Saturday, November 30, 2019
Mining In Sapce Essays - Spaceflight, Outer Space, Moon,
  Mining In Sapce    On December 10, 1986 the Greater New York Section of the   American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and   the engineering section of the New York Academy of Sciences   jointly presented a program on mining the planets. Speakers were   Greg Maryniak of the Space Studies Institute (SSI) and Dr.  Carl   Peterson of the Mining and Excavation Research Institute of   M.I.T.      Maryniak spoke first and began by commenting that the   quintessential predicament of space flight is that everything   launched from Earth must be accelerated to orbital velocity.   Related to this is that the traditional way to create things in   space has been to manufacture them on Earth and then launch them   into orbit aboard large rockets.  The difficulty with this   approach is the huge cost-per-pound of boosting anything out of   this planet's gravity well. Furthermore, Maryniak noted, since   (at least in the near to medium term) the space program must   depend upon the government for mos   t of its funding,  for this   economic drawback necessarily translates into  a  political   problem.      Maryniak continued by noting that the early settlers in   North America did not attempt to transport across the Atlantic   everything then needed to sustain them in the New World.  Rather   they brought their tools with them and constructed  their   habitats from local materials. Hence,  he suggested that the   solution to the dilemma to which he referred required not so   much a shift in technology as a shift in thinking.  Space,  he   argued, should be considered not as a vacuum, totally devoid of   everything. Rather, it should be regarded as an ocean, that is,   a hostile environment but one having resources.  Among the   resources of space, he suggested, are readily available solar   power and potential surface mines on the Moon and later other   celestial bodies as well.      The Moon, Maryniak stated, contains many useful materials.   Moreover, it is twenty-two times easi   er to accelerate a payload   to lunar escape velocity than it is to accelerate the identical   mass out of the EarthUs gravity well. As a practical matter the   advantage in terms of the energy required is even greater   because of the absence of a lunar atmosphere. Among other things   this permits the use of devices such  as  electromagnetic   accelerators (mass drivers) to launch payloads from the MoonUs   surface.      Even raw Lunar soil is useful as shielding for space   stations and other space habitats.  At present,  he noted,   exposure to radiation will prevent anyone for spending a total   of more than six months out of his or her entire lifetime on the   space station. At the other end of the scale, Lunar soil can be   processed into its constituent materials. In between steps are   also of great interest. For example, the MoonUs soil is rich in   oxygen, which makes up most of the mass of water and rocket   propellant. This oxygen could be RcookedS out of the Lunar soil   .   Since most of the mass of the equipment which would be necessary   to accomplish this would consist of relatively low technology   hardware, Maryniak suggested the possibility that at least in   the longer term the  extraction  plant  itself  could  be   manufactured largely on the Moon. Another possibility currently   being examined is the manufacture of glass from Lunar soil and   using it as construction material.  The techniques involved,   according to Maryniak, are crude but effective. (In answer to a   question posed by a member of the audience after the formal   presentation, Maryniak stated that he believed the brittle   properties of glass could be overcome by using glass-glass   composites. He also suggested yet another possibility, that of   using Lunar soil as a basis of concrete.)      One possible application of such Moon-made glass would be   in glass-glass composite beams. Among other things, these could   be employed as structural elements in a solar power sate   llite   (SPS). While interest in the SPS has waned in this country,  at   least temporarily, it is a major focus of attention in the   U.S.S. R. , Western Europe and Japan. In particular, the Soviets   have stated that they will build an SPS by the year 2000   (although they plan on using Earth launched materials. Similarly   the Japanese are conducting SPS related sounding rocket tests.   SSI studies have suggested that more than 90%,  and perhaps    
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