Clean Nuclear Launches?
AKAImBatman writes "When it comes to launching millions of pounds of material into space, nearly everyone knows about the Orion Project. Blow up a series of nuclear bombs under your dairy-aire and ride the explosion on up. Unfortunately, the Orion spewed out so much radiation that it just wasn't a feasible launch option. If we want commuter trips to space, we're going to have to find another way. Well, it turns out that NASA's been doing quite a bit of research on Gas Core Nuclear Rockets, an ultra-powerful nuclear rocket that puts out almost no radiation. This research has spurred a fascinating new generation of ideas on reaching the cosmos. Could inexpensive cruises to the moon happen within our lifetimes?"
The environmental whackos go nuts (and let slip the lawyers of war) when you launch a totally sealed reactor, can you imagine what they would do if you wanted to launch something that *gasp* released radioactive gasses into the atmosphere?
Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
There's a genuine safety issue with space elevators that ought to mentioned though, which is that if the elevator breaks, the part between Earth and the break point would act as a whip. A few thousand miles probably wouldn't be a big issue, but the closer to the end the cable breaks, the bigger, exponentially, the whiplash. A shockwave that destroys significant amounts of life on Earth isn't impossible.
You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
Actually, a SE makes a significantly better, safer and cheaper inter-solar-system-transportaion-system than dirty bombs. It's not just a tool to escape orbit - it can take us to other planets. That's what's so genious about the idea.
There are two reasons for making it 91000km long when all you technically need is 35000km.
One: because you need a very large and unfeasible mass at the top if you want to balance 35000km of cable hanging below GEO with a weight located, say, 1 meter above it. You need a significantly smaller weight at the top if you want to balance it at 91000km.
Two: (which brings us back to our point of discussion) If you go as far as 91000km, you can slingshot payloads as far as jupiter and its moons. If you build even higher, at 140000km you can get as far as pluto.
Of course, the first thing you'd want to send to your destination is a pre-fabricated and spooled SE to deploy there, so you can send stuff back...
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"Not to mention the fact that your average coal burning plant simply doesn't have the potential to cause a catastrophe on the scale of Chernobyl"
Not all at once in one place.
Coal and Petrochemical based air pollution has killed tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands at younger ages than they would have otherwise died, and cars and tobacco have killed TENS OF MILLIONS of people this century, and yet you think that the HUNDREDS of reactors in current operation in North America whom haven't killed a SINGLE HUMAN BEING yet - are a bigger badder threat.
Stupid dumb public. And they bitch like hell when we try and keep their asses in High School all the way through until grade 12.
Actually, going critical and melt-down are two different, yet slightly related events.
"going" critical: All nuclear reactions (not nuclear decay) are critical. In order for a self sustaing nuclear to occur, a critical mass of fissible material must be present. If the mass falls below critical the reaction will extinguish. Decay will still occur and generate heat, abliet much less.
Melt-down: A melt-down happens when a reaction goes out of control and produces sufficient amounts of heat to cause the core the liquify (melt down). When a core melt-down happens, there is not a damn thing on this planet (that I know of) that can the molten (and getting hotter by the second) glob that used to be the core.
It has been theorized that if this happens, the molten core will burn through the earth until it reaches water. Upon contact with the core the water will turn into steam and create what is in effect a steam cannon, blasing the core back up the hole and showering bits of the core for miles around.