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Space Elevators Maybe Closer To Reality Than Imagined
Spacedaily ^ | 7/22/03 | Richard Perry

Posted on 07/25/2003 3:53:49 PM PDT by Brett66

Space Elevators Maybe Closer To Reality Than Imagined

by Richard Perry
Los Angeles - Jul 22, 2003
Space elevators have an image problem, mainly due to two prominent science fiction novels. They appear either ungainly impossible, or so potentially dangerous to the planet itself you would never dream of building one. With the science now indicating that they are potentially near-term transport systems, it's time to review the fiction in relation to the possible reality.

Three publications by Pearson in 1975/6/7 and work done by Moravec and published in the Journal of the Astronautical Sciences in 1977 were enough to prompt Arthur C Clarke to write "The Fountains of Paradise" and Charles Sheffield "The Web Between the Worlds" - both published in 1979.

Clarke wrote of a world developed to a point where the weather systems could be controlled to produce designer-sunsets. A lone architect designs a 40,000km elevator consisting of four tubes. With a pair each for up and down travel, and regenerative breaking used to minimize the power losses.

The first attempt to lower a wire to Earth fails when it gets entangled, and the design is changed to that of an inverted square tower. A small iron asteroid is moved into Earth orbit to act as a counterweight. The four sides of the track will feature superconducting cables backed by fusion power generators.

Ultimately, the tower stands for 1500yrs, growing to be 500m on a side with a city built at the 1500km level. Half a billion people eventually settle in orbit for a zero-g lifestyle.

In a later printing, Clarke claims his inspiration came from much earlier articles from 1966, but the resurgence of interest and writing prior to 1979 was timely. He also says that he may have been too conservative, and that the tower may be a 21st century achievement. The latest research proposes 'early' 21st century.

Red Mars
The next great opinion-forming novel was "Red Mars", by Kim Stanley Robinson in 1992. A captured asteroid is mined using nanotechnology to extend a graphite cable 37,000km down to the surface.

Elevator cars take several days to make the journey, and are thirty stories high. But the main image from this incarnation is when the cable is brought down by revolutionary action. It twists around the planet at 21,000km per hour, with horrific consequences.

"Red Mars" was part of a trilogy. In "Green Mars", a replacement cable is made using Carbon Nanotubes from another captured asteroid. Cars travel up and down the cable at the same time to minimize energy losses. It's no coincidence that both these cables are called 'Clarke'.

The "The Fountains of Paradise" elevator is used to promote the concept that many people would wish to travel to, and even live-in, low Earth orbit. In "Red Mars", the cable is the main transport system, and seen as an essential 'umbilical cord' for the new colony.

Tower of Babel
Space tethers have been discussed in international workshops annually since 1983, and by the time that "Red Mars" was written had identified the issues of material strength and production.

However, even as late as 1999, these workshops were becoming confused in their own clouds of science and fiction. The Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether "Space Elevator" Concepts, held in June 1999 at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, for instance. The history section of the conference report tries to claim that the origins of space elevators could be traced back to Genesis 11.3 and references to the Tower of Babel.

They also concentrated on the non-fixed tethers, which do not go all the way to the Earth's surface and consequently require mach 16 aircraft vehicles to reach them. Even more worryingly, they considered the idea of building tall towers - up to 50km in height.

The significant point here is that as late as 1999, the materials issue had been acknowledged, but the thought processes had been allowed to dream back into 1950's style fiction. Basic desk research shows that the Tower of Babylon dates back to the time of King Nebuchadnezzar II who lived from 605-562 BC and rebuilt it to stand 295 feet high. It was nothing more then a ziggurat, honoring the god Marduk.

Clearly, the scientific thinking on space elevators had broken down and a more rational appraisal of the technology was long overdue.

Tapes and Lifters
The NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) commissioned Dr Bradley C Edwards to study all aspects of the construction and operation of a space elevator, and Phase I of the report was published in late 2002.

The report very specifically addresses design and operations, which had until then escaped close scrutiny.

Firstly, the elevator would not be a cable. It starts as a 1-micron thick piece of tape 91,000km long, tapering from 5cm wide at the Earth's surface to 11.5cm wide near the middle. This tape would be taken up by shuttle together with some booster rockets. It would then be 'flown-down' to the surface whilst the booster rockets provide the required counterbalance beyond geosynchronous orbit.

Centripetal force throws the higher part of the tape away from the Earth, whilst the effect of gravity on the lower mass of the tape keeps it in tension. This first link is capable of supporting 1238kg before breaking.

That's enough to allow more 'lifters' to add additional tapes to increase the strength of the elevator to a useful amount. This takes a total of 207 lifters and nearly two and a half years to complete. In its final form, each new lifter is capable of carrying 13,000kg and then adding their own mass to that of the counterweight when their job is done.

Production Issues
Carbon NanoTubes are proposed to be the main material for the tape. These were first produced in 1991 (the year before "Red Mars" was published), with 3cm ropes being produced by 1998. The strength of these laboratory-produced NaanoTubes confirmed people's predictions that this material would have the strength that a space elevator would require.

Moving asteroids around the solar system is not a requirement for a space elevator, you can 'build' the counterweight using your own construction equipment. By flying the tape all the way down to the ground you do not need tall towers and fast aircraft to connect to your orbital transport system.

A main concern is how to produce 91,000km long tapes, when the present capability is only a few centimeters. The tapes they have defined in this study are Carbon NanoTube/expoxy composites. Standard composites use these in a 60/40 ration, but this design proposes only a 98/2 ratio to minimize the mass of epoxy required - the rest would be bare Nanotubes, required to be at least a centimeter in length. This reduces the design issues to the high-volume production of NanoTubes and how to operate the elevator itself.

Destruction
The study highlights most of the risks that can be identified. Meteor strikes, hurricanes, terrorist attack, even to the falling of the ribbon itself.

In "Red Mars", the falling cable causes destruction, but with this design all you get is thousands of miles of carbon-based tape fluttering to the ground at the speed of a sheet of newspaper. Hurricanes are avoided by careful selection of the ground site, which also addresses the lighting strike risk.

A damaged cable ribbon is intended to be capable of in-situ repair, whereas a broken one only causes inconvenience until a replacement length can be flown down. If lifters become detached from the ribbon then parachutes or re-entry vehicle solutions are required.

Power Systems
For powering the elevator, Clarke had to bring in nuclear fusion and superconductors. This NIAC study proposes that power requirements for the initial deployment of the tape would be minimal and met by solar arrays or batteries. The deployment itself would actually generate excess power.

The report mentions the very problems that affected the Clarke cable - those of a tangled cable as it is deployed at the rate of 200km per hour, and identifies the need for appropriate mechanical control of the tension.

The lifters that climb the tape to add new strands are powered by beaming power onto their solar panels. With this and additional power coming from the locomotive system beyond geosynchronous orbit, getting rid of excess power is actually more of an issue. This technology is under development by several companies.

So no exotic power systems are required for the construction or operation of the cable, and much of the technologies required either already exist or are being worked on as near-term objectives. Such a system is highly scaleable. Once in place, a space elevator can be used to build another, thereby increasing capacity in a predictable manner.

One of the aspects of the elevator in "Red Mars" is that it had to oscillate to avoid hitting the moon Phobos. This design identifies a similar need to avoid low Earth orbit satellites and space debris. The solution is to ensure that there is adequate warning to move the elevator, and using a sea-based anchor station to do this.

Real World Numbers
Taking the design process to the ultimate stage, that of time and cost, reveals some real-world numbers. The first cable would cost around $40billion (50% of that being contingency), whilst a second cable would cost only $14billion. The construction time for the first elevator is scheduled to take 10 years, with another ten elevators built in the following decade.

However, there have been lots of changes since the report was written. A current program is $7-10B, with a 15-year cycle to build. That assumes 2 years of research into the material sciences, with some additional testing and research on other aspects. After 3 years of design and engineering, the actual "cutting metal" and building of parts for the system will begin. That will take another 7 years, and then 3 years for launching, on orbit assembly, and final integration.

They take the opportunity to propose how to make use of this space asset, with a large space station capable of housing hundreds of people, and the construction of a Martian elevator on Earth. It would be lifted into Earth orbit and then thrown onward to Mars itself to allow for unmanned and later manned exploration. No great detail, simply a possible roadmap for the use to which tethers can be put for the next fifty years.

The space elevator has been a concept ahead of its time for too long and the implications of mass access to Earth orbit and beyond need to be considered. The remaining work of the report's writers is to further refine their studies, whilst existing commercial industry works on the production related issues.

In terms of funding, an elevator is not outside the realms of commercial business, although the business case for it needs to be confirmed. At present, this may be simply put - whoever owns the first space elevator will control economic access to space for a long time to come.

Already the commercial development of space elevators has begun. LiftPort is a new group of companies that has sprung into being as a direct result of this study. The rest as they say, is future.

Richard Perry is a director of Transorbital Inc Member of the Moon Society and the National Space Society


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Technical
KEYWORDS: elevator; future; goliath; hinduropetrick; indianropetrick; magicropetrick; nasa; space; spaceelevator; spaceexploration
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To: plusones; dr_lew
If you're really interested in the answer, click here:

Chapter 1: A Space Elevator?

It's a long article, but it provides a lot of missing details.

81 posted on 07/25/2003 9:01:45 PM PDT by Brett66
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To: boris
It is the only technically-feasible method for making the human race a 'spacefaring' civilization

That so?

82 posted on 07/25/2003 9:41:13 PM PDT by Tree of Liberty
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To: Arkie2
There are only short time horizons among the general contractors (the big aerospace companies) and only the generals have the capability to do any kind of serious space work.

In other words, the commercial aerospace industry, when working on its own dime, develops only to present market demands. It doesn't anticpate paradigm shifts, it acts on them when proven. Hence Boeing moving from the Sonic Cruiser (who knows if passengers and carriers want a much faster subsonic plane?) to the 7E7 (everyone knows that passengers care about the environment and carriers care about lower fuel costs).

The A380 is the reductio ad absurdem of this principal -- a plane which will be in its core operating years in the 2010s and 2020s, built in the 2000s, to solve a 1990s problem (slot-impacted Asian airports), with 1980s technology.

I'm much more optimistic about other aerospace innovations. Even 2 or 3 years after its publication, James Fallows' piece in the Atlantic on the coming revolution in general aviation (near-idiot-proof $400,000 twin-jet 4- and 6-seater planes with 2000nm ranges, with nearly every upper middle class family able to buy in on a fractional basis) is something people still talking about as being the place that will make everyone a lot of money if they can figure out how to get there.
83 posted on 07/25/2003 10:22:42 PM PDT by only1percent
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To: King Prout
don't these things by definition HAVE TO BE on the Equator?

No, and I am now buying up as much land as I can on my island, which is the CLOSEST US Territory located nearest the Equator. I will soon be as rich as Bill Gates!

Ha Ha Ha!

84 posted on 07/26/2003 1:54:52 AM PDT by Experiment 6-2-6 (Meega, Nala Kweesta!!!!)
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To: only1percent
Too many trees. You're not seeing the forest. Too bad.
85 posted on 07/26/2003 4:08:08 AM PDT by Arkie2 (It's a literary fact that the number of words written will grow exponentially to fill the space avai)
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To: RightWhale
People passengers will never ride this. It's for freight only. Too slow, way too slow.

I'd ride it if it had a good view and nice accomodations on the way up. It could be a vertical hotel.
86 posted on 07/26/2003 7:16:49 AM PDT by aruanan
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To: Tree of Liberty
"That so?"

"It is a long way from Star Trek, but teleportation - the disembodiment of an object in one location and its reconstruction in another - has been successfully carried out in a physics lab in Australia.

Scientists at the Australian National University (ANU) made a beam of light disappear in one place and reappear in another a short distance away."

I call these 'stupid physicist tricks' which are ultimately sterile and serve no purpose other than to get the prof his 15 minutes of fame.

"We teleported a photon!"

"How do you know?"

"Well, it vanished over here and an identical one appeared over there!"

"Wow."

"Well, we did sort of have a spare photon available over there...but it's the same photon, for sure!"

"How do you know? Did you paint the first one blue or something?"

Idiotic.

--Boris

87 posted on 07/26/2003 7:56:05 AM PDT by boris (The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
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To: Experiment 6-2-6
"don't these things by definition HAVE TO BE on the Equator?"

No.

Yes, they do, and I'd like to see your proof that they do not.

--Boris

88 posted on 07/26/2003 7:59:13 AM PDT by boris (The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
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To: edwin hubble
"Because of Earth's rotation there is lower net 'gravity' at the equator than at the pole. Also, the equator is farther from the center than the pole, due to the shape of the Earth."

What a gormless answer from someone with your nick.

Now try again. Above which locii can geostationary satellites "hover"? I am looking for [hint] a certain line of latitude.

--Boris

89 posted on 07/26/2003 8:01:23 AM PDT by boris (The deadliest Weapon of Mass Destruction in History is a Leftist With a Word Processor)
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Comment #90 Removed by Moderator

Comment #91 Removed by Moderator

To: boris
These were first produced in 1991 (the year before "Red Mars" was published), with 3cm ropes being produced by 1998.

Do you know much about the nanotube technology mentioned in teh article? My 10 minutes of research on the web says these ropes are at best a few millimeters long.

92 posted on 07/26/2003 9:39:07 AM PDT by Straight Vermonter (...they led my people astray, saying, "Peace!" when there was no peace -- Ezekiel 13:10)
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To: Brett66
Elevator cars take several days to make the journey, and are thirty stories high. But the main image from this incarnation is when the cable is brought down by revolutionary action. It twists around the planet at 21,000km per hour, with horrific consequences.

This is the most prominent problem with the Skyhook. It would make an irresistable terrorist target.

93 posted on 07/26/2003 9:41:19 AM PDT by Lazamataz (PROUDLY POSTING WITHOUT READING THE ARTICLE SINCE 1999!)
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To: GodBlessPeggyNoonan
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_Spatial_Guyanais
94 posted on 07/26/2003 11:29:27 AM PDT by Museum Twenty
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To: plusones
Higher is slower, as quantified by Kepler's Third Law. This can be derived very simply by balancing the gravitational centripetal force with the inertial centrifugal force.

However, you can place a tethered pair of satellites, one above and one below the geosynchronous altitude, so that together they form a single elongated geosynchronous satellite, and this tether can be arbitrarily long, with due adjustments in position. I think the configuration is stable because the vertical orientation minimizes the total energy of the tethered pair.

95 posted on 07/26/2003 11:49:02 AM PDT by dr_lew
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To: Brett66
Clearly, the scientific thinking on space elevators had broken down and a more rational appraisal of the technology was long overdue

NASA'a problem in a nutshell.

Bureaucrats are incapable of rational design. NASA is infested with them. Privatization of NASA and the termination of the bureaucrat hegemony is our only hope.

96 posted on 07/26/2003 1:12:03 PM PDT by jimkress (Go away Pat Go away!)
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To: boris
Boris,

"What a gormless answer from someone with your nick."

Come on now, Boris. Please read my post #73 again.
I was responding to a question posed by Arkie2:
"Do elevators move slower and require more energy in Reykjavik than in Brazil? Just wondered. "

Answer: in a word, yes.


Now, If you have quite separate question about latitudes
and locations with respect to local conditions in the crust:

Clarke devotes a full chapter to this in Fountains of Paradise. After a lot of groundwork, he ends up with the elevator not on the equator but in Sri Lanka.
Many complex calculations involving resonance.

He finds the equatorial mountains (Africa, the Andes, etc) unstable in gravitational resonance. It's been some years since I've looked at it.


97 posted on 07/26/2003 6:22:05 PM PDT by edwin hubble
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To: Cachelot
Only Monkey Cloud can speak for all humanity.

Are you referring to the SGOTUN?

98 posted on 07/26/2003 6:29:21 PM PDT by reg45
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To: yooper
There ain't enough of it around to pay for this tower.

A good argument, but not the final word. Wealth grows. Twenty years from now, advances in technology and increases in total wealth may bring it within reach.

Forty years from now, it will definitely be within reach. Whether or not anyone will bother is another question.

99 posted on 07/26/2003 10:12:28 PM PDT by irv
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To: Brett66
No way. Never will happen.
100 posted on 07/28/2003 6:17:01 AM PDT by techcor (Admin Moderator wannabe)
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