would need analysis.

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  204. Re:I don't see how this thing is supposed to work. by Teahouse · · Score: 1

    The centripetal force is enough to keep it up there. A counter-weight on the far end dictates how much you can lift. The earth is spinning at a very fast speed. Once you put an object outside the atmosphere, it should stay in one place and be relatively stable. There will be some vibration and movement, but nothing a light set of thrusters at the top can't handle. You are right of course, if you try to pull up a weight that is heavier than the CP and the counterweight, it will pull it down.

    --
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  205. A lesson from Willy Wonka's glass elevator... by lhpineapple · · Score: 1

    "Invention, my dear friends, is 93% perspiration, 6% electricity, 4% evaporation, and 2% butterscotch ripple."

  206. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by agent+provocateur · · Score: 1
    But how will they protect it from, well, planes at altitudes below 100,000 feet?

    Paint it blue?

    I'd probably be more concerned about all of the junk that is whizzing around the planet above 100,000 ft.

    --
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  207. The splicing problem by Biff+Stu · · Score: 1

    It seems to me that the splicing problem is much more than a minor obstacle. Nanotubes are connected by a lattice of covalent carbon-carbon bonds, stabilized by aromaticity. That's the reason why nanotubes have such a phenomenal tensile strength when you scale a microscopic tube to macroscopic dimensions.

    When you try to make a rope out of a bunch of microscopic fibers, you have just another composite material. In order to make it work, you need to splice the fibers with multiple covalent bonds, just as strong as the fiber.

    Then there's the problem of spaghetti. I forget how long DNA in a gene is when you stretch it end to end, but it's long. Why don't you see long DNA ropes? The stuff basically tangles up in a knot. I don't know what the radius of gyration of a nanotube is, but they will also flex.

    The real problem is that you need a straight chain, 100,000 km long that's all covalently bound. Right now, it doesn't exist.

    Then there are a huge number of other obstacles. Like where do you start building the thing?

    The point of the whole concept is that it's self supporting; you can't start on Earth and go up, because it would never support itself before you get past geocentric orbit.

    Therefore, you need to start at geocentric orbit and build up and down at such a rate that the whole thing stays in geocentric orbit. Then you need to keep the thing stable when gets deep enough into the atmosphere to encounter weather.

    It's one thing to through a couple of hundred $K at it for a feasibility study, but if people are seriously asking for $7 billion, they're nuts.

    Are advanced composite materials using nanotubes worthy of government funding? Yes. But let's scale up to rocket motors on the federal dollar with spin-offs like tennis rackets to make the technology cheap before we worry about space elevators.

  208. Re:restricted airspace OT by willtsmith · · Score: 1

    A plane traveling at that speed with that much fuel would be INCINERATED upon impact.

    Although airframes are very sturdy when used under standard conditions, they are acutally a lot light a tin can when exposed to "unusual" stresses. The perimeter of the pentagon is a farily thick layer of steel reinforced concrete with a facade of Indiana limestone (best in the world ;-)

    Have you ever seen a rocket sled impact tests on outdated jets. It's pretty humorous because the impact surfaces aren't as wide as the jets. The internal structure of the plane vaporizes on impact. The wing tips continue without the plane as if nothing had happened.

    Nothing but the strongest of structures like the data recorder would be found under these circumstances.

    --
    -------- -------- Support Wesley Clark for president!!!
  209. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Lancer · · Score: 1

    You're halfway there - I envision a 100,000km vertically scrolling marquee!

    --
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx
  210. STOP before its too late!!!! by agent+provocateur · · Score: 1

    Okay,
    so this thing is made up of small tubes.

    Has anyone thought of the consequences of anchoring this thing in the middle of the Pacific ocean??

    Can anyone spell capilliary action or syphon??

    You fools!!! You'd have all of these tiny tubes sucking the world's oceans dry and spewing them out into space!!!

    I'm off to start stocking piling bottled water, before it too late.

    --
    Siggy Sig Sig? Where is the sig?
  211. What about little space junk? by djmitche · · Score: 3, Interesting

    OK, so these folks think they can move the base station to avoid space junk. That sounds extremely tricky already. But I wonder what they can do about meteorites and other smaller stuff that comes in much larger batches? The cable may be able to take one or two hits from these little buggers, but it's going to sustain *some* damage!

    1. Re:What about little space junk? by barawn · · Score: 1

      There are several things to remember here:

      1) The cable, like everything else, is not built to last forever. They were shooting for a 20-year operating lifetime.

      2) Once the first cable is built, all the other ones are essentially free - probably on the order of multiple MILLION, rather than multiple billion. That's the improvement we're talking about in terms of launch costs.

      3) Near the end of the elevator's lifetime (if not far before!), inevitably several new cables will be lofted to replace it.

      OK, so losing the cable is not that big deal, but you may be quite skeptical that you could simply "replace it" if it broke, since from meteorites or other random stuff, you wouldn't have any warning. This is true - but again, once the first elevator's up, everything else is free. Most likely what would happen is that the first thing done would be to loft up a large amount of "spare cable" that in case of a break, the elevator could simply spool more cable down to keep itself in geosynchronous orbit.

      Simple answer is that they have thought about this stuff, and meteor damage can be mitigated by making the elevator MUCH wider in the area where space debris is common (so it could survive more hits). Read here on meteor mitigation strategies.

      Oh, and random point:
      meteoroid: rocky object in space
      meteor: rocky object burning up in the atmosphere
      meteorite: rocky object from space that landed on Earth.

      What you're concerned with is meteor damage, not meteorite damage.

  212. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Zirnike · · Score: 2, Funny
    "generate static electricity"

    Well, we could always use it for propulsion. Make the counterweight a giant shirt and the elevator out of socks and the elevator will shoot right up there.

    --
    I'm not shy, I'm stalking my prey
  213. annoyance? by jmarkantes · · Score: 1

    Hmmm... that might be correct, that after one is built it's not nearly as big to build another. But if one does go down, whether from sabotage or accident, I can't imagine it would be just annoying.

    Man, I can't imagine at all what would happen if something bad happened to one of these. If the center of mass if at geostationary orbit, would it fall over? spin off to space? Slowly fall and drag over a couple continents?

    I dunno, but it would be a bit more than annoying would be my guess...
    j

  214. Don't shake the heavens by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Could it be that the tower of Babel will be created anew but slightly different?

  215. Don't forget... by VampireByte · · Score: 1

    Linux: Imagine SCO.

    --

    Run and catch, run and catch, the lamb is caught in the blackberry patch.

  216. Muzak? by AgentPhunk · · Score: 1

    Yes, but will they have an interstellar Muzak version of the "Girl from Ipanema" playing as you ride the elevator up?

  217. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1

    Wind. Duh.

    --
    Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
  218. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by p3d0 · · Score: 1
    First, I live in Canada. I know about cold weather. Look at the URL of my home page.

    Second, I have a Master's degree in electrical and computer engineering. I know about static electricity.

    Third, the POP occurs when the charge you have built up travels to your victim. Travelling charge is a current; it is not static because--guess what--it's travelling. It is static before the POP, but if it stayed static, there'd be no POP at all.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
  219. 15 days? by IDigUNIX · · Score: 1

    ...15 days on the way up? Wow, that would give pleny of time to join the mile high club. And the 10 mile high club. And the 20 mile high club. And ...

  220. First book? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The Guardian newspaper reports on scientists' efforts to realise the space elevator, as first described by Arthur C Clarke in his 1979 novel 'Fountains of Paradise'.
    What about Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator? First published in 1972, it covered an elevator going in space.
  221. Irony != coincidentally by ishmaelflood · · Score: 1

    Hope that helps

    Cheers

    Ish

  222. Re:What about the static electricity by pipingguy · · Score: 1

    You can harness it's awesome powers to make inflated balloons stick to the ceiling, after you rub them on your head.

    I'm bald, you insensitive clod!

  223. 100,000km elevator = lots of questions by SpiritedAway · · Score: 1

    A 100,000km elevator brings a few interesting questions.

    Such as,

    What will happen in an emergency? - Will there be emergency escape pods every few KMs in case something bad happens

    How fast is this thing going to travel? A person would hate to be trapped in an elevator for too long (if it comes to transporting persons) - you would need to bring up food/water as well.

    Terrorists and acts Terrorism - Screening of people entering the elevator and aircraft (WTC anyone?)

  224. Build it on the Moon First by hirebrand · · Score: 1

    The moon has much lower gravity, so we should build this thing on the Moon first, as a "proof of concept". The materials would not have to be as strong, nor the Elevator as long.

  225. Error in article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The article states:
    At about a third of the way along the cable - 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to complete a full orbit.
    First of all, geosynchronous object take one day to complete an orbit, not one year.
    Secondly, I thought that geosync orbit was 36,000 miles, not 36,000 kilometers.
  226. Wonderspace by pipingguy · · Score: 1

    The really exciting will no longer be GETTING into orbit, but rather what we can do once we get there.

    I remember reading a science fiction novel a loooong time ago about the effect of zero gravity on boobs. Anyone else read the same book?

    Duh. Just found the answer to my own question; it was "Rendezvous with Rama", by some guy (-5, Troll), noted in the link above.

  227. Vibrate to Death by JuergPeter · · Score: 1

    Imagine a harp with only 1 string, but some 10'000 km long and the wind as a musician. There would be a huge tension in the cable (after all it carries all the weight of the lower part), but it wouldn't be straight either, somehow more parabolic, the earth rotating the cable through the universe. If the wind is able to destroy bridges by stimulating their resonance frequency, I'm sure that this cable would vibrate a lot (like the harp string, but oscilating kilometers instead of mere millimeters)

    As a boy I used to play with a steel cable going up the Swiss mountains, a kind of cable car. The cable hung freely in the air for over 1 km. I pulled with all my weight and let it go. It took some seconds and the impulse came back, so strong impossible for me to hold the cable. It run up and down the mountain many times until it vanished. Imagine the wind pulling and pushing this very long cable and all the impulses running up and down. Forget a smooth ride up there.

  228. Vermicious by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
    as first described by Arthur C Clarke in his 1979 novel 'Fountains of Paradise'

    Well, all I know is I first heard of the concept of a space elevator in Charlie And The Great Glass Elevator. Hope they design in some protection against those vermicious knids.

    --
    - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
  229. they may talk forever by jr87 · · Score: 1

    whenever I hear about bold projects, I always hate it when they are discussed. I really wish that there would be some committment. Stop the endless chatter about the "possibility" of doing it, just say we will do this. Even if it fails something most likely has been learned.

    <P>Even if the project may have questionable value at the time doesn't mean that it is useless. At time of invention the airplane was pretty useless too.</P>

  230. The idea is good the article is bull@#$%. by Sdoh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It has some obvious mistakes like:

    > At about a third of the way along the cable -
    > 36,000km from Earth - objects take a year to
    >complete a full orbit.

    Should be : 24 hour to complete a full orbit

    >The biggest hazard could be space junk, but Dr
    >Edwards said the floating platform would be moved
    >around to steer the cable out of the way

    Hmm. I would like to see them:

    1. Tracing space junk ~0.01-1mm in size
    which flies around with a speed ~10km/sec.

    2. Moving platform fast enough on the ground
    to avoid collision at the altitude
    ~200 -1000 km . At those altitudes junk
    has the maximum density.

    > Edwards, who estimates it would take about $7bn
    > (4.4bn) to turn the concept into reality

    This thing should weight no less then ISS.
    Most of it flies much higher orbit:
    36,000-100,000km compare to ~500km for ISS,-
    READ: more expensive to get there.
    Now check the web about ISS price tag.

    Reminds me the story with cheap Space
    Shuttle for $5.6 +/- 1.0 bn.

    Either article is bad or this guy is full of @#$%.

    Pessimist is a well informed optimist.

    1. Re:The idea is good the article is bull@#$%. by Bob+Munck · · Score: 2, Informative
      Should be : 24 hour to complete a full orbit
      We all groaned at that mistake in the Guardian article, though you might be able to argue that a "year" for a given body is the period of time it takes to make one orbit around its primary. That is, everything orbits once a year. Pretty weak.

      1. Tracing space junk ~0.01-1mm in size which flies around with a speed ~10km/sec.
      The ribbon will be about a meter wide, 20 microns thick, and curved across its width. Stuff that small will punch right through it, sure, but won't sever enough of it to cause it to break. Every couple of weeks a maintenance climber will go up looking for little punctures like that and patching them.

      2. Moving platform fast enough on the ground to avoid collision at the altitude ~200 -1000 km . At those altitudes junk has the maximum density.
      Almost all of the junk big enough to hurt the ribbon is in orbit, is and will continue to be tracked on radar. There'll be plenty of warning; analysis says that the ribbon anchor will have to move about a kilometer once a day.

      Edwards, who estimates it would take about $7bn to turn the concept into reality. This thing should weight no less then ISS. Most of it flies much higher orbit: 36,000-100,000km compare to ~500km for ISS,- READ: more expensive to get there.
      The initial ribbon, weighing about 40 tons, will go up in two Delta IV launches on spools. (Two more Delta IVs will take up the GEO transfer vehicle and the deployment mechanism.) The initial ribbon will be unreeled from GEO, one end flying down to the surface and the other climbing above GEO to serve as counterweight. We will then send a little tiny climber up this initial space elevator, splicing just a little bit more material to the ribbon along its entire length. Then another one, slightly larger because the ribbon is now a tiny bit stronger. Then another. After 210 climbers, the ribbon will be able to hold a 20 ton climber and we can start building a second ribbon.

      So, you see, the Space Elevator is bootstrapped up to a usable size. We don't need to launch it with rockets; most of it goes up on itself. We only need 4 Delta launches, at an estimated price of $500 million each.

    2. Re:The idea is good the article is bull@#$%. by Sdoh · · Score: 1

      Thanks a lot. The article makes more sense now. Do you have publicly available TDR? I would appreciate a link.

  231. Mechanical lifters????? by annisette · · Score: 0

    A few questons here folks but first some support: A. Clarke is a great writer and visionary, you should read " A Fall of Moondust", great book. Back to the space elevator, there is no plural here, I would think there would have to be at least two of these fine contraptions BECAUSE of two words; MECHANICAL LIFTERS. What is the projected kph. to get "Up There"? What if someone needs to get down while everybody else is going UP(epecially with tourist)? There might be bulges in this sleek elevator such as medical emergency rooms, storage areas for keeping half of a payload waiting for replacement or improvement parts after it was discovered half the way up something is missing and maintinence crew living quarters. What kind of fuel will these lifter motor, piston, turbine,what ever be burning and how will they carry it or have it delivered. I think it is a great Idea created by a very talented man but unless NASA never plans on making any more mistakes we may just need two in case one is down for parts......"When I would make a mistake in shop class I would just put two grooves in it and call it an ashtray"..Bill Cosby

    --
    I eat my grapes at room temperature, cuz the cold ones hurt my teeth
  232. What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1



    Then what happens ?

    What if that guy and his group of fanatics decided to cut loose that robe ?

    What type of catastrophy will that cause ?

    No, I am not saying that we shouldn't innovate just because of what a bunch of loony Moslems might do, but we owe it to ourselves to think about the possible consequences ?

    We _are_ living in a world where a certain world-religion is actively advocating to kill all the "infidels" - aside from what they have done in NYC that fateful day 2 years ago, they are still killing the "infidels" (aka Christians) in Indonesia and Sudan and Nigeria.

    We just gotta be careful, be extra careful nowaday.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by Jeremi · · Score: 1
      From the FAQ:


      2. What if [the ribbon] breaks?


      The majority, the long end out in space, gains enough speed that it burns up in the atmosphere, with the lower portion falling into the sea. It will not fall on top of anyone.


      3. For the portion that doesn't burn up in a fall- what effect will it have on the environment?


      Honestly, it will make a little bit of a mess. But New York City tickertape parades have made bigger messes. Comparatively it will put much less dust, dirt, debris and chemicals into the environment than
      wildfires of the American west, any one of the large expendable rockets, or a month of natural meteors hitting Earth. The ribbon is light (7.5 kg/km) so, any pieces that fall to earth will slow down, in the air, to about the same terminal velocity as that of an open newspaper page falling. It will not have enough momentum to cause mechanical damage when it comes down. We have considered other health risks such as inhalation of very small fragments and believe this will not be a problem but we are conducting studies to make sure this isn't a problem. Since we are aware of the possible problems now we can design the elevator to avoid these problems.

      --


      I don't care if it's 90,000 hectares. That lake was not my doing.
    2. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by St__Gregory · · Score: 1

      Certainly Our concern must be "What will come down this perfidious space cable ?" I say - at least cover the ends with huge inverted cones to trap the space vermin. On the other hand the electromagnetic fields created through such a planetary dragline would surely combust all comers.

    3. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by ppanon · · Score: 1

      Then what happens?
      Just how will they "get a hold of it?" Where are they going to get the space suits to occupy anything more than the lower kilometer?

      What if that guy and his group of fanatics decided to cut loose that robe?

      Public nudity is probably against the Islamic faith. It certainly is for women. Humility before God and so on. Oh, you meant rope?

      What type of catastrophy will that cause ? Probably none. This was talked about at a TorCon3 panel I saw, The cable for a space elevator would be very thin. Depending on where it was cut, apart for the first few kilometers of cable, any of it that fell into the atmosphere would mostly burn up. You would probably base it on a floating sea platform to avoid danger to populated areas from the small portion that didn't burn up.

      No, I am not saying that we shouldn't innovate just because of what a bunch of loony Moslems might do, but we owe it to ourselves to think about the possible consequences ?
      While Muslim extremists have the highest profile currently, religious fanaticism is not restricted to Islam. The Shia/Sunni sectarian rift provides a pretty good breeding ground for radicalism, but it's not alone by any stretch of the imagination.

      We _are_ living in a world where a certain world-religion is actively advocating to kill all the "infidels"
      Who? Zionists? Right-wing born-agains who support them? Protestants and Catholics in Ireland?
      - aside from what they have done in NYC that fateful day 2 years ago, they are still killing the "infidels" (aka Christians) in Indonesia and Sudan and Nigeria.
      Christianity's hands are not free of bloodstains. While many moslems (clerics and faithful) condemn bin Laden's violent actions, the Spanish Inquisition had the blessings of Mother Church.

      We just gotta be careful, be extra careful nowaday.
      Thousands (millions?) of Americans are at a much higher risk because they live in flood plains.

      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    4. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah....and monkeys will fly out of my ass!!!

    5. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pardon moi, but I think if the cable is cut, it will only fall in the area below the cut, above the cut it'll float up and away eventually escaping earth. I don't believe the "long" end will burn up falling into the atmosphere, it'll simply escape from earth :-).

      The earth is an anchor the overall cable system depends on having slightly higher centrifical effect vs gravitation effect.

      My guess is in the atmosphere they'll use more than one cable to help prevent a single snap from detatching the entire thing from earth :-)

    6. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

      No, I am not saying that we shouldn't innovate just because of what a bunch of loony Moslems might do, but we owe it to ourselves to think about the possible consequences.

      As apposed to loony Christians? The religious reich are just as bad. They just have a better marketing department. I would be more worried of the creationists who would blow it up lest it prove the world was round.

    7. Re:What if Osama Bin Laden gets hold of it ? by rev063 · · Score: 1
      One of Kim Stanley Robinson's books -- Red Mars, I think it was -- had a scene where separatist Mars colonists sabotaged a space elevator by disconnecting the tethering asteroid at the far end. The cable wrapped several times around the circumference of Mars, demolishing several settlements in the process.

      The cable in that scenario was several meters thick rather than paper-thin, but you get the idea.

  233. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying what? This elevator is in use and has been locked? Press Ctrl+Alt+Del to unlock this elevator? Or more likely: "This elevator has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down"

  234. Wipe them out ! by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1



    The only sure-fire way to fight the terrorists is to wipe them out, completely.

    There's no place in _any_ society, and no reason whatsoever, to let the terrorists continue to terrorize all of us.

    The only problem we have so far is that the world community has absolutely _NO_ will to really fight the terrorists.

    Terrorists won't go away just because we wish them to.

    Those who were responsibled for the Bali bombing in Indonesia were still yelling "Allah the greatest" in their trial, despite having washed their hands and soul with the bloods and guts of over 200 innocent people.

    And look at the PLO - I don't care what they say - killing women and children in the name of "liberation" isn't liberation at all. And killing the Jews (or whoever) in the name of their God only confirms to the world that their "God" is the Devil himself.

    The only way to deal with those terrorists is to send them back to their "God" - and make them stay there, forever.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:Wipe them out ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AMEN, BROTHER!

    2. Re:Wipe them out ! by NiceGeek · · Score: 1

      You do know the Palestinans were there first right?

    3. Re:Wipe them out ! by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      Wow, this guy must watch Fox. Have you ever considered why they attack? It's not hatred of "freedom" or the whole religious thing. There is a way to stop it...simply stop pissing them off in the first place!! Of course, the present "solution" doing the rounds right now is actively creating the next generations of terrorists, by continuing the same mistakes. Do you think the sons & daughters of the 100,000 recently dead Iraqis are going to have a love affair with the west? No, they will simply bay for blood like many in the west have done in recent years.

      To try to "wipe them out, completely", you would only create more hatred and ultimately more terrorism for your children to endure. We are suffering right now from our parents mistakes in the middle-east of the past 50 years, and we still haven't learned not to screw people over for a quick buck.

      in the name of their God only confirms to the world that their "God" is the Devil himself.

      Shit, just realised you are a believer yourself. The is no point in taking this argument any further, you are clearly against common sense and reason. God, Devil, Adam & Eve and the tree of knowledge, jeez you religious guys are funny!! Onward Christian soldiers!! Let's kill all the Muslims!!

  235. Linky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  236. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    4 Lear Jets are NOT going to be able to avoid 1 F-16, much less 2 of them.

  237. Not quite correct -- think about fracture process. by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    You say the cable is actually pulling up. Okay, I buy that. However, once the cable breaks, the part under the break is going to go *down*, because its average orbital velocity is going to be less than that required to pull it up.

    So if it breaks, the part above is going to pull up, the the part below is going to fall down.

    Now, the next question is where it's likely to break. If it's breaking due to terrorist attack (a la 9-11) , then I think the effects will be minimal, except that you're going to get a burning ribbon whipping through the atmosphere in circles. First, it will pull up, and start moving with the sun, but faster (E to W). Then, due to wind currents, that's going to pull *back* on the ribbon from its expected orbital position, resulting in a rotation towards the earth, but a higher altitude. As this happens, it's going to break several more times, and start to pull farther out.

    Yet this process is going to result in an elliptic orbit, since it's going to represent several unit impulses. Further, the rotation is going to bring the much larger top into the lower position. Add to that the effect of wind currents as it whips through the atmosphere, and it'll be tumbling slightly as the formerly top part of the ribbon slices into the atmosphere at high mach speeds.

    At that point, it breaks again, resulting in it bouncing up again, but in an even more eliptical orbit... you see, this gets to be a bit of a mess. A very expensive mess, because it's going to be completely unusable when it's all done.

    For thise reason, I still say that it is far better to use nanotube technology and pyrimiding construction techniques to build super-high launch pads, than to use normal rockets to launch materials for a ribbon elevator.

    At least, if you build these up as high as you can, you can (1) have a much smaller ribbon (2) have a self-supporting structure below the broken section (3) more quickly and cheaply rebuild broken elevator ribbons.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
  238. Sorting Carbon Nanotubes Will Help the Space Eleva by rpiquepa · · Score: 2, Informative

    The Guardian says: "The biggest technical obstacle is finding a material strong but light enough to make the cable; this is where the carbon nanotubes come in." But what about selecting the appropriate carbon nanotubes among the 56 known varieties? Two teams of chemists from Rice University and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) have found a way to separate and manipulate these varieties of carbon nanotubes. Obviously, it will help to build the Space Elevator. More details are available on my blog.

  239. Nice use of moderator points.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here, mod this this as FLAMEBAIT....

    How is this post offtopic? Are you really that stupid? Yes, it was redundant; however, it's CLEARLY a post about the damn elevator. I think /. should implement a basic intelligence test before it gives out mod points. Sheesh....

  240. You forgot the most hilarious part by Tap-Sa · · Score: 1

    People seem to be genuinely worried about ~250t (the mass below GTO that can fall down) of pure carbon burning in the atmosphere into CO2. Rather ... funny ... considering the US enviromental policy during Bush administration (Kyoto, gas is not pollutant etc. etc.)

  241. moon elevator? by Tap-Sa · · Score: 1
    Correct, the elevator can be used as slingshot to escape earth. Not for the average person though since precise timing (and floor?) is required to reach correct destinations. Especially if you have to catch other swinging elevator at the other end. There have been proposals that mars-expeditions could use the elevator concept to descend and ascend mars and then slingshot back to earth.

    BTW wouldn't it be possible at least in theory to build similar elevator from earth to moon? The gravity center should be at the point where the gravity of each bodies cancel each other and the whole thing would rotate the same period as the moon. Moon would conveniently have the same side always towards earth so cable could be anchored there. Earth-end would have to be at altitude of LEO or higher due to delta-Vs.

    Not sure if practical, would the earth-GTO and earth-moon elevators inevitably collide? Too high tension for even carbon nanotubes? Reaching the the earth-end would still require a booster but required deltaV is not very big, a supersonic jet would do if the end could be lowered to atmosphere. But the drag makes it impossible.

    One more thing about the normal GTO elevator and possible threats (hurricane, terror etc). In pictures you see the cable anchored to oil rigs and such, giving the impression that there's a huge tension. In reality the original tension at ground level is nil, growing possibly to the same size as the maximum weight of climbers.
    So imagine that you are the the ground (or sea) station, attach a climber to the cable that is exactly the same weight as cables tension to the station and then release the cable, what happens? Right, nothing. Now the climber is the counterweight needed to keep the cable at still. Make the climber to reel the cable in while it ascends and you have a neat way a avoid any threats at atmospheric levels. The climber might need some sort of balloons and controllable ballast in order to keep the cable's center of gravity not shifting from desirable point but that's all lowtech.

    1. Re:moon elevator? by gomiam · · Score: 1
      Mmm... watch out. The Moon is not yet locked on Earth: due to pendular movements, we are able to see near 60% of its surface. As a result, were a cable extend from the Moon to somewhere much farther than its own LMO (low moon orbit, by analogy), that bell-like movement would make the cable twist quite a bit.
      I think it wouldn't last too much. Anyway, it still would mean there is less free-flight involved :-)

  242. Elevator? by Monty+Worm · · Score: 1

    The original SF calls for an elevator - ie counterweights and elevator cages. All this is is a single line - stage 1 if you will. Initially we'll have to be shooting rocks up by rocket so we can bring them back down again as counterweight....

    --
    ... and today's pet project has ... been discarded for lack of time.
  243. hmmm ... any other way to do it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    first off WOAH! a space elevator!
    then ... not possible, me thinks.
    36'000 km? how much are just the cables going to weight? then again one loses weight with square of distance to surface (one G). anyway the elevator in orbit will not be able to pull up the cabin still on the surface etc, because it's weight-less.
    okay at 36'000 km from surface i would rotate with the spot on the surface straight down. but what about at 100 km up, or 1000 km up? or how about this: how fast would i have to go at an orbit 5m above earth-surface to be in a stable orbit around the planet? pretty damn fast, not counting the headwind ;)

    anyway ... there must be another/cheaper way to get into orbit besides using rockets/drugs and sex...

    how about a loftstrom-loop? i read about that in a frederick pohl book. if i remember correctly it's a huge accelarator/railgun with some fancy geometrics that can accelerate small payloads in to low orbit.the track isn't straight but kind like a rollercoaster, that at the end shots you into space : )

    and since we are having "silly" ideas.
    how about this: get a 100'000 light years long nanotube-cable. but some weight on one end. tie one end to the earth and drop the other end into a blackhole. this would be a pretty cool trick for terrorists to destroy the earth ...

  244. Won't it create a "short" ? by chetanvaity · · Score: 1

    Will this thing short the normal atmospheric electrical phenomena in the region? No lightnings!

    1. Re:Won't it create a "short" ? by isorox · · Score: 1

      They site it in a place with none to very low lightning levels anyway.

  245. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by CommieOverlord · · Score: 1

    I have a feeling it would be more than slightly annoying if you were one the people stuck 36K up in space with no way back down!

  246. Gemini?! by StarKruzr · · Score: 1

    Your claim completely shocked me, so I went to the site...

    and was totally amazed. I had no idea the project was developed for that long. I also had no idea Gemini had become such a capable spacecraft.

    What do you mean by Apollo not having "real pilot control?"

    I noted, btw, that there was no mention of Gemini being a reusable craft. Any idea if a reusable capsule is a viable design?

    --

    +++ATH0
    1. Re:Gemini?! by cosmo7 · · Score: 1

      This is from astronautix (the best site on spaceflight i've ever seen):

      In many ways the Gemini design was ahead of that of the Apollo, since the project began two years later . The crew station layout was similar to that of the latest military fighters; the capsule was equipped with ejection seats, inertial navigation, the pilot's traditional 8-ball attitude display, and radar. The escape tower used for Mercury was deleted; the propellants used in the Titan II launch vehicle, while toxic, corrosive, poisonous, and self-igniting, did not explode in the manner of the Atlas or Saturn LOX/Kerosene combination. The ejection seats served as the crew escape method in the lower atmosphere, just as in a high-performance aircraft. The seats were also needed for the original landing mode, which involved deployment of a huge inflated Rogallo wing (ancestor of today's hang gliders) with a piloted landing on skids at Edwards Dry Lake. In the event, the wing could not be made to deploy reliably before flights began, so the capsule made a parachute-borne water landing, much to the astronauts' chagrin.

      All around the Gemini was considered the ultimate 'pilot's spacecraft', and it was also popular with engineers because of its extremely light weight. The capsule allowed the recovery of a crew of two for only 50% more than the Mercury capsule weight, and half of the weight per crew member of the Apollo design. The penalty was obvious - it was christened the 'Gusmobile' since diminutive Gus Grissom was the only astronaut who was said to be able to fit into it.

  247. Re:Defending a one meter wide cable below 60,000 f by juhaz · · Score: 1

    Yeah, bit like those poor souls on ISS, Mir et all that had no way back down as the elevator hasn't been built yet.

    Oh wait. Ever heard of gravity? Just keep few "lifeboats" up there.

  248. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by QuantumG · · Score: 1

    So is your english.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  249. What's the point? by QuantumG · · Score: 1
    this could be a nice way for us to start working toward the moon (and eventually beyond) again.

    I'm sorry, what's the point of this again? Where are we going and what for? If we had some design for a super-lightspeed ship or had received a communication from an alien race, then I could see the point, but we dont. So why are we going back out there? Fusion fuel from the moon? We don't know how to build the reactors to use it (if we did, it might make sense to go mine some of it). Colonisation of mars? We don't know how to do that either, and even if we did, we've got enough people starving to death here on earth.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:What's the point? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, what's the point of this again?

      Um, to reduce the risk to humans to launch satalites in space (recent Brazil accident kills many on ground).

      To reduce the cost of launching satalites significantly, which reduces costs to use them to the whole world.

      To reduce the ungodly pollution and risk associated with using highly toxic chemicals in traditional launches.

      To allow scientific experimentation in space more affordably.

      To reduce the number of humans it takes to get a payload into space. Stuff like Hubble.

      To allow NON nasa pilots into space for science and (some day) recreation.

      To act as a stepping stone to the moon, which is a stepping stone to mars.

      Oh, I'm sorry, were you trolling, or do you just really not get it?

      Oh yea, and screw the people that are starving. Tell them to get jobs. Have a nice day.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
  250. are you kidding me? by leery · · Score: 1

    way before the operational stage, people would come from the corners of the globe just to get a look at a ribbon stretching up into space! you'd have to beat them back with a stick. expect ad-hoc floating cities surrounding the site, populated by geeks over here, pilgrims there, fanatics there, there, and there, tourists over that way, and terrorists, anyone?... the biggest problem after the engineering hurdles are gone will be security, not publicity.

    --
    "This is not a sig." -- R.
  251. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by CaptainAvatar · · Score: 1

    How is it stationary? The Earth's magnetosphere is asymmetric and Sun-oriented, so in fact an elevator couldn't possibly see an unvarying magnetic field as it orbits.

    --
    The real Captain Avatar is a fictional character, so I suppose he doesn't mind if I impersonate him.
  252. Elevator Out of Service by Databass · · Score: 1


    You just know some prankster would keep hitting all the buttons before getting out at their stop!

  253. A digest of replies. by Smoovious · · Score: 1

    Q: Why can't we just put a needle above the poles?

    A: because objects directly above the poles don't orbit, they would just stay motionless above
    the planet, so as soon as the thrust was removed to keep them there, they would just plummet
    back to earth.

    Q: Why do we have to have it around the equator?

    A: because that is the only place you'll have a geostationary orbit. Place a satellite, say, 10-degrees north or south of the equator at a geo altitude and the satellite will oscillate
    between +10 and -10 degrees of the equator.

    Q: Why don't we build it on the moon first?

    A: because the materials and expertise are here, and the whole point of the elevator is to slash the costs of getting materials off the surface of the earth in the first place. We need an efficient means of doing that first before we can think of building them on the other rocks in our system. The plus side is we don't have to waste so much space/weight on propellant to get a rocket up to speed to escape gravity and into orbital velocity. Instead, we would just climb up mechanically, which with photo-electric power, would use fewer resources than chemical propellant. Once up in geosynchronous orbit, the materials brought up can hang there near the elevator as more pieces are brought up, eventually assembling the pieces into a larget vehicle, better suited to long-range missions to say, mars and beyond.

    Q: We couldn't use it for salvaging the space junk, they are just plain moving too fast.

    A: yes and no... we would only really need small automated vehicles which could clamp onto the pieces of junk, and using maneuvering thrusters, adjust the orbits higher or lower, as well as trajectory, until they are at the level of the end of the elevator. Once at that point, the relative speeds aren't much different (although objects in a retrograde orbit might be a problem).
    For that matter, vehicles assembled in space wouldn't need much more than thrusters, and perhaps a small engine for larger accellerations to get from place to place, since escaping earth's gravity isn't an issue anymore.

    Q: What about 9/11 and terrorist attacks?

    A: keep hiding under your bed you @#$&$#!@ coward.

    Q: Wouldn't the pull of the ascending vehicle pull the counterweight down into a lower orbit, making the elevator useless?

    A: It depends on how heavy the vehicle/payload is, as well as the counterweight. Only an idiot would try to ascend with more weight than the counterweight can handle (The Darwin Awards has a perfect example of this effect, about a guy working on his radio tower, sorry no URL handy). If there is more force on the counterweight trying to fling it away, than there is by the payload pulling it down, then the counterweight will stay in place... ...

    which brings me to one point that I'm not so sure about...

    It always seemed to me that you would need a very good/reliable anchoring point for something like this, and having a floating base in the water just doesn't seem to be it... get too much payload
    too high on the cable, and it would add to the pull the counterweight is exerting, and you could very well yank the base out of the water and into space if the accident was catastrophic.

    Suppose you have a payload that is pretty much right at the limit of what the counterweight can support. It approaches geo-point, but isn't braking fast enough, and passes geo-point. At that point, the forces switch from trying to pull the payload back down to the ground, to trying to push it further away. Eventually, it slams into the counterweight, which may or may not hold. Problem is, you now have (for an extreme example) twice as much weight on the end on the cable, exerting twice as much vertical force on the base. Add to that the inertia of the payload hitting the counterweight would "jerk" the cable upwards.

    You would need a great deal of weight at the base for it to be a suitable anchor, yet you need the
    base to float at the same

    --
    Cogito cogito, ergo cogito sum, cogito.
  254. Dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dunno, but a 30,000 km cable weighting several billion tons suspended from orbit, combined with high energy lasers tracking fast moving objects moving chaotically in 3 dimensions sure sounds safer than the odd shuttle launch to me! Cut the thing and the damage could be catastrophic.

  255. Re:ATTN: MODERATION ABUSE.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    > it seems that the thin-skinned, P.C. moderators can't accept the reality of today's post 9/11 world.
    > You can mod this down to hell and ignore the issue, but it still is a valid one.

    Indeed. It just so happens I've just M2'd that as unfair, nice to then come here and see that others agree with me.

    I guess some moderators just can't see past the poster's handle.

  256. Re:What about the static electricity it will gener by merlin_jim · · Score: 1

    I do not claim that it is stationary wrt the earth's magnetosphere. I claim that it is stationary wrt the earth's surface (which it is), and that it is orthogonal to the earth's magnetic field at any height at which it could cause atmospheric disturbances (which it is)

    These two criteria make it stationary wrt magnetic field lines, which is the important determination. Remember, magnetic field lines connect the earth's north and south poles (magnetic ones, not rotational ones)

    While, as the earth rotates in the solar wind, these field lines compress and expand, no new field lines would sweep across a vertical. Remember, electricity is generated by a CHANGE in magnetic field. That wouldn't be happening here.

    --
    I am disrespectful to dirt! Can you see that I am serious?!
  257. Interesting - Definition of "invent" by tomzyk · · Score: 1

    I was just curious about your statement that the space elevator was "invented" by Jurij Artsutanov...

    My initial reaction was: "Waitaminute... it wasn't INVENTED; it was just THOUGHT UP/CONCEIVED by that guy. There is no physical structure and, therefore, no INVENTION."

    But then I came across this:

    http://www.hyperdictionary.com/dictionary/invent

    Apparently in 1913, Webster said "invent" was "to contrive or produce for the first time", but today, WordNet said it is to "come up with (an idea, plan, explanation, theory, or priciple) after a mental effort".

    I just thought it was interesting how the definition has changed over the years.

    --
    Karma: NaN
  258. Slow down, cowboy by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    with a 1/10 g acceleration you will reach the top of the "elevator" in less than 6 hours

    Another poster hypothesized that the "track mechanism will presumably be some sort of magnetic suspension," thus speeds must be kept down to 400 - 500 km/h, to prevent a catastrophic failure in case the vehicle brushes against the nanotube ribbon.

    For all I know, the "track mechanism" may be even simpler than that -- such as opposing rubber wheels tightly gripping the ribbon. (I wish I could be at that conference to see what mechanisms are actually being proposed!) In which case speeds will also have to be kept pretty low in order to prevent damage to the ribbon.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  259. Time dilation problems? by eelko · · Score: 1

    What I've been wondering:

    When you have a cable this long and you swoop it around to get it geo-stationary (and not let it tie up the Earth two-and-a-half times), doesn't Einstein kick in? The speed of the tip is far greater than the speed at the bottom, which -TMK- makes the end slow down in relative time, compared to the 'stationary' part that's located on Earth.

    A small calculation:

    -Earth is revolving at .5 KM/sec= 1800km/h
    -we ignore the speed of the Earth around the sun (and the speed of our Solar system, etc)
    -(so) the center of the Earth doesn't move

    Triangular geometry shows us that at a distance of 100,000km, we have a speed of 28350KM/h (roughly) for a geo-stationary tip-of-the-cord. That's a difference in speed of 26550 km/h between bottom and top. (Am I still correct?)

    Now, it's not by far as fast as the speed of light, so time will not stand still when you reach the end. Still, I do wonder what happens to an object that is so big and has such a difference in speed at the opposing ends. Does time slow down -relatively- when you reach the end? If you stay at the end of the cord for a month, did you age less than you twin brother on Earth? If so, how much younger are you?

    Ponderingly yours,
    Eelko

  260. Elevator superior to rocket: let me count the ways by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    you have to use the cable for propulsion, otherwise you have just invented a strange kind of tethered rocked and you are not saving any energy.

    It's not "a strange kind of tethered rocked." Not by a longshot.

    First of all, the elevator, unlike a rocket, need not carry any propellant. Right there you have reduced the size and complexity of the vehicle by 97%. Do a little research on the "rocket equation," and learn how the need to accelerate tons of propellant to hypersonic speeds leads to exponential increases in vehicle size, as well as the need for complex staging mechanisms.

    It also need not carry its own energy source. Power will be beamed to the vehicle by laser or microwave.

    A final way to realize the elevator's superiority to a rocket is to consider that 100% of the energy expended by the elevator serves to increase the elevator's potential energy in the earth's gravitational field. But not all of the energy expended by a rocket increases the rocket's potential energy -- especially when it has just left the pad and is traveling slowly. In the extreme case, consider how a rocket needs to expend enormous amounts of energy just to "hover" at a constant altitude. The elevator, on the other hand, can simply clamp on to the ribbon and hang there, expending zero energy to hover.

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  261. The ribbon deploys itself. by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    I would expect that once you get the cable past 36,000 km above the earth the cable would mostly pull itself up from that point on.


    Your understanding is pretty close.

    What will actually happen is that a big "spool" of ribbon will be launched into geosynch orbit. Shortly after you begin to deploy the ribbon out of the spool, the "gravity gradient" effect will create tension in the ribbon, and it will actually begin to pull itself out of the spool. To date, experimental space tethers have only been a few km long and generated a relatively modest tension. But a tether long enough to reach Earth's surface will generate high tension; the "spool" will have to contain a powerful brake to keep the ribbon from unreeling itself at out-of-control speeds.

    Keep in mind that as the ribbon deploys in one direction, the spool will automagically move in the opposite direction, such that the system's center of mass remains in geosynch orbit. That's why the overall length of the ribbon must be longer than the altitude of geosynch orbit. (And that's a big bonus for launching an interplanetary vehicle; it can ride the elevator to a point well above geosynch orbit.)

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  262. simple question. by LifesABeach · · Score: 0

    given this can be done, how much carbon would it take?

  263. Re:Not quite correct -- Getting Closer by abb3w · · Score: 1

    If it's breaking due to terrorist attack (a la 9-11) , then I think the effects will be minimal, except that you're going to get a burning ribbon whipping through the atmosphere in circles.

    You seem to be assuming the terrorism takes the form of idjit flying an airplane into the base of the skyhook; yes, this scenario causes a bit of local damage and a large spaghetti nuisance in orbit. However, trivial non-airplane sabotage scenarios (left as exercises for the student) can cause breaks higher up. A break at, say, 80% up the ground-to-geostationary distance results in a beanstalk trying to wrap itself from Quito to Gabon by way of Indonesia, and dumping a sizable chunk of (a) kinetic energy and (b) oxidized carbon into the atmosphere-- *IF* you're lucky. Buckytubes also show some thermal superconductor tendencies, depending on type. Dropping one kilo from geostationary yields about the same bang as half a stick of dynamite in pure kinetic energy; this doesn't factor in the kinetic energy of the flaming ribbon. How grams of carbon per meter ribbon length are we talking again?

    In my more heartily American A--hole moods, I greatly regret that Mecca isn't 20 degrees further south; it would substantially reduce the risk of Islamic terrorist attacks on our hypothetical Indian Rope Trick.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  264. What I realy really want to know is... by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 1

    OK, OK. So the cable snaps. Which way does it fall (east or west)? I predict that the land value close to the equator will fall drastically if there's any chance that a snapped cable could land in your backyard, so to speak.

    --
    The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
  265. Re:So what happens by AlecC · · Score: 1

    And the lowest note ever twanged.

    Sorry, somebody got lower. Apparently there are a couple of galaxies way out there hooting at a frequency of one cycle every 10 million years and a wavelength of 30,000 light years. Now that is Bass.

    --
    Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
  266. Think on a larger scale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Jupiter has a magnetosphere that extends past the orbit of Saturn, which goes to say it's about gajillion times larger and more powerful than earth.
    Jupiter also has a bunch of "moons".

    Here's a thought: wrap one of the moons of jupiter with some wire, and you get free electricity forever (or until Jupiter eats it's moon, or Sol eats Jupiter).

    So, dumb idea, or is this possible?

  267. Read Larry Niven - Rainbow Mars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This book talks about the concept of finding a tree (trees are great at making carbon, and scientists today are thinking of using carbon nanotubes to build an elevator on earth in the next few years) that is strong enough to bear it's own weight (like finding the holy grail for space travel), and the natives throw some tracks up against it and use it as a stairway to heaven. Good book.

  268. umm, is it me, or in event of catastrophic failure by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

    Would a 10,000 km long razor thin cable, falling 9.8 m/s^2 for 10,000 km towards the earth do just a _bit_ of damage when it landed? How many safety precautions have been taken with this thing? Or would they just build the thing out in the middle of the ocean or something just in case?

  269. Re:Um...... by MrResistor · · Score: 1

    There is no such thing as centrifugal force.

    There is centripetal force, which is the force of the string accelerating the rock towards the center, and there is the inertia of the rock resisting that force which is tangential to its orbit. Centrifugal force, which would be force directed from the center to the rock, pushing it outwards, is an illusion produced by your mind's incorrect interpretation of the rock's inertia.

    --
    Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  270. Re:Give some credit to the inventors - indeed! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buckminster Fuller, the discoverer of "buckminsterfullerene"

    Fuller himself was not aware of this ironic fact

    Indeed he wasn't, since he was dead 10 years by the time buckyballs were discovered.

    - nic

  271. Re:Elevator superior to rocket: let me count the w by amorsen · · Score: 1

    You did not read the first half of the sentence you quoted. We are in fact in violent agreement.

    --
    Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?