Originally posted by Osiri
they stated in the pacific ocean
Read the article.
A launch from the counterweight would actually have the momentum to get you to Mars, Venus or the Asteroids.
I didn't see anything about Jupiter so I guess that is a bit beyond this momentum.
All at $250 a lb.
That is amazingly cheap to get to Mars.
Getting back would be more difficult I assume.
The US would certainly oversight it.
Hmmmm.
The moore I dig through the endless archives of space elevator talk, the prominent it comes that
A) it is possible to build nanotubes that reach the required GPa. They almost do, but it's not enough,not by a long shot. You need to be 1000% certain, because this thing can never fail. Never.
Also, said nanotubes are very small and short, several millimeters. Not 50 000 kilometers. Ok fixable we'll produce them in no time (no time meaning years or even decades before large-scale construction can even theoreticall begin)? Of course you have to actually PRODUCE said ultra-high quality in large numbers AND in sufficiently low cost.
B) the lightning problem could be solved with moving the platform (costs like ****), coating the cable with some kind of coating (could create nasty water/particle problems), using lasers to kill the clouds (very unfeasible right now and they don't even work as intended) or use chemicals to break down the clouds (seems like the most useful one, yet cost++++. And even they don't work always).
So I back down from my "physically impossible" stance, because it seems it is possible. Theoretically possible, but practically it borders on impossible for quite some time (read: certainly not 5 or 10 or 20 years).
The technology is far from mature. We don't have the nanotubes or required magnitudes. We don't have protection for counterweight, or the counterweight, or methods to move it in case something goes wrong (these are pretty minor problems in the scale if SE).
We don't have even limited weather control. If the best solution is "let's not get struck by lightning", then yes there are problems. We don't have protection against debris or meteorites or ****ed-up airplanes or UFOs flying against the rope. Actually, we don't have any feasible protection against electronic charges and discharges in the cable.
We don't have the anchor - we don't have enough steel in the planet to make it out of it, nor has anyone come up with any feasible plans to make some kind of anchor that can flex in all directions, because that's what the rope requires.
Oh, this one is cool: This would require some groundbreaking maths, namely orbital maths and an analytical solution to an
n-body problem (I am not a mathematician). That's apparently really damn hard.
Hey ho, some more. This is actually pretty fun. The cable must be kept straight. That seems to be a pretty big problem and involves A LOT of fuel because the climber will cause some problems. Pretty funky problems..
Also, there are problems using the the GEO station as launchpad - changing orbit eats up a lot of energy, sometimes even more than just packing and sending a rocket straight from the surface.
And someone just mentioned something about 2,4km/s and it has something to do with the station and the counterweighth and construction... ugh.
The guys on the SE project rely on magical breakthroughs. If you count on incremental breakthroughs, then their timeline is pretty optimistic.
And then comes the entire government vs. private corporation and economic issues. Let's see something
1. It should be located on equator. If it's being built on the ground, well, urrr, where? If on sea (seems like a wise plan), would it be on international waters or some country's waters. Someone pointed out that a potential place would be somewhere near Galapagos islands..
2. It costs. A lot. Research + development + building + getting the resources + fixing mistakes + manpower + protection... That's a nice sum.
3. It must be protected, and it costs.
4. It must pay itself back, ESPECIALLY if it's a private venture.
5. Why would a government protect it unless they had a substantial say on how it is run + nice portion of profits?
6. urgh my head