Hiya guys, a bit OT here but still related to the SMAC SP...
Here's a quote from the "Focus" magazine, UK
So what do you think? This is almost EXACT description of the Space Elevator from SMAC (an anchored asteroid, etc.) - could it be something there? I future catching up with today, sci-fi catching up with reality?
Here's a quote from the "Focus" magazine, UK
"Taking a trip to the top"
You're taking the lift to outer space. You climb in, press 'top' and off you go. At your juorney's end, you step out into space and weightlessness. Planet Earth is a blue globe beneath you and the stars look so close you could touch them.
Sounds crazy, but members of the Advanced Projects office at Nasa are working on the idea. By the beginning of the next century, they predict that we may be sending equipment and people into space - not by rocket or even by a space plane, but in electromagnetic vehicles, travelling along a cable made from an incredibly strong but weightless carbon material known as buckytubes.
The space elevator was first imagined by Russian space pionner Konstantin Tsiolkovsky at the beginning of the 20th century. The modern incarnation calls for the construction of a 50km tower somewhere on the equator, because this lines up perfectly with the so-called geostationary orbit, 36,000km above the planet. At this height, a satellite orbits Earth once every 24 hours, thus appearing to 'hover' over a single spot on the Earth's surface. The cable would reach from the tower to geostationary orbit and be anchored to an asteroid, specially moved into orbit around the Earth as a counterbalance. The orbital motion of the asteroid would keep the cable taut.
Would-be travellers should take sandwichess as a ride up to geostationary orbit would take around five hours - even though the lift-cars, should they get off the ground, are planned to be travelling at thousands of kilometres an hour.
You're taking the lift to outer space. You climb in, press 'top' and off you go. At your juorney's end, you step out into space and weightlessness. Planet Earth is a blue globe beneath you and the stars look so close you could touch them.
Sounds crazy, but members of the Advanced Projects office at Nasa are working on the idea. By the beginning of the next century, they predict that we may be sending equipment and people into space - not by rocket or even by a space plane, but in electromagnetic vehicles, travelling along a cable made from an incredibly strong but weightless carbon material known as buckytubes.
The space elevator was first imagined by Russian space pionner Konstantin Tsiolkovsky at the beginning of the 20th century. The modern incarnation calls for the construction of a 50km tower somewhere on the equator, because this lines up perfectly with the so-called geostationary orbit, 36,000km above the planet. At this height, a satellite orbits Earth once every 24 hours, thus appearing to 'hover' over a single spot on the Earth's surface. The cable would reach from the tower to geostationary orbit and be anchored to an asteroid, specially moved into orbit around the Earth as a counterbalance. The orbital motion of the asteroid would keep the cable taut.
Would-be travellers should take sandwichess as a ride up to geostationary orbit would take around five hours - even though the lift-cars, should they get off the ground, are planned to be travelling at thousands of kilometres an hour.
Comment