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Space

NASA On Mining Extraterrestrial Sources 214

FortKnox writes "Looks like something from the game "Homeworld", but NASA discusses mining ore from planets/asteroids or any other source of "Cosmic Dirt"." I remember debating this idea in high school debate - it's a wonderful idea.
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NASA On Mining Extraterrestrial Sources

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  • This has profound implications for new ventures into the wonderful world of hallucinations.
  • by orac2 ( 88688 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:05PM (#2564610)
    I'm some shameless self promotion, /. reader's may be interested to read this article [ieee.org] by Mark Ingebretson in August's issue IEEE Spectrum on the topic - he talks about how water, not metal, is the most likely first choice for a mining economy.

    • This article also talks about one of the biggest advantages of mining asteroids - getting mass (ore, water, aggregate) off an asteroid is trivial in terms of energy and thrust required. If you're looking to build spaceships or space stations, there's a big advantage in using the materials already up there instead of bringing them out of the Earth's gravity well. The Moon and Mars have the same advantage to a lesser degree.
      • Heavier elements (metals) are more likely to be concnetrated closer to the sun (Mercury and Venus) and lighter elements (hydrogen, etc.) will be more likely to be located further out (note gas giants are the outermost planets formed along with our solar system-- Pluto being explicitly included as a captured object).

        Some iron, maybe a little nickel would be available. However, I think that water (being lighter) would also the first target because it gives a lot of versatility for a mission, from life support (O2 and H20) to propulsion.
      • One issue is that whatever you mine will need to be refined to make it useful. You don't get pure chrome-vanadium steel asteroids. And refining requires some way of getting stuff to separate. Currently the easiest way of doing this is gravity. Centrifuges are used, but only where the quantities are small - a centrifuge large enough to produce industrial quantities of steel would meet some very real physical limitations. And electrolysis can be used, but it's usually significantly more expensive than other methods, since you have to literally melt the ore. So the Moon or Mars may be useful, in that they may have sufficient gravity to allow easy refining using Earth-developed techniques, whilst only having a small gravity well so that getting stuff in and out isn't energy-expensive.

        And in fact, the Moon may be the ideal place to have a first go at building a space elevator - IIRC the mass of a space elevator structure decreases as the cube of the gravitational force. So a gravity of 1/6 G would give you a space elevator 1/216 of the size required on Earth. This not only makes it easier to get the stuff to build it, but also means that some of the insanely-difficult engineering problems for Earth's space elevator (the problems of the lower structure supporting that mass) may simply not be necessary.

        Grab.
    • I would be karma whoring, but I'm maxed anyway.

      Still check out NeoFuel [neofuel.com]. It talks about using water from NEO's and/or the moon for space travel/mining. Looks quite practical.
  • In this [yahoo.com] recent article, Honda said it had contracted Asimo out to do receptionist work for IBM. Working as a miner would be so much cooler. With the miner's union on the decline for the last 50 years, this could really be a killer blow :)

    BEN
  • right... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by NeoTomba ( 462540 )
    "As example, processing of Martian resources to churn out fuel for a Mars sample return mission could be later scaled up to support human expeditionary crews on the red planet."

    Wonderful idea or not, we're decades away from this. Right now, we can barely get people to the moon. We managed to get a tiny little explorer to the moon. Now, they're already thinking about putting PEOPLE on mars?

    Take things one step at a time, I say. Let's wait a while, allow the technology to improve, and then evaluate what to do once we can place people on other planets.

    I'm sure we can come up with far better things to do if we could get humans on Mars. And I pray it doesn't involve stripping the planet of its natural resources like we're doing here on Earth. I hope by the time this becomes reality, we're better at drawing resources from nature (i.e. solar power) and that we won't have to resort to strip mining on other planets just to keep up our quality of life here on Earth.

    -NeoTomba
    • Wonderful idea or not, we're decades away from this

      Of course, this is exactly what NASA is good at. Writing huge documents which are totally impossible to implement for at least 30 years. In 5 years time, they'll rewrite it from scratch, because all of the assumptions in the orignal document are now wrong. Repeat until you have 15 versions of 100,000 page reports.

    • Re:right... (Score:2, Insightful)

      by jafac ( 1449 )
      Sitting back and waiting is not what improves technology. Europe did a lot of sitting back and waiting for a few hundred years during the dark ages.

      Technology improves when you invest in it and use it.

      Personally, I'd rather we strip mine the fuck out of Mars and the Moon than our one and only home. Terraforming or no.
    • Re:right... (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Dastardly ( 4204 )
      I just don't see mining other planets to return material to Earth being economically feasible. Launch costs are still a problem. Especially from Mars, maybe the moon could send material to Earth. Probably the only economically feasible space mining for return to Earth would be mining an asteroid after it has been moved into orbit around earth or the moon. But, that kind of capability is much further out.

      The primary use of space mining would be to provide resources for continued exploration of space. Getting people and equipment to Mars and the Outer Planet and moons would be much less costly if a lot of the material could be picked up form the Moon, Earth Orbit, or Mars. Currently, a trip to Mars requires launching enough fuel to get to Mars, food for the entire trip, and all equipment.

      Let's say then that the Moon has been developed into a space pit stop. With facilities for manufacturing and storing fuel from lunar material.
      facilities for growing and processing food for a Mars trip. So from, earth we just need to launch the vehicle, people, and enough fuel and supplies to get to the mooon. The crew lands on the moon picks up enough fuel and supplies to get to Mars, and only has to overcome lunar gravity and earth's gravity 300,000 miles away.

      The next step would be to have a reusable Earth/Moon transport, and manufacture a Moon/Mars vehicle that would never return to Earth, but would be maintained, fueled and supplied from the Moon. The step after that would be to completely manufacture supply and fueld non Earth/Moon space vehicles on the moon. The nect step would be the development of the space elevator such that the people and what little couldn't be manufactured in space could be moved to geosynchronous orbit. And, from their be transported via lunar manufactured spacecraft to the moon for refuel and resupply. And, the next step from their is to mvoe resource rich asteroids and comets (for water) into Earth, lunar, Mars, Ganymede orbit as orbital pit stops to reduce the need for a space craft to enter a gravity well for resupply, refit, and/or refuel.

      Basically, what it comes down to is that human exploration and development of space needs to involve planet/moon hopping. First, develop facilities on the moon, from there do the same to a martian moon, from their hit Mars, the asteroid belt and Jupiters moons. Then, eliminate the moon from the equation as much as possible and make an asteroid in lunar or earth orbit the way station from Earth to the rest of the solar system.

      Any other method is just not efficient, and requires too much stuff to be launched from Earth.

      Dastardly
  • I know some people might bemoan this, but personally, I like the idea. Once we can get the lawyers to agree on who owns what, and why, it will allow eventually lead to a greater supply of raw materials, and thus cheaper goods. It will also allow for the environmental hassles of mining on Earth to be less of a factor.

    I mean, it beats starting a land war of mineral deposits.

    • Re:Mines in Space (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Jburkholder ( 28127 )
      Surely the primary focus of "Exterrestrial Mining" would be to produce raw materials needed for space exploration and colonization, not just to bring it back to Earth in lieu of terrestrial sources?
      • Eventually, yes. But how do we get from here to there? Once there are space colonies and so forth being built, then it makes sense to use on-orbit materials. But I don't see any today. (The ISS doesn't count - it was made with 100% Earth materials - but maybe a future version of it would.)

        More to the point, they won't exist until after some profit comes from space to Earth to fund the development of things needed to build them. One possibility: mining platinum-group metals for use on Earth, since they are valuable in and of themselves on Earth. Leave the rock, and maybe the iron and nickel, up there for later when we get around to building colonies. But bring that shiny pricey metal down here so we can pay off our creditors today, so that we can build space colonies tomorrow!
  • If their going to go as far as start mining on Mars, then why not just colonize it and start up some industry and communities there.
    • Come to think of it, I remember hearing somewhere that aliens had once created a machine in one of the mountains on Mars that creates air but for some reason had abandoned it. If we could find that machine and turn it on... imagine... a blue sky on Mars!
    • comets (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Alien54 ( 180860 )
      If they're going to go as far as start mining on Mars, then why not just colonize it and start up some industry and communities there?

      I suspect that more resources are going to be needed. And a bit of terraforming to make it much more sustainable. You want to be able to have the thing last on it's own, sustain itself and grow.

      This gets into things like altering the paths of comets so that they crash into Mars depositing all kinds of extra water into the place. But that raises all kinds of questions. For example there is this old debate [nasa.gov] on if the earth is being constantly pelted on by mini-comets. If this is happening on Earthe, what is going on at mars?

      All kinds of things to talk about.

  • Oh wait, we saw that in Alpha Centauri. I thought we needed nanotube before we were allowed to reseach this technology.
  • by Walter Bell ( 535520 ) <(wcbell) (at) (bellandhorowitz.com)> on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:11PM (#2564670) Homepage
    One of my co-workers was telling me that NASA is also actively researching the possible drilling for petroleum on other planets (Mercury comes to mind, IIRC). He said that there are a lot of ways that "fossil" fuels could have been generated on other planets through chemical reactions between the soil and the atmosphere and the responsible research group would like send a few probes out in the coming years to investigate the possibility.

    Although an incentive for continued reliance on petroleum is a Bad Thing(tm) for the environment, alternative energy research, and noise, it is nice to see that there may be a breakthrough that helps ease our pain when we run out of oil on Earth.

    ~wally
    • Drilling for petroleum is inherently stupid when you've got those giant balls of petrochemicals orbiting the sun.
    • Idiocy (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      A stupid idea! The energy required to get the oil out of the gravity well of whatever
      planet it's on (Titan is a likely place to find it) and back to Earth far exceeds the
      energy content of the oil itself. No way is NASA seriously considering it - and if it
      is then I'm going to have to start working somewhere else, because it must have been taken over by idiots.
    • Yeah,there are also huge oxygen reserves under Mars by which you can conveniently burn your fossil fuel. I also heard there are massive clue wells under frozen plains of charon. They are very costly to access and carry but it might be feasible to transport those resources to earth because of high demand.
    • At first i was going to blast you for being a troll, but then i realized that you may be right despite yourself. There is quite a bit of "fossil" fuel out in space, but its not petroleum. In fact i would wager your friend never mentioned the P word, and im absolutely certain that NASA didnt. you see, Natural gas is a so called "fossil" fuel, and natural gas is almost 100%, you guessed it, Methane. And Methane is one of the more common compunds in the solar system, since the four hydrogens and one carbon can get together all by themselves without any interference by life. In fact the first atmosphere of earth is thought to have been methane instead of oxygen and nitrogen. So your friend is right, there are fossil fuels out there, specifically in comets and cometary remnants, but dont expect oil. And dont expect to get rich mining it either, currently we have more methane than we know what to do with, it bubbbles up with oil, and most drilling rigs, at least in the ocean, burn it off, since its too expensive to capture and ship.
  • Good cuz I've been in need of some dilithium crystals and I can't find em anywhere...
  • mine WHAT? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Exmet Paff Daxx ( 535601 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:12PM (#2564678) Homepage Journal
    I just read the article, and the big unanswered question is: WHAT are you going to mine?

    Taylor explained that work should focus on the "unusual economics" of planetary ores, including the relationship of lunar and Martian development to each other.

    Unusual economics is a good euphimism for "ungodly expensive", especially in transport costs. Whatever we're mining, it would have to be extremely valuable per ounce, right?

    Aggregate will be an important resource on both the Moon and Mars. Here on Earth, it is the most mined material in the United States, at some 2.3 billion tons a year. It is used for roads, concrete, bridges, roofing materials, and glass

    Aggregate? Not Iridium, Gold, Plutonium, Scandium, or "rare earth" metals so expensive we haven't even heard of them? AGGREGATE? Rock?

    I'm sorry, I don't buy it. Space travel costs are in the billions of dollars per ton right now. A metric ton of aggregate crap... you can mine out of my back yard.

    I must be missing something.
    • Re:mine WHAT? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by SirSlud ( 67381 )
      > Space travel costs are in the billions of dollars per ton

      Isn't that because of takeoff? Once you get something going in space (ie, out of gravities way), it's cheaper to move shit in space than on earth. Basically, you get to stop paying tariffs to our good friends friction and air resistance.

      I suppose once you start saying that you're going to mine the galaxy, you've already got some sort of low-cost method of escaping earths atmosphere, a la space elevator, or maybe even anti-gravity.

      Anyone here read James Blish's City in the Stars? (I think thats what it was called)
    • > I must be missing something.
      You're apparently missing that the aggregate would be used for development on Mars and Luna.

      The article reads: "an important resource on both the Moon and Mars", not "from both the Moon and Mars"

      I don't know about you, but the second they build the first settlement, I'm findin' me nineteen men and twenty women, renaming my palm pilot's build of Eliza Mike, and hopping on the first ship up.

      There are many things more important than shipping the minerals to Earth
    • The real vaule of this in the next century is probably its use in space colonies or probes themselves (e.g. powerstats or those giant mirrors for making crops grow in Siberia). Except for perhaps dropping an asteroid loaded with platnium into tje Mojave, you're dead on for the expenses.
    • They aren't talking about mining aggregate and shipping it to earth. The idea is to mine aggregate on mars and use it to build structures on mars instead of shipping building materials to mars.
    • "Space travel costs are in the billions of dollars per ton right now."

      Which is exactly why they don't want to use stuff from Earth. These mined materials are going to be used to fabricate items on the Moon and Mars.
    • by WolfWithoutAClause ( 162946 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:51PM (#2565100) Homepage
      "I'm sorry, I don't buy it. Space travel costs are in the billions of dollars per ton right now. A metric ton of aggregate crap... you can mine out of my back yard."

      Actually the costs to LAUNCH is "only" ~$2600/kg. That's $2.6 million/tonne, that's 3 orders of magnitude less than you quoted. And although that still sounds expensive, it usually turns out that what is launched costs 5-10x more than that to develop and build; so launch costs aren't the issue.

      But that's launch. There's many reasons to think that space transport is going to be many times cheaper than that- if you use space resources to move around; IN space, rather than getting INTO space, the costs are much, much lower. For one thing, reusable interplanetary craft are pretty trivial to design- fully reusable launch vehicles are harder.

      Incidentally, some materials are 'ungodly' expensive. Check out the price of platinum group materials- they run at over $500/ounce.

      Oh yeah, BTW the underlying cost of launching something into space are under $10/kg. That's more than the fuel costs. We're a long way from that at the moment- but from my studies, there's a pretty convincing argument that that's mainly because the launch rate is so low right now (the costs are, surprisingly, roughly fixed, and amortise across the amount of launched mass).

      I'm expecting the launch cost to go down by atleast 4x in the next ten years, and to do the same in the ten years after that. That will put Space Tourism in the ballpark of a Concorde flight.
      • Damn, $1000 a lb? what the hell are you launching on? And please, tell NASA about it. They've had a stated goal for their next generation launch vehicle of $1000 a lb. Right now it costs about $10,000 a lb to launch on the space shuttle, or about $3-4000 a lb to launch on an unmanned rocket.

        And although that still sounds expensive, it usually turns out that what is launched costs 5-10x
        more than that to develop and build; so launch costs aren't the issue.

        This figure is true regardless of what it costs to launch something. If it costs a dollar to launch something into orbit, it will cost about $10 to produce the thing being launched. The problem is engineering and volume. Say you have a satellite to produce. Its going to cost you $50 Million to launch it and if it broke down on orbit, it would take another launch to replace it. Youre going to be much more willing to spend alot of time and money to make darn sure the satellite will work for 10-15 years than if it cost $500 to launch it. If it cost $500 to launch a satellite, you wouldnt need to worry about station keeping, you wouldnt need to worry about rad hard hardware, you wouldnt need to worry about fault tolerent software. If it breaks, just throw another one up there. The cost of launch and the cost of satellites are linked. Launch costs cannot go down much further with current technology, any more than propeller planes can break the sound barrier. You are limited by the rocket equation. V=-g0*Isp*ln(r) where r is the ratio between the payload mass and the initial mass of the rocket. The best Isp rocket engine we can muster right now is 433 seconds. Until we can beat that and still have enough thrust to get off the ground, the current situation wil remain. We need a propulsion breakthrough, plain and simple.

        • *grin*

          Russian Proton launcher. Actually if you look closely you'll find that quite a lot of the ISS was lifted there by the Proton. There's a reason for that...

          NASA can't use the launcher directly because NASA is mostly a work creation scheme for Americans; so they end up spending orders of magnitude more for services they can get locally. It's nuts but that's politics I guess.

          >Launch costs cannot go down much further with current technology, any more than propeller planes can break
          >the sound barrier. You are limited by the rocket equation. V=-g0*Isp*ln(r) where r is the ratio between the payload mass and the
          >initial mass of the rocket.

          Oh so the costs all go into the rocket fuel? Nope. The rocket fuel costs are negligable. The costs to launch go into the armies of people that build, fuel, launch and control the rocket.

          Thing is; if the launch rate went up by an order of magnitude, how many more people would you need? Not ten times, more like twice, at most. So the cost per kg would come down by 5 times... (Actually that's partly why the Shuttle is so expensive- it was designed to launch every week- but they weren't able to in the end.)

          We don't actually need any new tech. We need to launch more.
        • Oh yeah, I just found on the web that the Energia is/was able to launch for ~$1360/kg... (88 tonne payload to LEO... whoa)
  • So how exactly would these resources be returned to earth? We're pretty good at launching big things into orbit. But I think the descent of these resources would need to be a little more controlled than MIR dropping into the ocean.

    Of course we could just drop them into the ocean, and then mine them again.
  • We could probably adapt some of our terrestial robotic mining [slashdot.org] technology for this.

    (Blatant plug, I know! :)
  • by StaticEngine ( 135635 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:14PM (#2564700) Homepage
    That's good thinking on NASA's part, because after being cooped up in a spaceship on a multi-month trip to Mars, I'd be in a mood for a few hours with any 'ore I could find.

    Ba Dum Bum.
  • by Bonker ( 243350 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:15PM (#2564714)
    ...Or any other of a hundred disasters waiting to happen.

    One of the big, big problems I see with interplanetary mining is the inherent possibilities for danger in the celestial shipment process.

    Say you mine an Iron-rich asteroid, and then send the packets of ore back home to earth via a cheap, long-trajectory orbit. How easy would it be to hijack huge chunks of ore from their trajectories and then fire them at the enemy of your choice on the planet with the aid of a rail gun.

    I'm not a engineer, but I've seen enough 'build your own railgun' pages out there to know that it would be fairly easy and cheap for any given interplanetary free-lancer to build such a weapon in orbit.

    There is also a high probability of space accidents. With all that ore just floating around, someone is bound to hit it sooner or later. Worse, suppose that the mining activities send large-enough chunks of poorly aimed metal-rich debris toward earth? Worse, suppose mining activities affect the orbit of certain Near-Earth Asteroids.

    Asteroid and Planetary mining is a very good thing, because it will help save the Earth's environment, provide massive amounts of employment and wealth on Earth. Unfortuneately, there are very serious risks that should be addressed before mining begins.
    • Hey, why bother with a railgun? If your projectile is not in a gravity well (ie, like an asteroid), all you have to do is drop it on somebody's head. Small grans of sand - nice fireworks. Suitcased sized chunks of iron - take out some cars (good luck with the guidance). Asteroid sized stuff - ever hear of that crater near Yucatan? Seen any dinosaurs lately? Nuff said.

    • Read "Moon is a harsh Mistress" by R.A. Heinlein for a Sci-fi view of this. You folks who are talking about bringing the ore back to earth seem to miss the point - it's better to keep this stuff up in orbit to you can use it instead of bringing it back to Earth. I forget the price per Kilogram of sending something up in the space shuttle, but it's something like $20,000/kg +.

      Of course, if you bang an asteroid with a nice meaty chunk of Platinum or Paladium, there's a lot of healthy uses for that back home.
      • "I forget the price per Kilogram of sending something up in the space shuttle, but it's something like $20,000/kg +."

        Yes, but the shuttle is ungodly expensive.

        The Russians launch for about $2600/kg. Also SeaLaunch (Boeing/Russian collaboration) are about that price too.
  • One constant in any mining operation is the presence of some very big, very heavy movers and diggers... would these be launched from Earth (at a crazy cost per launch pound/kilo), or built in space, for use in space? Anything less than serious mass-moving wouldn't be mining.

    Another question is whether these space resources would be used for construction up there, or sent back here... if sent back here, I can see now the inane claims of Greens that, while we'd be using less of the Earth's own bounty, we'd be dangerously adding mass to the Earth with "unknown consequences"...

    Love the earlier reference to Larry Niven... always worth going back and reading his stuff.

    • It would have to be manufactured on location. Initial equipment would have to be launched from earth, but the key is to launch just enough to make it possible to mine and manufacture the necessary equipment on location. As I have been saying all throughout this thread the point of mining and manufacturing in space and on other planets is not to send the stuff back to earth, it is to make it so earth no longer has to send as much stuff into space to accomplish something.

      The only things sent back to earth would not be raw materials, but manufactured items that could only be made under 0G.

      The rest is for launching missions to other planets, and hopefully other stars. What NASA really needs is a multi-decade(century) plan to colonize the Solar System starting with a self sustaining refuel and refit facility on the moon. Meaning a lunar food, water, oxygen, and fuel source. The next step is to develop manufacturing capability on the moon to use lunar resources to make reusable interplanetary vehicles. Then, do the same on a martian moon. Then, decide if there is any reason to set up facilities on Mars. Why try to launch stuff from Mars if you can get it from a Martian moon? Although developing Mars might be nice for the people to have solid ground under foot, a sky, gravity, etc... Next pick a jovian moon and develop food, fuel, oxygen and water resources. I think Saturn is an important target due to its lower radiation than jupiter, rings full of ice, and many moons.

      When the technology is developed, the ideal step is for conglomerations of comets and asteroids to be put in convenient orbits as refueling and refit stations for interplanetary travelers.

      The ulitmate goal of all of this is of course an interstellar colonization. Assembling a self-sustaining habitat from asteroids, comets, chunks of saturn ring ice. Outfit it with nuclear reactors and plenty of nuclear fuel and reaction mass. Then send a large group of colonists to another star, hopefully by then we have found planets capable of sustaining human life. A ship of that size, and with the capabilities inherent in building such a ship, should even be able to add additional chunks of ice and asteroids from a star as it looks for a place to set up shop permanently.

      Dastardly
  • by Tsar ( 536185 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:21PM (#2564776) Homepage Journal
    Nothing ever collected in space has ever been practically useful. Dust, rocks, etc. were only used as research material, and then only back on earch. In effect, when it comes to space travel, we've always carried a sack lunch, and tend to pack out our trash.

    In Earth's history, voyages of discovery have always taken enough supplies to get them to their destination, then they used indiginous resources to keep going. How far could Columbus (nasty Eurotrash that he was) have kept going if he'd had to get back before his food ran out?

    Mining operations in space needn't be self-sufficient to represent a new era in space exploration; they need only become marginally profitable, and we'll be over the hump. The new "New World" will begin to move past the exploration phase, and on to exploitation and settlement. Thank God we aren't carrying smallpox around anymore.
  • The article seems to make a pretty big assumption.. that it's already easy to get back and forth between large bodies in space. Only thing I saw getting close to the subject was harvesting resources on the remote site and turning it into fuel for a return trip.

    Other than that though it completely glazes over this problem. Most of our space travel right now relies on coasting around gravity fields of the sun and planets, and the result this has is that travel takes a really freaking long time. The obvious solution would be to make sure each shipment is worth the wait.. but then you run into the problems of carting an aircraft carrier sized ship around the solar system.

    Methods of gathering the resources is a good discussion to be having, but the issue of transportation is a lot more fundamental and will need to be answered first. Us humans gotta develop a way to get between earth/moon/mars with a reasonable timetable and budget before we can seriously debate the idea of mining the solar system.

    Of course one could argue that you just use the resources where you mine them and then worry about exporting the products, but that just complicates things.. at that point you not only have to worry about shipping stuff around, you have to worry about building up a full ecology at the remote site.

    And let's not forget to consider the words of whatisface in the matrix likening humans to parasites who do nothing but expand and consume. ;) Is the solar system just one big resource waiting for us to come take it.. or should we enter the ordeal of a mind to preserve something that's been there for billions of years?
    • Actually Ion drives (Hall thrusters particularly) are pretty good at interplanetary travel. They need a fair amount of power, and a moderate amount of fuel; but they get you there.

      Provided you have enough power (large solar panels or fission reactor) the're slow, but not *that* slow.

      Also see VASIMIR; but that needs very much more power, and it isn't clear that the nuclear power plant can be made light enough to make VASIMIR practical- VASIMIR uses a LOT of power.

      >Is the solar system just one big resource waiting for us to come take it.. or should we enter the
      >ordeal of a mind to preserve something that's been there for billions of years?

      The dinosaurs didn't have space flight. They died. Your choice.
  • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:22PM (#2564784) Homepage Journal
    Is that space-based mining's biggest saving comes when you build big heavy things in orbit. This is especially true of asteroid mining since you don't have to move the mass off of a planet, paying to fight gravity.

    It costs quite a bit of money just to put a pound of mass into orbit. Just looking for a quick ballpark, I found http://www.orbit6.com/et/ngfido94.htm [orbit6.com] which asserts:

    Launching the 80 tons of fuel into orbit will cost about $150 million? for one launch of a Shuttle-Derived HLV (or its Energia equivalent) or $1.5 billion if Titan IV vehicles (5 Titan IV's at $300 million each) are used (see how cost-effective developing a Heavy-Lift vehicle would be. Without a Heavy-Lift vehicle it would cost ten times as much to launch 80 tons of fuel to LEO: $150 million versus $1.5 billion. An HLV would pay back its development costs in short order).

    So it's about US$1.875M to launch one ton of mass into orbit (best case.) Therefore one ton of, say, iron in orbit is worth whatever a ton of iron is worth normally, PLUS some fraction of US$1.875M.

    If you're building things for space, the best way to go is to build them IN space, which should cut their cost dramatically. We shouldn't forget about reusing the shuttle's bigass tanks, which NASA says they can do for free, and supposedly will do for anyone who is willing to do something responsible with them. We should be thinking of ways to use those tanks to do something clever WRT space-based mining, because they're cheap. Perhaps one should build some sort of machining facility, and a smelter; Having done that it should be possible to make ISS parts or similar. This would save huge piles of money, because you only have to lift the most specialized components.

    • The problem with the tanks is that they are coated on the outside with insulation to keep the liquid hydrogen cold. The insulation fragments in orbit and becomes a major 'space junk' issue.

      I personally think the tank is a red herring. It may be that NASA won't launch very many more of them anyway- the Space Shuttle design has been outcompeted; it's just a matter of time before Space Shuttle launch vehicles are replaced, alas. Indeed, I think they MUST go, for the good of NASA and the american space industry.
  • ...is the moon. Now, IIRC, most of the problems with getting a fusion reactor (smashing atoms together) to work are solved by using Helium-3, He-3. But it's rare enough that minute quantities are sold by Us.Gov at fantastically high prices - they get it from old nuclear bombs, because a component (tritium gas) decays into He-3 (tritium has a half-life of aprox. 13 years).

    The surface of the moon is rich in He-3.

    To hear some tell it, the answer to all our energy problems is strip-mining the surface of the moon...

    • Possibly.. But the Wisconsin cheese lobbyists will never stand for it...

    • You're partly right: the deuterium-helium-3 fusion reaction has the advantage that no neutrons are produced. This reaction, however, requires higher temperatures than deuterium-tritium fusion, and is more technologically challenging than deuterium-tritium fusion.

      Having said that, I work on a fusion experiment. Its configuration is such the deuterium-helium-3 reaction may be required to make a workable reactor, and the notion of mining He-3 from the moon has been a subject of serious discussion
  • This is the basis for a bunch of stuff in Manifold Time by Stephen Baxter. He doesn't really go into much detail, but any chance I get to mention Stephen Baxter I will take.
  • It reminds ME of Niven's Known Space books. Homeworld indeed...

    I volunteer to be the first of the Belters.

  • It's even better if value is added in site, that is, if manufactured materials are produced in the same site and brought back to earth on demand. It would be useless if you would have to process it on earth, there wouldn't be enough space shuttles in the world for processing the output of a single mine.

    It would be even better if you could _consume_ it on site...
  • The point is not to return resources to Earth - it's way cheaper to just go and dig up someone's back yard and find stuff there. The point is for exploration - instead of taking everything with you, you build it when you get there. Ie, send a "seed" ship to an asteroid, and use the resources there to build a really big ship, out of a gravity well, and use it to get to a place further away. The benefit is that we didn't have to lift all the resources out of Earth's gravity well.



    The danger is that this type of system, if it was automated, could easily over-run us.

  • i ran asteroid mining too! that's before we switched to unmanned probes to pluto. both of these plans, btw, were vital to preventing the human race from being wiped out by nuclear war and/or environmental collapse.

    yep, i built super-excellent logical reasoning skills in those years.

    mod this up so other debaters can chime in.
  • Asteroids = $$$$$ (Score:5, Insightful)

    by cryptochrome ( 303529 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:34PM (#2564908) Journal
    I don't know if anyone remembers this earlier slashdot article, which also discussed the matter of mining space. It also mentioned that one near earth asteroid (NEO 3554 Amun, about 2km wide) that was worth about 20 trillion dollars [feedmag.com]. Mind you that's in today's market, but I'd say there is more than enough economic incentive to go for it. I don't understand why NASA hasn't already - just one rock could solve their many budgetary woes for years to come, would be a tremendously telegenic venture, and would stimulate practical space technologies tremendously...
    • Re:Asteroids = $$$$$ (Score:4, Informative)

      by WolfWithoutAClause ( 162946 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @03:09PM (#2565295) Homepage
      The counter argument is that the asteroid isn't much more valuable than the rock in your backyard- it has much the same abundances; although more platinum group metals.

      But the counter-counter argument is that the asteroid has something you don't have in your backyard- a continuous supply of mostly free solar energy. Smelting on the earth is enormously expensive. Smelting at an asteroid only needs a big sheet of foil and you can obtain ~5000C.

      Solar ovens give 1.6 kw/m^2. That's a lot. On earth solar power is less than 1/6 of that due to weather, oblique angles, atmospheric effects and this phenomena called 'nighttime'. 200 watts isn't much. 1.6kw is getting respectable.

      (And no- solar ovens are not hard to build- they don't require any kind of high precision; but they are not used much on earth chiefly because of weather and mounting/pointing issues, in zero gravity this is not an issue.)
      • a continuous supply of mostly free solar energy.

        You neglected one very important fact in your calculations. Yes, there is more solar energy on an asteroid that is near the Earth, but this energy is useless. There's a lot of energy in the core of the Earth too, but that's also useless for the purpose of power generation. There is no convenient method of transporting the energy to a convenient location. (Especially when one considers that the asteroid will soon be many millions of miles from the Earth, even if it is close for a moment.)
        • >Yes, there is more solar energy on an asteroid
          >that is near the Earth, but this energy is
          >useless.

          Oh really? So it wouldn't power a mining operation or allow you to extract particular minerals or compounds?

          >There is no convenient method of transporting the
          >energy to a convenient location.

          I think the mine IS a convenient location.

          For example, water would be a reasonable thing to mine, and the extraction equipment (distillation!) could certainly use the solar energy. Water is a basic ingredient for very decent rocket fuel, either steam rockets, or LOX/LH.

          Right now, 1 tonne of water is worth upto $2.6 million in earth orbit.

          And solar energy also is useful to power the trip back...
  • For a space.com reported, Leonard David has some problems with basic physics:
    Sucking up 200 watts of energy per day, the drill would make slow, but steady headway
    The watt is a measure of power, not energy. Does he mean that the drill is a 200 watt device?
  • I remember debating the Idea in Highschool Debates

    As well as I. I went to highschool not to long ago, but my school was populated with save the planet wannabes. When it was brought up in class, kids would say stuff like "mining is the worst thing that you can do" or when I talked about strip mining an asteroid it was "do you know what a strip mine does to the eco-system?"

    I mean come on how stupid can you be...those statements are about as dumb as one kid who was appalled when we discussed nuclear fission engines in the space shuttle to mars "but what if there is a melt down, think of all the radiation and toxic pollution!!!
    • Kinda like they had to rename NMR to MRI because NMR stood for Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, and people refused to have Nukes applied to them. Of course there was no radiation in any part of the equipment at all...

      Now its MRI, people have it done without a qualm.

      "A rose by any other name..."
  • . . . is plain old cost. Because the two biggest factors raising the cost of putting things in space are 1) overcoming Earth's gravity and 2) overcoming the friction from Earth's atmosphere. If mining the moon, the costs 1) is a lot less and 2) non-existent. There is some set up cost and an overhead but one doesn't have to go for just the rarest of minerals to make a profit (or save money/resources). As in all real estate, the rules are a) location, b) location and c) location.
  • Send criminals! (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by Erasei ( 315737 )
    Ok ok, it sounds like a joke (or a troll even), but seriously.. think about it. How many cons sitting on Death Row wouldn't love to go into the history books for being the first person on Mars. Tell them up front: 'Look, you are gonna die by lethal injection in 10 years, why not help the world and be famous by dying on Mars?' He could be trained to send back data as he goes in, and maybe, after a few dozen or so cons have been, we can get one to survive on the planet surface for awhile.

    Seriously.. this isn't a troll. It sounds crazy, but as long as we are killing people, we might as well get some use out of them. And I am sure quite a few death row inmates would rather be remembered for helping mankind get to mars than for killing a few people in a convience store robbery.

    I don't know.. maybe I just haven't had enough coffee yet this morning.. just an idea.
    • Because we don't want Mars to become a space-borne Australia...

      *ducks and runs*

    • Australia (Score:2, Interesting)

      For other reasons (see my other, inept post) death row might not be the best place to get your "volunteers". But once you get a self sufficient colony going and you need a few thousand bodies, credit cheats or other nonviolent criminals might be good candidates. Also, an oppressive/callous government might also consider lightening the welfare rolls with forced immigration (although the motivation would have to be political, not economic - the cost of shipping the poor soul would easilly outweigh the their lifetime cost on the dole).

      Of course, the English did this with Australia, which is ironic. I mean, they shipped away all these criminals whose descendants wound up living on an entire continent surrounded with incredible natural beauty, massive resources, and much better weather. I guess punishment is in the eye of the beholder...

  • by Embedded Geek ( 532893 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @02:39PM (#2564965) Homepage
    Most of the other postings make good, solid points on the economics of these things. Specifically, that any material you find in space just isn't valuble enough to transport the equipment "up the well" to orbit.

    But, what about self sufficiency for a space colony? Robinson's Mars series points out how any colony that becomes self sufficient is destained to become its own nation (think of the U.S. colonies in 1776). Extraterretial mining technology would be the first step in that direction.

    Most SF on the topic (including Robison) focuses on a revolution scenario, with Earth trying to maintain its grip on the colony in question. On the other hand, skeptics of human space colonization say colonies will never happen beacause they cost too much and will drain resources from Mother Earth over the long term.

    What if they're both wrong? Would Earth be willing to front a large, but finite, amount of cash to set up a colony with the understanding that it would one day become an independant political entity and not an ongoing drain on resources? Would immigrants be more willing to join up, and front some of their own capital, with this promise of independance when "the mortgage is paid off"?

  • I read somewhere a long time ago that mining asteroids would eventually reap such huge quantities of resources that poverty and perhaps even money itself would become a thing of the past. Obviously I'm short on details, but like I said it's been a long time and I don't remember where I saw the story. I'm just wondering whether anyone here knows how that would be possible. I'm still hoping for a Star-Trek-ish economy to come along in my lifetime. Meaning the labor-work no one wants would be done by machines, other jobs would be done by people who enjoy doing them for their own benefit, and the only purpose in life is self-improvement and happiness. A slacker's paradise.
    • Actually that's more or less what the industrial revolution is doing, and continuing to do.

      But that isn't going to get rid of money, or working for that matter.

      To see that, consider what happens if the cost of producing some item drops to zero- say bread.

      It wouldn't actually drop the price to nothing. It would only drop the price down somewhat- you'd still have to pay for the R&D for new sorts of bread, for advertising and so forth.

      You could imagine an 'open source' recipe for bread; and that would drop the cost for the open source bread to zero, but I would expect that some sorts of bread wouldn't be open source, and would still sell.

      Either way, bakers wouldn't be out of a job, its just that the job would change. Money isn't about paying for things, it's more to do with paying for persons time in fact. Time is money. (Only not exactly- there's also what you can get for an item...)
  • This discussion of space mining is pure sci-fi dreaming.

    The world can barely muster up enough political will and economic support to maintain one space station with three people on it. Even the space station plan has been cut way back from its original scope. You can forget about seeing extensive space mining or any other other kind of major escalation of space efforts as long as the current economics and attitudes prevail.

    IMHO, extensive exploration of space will only start happening when it's no longer the governments of the world that are paying for it.

    -- Spike
    • >IMHO, extensive exploration of space will only start happening when it's no longer the
      >governments of the world that are paying for it.

      I think exploration is what the governments are supposed to do.

      On the other hand, commercial use of space is going great, already more than 60% of space launches are commercial rather than governmental, and this is driving down the costs to access space; and there's a long way to go on that yet.
  • by Cujo ( 19106 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @03:05PM (#2565269) Homepage Journal

    The posting implies that NASA is leading these studies. Not at all. It's primarily the academic community and non-profits like the Space Studies Institute [ssi.org] and the National Space Society [nss.org]. NASA generally puts its mouth where its money is, and that's the ISS, which does little or nothing to help advance the cause of space development.

    Given the very poor ROI of the ISS, who would seriously trust NASA to lead the way on lunar, asteroid and cometary resource exploitation? The best they can do is sponsor science missions so that we can understand what these resources are and where. In fact, they are doing that.

    Like any conference, there will be loads of good and not so good ideas presented, but the fundamental logic is the same: it makes no sense to build things in space with materials brought from the ground. There are loads of materials on the moon (and no biosphere to damage) that have the potential to supply a large proportion of a spacefaring civilization. Big question is, do we want to be a spacefaring civilization?

  • by matusa ( 132837 )
    I never like short term solutions over long term solutions.

    IF we get in the habit or scrounging up every bit of good minerals/power from everywhere near us, we will leave a trail of trash wherever we go. In 1000 years do we want a string of dead solar systems pointing to us, who now need a galaxy's power for a few star systems?

    Bah. We need to learn efficiency.

    short term good sucks.
    • efficiency is all well and good, but without exploiting the eneryg in our solar system, we will never be able to explore beyond it. Also, the quality of life has increased (for first world inhabitants) due to the larger amounts of energy we are able to use. If we don't expand, we will contract.
  • It doesn't matter how much any random asteriod is worth if you can't get to it.

    The cost of launching a payload is the bottleneck for all forms of space exploration, manned or unmanned. Check here [ghg.net] for an interesting read about launch costs. I don't agree with everything the author says, but he raises some salient points.

    Asteriod mining, missions to Mars and the outer planets, a return to the Moon - all these are wonderful ideas, but until the cost of a ride to orbit comes down, it's all academic.
  • The Rape of the Moon (Score:3, Interesting)

    by EccentricAnomaly ( 451326 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @03:21PM (#2565385) Homepage
    "On the Moon, we want to look at those lunar polar regions, where there may be hydrogen concentrations...water ice, perhaps"

    Water is far more valuable for being water than for being a source of hydrogen. Mining the ice on the moon for propellant is stupid and short-sighted. The moon has very little water and that water will be needed to support eventual human colonies on the moon.

    There is a real danger that missions to the moon in the near future will use the water ice to make propellant and lower their cost. I don't think that wasting this water is a good idea... the Moon is the only water source near Earth that won't cost you hefty launch costs. This lunar water will be valuable to lunar colonies as well as colonies on asteroids and in orbit around the Earth as it will be much easier to get than water from Earth or Mars.
  • With enough lead time, we could mine down an Earth approacher until it was small enough to divert.

    It's the 10 km comets coming out of nowhere with only months of lead time that are frightening. Of course, by establishing a continuous presence in interplanetary space, this will lead us to develop other technologies that will allow us to destroy asteroid/comet threats in a shorter time frame.

    So, I'm all for it. I'd much rather grab methane ice from some space rock than blast the top off a mountain in West Virginia. Of course, I'm sure the environmentalist wackos will figure out some way to make asteroid mining politically incorrect. On the up side, maybe they will chain themselves to the asteroids.

  • "Earth First! (We'll mine the other planets later.)"

    Funny part is I went to the Colo School of Mines - which held the first summit to discuss the econmics of space mining last year.
  • Economics (Score:3, Insightful)

    by photon317 ( 208409 ) on Wednesday November 14, 2001 @03:41PM (#2565511)

    Another thing is that when/if we establish fully functional mining colonies on the moon, the next stage will be to create the industrial resources there on the moon to construct and launch spacecraft. There's some startup costs getting materials there for the first few spacecraft... but construction and launches should both be much more efficient in a low gravity environment. Those first ships can then hopefully lead to cheaper mining elsewhere (Mars?) for raw materials to build more in space, leading to progressively less and less launches from Earth.
  • by John S. Lewis - it's an excellent introduction this fascinating opportunity:

    href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/02013 28194/qid=1005767931/sr=8-4/ref=sr_8_3_4/102-76494 17-0636122 [amazon.com]

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