Talk:Colonising Space/Access to space
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< Talk:Colonising Space
Revision as of 20:57, 17 April 2012 by Balatro (Talk | contribs) (@CharlesC - Why I think space guns can be a breakthrough for cheap manned flight)
Notes removed, but have valuable info for a proper write-up of the topic of access to space
...we need an efficient, reliable way of getting large amounts of material beyond the Earth's gravitational pull. While incremental improvements in rocket technology may suffice, several very different ways of getting off the planet have been proposed.
- Multi-stage rocket
- Aircraft piggy-back
- Scramjet / rocket hybrid, such as the single stage to orbit (SSTO) Skylon launch vehicle
- Space elevator . Picture a satellite tethered to the Earth — a large weight in geosynchronous orbit is attached by a strong, long, light cable to an anchor-point on the planet's surface. Robots could climb this cable, carrying payloads into space. This is expected to reduce the cost of transporting a pound of material into space to $100 [1], which would completely open up space to all kinds of new ventures. However, there are still many challenges to be overcome before a space elevator is viable: the robots that ascend the cable need a reliable power source, there are dangers of the cable being snapped by lightning strikes, asteroids or orbiting debris and there is doubt as to whether carbon nanotube cables can be made strong enough to withstand the tension generated by such an enormous structure.
- A launch loop (illustrated here) is perhaps more feasible than a space elevator as it requires no new materials. It is essentially a conveyor belt to space. It consists of a loop of iron cable anchored on the surface of the Earth at one end, and at a height of 125km above the Earth at the other end. The loop passes through electromagnetic bearings at each end. These bearings spin the cable at high speeds, which creates a centrifugal force that lifts the cable up into an enormous loop, the top half of which is in space. Payloads can use magnets to attach themselves to the cable and ride it into space.
- Space guns like HARP .
- Linear motor assisted launch from high altitude terrain
About the space gun
A large fraction of the weight of a manned vessel is fuel. If we launch this fuel (and any other bulky stuff) cheaply from a giant gun, astronauts can travel in smaller rockets. The less mass that is launched by rocket, the cheaper manned spaceflight becomes. This is the primary market that Quicklaunch Inc are targeting; theey want to launch fuel payloads to be picked up in orbit by other spacecraft. --Balatro 21:57, 17 April 2012 (CEST)