Saturday, November 17, 2012

Space Tourism and Asteroid Mining in the Future

1 comment:

  1. The advent of relatively “inexpensive,” privately developed,low-orbit space vehicles will lead to a burgeoning business in orbital space
    tourism by which thousands of people will pay tens of thousands of dollars (or
    yen, yuan or euros, etc.) to take a ride around the earth and watch the sun
    rise and set, all within a matter of two hours. Five-plus tons of “space
    garbage” in orbit will prove a major hazard. Each tiny speck if it strikes a
    spaceship can penetrate aluminum and kill someone inside the same as a bullet
    fired from a high-powered rifle. If such an accident should occur, a PR
    campaign should demonstrate that such flights—with newly added security
    measures—are far safer than any other mode of transportation. The new NSRA
    should undertake or organize an international program to sweep up the estimated
    twenty thousand pieces of space garbage. That should effectively overcome any
    temporary reluctance on the part of the public.



    The spectacular success of the Russian nuclear engine will
    facilitate true space tourism, i.e., excursions to the moon. The way in which
    the moon will be so quickly commercialized will amaze people. Since we are
    speculating as to how this might come about, bear with us as we brazenly
    attempt to predict the future. The International Space Station (ISS) has cost
    twelve times its original estimate and has produced little hard science to
    date. It will be replaced by a laboratory with permanent living quarters on the
    moon that will be much less costly to operate—as quickly as that lab becomes
    feasible.



    Therefore, most probably, the International Space
    Station will be purchased by a consortium of private companies and adapted to
    the task of transferring passengers to the nuclear-powered “Moonship.” It is
    possible that the nuclear engine may not be allowed for manned Earth takeoff,
    so it will need a docking waystation where passengers can be transferred from
    efficient shuttles to the nuclear-powered moonship. From there it will be a
    two-hour ride to a docking port at the elevator in orbit above the Mare
    Crisium. If allowed, the nuclear moonship may depart directly from the surface
    of the earth and land directly on the moon. A spaceport on the moon will be
    less costly to operate than waystations.

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