If we didn't waste 24% of our federal spending on the military, we could probably build a space elevator.
How High Can We Build?
By Dan8267 Follow Sun, 10 Jun 2012, 10:58pm 1,034 views 9 comments
In Boca Raton FL 33433
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That would be a project I would hope that sabotage attempts would keep it from being a reality. Go try that shit on the moon first.
If it collapsed, you think there's a debris belt in space now? Or the plasticized ocean is an issue. That calamity would be worse than 500 Gulf oil leaks.
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CaptainShuddup says
That, of course, would be a concern. Supposedly, carbon nanotubes can be biodegradable.
Making carbon nanotubes biocompatible and biodegradable.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21776531
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CaptainShuddup says
I'm in agreement with this. The science of materials has been running ahead of our understanding for a long time now. Example what happens to a composite aircraft on fire? Not much science on that, but let's build 'em anyway!
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robertoaribas's website
if it collapsed.. as in structural failure?
Ok, some simple thinking: I would expect it to fail AT ONE POINT first. I mean, it isn't like it would miraculously break at multiple points all at the same time... Then, it would turn into 2 structures, one with a center of mass above its geostationary orbit point. It would climb into a higher orbit. The other part would fall back to earth, making for a very exciting day...
On the other hand, we basically put people/satellites on top of very huge bombs and light them up to go to space now. Not exactly safe, and very expensive per pound put into orbit. A project like this has the possibility to drop the orbital price of material by orders of magnitude, making scientific space exploration, revolutionary communications etc., much cheaper to consider.
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We need FHA to finance space condos and the elevator also of course. That way its a tax write off and totally worth it!
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Some can get high without a building.
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In Kim Stanley Robinson's "Mars" trilogy, they build one as part of a project to terraform Mars, and revolutionaries destroy it. It falls down as the planet rotates, creating a belt of destruction at the planet's equator.
I'd still like to see one of these on Earth, revolutionaries or not.
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I'm sure that there are better ways of moving cargo into space:
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