Space elevator: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|Proposed type of space transportation system}} |
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[[Image:Space elevator structural diagram.svg|thumb|A space elevator would consist of a cable anchored to the [[Earth]]'s surface, reaching into [[outer space|space]]. By attaching a counterweight at the end (or by further extending the cable for the same purpose), [[centrifugal force]] ensures that the cable remains stretched taut, countering the gravitational pull on the lower sections, thus allowing the elevator to remain in [[geostationary]] orbit. Once beyond the gravitational midpoint, carriage would be accelerated further by the planet's rotation. Diagram not to scale.]] |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2024}} |
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{{Use American English|date=April 2021}} |
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[[File:Space elevator structural diagram--corrected for scale+CM+etc.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|alt=Diagram of a space elevator. At the bottom of the tall diagram is the Earth as viewed from high above the North Pole. About six earth-radii above the Earth an arc is drawn with the same center as the Earth. The arc depicts the level of geosynchronous orbit. About twice as high as the arc and directly above the Earth's center, a counterweight is depicted by a small square. A line depicting the space elevator's cable connects the counterweight to the equator directly below it. The system's center of mass is described as above the level of geosynchronous orbit. The center of mass is shown roughly to be about a quarter of the way up from the geosynchronous arc to the counterweight. The bottom of the cable is indicated to be anchored at the equator. A climber is depicted by a small rounded square. The climber is shown climbing the cable about one third of the way from the ground to the arc. Another note indicates that the cable rotates along with the Earth's daily rotation, and remains vertical. |A space elevator is conceived as a cable fixed to the equator and reaching into space. A counterweight at the upper end keeps the [[center of mass]] well above geostationary orbit level. This produces enough upward [[centrifugal force]] from Earth's rotation to fully counter the downward gravity, keeping the cable upright and taut. Climbers carry cargo up and down the cable.]] |
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[[File:Space elevator in motion viewed from above north pole.ogv|thumbtime=28|thumb|upright=1.2|Space elevator in motion rotating with Earth, viewed from above North Pole. A free-flying satellite (green dot) is shown in geostationary orbit slightly behind the cable.]] |
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A '''space elevator''', also referred to as a '''space bridge''', '''star ladder''', and '''orbital lift''', is a proposed type of planet-to-space transportation system,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.isec.org/faq/#What%20is%20it |title=What is a Space Elevator? |publisher=The International Space Elevator Consortium |year=2014 |access-date=22 August 2020}}</ref> often depicted in science fiction. The main component would be a cable (also called a [[space tether|tether]]) anchored to the surface and extending into space. An Earth-based space elevator would consist of a cable with one end attached to the surface near the equator and the other end attached to a counterweight in space beyond [[geostationary orbit]] (35,786 km altitude). The competing forces of gravity, which is stronger at the lower end, and the upward centrifugal force, which is stronger at the upper end, would result in the cable being held up, under tension, and stationary over a single position on Earth. With the tether deployed, climbers (crawlers) could repeatedly climb up and down the tether by mechanical means, releasing their cargo to and from orbit.<ref name="Edwards">{{cite report|last=Edwards|first=Bradley Carl|title=The NIAC Space Elevator Program|url=http://www.niac.usra.edu/studies/521Edwards.html|publisher=NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080512225341/http://www.niac.usra.edu/studies/521Edwards.html|archive-date=12 May 2008|access-date=24 November 2007|url-status=bot: unknown}}</ref> The design would permit vehicles to travel directly between a planetary surface, such as the Earth's, and orbit, [[non-rocket spacelaunch|without the use of large rockets]]. |
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A '''space elevator''' is a proposed [[structure]] designed to transport [[material]] from a [[celestial body]]'s [[surface]] into [[outer space|space]]. Many different types of [[outer space|space]] [[elevator]]s have been suggested. They all share the goal of replacing [[rocket propulsion]] with the traversal of a fixed structure via a mechanism not unlike an [[elevator]] in order to move [[material]] into or beyond [[Planetary orbit|orbit]]. Space [[elevators]] have also sometimes been referred to as '''beanstalks''', '''space bridges''', '''space lifts''', '''space ladders''' or '''orbital towers'''. |
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<!-- please do not rearrange, the order is determined by google popularity- see 'naming issues' in talk ---> |
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==History== |
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The most common proposal is a [[tether]], usually in the form of a [[cable]] or [[ribbon]], spanning from the surface to a point beyond [[geosynchronous orbit]]. As the planet rotates, the inertia at the end of the tether counteracts gravity because of the [[centripetal force]] that keeps the cable taut. Vehicles can then climb the tether and escape the planet's [[gravity]] without the use of rocket propulsion. Such a structure could theoretically permit delivery of [[cargo]] and people to orbit with transportation costs a fraction of those of more traditional methods of launching a payload into orbit. |
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===Early concept=== |
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The idea of the space elevator appears to have developed independently in different times and places. The earliest models originated with two Russian scientists in the late nineteenth century. In his 1895 collection ''Dreams of Earth and Sky'',<ref>{{Cite book |last=Tsiolkovsky |first=Konstanti |title=Dreams of Earth and Sky |publisher=Athena Books |year=2004 |isbn=9781414701639}}</ref> [[Konstantin Tsiolkovsky]] envisioned a massive sky ladder to reach the stars as a way to overcome gravity.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Derek J. Pearson |date=2022 |title=The Steep Climb to Low Earth Orbit: A History of the Space Elevator Community's Battle Against the Rocket Paradigm. |url=https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/server/enwiki/api/core/bitstreams/4e65652b-115e-4410-8aec-e17dbf33a8a9/content}}</ref><ref name="NASASci">{{cite web |title=The Audacious Space Elevator |url=https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080919070924/https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm |archive-date=19 September 2008 |access-date=27 September 2008 |publisher=NASA Science News}}</ref><ref name="JBIS1999">{{cite journal |last1=Landis |first1=Geoffrey A. |last2=Cafarelli |first2=Craig |name-list-style=amp |year=1999 |others=Presented as paper IAF-95-V.4.07, 46th International Astronautics Federation Congress, Oslo, Norway, 2-6 October 1995 |title=The Tsiolkovski Tower Reexamined |journal=Journal of the British Interplanetary Society |volume=52 |pages=175–180 |bibcode=1999JBIS...52..175L}}</ref> Decades later, in 1960, [[Yuri Artsutanov]] independently developed the concept of a "Cosmic Railway", a space elevator tethered from an orbiting satellite to an anchor on the equator, aiming to provide a safer and more efficient alternative to rockets.<ref>Artsutanov, Y. V Kosmos na Elektrovoze (Into Space by Funicular Railway). Komsomolskaya Pravda (Young Communist Pravda), 31 July 1960. Contents described in Lvov, ''Science'' 158:946, 17 November 1967</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lvov |first=Vladimir |date=1967-11-17 |title=Sky-Hook: Old Idea |url=https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.158.3803.946 |journal=Science |language=en |volume=158 |issue=3803 |pages=946–947 |doi=10.1126/science.158.3803.946 |pmid=17753605 |bibcode=1967Sci...158..946L |issn=0036-8075}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Artsutanov |first=Yu |year=1960 |title=To the Cosmos by Electric Train |url=http://liftport.com/files/Artsutanov_Pravda_SE.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060506100948/http://liftport.com/files/Artsutanov_Pravda_SE.pdf |archive-date=6 May 2006 |access-date=5 March 2006 |work=liftport.com |publisher=Young Person's Pravda}}</ref> In 1966, [[John O. Isaacs|Isaacs]] and his colleagues introduced the concept of the 'Sky-Hook', proposing a satellite in geostationary orbit with a cable extending to Earth.<ref name=":1">{{cite journal |author=Isaacs |first1=J. D. |last2=Vine |first2=A. C. |last3=Bradner |first3=H. |last4=Bachus |first4=G. E. |year=1966 |title=Satellite Elongation into a True 'Sky-Hook' |journal=Science |volume=151 |issue=3711 |pages=682–683 |bibcode=1966Sci...151..682I |doi=10.1126/science.151.3711.682 |pmid=17813792 |s2cid=32226322}}</ref> |
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=== Innovations and designs === |
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Recent proposals for a space elevator are notable in their plans to incorporate [[carbon nanotubes]] into the tether design, thus providing a link between space exploration and [[nanotechnology]]. |
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The space elevator concept reached America in 1975 when [[Jerome Pearson]] began researching the idea, inspired by [[Arthur C. Clarke]]'s 1969 speech before Congress. After working as an engineer for NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory, he developed a design for an "Orbital Tower", intended to harness Earth's rotational energy to transport supplies into low Earth orbit. In his publication in ''[[Acta Astronautica]]<ref name=":2">{{cite journal |author=Pearson, J. |year=1975 |title=The orbital tower: a spacecraft launcher using the Earth's rotational energy |url=http://www.star-tech-inc.com/papers/tower/tower.pdf |journal=Acta Astronautica |volume=2 |issue=9–10 |pages=785–799 |bibcode=1975AcAau...2..785P |citeseerx=10.1.1.530.3120 |doi=10.1016/0094-5765(75)90021-1}}</ref>'', the cable would be thickest at geostationary orbit where tension is greatest, and narrowest at the tips to minimize weight per unit area. He proposed extending a counterweight to 144,000 kilometers (89,000 miles) as without a large counterweight, the upper cable would need to be longer due to the way [[Gravity|gravitational]] and centrifugal forces change with distance from Earth. His analysis included the Moon's gravity, wind, and moving payloads. Building the elevator would have required thousands of [[Space Shuttle]] trips, though material could be transported once a minimum strength strand reached the ground or be manufactured in space from [[Asteroid mining|asteroidal]] or [[In-situ resource utilization|lunar ore]]. Pearson's findings, published in ''Acta Astronautica'', caught Clarke's attention and led to technical consultations for Clarke's science fiction novel ''[[The Fountains of Paradise]]'' (1979),<ref>{{Cite book |last=Clarke |first=Arthur C. |title=The fountains of Paradise. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich |year=1979 |publisher=Harcourt Brace Jovanovich |isbn=9780151327737}}</ref> which features a space elevator.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Boucher |first=Marc |date=2013-04-08 |title=The Space Elevator: 'Thought Experiment', or Key to the Universe? |url=https://spaceref.com/newspace-and-tech/the-space-elevator-thought-experiment-or-key-to-the-universe-by-sir-arthur-c-clarke/ |access-date=2024-05-30 |website=SpaceRef |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Edwards |first=Bradley C. |date=2004 |title=A Space Elevator Based Exploration Strategy |url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1649650 |journal=AIP Conference Proceedings |volume=699 |pages=854–862 |publisher=AIP |doi=10.1063/1.1649650|bibcode=2004AIPC..699..854E }}</ref> |
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The first gathering of multiple experts who wanted to investigate this alternative to space flight took place at the 1999 NASA conference 'Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether Space Elevator Concepts'. in Huntsville, Alabama.<ref name=":0"/> D.V. Smitherman, Jr., published the findings in August of 2000 under the title ''Space Elevators: An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium'', concluding that the space elevator could not be built for at least another 50 years due to concerns about the cable's material, deployment, and upkeep.<ref name="Smitherman">{{cite report |editor-last=Smitherman, Jr. |editor-first=D.V. |date=August 2000 |title=Space Elevators: An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium |url=https://nss.org/wp-content/uploads/2000-Space-Elevator-NASA-CP210429.pdf |publisher=[[NASA]] |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150328040627/http://www.nss.org/resources/library/spaceelevator/2000-SpaceElevator-NASA-CP210429.pdf |archive-date=2015-03-28}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}} |
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==Non-tether space elevator concepts== |
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At this time orbital tethers are the only space elevator concept that is the subject of active research and [[Commercialization of space|commercial interest in space]]. However, there are two related concepts worth mentioning: a ''[[space fountain]]'' and a very tall ''compressive structure'' (i.e. a structure that stands on its own). |
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[[Bradley C. Edwards|Dr. B.C. Edwards]] suggested that a {{convert|100,000|km|mi|abbr=on}} long paper-thin ribbon, utilizing a carbon nanotube composite material could solve the tether issue due to their high tensile strength and low weight <ref name="EDWARDS_PHASE_I_2000_472Edwards.html">[[Bradley C. Edwards]], "[http://www.niac.usra.edu/studies/472Edwards.html The Space Elevator]".</ref> The proposed wide-thin ribbon-like cross-section shape instead of earlier circular cross-section concepts would increase survivability against meteoroid impacts. With support from [[NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts]] (NIAC), his work was involved more than 20 institutions and 50 participants.<ref name=":3">{{cite report |last=Edwards |first=Bradley C. |author-link=Bradley C. Edwards |date=2003-03-01 |title=The Space Elevator: NIAC Phase II Final Report |url=http://images.spaceref.com/docs/spaceelevator/521Edwards.pdf |publisher=Eureka Scientific}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}} The Space Elevator NIAC Phase II Final Report, in combination with the book ''The Space Elevator'': ''A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System'' (Edwards and Westling, 2003)<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bradley C. Edwards; Eric A. Westling |title=The Space Elevator: A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System |publisher=BC Edwards |year=2003 |isbn=9780974651712}}</ref> summarized all effort to design a space elevator<ref name=":3" />{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}} including deployment scenario, climber design, power delivery system, [[Space debris|orbital debris]] avoidance, anchor system, surviving [[atomic oxygen]], avoiding lightning and hurricanes by locating the anchor in the western equatorial Pacific, construction costs, construction schedule, and environmental hazards.<ref name="Edwards" /><ref name="Smitherman"/>{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}}<ref>Science @ NASA, [https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm "Audacious & Outrageous: Space Elevators"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080919070924/https://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm|date=19 September 2008}}, September 2000.</ref> Additionally, he researched the structural integrity and load-bearing capabilities of space elevator cables, emphasizing their need for high tensile strength and resilience. His space elevator concept never reached NIAC's third phase, which he attributed to submitting his final proposal during the week of the [[Space Shuttle Columbia]] disaster.<ref name=":0" /> |
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A space fountain would use pellets fired up from the ground by a [[mass driver]], the pellets traveling through the center of a tower. These pellets would impart their kinetic energy to the tower structure via electromagnetic drag as they traveled up and again as their direction was reversed by a magnetic field at the top. Thus the structure would not be supported by the compressive strength of its materials, and could be hundreds of kilometers high. Unlike tethered space elevators (which have to be placed near the equator), a space fountain could be located at any [[latitude]]. Space fountains would require a continuous supply of power to remain aloft. |
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=== 21st century advancements === |
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Compressive structures would be similar to those used for [[Radio masts and towers|aerial masts]]. While these structures might reach the agreed [[Karman line|altitude for space]] (100 km), they are unlikely to reach [[geostationary orbit]] (35,786 km). Due to the difference between [[sub-orbital spaceflight|sub-orbital]] and [[orbital spaceflight]]s, additional rockets or other means of propulsion would be necessary to achieve orbital speed. [[Arthur C. Clarke]] proposed a compressive space tower made of diamond in his novel [[2061: Odyssey Three]], a second sequel to his famous [[2001: A Space Odyssey (novel)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]. |
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To speed space elevator development, proponents have organized several [[Space Elevator Competitions|competitions]], similar to the [[Ansari X Prize]], for relevant technologies.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nbcnews.com/id/5792719 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131214181227/http://www.nbcnews.com/id/5792719/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=14 December 2013 |title=Space elevator contest proposed |first=Alan |last=Boyle |publisher=NBC News |date=27 August 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Space Elevator – Elevator:2010 |url=http://www.elevator2010.org/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070106211508/http://www.elevator2010.org/ |archive-date=6 January 2007 |access-date=5 March 2006}}</ref> Among them are [[Elevator:2010]], which organized annual competitions for climbers, ribbons and power-beaming systems from 2005 to 2009, the Robogames Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing competition,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://robogames.net/rules/climbing.php |title=Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing Robot Competition Rules |access-date=5 March 2006 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20050206100051/http://robolympics.net/rules/climbing.shtml|archive-date=6 February 2005}}</ref> as well as NASA's [[Centennial Challenges]] program, which, in March 2005, announced a partnership with the Spaceward Foundation (the operator of Elevator:2010), raising the total value of prizes to US$400,000.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2005/mar/HQ_m05083_Centennial_prizes.html |title=NASA Announces First Centennial Challenges' Prizes |year=2005 |access-date=5 March 2006 |archive-date=8 June 2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050608083813/http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2005/mar/HQ_m05083_Centennial_prizes.html |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.space.com/news/050323_centennial_challenge.html |title=NASA Details Cash Prizes for Space Privatization |first=Robert Roy |last=Britt |work=Space.com |date=24 March 2005 |access-date=5 March 2006}}</ref> |
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The first European Space Elevator Challenge (EuSEC) to establish a climber structure took place in August 2011.<ref>{{cite web |title=What's the European Space Elevator Challenge? |url=http://eusec.warr.de/?eusec |publisher=European Space Elevator Challenge |access-date=21 April 2011 |archive-date=15 August 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110815214545/http://eusec.warr.de/?eusec |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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In 2005, "the [[LiftPort Group]] of space elevator companies announced that it will be building a carbon nanotube manufacturing plant in [[Millville, New Jersey]], to supply various glass, plastic and metal companies with these strong materials. Although LiftPort hopes to eventually use carbon nanotubes in the construction of a {{convert|100,000|km|mi|abbr=on}} space elevator, this move will allow it to make money in the short term and conduct research and development into new production methods."<ref name="universetoday">{{cite news |url=http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/liftport_manufacture_nanotubes.html?2742005 |title=Space Elevator Group to Manufacture Nanotubes |date=27 April 2005 |first=Fraser |last=Cain |work=Universe Today |access-date=5 March 2006}}</ref> Their announced goal was a space elevator launch in 2010. On 13 February 2006, the LiftPort Group announced that, earlier the same month, they had tested a mile of "space-elevator tether" made of carbon-fiber composite strings and fiberglass tape measuring {{cvt|5|cm|in}} wide and {{cvt|1|mm|in}} (approx. 13 sheets of paper) thick, lifted with balloons.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn8725.html |title=Space-elevator tether climbs a mile high |date=15 February 2006 |work=New Scientist |first=Kimm |last=Groshong |access-date=5 March 2006}}</ref> In April 2019, Liftport CEO Michael Laine admitted little progress has been made on the company's lofty space elevator ambitions, even after receiving more than $200,000 in seed funding. The carbon nanotube manufacturing facility that Liftport announced in 2005 was never built.<ref>{{cite web |date=28 March 2019 |title=If a space elevator was ever going to happen, it could have gotten its start in N. J. Here's how it went wrong |url=https://www.nj.com/cumberland/2019/04/if-a-space-elevator-was-ever-going-to-happen-it-could-have-gotten-its-start-in-nj-heres-how-it-went-wrong.html |access-date=11 May 2019 |publisher=NJ.com}}</ref> |
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==Orbital tethers== |
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This concept, also called an '''orbital space elevator''', '''geosynchronous orbital [[tether propulsion|tether]]''', or a '''beanstalk''', is a subset of the [[skyhook (structure)|skyhook]] concept. Construction would be a vast project: a tether would have to be built of a [[material]] that could endure tremendous [[stress (physics)|stress]] while also being light-weight, cost-effective, and manufacturable in great quantities. Today's materials [[technology]] does not quite meet these requirements, although [[carbon nanotube]] technology shows promise. A considerable number of other novel engineering problems would also have to be solved to make a space elevator practical. Not all problems regarding feasibility have yet been addressed. Nevertheless, some believe that the necessary technology might be developed as early as 2008<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://liftport.com/research2.php |
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|title=Space Elevator Concept |
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|publisher=LiftPort Group |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> and, according to the [http://www.liftport.com LiftPort Group] developing the technology, the first space elevator could be operational by 2031.<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/space_elevator_020327-1.html |
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|title=The Space Elevator Comes Closer to Reality |
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|first=Leonard |
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|last=David |
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|year=2002 |
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|accessdtate=2006-03-05 |
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}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.isr.us/research_es_se.asp |
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|title=The Space Elevator |
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|publisher=Institute for Scientific Research, Inc. |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> |
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In 2007, [[Elevator:2010]] held the 2007 Space Elevator games, which featured US$500,000 awards for each of the two competitions ($1,000,000 total), as well as an additional $4,000,000 to be awarded over the next five years for space elevator related technologies.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20100118153108/http://www.spaceward.org/elevator2010 Elevator:2010 – The Space Elevator Challenge]. spaceward.org.</ref> No teams won the competition, but a team from [[MIT]] entered the first 2-gram (0.07 oz), 100-percent carbon nanotube entry into the competition.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071101081423/http://www.spaceward.org/games07Wrapup.html Spaceward Games 2007]. The Spaceward Foundation.</ref> Japan held an international conference in November 2008 to draw up a timetable for building the elevator.<ref name="JapanUKTimes">{{cite news |last=Lewis |first=Leo |date=22 September 2008 |title=Japan hopes to turn sci-fi into reality with elevator to the stars |url=http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/world/article1967078.ece |access-date=23 May 2010 |work=The Times |location=London, England}} Lewis, Leo; News International Group; accessed 22 September 2008.</ref> |
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==Physics and structure== |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorClimbing.jpg||thumb|300px|right|One concept for the space elevator has it tethered to a mobile seagoing platform.]] |
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In 2012, the [[Obayashi Corporation]] announced that it could build a space elevator by 2050 using carbon nanotube technology.<ref name="physorg_obayashi">{{cite news| url=http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-japan-builder-eyes-space-elevator.html | website=Phys.org | title=Going up: Japan builder eyes space elevator | date=22 February 2012}}</ref> The design's passenger climber would be able to reach the level of geosynchronous equatorial orbit (GEO) after an 8-day trip.<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/researchers-take-tiny-first-step-toward-space-elevator-180970212/ | title=Japan Takes Tiny First Step Toward Space Elevator | date=5 September 2018 |work=Smithsonian Magazine |first=Jason |last=Daley}}</ref> Further details were published in 2016.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ishikawa |first1=Y. |date=2016 |title=Obayashi Corporation's Space Elevator Construction Concept |url=https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2016JBIS...69..227I/abstract |journal=Journal of the British Interplanetary Society |volume=69 |issue= |pages=227–239 |doi= |bibcode=2016JBIS...69..227I |access-date=5 January 2021}}</ref> |
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There are a variety of tether designs. Almost every design includes a base station, a cable, climbers, and a counterweight. |
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In 2013, the [[International Academy of Astronautics]] published a technological feasibility assessment which concluded that the critical capability improvement needed was the tether material, which was projected to achieve the necessary [[specific strength]] within 20 years. The four-year long study looked into many facets of space elevator development including missions, development schedules, financial investments, revenue flow, and benefits. It was reported that it would be possible to operationally survive smaller impacts and avoid larger impacts, with meteors and space debris, and that the estimated cost of lifting a kilogram of payload to GEO and beyond would be $500.<ref name="ISEC_SE_way_forward_2013"/>{{rp|10–11, 207–208}}<ref>{{cite report |editor-last1=Swan |editor-first1=Peter |editor-last2=Penny |editor-first2=Rober "Skip" |editor-last3=Swan |editor-first3=Cathy |date=2010 |title=Space Elevator Survivability, Space Debris Mitigation |url=https://static1.squarespace.com/enwiki/static/5e35af40fb280744e1b16f7b/t/5e5c1d06483fcf20335da699/1583095099789/2010StudyReport_SpaceElevatorSpaceDebris.pdf |publisher=International Space Elevator Consortium}}{{Self-published source|reason=Published via Lulu.com.|date=August 2024}}</ref>{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}} |
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===Base station=== |
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The base station designs typically fall into two categories—mobile and stationary. Mobile stations are typically large oceangoing vessels, though airborne stations have been proposed as well. Stationary platforms would generally be located in high-altitude locations, such as on top of high towers. |
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In 2014, Google X's Rapid Evaluation R&D team began the design of a Space Elevator, eventually finding that no one had yet manufactured a perfectly formed [[carbon nanotube]] strand longer than a meter. They thus put the project in "deep freeze" and also keep tabs on any advances in the carbon nanotube field.<ref>{{cite web|last=Gayomali|first=Chris|title=Google X Confirms The Rumors: It Really Did Try To Design A Space Elevator|url=http://www.fastcompany.com/3029138/world-changing-ideas/google-x-confirms-the-rumors-it-really-did-try-to-design-a-space-elevat?partner=rss|work=Fast Company |date=15 April 2014 |access-date=17 April 2014}}</ref> |
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Mobile platforms have the advantage of being able to maneuver to avoid high winds, storms, and [[space debris]]. While stationary platforms don't have these advantages, they typically would have access to cheaper and more reliable power sources, and require a shorter cable. While the decrease in cable length may seem minimal (typically no more than a few kilometers), that can significantly reduce the minimal width of the cable at the center, and reduce the minimal length of cable reaching beyond geostationary orbit significantly. |
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In 2018, researchers at Japan's [[Shizuoka University]] launched STARS-Me, two [[CubeSat]]s connected by a tether, which a mini-elevator will travel on.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://www.nbcnews.com/mach/science/colossal-elevator-space-could-be-going-sooner-you-ever-imagined-ncna915421 | title=A colossal elevator to space could be going up sooner than you ever imagined |work=NBC News |date=2 October 2018 |first=Scott |last=Snowden}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.curbed.com/2018/9/12/17851500/space-elevator-japan-news |title=Japan is trying to build an elevator to space |publisher=Curbed.com |first=Meghan |last=Barber |date=12 September 2018 |access-date=18 September 2018}}</ref> The experiment was launched as a test bed for a larger structure.<ref>{{Cite web | url=https://gizmodo.com/japan-testing-miniature-space-elevator-near-the-interna-1828800558 |title = Japan Testing Miniature Space Elevator Near the International Space Station| date=4 September 2018 }}</ref> |
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===Cable=== |
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The cable must be made of a material with a huge [[tensile strength]]/density ratio (the stress a material can be subjected to without breaking, divided by its density). A space elevator can be made relatively economically feasible if a cable with a density similar to [[graphite]] and a tensile strength of ~65–120 [[gigapascal|GPa]] can be mass-produced at a reasonable price. |
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In 2019, the [[International Academy of Astronautics]] published "Road to the Space Elevator Era",<ref>{{cite book |vauthors=Swan PA, Raitt DI, Knapman JM, Tsuchida A, Fitzgerald MA, Ishikawa Y |title=Road to the Space Elevator Era |date=30 May 2019 |publisher=International Academy of Astronautics |isbn=978-0-9913370-3-3 |url=https://www.heinleinbooks.com/product-page/road-to-the-space-elevator-era}}</ref> a study report summarizing the assessment of the space elevator as of summer 2018. The essence is that a broad group of space professionals gathered and assessed the status of the space elevator development, each contributing their expertise and coming to similar conclusions: (a) Earth Space Elevators seem feasible, reinforcing the IAA 2013 study conclusion (b) Space Elevator development initiation is nearer than most think. This last conclusion is based on a potential process for manufacturing macro-scale single crystal [[graphene]]<ref name="azom.com">{{Cite web |date=23 July 2018 |title=Space Elevator Technology and Graphene: An Interview with Adrian Nixon |url=https://www.azom.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=16371}}</ref> with higher [[specific strength]] than [[carbon nanotube]]s. |
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By comparison, most steel has a tensile strength of under 2 GPa, and the strongest steel resists no more than 5.5 GPa, but steel is dense. The much lighter material [[Kevlar]] has a tensile strength of 2.6–4.1 GPa, while [[quartz]] fiber can reach upwards of 20 GPa; the tensile strength of [[diamond]] filaments would theoretically be minimally higher. |
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==Materials== |
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[[Carbon nanotube]]s (a material that was first fabricated in the 1950s) appear to have a theoretical tensile strength and density that is well above the desired minimum for space elevator structures. The technology to manufacture bulk quantities<ref>{{cite web |
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A significant difficulty with making a space elevator for the Earth is strength of materials. Since the structure must hold up its own weight in addition to the payload it may carry, the strength to weight ratio, or [[Specific strength]], of the material it is made of must be extremely high. |
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|url=http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003330.html |
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|title=Ribbons, Sheets and the Nanofuture |
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|first=Jamais |
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|last=Cascio |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05 |
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|year=2005}}</ref> of this material and fabricate them into a cable is in early stages of development. While theoretically carbon nanotubes can have tensile strengths beyond 120 GPa, in practice the highest tensile strength ever observed in a single-walled tube is 52 GPa, and such tubes averaged breaking between 30 and 50 GPa.<ref name="Yu 2000 PRL"> |
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{{cite journal |
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| author = Min-Feng Yu, Bradley S. Files, Sivaram Arepalli, and Rodney S. Ruoff |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = Tensile Loading of Ropes of Single Wall Carbon Nanotubes and their Mechanical Properties |
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| journal = Phys. Rev. Lett. |
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| volume = 84 |
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| pages = 5552–5555 |
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| url = http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRL/v84/p5552 |
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}} |
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</ref> |
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Even the strongest fiber made of nanotubes is likely to have notably less strength than its components. Improving tensile strength depends on further research on purity and different types of nanotubes. |
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Since 1959, most ideas for space elevators have focused on purely [[Tension (physics)|tensile]] structures, with the weight of the system held up from above by centrifugal forces. In the tensile concepts, a [[space tether]] reaches from a large mass (the counterweight) beyond geostationary orbit to the ground. This structure is held in tension between Earth and the counterweight like an upside-down [[plumb bob]]. The cable thickness is tapered based on tension; it has its maximum at a geostationary orbit and the minimum on the ground. |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorAnchor.jpg||thumb|300px|right|A seagoing anchor station would incidentally act as a deep-water [[seaport]].]] |
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The concept is applicable to other planets and [[Astronomical object|celestial bodies]]. For locations in the Solar System with weaker gravity than Earth's (such as the [[Lunar space elevator|Moon]] or [[Mars]]), the strength-to-density requirements for tether materials are not as problematic. Currently available materials (such as [[Kevlar]]) are strong and light enough that they could be practical as the tether material for elevators there.<ref>[[Hans Moravec|Moravec, Hans]] (1978). [http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~hpm/project.archive/1976.skyhook/papers/scasci.txt ''Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhooks for the Moon and Mars with Conventional Materials'']. Carnegie Mellon University. frc.ri.cmu.edu.</ref> |
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Most designs call for single-walled carbon nanotubes. While multi-walled nanotubes may attain higher tensile strengths, they have disproportionately higher mass and are consequently poor choices for building the cable. One potential material possibility is to take advantage of the high pressure interlinking properties of carbon nanotubes of a single variety.<ref> |
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{{cite journal |
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| author = T. Yildirim, O. Gülseren, Ç. Kılıç, S. Ciraci |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = Pressure-induced interlinking of carbon nanotubes |
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| journal = Phys. Rev. B |
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| volume = 62 |
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| pages = 12648–12651 |
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| url = http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRB/v62/p12648 |
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}} |
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</ref> While this would cause the tubes to lose some tensile strength by the trading of [[sp² bond]] (graphite, nanotubes) for [[sp³ bond|sp³]] (diamond), it will enable them to be held together in a single fiber by more than the usual, weak [[Van der Waals force]] (VdW), and allow manufacturing of a fiber of any length. |
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Available materials are not strong and light enough to make an Earth space elevator practical.<ref>{{cite web |last=Fleming |first=Nic |date=15 February 2015 |title=Should We give up on the dream of space elevators? |url=http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150211-space-elevators-a-lift-too-far |access-date=4 January 2021 |publisher=BBC |quote='This is extremely complicated. I don't think it's really realistic to have a space elevator,' said Elon Musk during a conference at MIT, adding that it would be easier to 'have a bridge from LA to Tokyo' than an elevator that could take material into space.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Donahue |first=Michelle Z. |date=21 January 2016 |title=People Are Still Trying to Build a Space Elevator |url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/people-are-still-trying-build-space-elevator-180957877/ |access-date=4 January 2020 |publisher=Smithsonian Magazine |quote='We understand it’s a difficult project,' Yoji Ishikawa says. 'Our technology is very low. If we need to be at 100 to get an elevator built – right now we are around a 1 or 2. But we cannot say this project is not possible.'}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=30 January 2018 |title=Why the world still awaits its first space elevator |url=https://www.economist.com/the-economist-explains/2018/01/30/why-the-world-still-awaits-its-first-space-elevator |access-date=4 January 2020 |publisher=The Economist |quote=The chief obstacle is that no known material has the necessary combination of lightness and strength needed for the cable, which has to be able to support its own weight. Carbon nanotubes are often touted as a possibility, but they have only about a tenth of the necessary strength-to-weight ratio and cannot be made into filaments more than a few centimetres long, let alone thousands of kilometres. Diamond nanothreads, another exotic form of carbon, might be stronger, but their properties are still poorly understood.}}</ref> Some sources expect that future advances in [[carbon nanotube]]s (CNTs) could lead to a practical design.<ref name="Edwards" /><ref name="Smitherman"/>{{Page needed|date=August 2024|reason=Lengthy document; please provide applicable page.}}<ref name="universetoday" /> Other sources believe that CNTs will never be strong enough.<ref>{{cite web |last=Aron |first=Jacob |date=13 June 2016 |title=Carbon nanotubes too weak to get a space elevator off the ground |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/2093356-carbon-nanotubes-too-weak-to-get-a-space-elevator-off-the-ground/ |access-date=3 January 2020 |publisher=New Scientist |quote=Feng Ding of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University and his colleagues simulated CNTs with a single atom out of place, turning two of the hexagons into a pentagon and heptagon, and creating a kink in the tube. They found this simple change was enough to cut the ideal strength of a CNT to 40 GPa, with the effect being even more severe when they increased the number of misaligned atoms... That’s bad news for people who want to build a space elevator, a cable between the Earth and an orbiting satellite that would provide easy access to space. Estimates suggest such a cable would need a tensile strength of 50 GPa, so CNTs were a promising solution, but Ding’s research suggests they won’t work.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Christensen |first=Billn |date=2 June 2006 |title=Nanotubes Might Not Have the Right Stuff |url=https://www.space.com/2456-nanotubes-stuff.html |access-date=3 January 2020 |publisher=Space.com |quote=recent calculations by Nicola Pugno of the Polytechnic of Turin, Italy, suggest that carbon nanotube cables will not work... According to their calculations, the cable would need to be twice as strong as that of any existing material including graphite, quartz, and diamond.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last=Whittaker |first=Clay |date=15 June 2016 |title=Carbon Nanotubes Can't Handle a Space Elevator |url=https://www.popsci.com/carbon-nanotubes-cant-handle-space-elevator/ |access-date=3 January 2020 |publisher=Popular Science |quote=Alright, space elevator plans are back to square one, people. Carbon nanotubes probably aren't going to be our material solution for a space elevator, because apparently even a minuscule (read: atomic) flaw in the design drastically decreases strength.}}</ref> Possible future alternatives include [[boron nitride nanotube]]s, [[carbon nanothread|diamond nanothreads]]<ref name="SCIAM_DN" /><ref name="Xtech_DN" /> and macro-scale single crystal [[graphene]].<ref name="azom.com" /> |
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The technology to spin regular VdW-bonded yarn from carbon nanotubes is just in its infancy: the first success to spin a long yarn as opposed to pieces of only a few centimeters has been reported only very recently (March 2004); but the strength/weight ratio was not as good as Kevlar due to the inconsistent quality and short length of the tubes being held together by VdW. |
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==In fiction== |
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Note that [[as of 2006]], carbon nanotubes have an approximate price of $25/gram, and 20,000 kg - twenty million times that much - would be necessary to form even a seed elevator. This price is decreasing rapidly, and large-scale production would reduce it further, but the price of suitable carbon nanotube cable is anyone's guess at this time. |
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{{main|Space elevators in fiction}} |
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{{unsourced|section|date=December 2024}} |
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In 1979, space elevators were introduced to a broader audience with the simultaneous publication of [[Arthur C. Clarke]]'s novel, ''[[The Fountains of Paradise]]'', in which engineers construct a space elevator on top of a mountain peak in the fictional island country of "Taprobane" (loosely based on [[Sri Lanka]], albeit moved south to the Equator), and [[Charles Sheffield]]'s first novel, ''[[The Web Between the Worlds]]'', also featuring the building of a space elevator. Three years later, in [[Robert A. Heinlein]]'s 1982 novel ''[[Friday (novel)|Friday]]'', the principal character mentions a disaster at the “Quito Sky Hook” and makes use of the "Nairobi Beanstalk" in the course of her travels. In [[Kim Stanley Robinson]]'s 1993 novel ''[[Red Mars]]'', colonists build a space elevator on Mars that allows both for more colonists to arrive and also for natural resources mined there to be able to leave for Earth. [[Larry Niven]]'s book ''[[Rainbow Mars]]'' describes a space elevator built on Mars. In [[David Gerrold]]'s 2000 novel, ''[[David Gerrold#Bibliography|Jumping Off The Planet]]'', a family excursion up the Ecuador "beanstalk" is actually a child-custody kidnapping. Gerrold's book also examines some of the industrial applications of a mature elevator technology. The concept of a space elevator, called the [[Old Man's War#Beanstalk|Beanstalk]], is also depicted in John Scalzi's 2005 novel ''[[Old Man's War]].'' In a biological version, [[Joan Slonczewski]]'s 2011 novel ''The Highest Frontier'' depicts a college student ascending a space elevator constructed of self-healing cables of anthrax bacilli. The engineered bacteria can regrow the cables when severed by space debris. |
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==Physics== |
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A possible complication not mentioned in most of the literature is the potential 'pretzel-effect' of a carbon nanotube ribbon which would, without wind mitigation, ultimately twist into a pretzel shape in the areas of the ribbon exposed to the atmosphere. The added tensile stress from these forces could break the ribbon and it admits no simple solution. If the constant minimum load tension in the ribbon is sufficient (some have suggested 20 tons) such twisting may be mitigated by this tension alone. A cylindrical cable shape eliminates this concern entirely as the twisting need only be mitigated at the end points. |
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===Apparent gravitational field=== |
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Carbon nanotube fiber is an area of energetic worldwide research because the applications go much further than space elevators. Other suggested application areas include suspension bridges, new composite materials, lighter aircraft and rockets, and computer processor interconnects. This is good news for space elevator proponents because it is likely to push down the price of the cable material further. |
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An Earth space elevator cable rotates along with the rotation of the Earth. Therefore, the cable, and objects attached to it, would experience upward centrifugal force in the direction opposing the downward gravitational force. The higher up the cable the object is located, the less the gravitational pull of the Earth, and the stronger the upward centrifugal force due to the rotation, so that more centrifugal force opposes less gravity. The centrifugal force and the gravity are balanced at geosynchronous equatorial orbit (GEO). Above GEO, the centrifugal force is stronger than gravity, causing objects attached to the cable there to pull ''upward'' on it. Because the counterweight, above GEO, is rotating about the Earth faster than the natural orbital speed for that altitude, it exerts a centrifugal pull on the cable and thus holds the whole system aloft. |
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The net force for objects attached to the cable is called the ''apparent gravitational field''. The apparent gravitational field for attached objects is the (downward) gravity minus the (upward) centrifugal force. The apparent gravity experienced by an object on the cable is zero at GEO, downward below GEO, and upward above GEO. |
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====Cable taper==== |
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Due to its enormous length a space elevator cable must be carefully designed to carry its own weight as well as the smaller weight of climbers. The required strength of the cable will vary along its length, since at various points it has to carry the weight of the cable below, or provide a [[centripetal force]] to retain the cable and counterweight above. In an ideal cable, the actual strength of the cable at any given point would be no greater than the required strength at that point (plus a safety margin). This implies a tapered design. |
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The apparent gravitational field can be represented this way:<ref name="aravind"/>{{rp|Table 1}} |
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Using a model that takes into account the Earth's gravitational and "centrifugal" forces (and neglecting the smaller solar and lunar effects), it is possible to show<ref name="pearson"> |
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{{cite journal |
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| author = J. Pearson |
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| year = 1975 |
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| title = [http://www.star-tech-inc.com/papers/tower/tower.pdf The orbital tower: a spacecraft launcher using the Earth's rotational energy] |
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| journal = Acta Astronautica |
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| volume = 2 |
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| pages = 785–799 |
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}} |
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</ref> that the cross-sectional area of the cable as a function of height is given by: |
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{{block indent|The downward force of actual [[Newton's law of universal gravitation|gravity]] ''decreases'' with height: [[Newton's law of universal gravitation|<math>g_r = -GM/r^2</math>]]}} |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorCableTaper3DPlot2.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Cable Taper Plot]] |
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{{block indent|The upward [[centrifugal force]] due to the planet's rotation ''increases'' with height: [[Centrifugal force|<math>a = \omega^2 r</math>]]}} |
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:<math> |
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{{block indent|Together, the apparent gravitational field is the sum of the two: |
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A(r) = A_{0} \ |
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{{block indent|<math>g = -\frac{GM}{r^2} + \omega^2 r</math>}}}} |
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\exp |
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\left[ |
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\frac{\rho}{s} |
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\left[ |
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\begin{matrix}\frac{1}{2}\end{matrix} \omega^{2} (r_{0}^{2} - r^2) |
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+ g_{0}r_{0} (1 - \frac{r_{0}}{r}) |
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\right] |
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\right] |
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</math> |
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where |
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Where <math> A(r) </math> is the cross-sectional area as a function of distance <math> r </math> from the Earth's ''center''. |
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{{block indent|''g'' is the acceleration of ''apparent'' gravity, pointing down (negative) or up (positive) along the vertical cable (m s<sup>−2</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|''g<sub>r</sub>'' is the gravitational acceleration due to Earth's pull, pointing down (negative)(m s<sup>−2</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|''a'' is the centrifugal acceleration, pointing up (positive) along the vertical cable (m s<sup>−2</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|''G'' is the [[gravitational constant]] (m<sup>3</sup> s<sup>−2</sup> kg<sup>−1</sup>)}} |
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{{block indent|''M'' is the mass of the Earth (kg)}} |
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{{block indent|''r'' is the distance from that point to Earth's center (m),}} |
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{{block indent|''ω'' is Earth's rotation speed (radian/s).}} |
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At some point up the cable, the two terms (downward gravity and upward centrifugal force) are equal and opposite. Objects fixed to the cable at that point put no weight on the cable. This altitude (r<sub>1</sub>) depends on the mass of the planet and its rotation rate. Setting actual gravity equal to centrifugal acceleration gives:<ref name="aravind"/>{{rp|p. 126}} |
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The constants in the equation are: |
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{{block indent|<math>r_1 = \left(\frac{GM}{\omega^2}\right)^\frac{1}{3}</math>}} |
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This is {{convert|35786|km|mi|0|abbr=on}} above Earth's surface, the altitude of geostationary orbit.<ref name="aravind"/>{{rp|Table 1}} |
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* <math> A_{0} </math> is the cross-sectional area of the cable on the earth's surface. |
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* <math> \rho </math> is the density of the material the cable is made out of. |
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* <math> s </math> is the tensile strength of the material. |
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* <math> \omega </math> is the rotational frequency of the Earth about its axis, 7.292 × 10<sup>-5</sup> [[radian per second|rad·s<sup>-1</sup>]]. |
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* <math> r_{0} </math> is the distance between the Earth's center and the base of the cable. It is approximately the Earth's [[equator]]ial radius, 6378 km. |
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* <math> g_{0} </math> is the acceleration due to [[gravity]] at the cable's base, 9.780 m·s<sup>-2</sup>. |
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On the cable ''below'' geostationary orbit, downward gravity would be greater than the upward centrifugal force, so the apparent gravity would pull objects attached to the cable downward. Any object released from the cable below that level would initially accelerate downward along the cable. Then gradually it would deflect eastward from the cable. On the cable ''above'' the level of stationary orbit, upward centrifugal force would be greater than downward gravity, so the apparent gravity would pull objects attached to the cable ''upward''. Any object released from the cable ''above'' the geosynchronous level would initially accelerate ''upward'' along the cable. Then gradually it would deflect westward from the cable. |
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This equation gives a shape where the cable thickness initially increases rapidly in an exponential fashion, but slows at an altitude a few times the Earth's radius, and then gradually becomes parallel when it finally reaches maximum thickness at [[geostationary orbit]]. The cable thickness then decreases again out from geosynchronous orbit. The relative thickness at all points is determined by the strength density ratio. This is shown in the figure to the right. |
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===Cable section=== |
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Thus the taper of the cable from base to GEO (''r'' = 42,164 km), |
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Historically, the main technical problem has been considered the ability of the cable to hold up, with tension, the weight of itself below any given point. The greatest tension on a space elevator cable is at the point of geostationary orbit, {{convert|35786|km|mi|0|abbr=on}} above the Earth's equator. This means that the cable material, combined with its design, must be strong enough to hold up its own weight from the surface up to {{convert|35786|km|mi|0|abbr=on}}. A cable which is thicker in cross section area at that height than at the surface could better hold up its own weight over a longer length. How the cross section area tapers from the maximum at {{convert|35786|km|mi|0|abbr=on}} to the minimum at the surface is therefore an important design factor for a space elevator cable. |
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:<math> |
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\frac{A(r_{\mathrm{GEO}})}{A_0} = \exp \left[ \frac{\rho}{s} \times 4.832 |
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\times 10^{7} \, \mathrm{ {m^2}\!\!\cdot\!{s^{-2}} } |
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\right] |
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</math> |
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Using the density and tensile strength of steel, and assuming a diameter of 1 cm at ground level, yields a diameter of several hundred kilometers at geostationary orbit height, showing that steel, and indeed most materials used in present day engineering, are unsuitable for building a space elevator. |
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To maximize the usable excess strength for a given amount of cable material, the cable's cross section area would need to be designed for the most part in such a way that the [[Stress (mechanics)|stress]] (i.e., the tension per unit of cross sectional area) is constant along the length of the cable.<ref name="aravind" /><ref>Artuković, Ranko (2000). [http://www.zadar.net/space-elevator/ "The Space Elevator".] zadar.net</ref> The constant-stress criterion is a starting point in the design of the cable cross section area as it changes with altitude. Other factors considered in more detailed designs include thickening at altitudes where more space junk is present, consideration of the point stresses imposed by climbers, and the use of varied materials.<ref name="PhaseII"/> To account for these and other factors, modern detailed designs seek to achieve the largest ''[[Factor of safety#Margin of safety|safety margin]]'' possible, with as little variation over altitude and time as possible.<ref name="PhaseII"/> In simple starting-point designs, that equates to constant-stress. |
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The equation shows us that there are four ways of achieving a more reasonable thickness at geostationary orbit: |
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For a constant-stress cable with no safety margin, the cross-section-area as a function of distance from Earth's center is given by the following equation:<ref name="aravind" /> |
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* Using a lower density material. Not much scope for improvement as the range of densities of most solids that come into question is rather narrow, somewhere between 1000 kg·m<sup>-3</sup> and 5000 kg·m<sup>-3</sup>. |
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* Using a higher strength material. This is the area where most of the research is focused. Carbon nanotubes are tens of times stronger than the strongest types of steel, hugely reducing the cable's cross-sectional area at geostationary orbit. |
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* Increasing the height of a tip of the base station, where the base of cable is attached. The exponential relationship means a small increase in base height results in a large decrease in thickness at geostationary level. Towers of up to 100 km high have been proposed. Not only would a tower of such height reduce the cable mass, it would also avoid exposure of the cable to atmospheric processes. |
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* Making the cable as thin as possible at its base. It still has to be thick enough to carry a payload however, so the minimum thickness at base level also depends on tensile strength. A cable made of carbon nanotubes (a type of [[fullerene]]), would typically be just a millimeter wide at the base. |
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{{CSS image crop |
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===Climbers=== |
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|Image = Space Elevator Taper Profile.svg |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorInClouds.jpg||thumb|300px|right|Most space elevator designs call for a '''climber''' to move autonomously along a stationary cable.]] |
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|bSize = 375 |
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|cWidth = 330 |
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|cHeight = 135 |
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|oTop = 0 |
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|oLeft = 28 |
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|Location = right |
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|Description = Several taper profiles with different material parameters |
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}} |
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{{block indent|<math>A( r ) = A_s \exp\left[ \frac{\rho g R^2}{T}\left( \frac{1}{R}+\frac{R^2}{2R_g^3}-\frac{1}{r}-\frac{r^2}{2R_g^3} \right) \right]</math>}} |
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A space elevator cannot be an elevator in the typical sense (with moving cables) due to the need for the cable to be significantly wider at the center than the tips. While designs employing smaller, segmented moving cables along the length of the main cable have been proposed, most cable designs call for the "elevator" to climb up a stationary cable. |
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where |
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Climbers cover a wide range of designs. On elevator designs whose cables are planar ribbons, most propose to use pairs of rollers to hold the cable with friction. |
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{{block indent|<math>g</math> is the gravitational acceleration at Earth's surface (m·s<sup>−2</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|<math>A_s</math> is the cross-section area of the cable at Earth's surface (m<sup>2</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|<math>\rho</math> is the density of the material used for the cable (kg·m<sup>−3</sup>),}} |
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{{block indent|<math>R</math> is the Earth's equatorial radius,}} |
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{{block indent|<math>R_g</math> is the radius of geosynchronous orbit,}} |
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{{block indent|1=<math>T</math> is the stress the cross-section area can bear without [[Yield (engineering)|yielding]] (N·m<sup>−2</sup>), its elastic limit.}} |
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Safety margin can be accounted for by dividing T by the desired safety factor.<ref name="aravind" /> |
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Power is a significant obstacle for climbers. Energy and power storage densities, barring significant advances in compact nuclear power, do not yet provide the desired rate of climb performance. While the technology is current, no batteries of an adequate size have yet been constructed. Current Direct Energy Conversion radioisotopic batteries can deliver approximately 35 watts per kilogram continuous (based on Sr-90 fuel), allowing for a cargo to battery mass ratio of approximately 1 and an upward travel rate, making generous efficiency assumptions, of approximately 35 miles per hour (56 km/h). These devices do not require recharging. Some other potential solutions have involved [[laser]] or [[microwave]] [[power beaming]], and solar power. |
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===Cable materials=== |
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The primary power methods (laser and microwave power beaming) have significant problems with both efficiency and heat dissipation on both sides, although with optimistic numbers for future technologies, they are feasible. Advancements in carbon nanotube production and manipulation would work directly into this; some carbon nanotube configurations exhibit photovoltaic properties, and some have exceptional thermal conduction properties. |
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Using the above formula, the ratio between the cross-section at geostationary orbit and the cross-section at Earth's surface, known as taper ratio, can be calculated:<ref group="note">Specific substitutions used to produce the factor {{val|4.85|e=7}}:{{block indent|<math>A(R_g)/A_s = \exp \left[ \frac{\rho \times 9.81 \times (6.378\times 10^6)^2 } {T} \left( \frac{1}{6.378\times 10^6} + \frac{(6.378\times 10^6)^2}{2 (4.2164\times 10^7)^3} - \frac{1}{4.2164\times 10^7} - \frac{(4.2164\times 10^7)^2}{2 (4.2164\times 10^7)^3}\right)\right]</math>}}</ref>{{block indent|<math>A(R_g)/A_s = \exp \left[\frac{\rho}{T}\times 4.85\times 10^7\right]</math> }} |
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[[File:Space Elevator Taper Ratio.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|Taper ratio as a function of specific strength]] |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:left" |
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|+Taper ratio for some materials<ref name="aravind" /> |
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|- |
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!Material!!Tensile strength<br />(MPa)!!Density<br />(kg/m<sup>3</sup>)!![[Specific strength]]<br />(MPa)/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>)!!Taper ratio |
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|- |
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|[[Steel]] || 5,000 || 7,900 || 0.63 ||{{val|1.6|e=33}} |
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|- |
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|[[Kevlar]] || 3,600 || 1,440 || 2.5 ||{{val|2.5|e=8}} |
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|- |
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|[[UHMWPE]] @23°C || 3,600 || 0,980 || 3.7 ||{{val|5.4|e=6}} |
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|- |
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|Single wall [[carbon nanotube]] || 130,000 || 1,300 || 100 || 1.6 |
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|} |
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The taper ratio becomes very large unless the specific strength of the material used approaches 48 (MPa)/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>). Low specific strength materials require very large taper ratios which equates to large (or astronomical) total mass of the cable with associated large or impossible costs. |
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==Structure== |
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Climbers must be paced at optimal timings so as to minimize cable stress and oscillations and to maximize throughput. The weakest point of the cable is near its planetary connection; new climbers can typically be launched so long as there are not multiple climbers in this area at once. An only-up elevator can handle a higher throughput, but has the disadvantage of not allowing energy recapture through regenerative down-climbers. Additionally, an up-only elevator would require some other method to return people to Earth. Finally, only-up climbers (that do not return to Earth) must be disposable; if used, they should be modular so that their components can be used for other purposes in space. In any case, smaller climbers have the advantage over larger climbers of giving better options for how to timetable trips up the cable, but may impose technological limitations. |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorClimbing.jpg|thumb|right|upright=1.2|One concept for the space elevator has it tethered to a mobile seagoing platform.]] |
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There are a variety of space elevator designs proposed for many planetary bodies. Almost every design includes a base station, a cable, climbers, and a counterweight. For an Earth Space Elevator the Earth's rotation creates upward [[centrifugal force]]<!--"upward" is a continuously changing direction which implies an accelerated reference frame where "c.f." is unquestionable (see http://xkcd.com/123/) --> on the counterweight. The counterweight is held down by the cable while the cable is held up and taut by the counterweight. The base station anchors the whole system to the surface of the Earth. Climbers climb up and down the cable with cargo. |
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=== |
===Base station=== |
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Modern concepts for the base station/anchor are typically mobile stations, large oceangoing vessels or other mobile platforms. Mobile base stations would have the advantage over the earlier stationary concepts (with land-based anchors) by being able to maneuver to avoid high winds, storms, and [[space debris]]. Oceanic anchor points are also typically in [[international waters]], simplifying and reducing the cost of negotiating territory use for the base station.<ref name="Edwards" /> |
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There have been two dominant methods proposed for dealing with the counterweight need: a heavy object, such as a captured asteroid or a [[space station]], positioned past geosynchronous orbit, or extending the cable itself well past geosynchronous orbit. The latter idea has gained more support in recent years due to the relative simplicity of the task and the fact that a payload that went to the end of the counterweight-cable would acquire considerable velocity relative to the Earth, allowing it to be launched into interplanetary space. |
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Stationary land-based platforms would have simpler and less costly logistical access to the base. They also would have the advantage of being able to be at high altitudes, such as on top of mountains. In an alternate concept, the base station could be a tower, forming a space elevator which comprises both a compression tower close to the surface, and a tether structure at higher altitudes.<ref name="JBIS1999" /> Combining a compression structure with a tension structure would reduce loads from the atmosphere at the Earth end of the tether, and reduce the distance into the Earth's gravity field that the cable needs to extend, and thus reduce the critical strength-to-density requirements for the cable material, all other design factors being equal. |
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===Angular momentum, speed and cable lean=== |
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[[Image:Space elevator balance of forces.png|thumb|250px|As the car climbs, the elevator takes on a 1 degree lean, due to the top of the elevator traveling faster than the bottom around the Earth (Coriolis effect). This diagram is not to scale.]] |
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The horizontal speed of each part of the cable increases with altitude, proportional to distance from the center of the Earth, reaching [[orbital velocity]] at geosynchronous orbit. Therefore as a payload is lifted up a space elevator, it needs to gain not only altitude but [[angular momentum]] (horizontal speed) as well. |
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===Cable=== |
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This angular momentum is taken from the Earth's own rotation. As the climber ascends it is initially moving slightly more slowly than the cable that it moves onto ([[Coriolis effect]]) and thus the climber "drags" on the cable, carrying the cable with it very slightly to the west (and necessarily pulling the counterweight slightly to the west, shown as an offset of the counterweight in the diagram to right, slightly changing the motion of the counterweight). At a 200 km/h climb speed this generates a 1 degree lean on the lower portion of the cable. The horizontal component of the tension in the non-vertical cable applies a sideways pull on the payload, accelerating it eastward (see diagram) and this is the source of the speed that the climber needs. Conversely, the cable pulls westward on Earth's surface, insignificantly slowing the Earth, from Newton's 3rd law. |
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[[File:Kohlenstoffnanoroehre Animation.gif|thumb|upright|[[Carbon nanotubes]] are one of the candidates for a cable material.<ref name="physorg_obayashi"/>]] |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorAnchor.jpg|thumb|upright|A seagoing anchor station would also act as a deep-water [[seaport]].]] |
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A space elevator cable would need to carry its own weight as well as the additional weight of climbers. The required strength of the cable would vary along its length. This is because at various points it would have to carry the weight of the cable below, or provide a downward force to retain the cable and counterweight above. Maximum tension on a space elevator cable would be at geosynchronous altitude so the cable would have to be thickest there and taper as it approaches Earth. Any potential cable design may be characterized by the taper factor – the ratio between the cable's radius at geosynchronous altitude and at the Earth's surface.<ref>{{cite web |title=NAS-97-029: NASA Applications of Molecular Nanotechnology |author=Globus, Al |display-authors=etal |publisher=NASA |url=http://www.nas.nasa.gov/assets/pdf/techreports/1997/nas-97-029.pdf |access-date=27 September 2008 |archive-date=8 April 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160408064557/http://www.nas.nasa.gov/assets/pdf/techreports/1997/nas-97-029.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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The cable would need to be made of a material with a high [[specific strength|tensile strength/density ratio]]. For example, the Edwards space elevator design assumes a cable material with a tensile strength of at least 100 [[gigapascal]]s.<ref name="Edwards"/> Since Edwards consistently assumed the density of his carbon nanotube cable to be 1300 kg/m<sup>3</sup>,<ref name="EDWARDS_PHASE_I_2000_472Edwards.html"/> that implies a specific strength of 77 megapascal/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>). This value takes into consideration the entire weight of the space elevator. An untapered space elevator cable would need a material capable of sustaining a length of {{convert|4,960|km|mi|sp=us}} of its own weight ''at [[sea level]]'' to reach a [[geostationary]] altitude of {{convert|35786|km|mi|0|abbr=on}} without yielding.<ref>This 4,960 km "escape length" (calculated by [[Arthur C. Clarke]] in 1979) is much shorter than the actual distance spanned because [[Centrifugal force (fictitious)|centrifugal forces]] increase (and gravity decreases) dramatically with height: {{cite web |last=Clarke |first=A. C. |year=1979 |title=The space elevator: 'thought experiment', or key to the universe? |url=http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK2.HTM |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140103033306/http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK2.HTM |archive-date=3 January 2014 |access-date=5 January 2010}}</ref> Therefore, a material with very high strength and lightness is needed. |
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Meanwhile, the overall effect of the centrifugal force acting on the cable causes it to constantly try to return to the energetically favourable vertical orientation, so after an object has been lifted on the cable the counterweight will swing back towards the vertical like an inverted pendulum. Provided that the Space Elevator is designed so that the center of mass always stays above geosynchronous orbit<ref>[http://www.mit.edu:8001/people/gassend/spaceelevator/center-of-mass/index.html]</ref> for the maximum climb speed of the climbers, the elevator cannot fall over. Lift and descent operations must be carefully planned so as to keep the pendulum-like motion of the counterweight around the tether point under control. |
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For comparison, metals like titanium, steel or aluminium alloys have [[specific strength|breaking lengths]] of only 20–30 km (0.2–0.3 MPa/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>)). Modern [[Man-made fibers|fiber]] materials such as [[kevlar]], [[fibreglass|fiberglass]] and [[Carbon fiber|carbon/graphite fiber]] have breaking lengths of 100–400 km (1.0–4.0 MPa/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>)). Nanoengineered materials such as [[carbon nanotubes]] and, more recently discovered, [[graphene]] ribbons (perfect two-dimensional sheets of carbon) are expected to have breaking lengths of 5000–6000 km (50–60 MPa/(kg/m<sup>3</sup>)), and also are able to conduct electrical power.{{Citation needed|date=April 2014}} |
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By the time the payload has reached GEO the angular momentum (horizontal speed) is enough that the payload is in orbit. |
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For a space elevator on Earth, with its comparatively high gravity, the cable material would need to be stronger and lighter than currently available materials.<ref name="Huff.3353697" /> For this reason, there has been a focus on the development of new materials that meet the demanding specific strength requirement. For high specific strength, carbon has advantages because it is only the sixth element in the [[periodic table]]. Carbon has comparatively few of the [[nucleons|protons and neutrons]] which contribute most of the dead weight of any material. Most of the interatomic [[Chemical bond|bonding forces]] of any element are contributed by only the [[Valence electron|outer few]] electrons. For carbon, the strength and stability of those bonds is high compared to the mass of the atom. The challenge in using carbon nanotubes remains to extend to macroscopic sizes the production of such material that are still perfect on the microscopic scale (as microscopic [[Crystallographic defects|defects]] are most responsible for material weakness).<ref name="Huff.3353697">{{cite news |first=Jillian |last=Scharr |title=Space Elevators On Hold At Least Until Stronger Materials Are Available, Experts Say |newspaper=Huffington Post |date=29 May 2013 |url=https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/29/space-elevators-stronger-materials_n_3353697.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Feltman |first=R. |title=Why Don't We Have Space Elevators? |journal=Popular Mechanics |date=7 March 2013 |url=http://www.popularmechanics.com/science/space/nasa/why-dont-we-have-space-elevators-15185070}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Templeton |first=Graham |url=http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/176625-60000-miles-up-geostationary-space-elevator-could-be-built-by-2035-says-new-study |title=60,000 miles up: Space elevator could be built by 2035, says new study |work=Extreme Tech |date=6 March 2014 |access-date=14 April 2014}}</ref> As of 2014, carbon nanotube technology allowed growing tubes up to a few tenths of meters.<ref>{{cite journal| first1=X.| last1=Wang| title=Fabrication of Ultralong and Electrically Uniform Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes on Clean Substrates| volume=9| pages=3137–3141| year=2009| doi=10.1021/nl901260b| journal=Nano Letters| last2=Li| first2=Q.| last3=Xie| first3=J.| last4=Jin| first4=Z.| last5=Wang| first5=J.| last6=Li| first6=Y.| last7=Jiang| first7=K.| last8=Fan| first8=S.| issue=9| pmid=19650638| bibcode=2009NanoL...9.3137W| url=http://www.chem.pku.edu.cn/page/liy/labhomepage/publications/2009/2009NL.pdf| url-status=dead| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170808164154/http://www.chem.pku.edu.cn/page/liy/labhomepage/publications/2009/2009NL.pdf| archive-date=8 August 2017| citeseerx=10.1.1.454.2744}}</ref> |
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The opposite process would occur for payloads descending the elevator, tilting the cable eastwards and insignificantly increasing Earth's rotation speed. |
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In 2014, [[carbon nanothread|diamond nanothreads]] were first synthesized.<ref name="SCIAM_DN">{{cite magazine |url=http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/liquid-benzene-squeezed-to-form-diamond-nanothreads/ |title=Liquid Benzene Squeezed to Form Diamond Nanothreads |first=Julia |last=Calderone |date=26 September 2014 |magazine=[[Scientific American]] |access-date=22 July 2018}}</ref> Since they have strength properties similar to carbon nanotubes, diamond nanothreads were quickly seen as candidate cable material as well.<ref name="Xtech_DN">{{cite news |url=http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/190691-new-diamond-nanothreads-could-be-the-key-material-for-building-a-space-elevator |title=New diamond nanothreads could be the key material for building a space elevator |first=Sebastian |last=Anthony |date=23 September 2014 |publisher=Zeff Davis, LLC |newspaper=Extremetech |access-date=22 July 2018}}</ref> |
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===Launching into outer space=== |
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We can determine the velocities that might be attained at the end of Pearson's 144,000 km cable. The tangential velocity is 10.93 kilometers per second which is more than enough to [[escape velocity|escape]] Earth's gravitational field and send probes as far out as [[Saturn (planet)|Saturn]]. If an object were allowed to slide freely along the upper part of the tower, a velocity high enough to escape the [[solar system]] entirely would be attained. This is accomplished by trading off overall angular momentum of the tower for velocity of the launched object, in much the same way one snaps a towel or throws a [[lacrosse]] ball. After such an operation a cable would be left with less angular momentum than required to keep its geostationary position. The rotation of the Earth would then pull on the cable increasing its angular velocity, leaving the cable swinging backwards and forwards about its starting point. |
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===Climbers=== |
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For higher velocities, the cargo can be electromagnetically accelerated, or the cable could be extended, although that would require additional strength in the cable. |
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[[Image:SpaceElevatorInClouds.jpg|thumb|upright|A conceptual drawing of a space elevator climber ascending through the clouds.]] |
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A space elevator cannot be an elevator in the typical sense (with moving cables) due to the need for the cable to be significantly wider at the center than at the tips. While various designs employing moving cables have been proposed, most cable designs call for the "elevator" to climb up a stationary cable. |
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===Extraterrestrial elevators=== |
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A space elevator could also be constructed on some of the other planets, asteroids and moons. |
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Climbers cover a wide range of designs. On elevator designs whose cables are planar ribbons, most propose to use pairs of rollers to hold the cable with friction. |
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A [[Mars|Martian]] tether could be much shorter than one on Earth. Mars' surface [[gravity]] is 38% of Earth's, while it rotates around its axis in about the same time as Earth. Because of this, Martian [[areostationary orbit]] is much closer to the surface, and hence the elevator would be much shorter. Exotic materials might not be required to construct such an elevator. However, building a Martian elevator would be a unique challenge because the Martian moon [[Phobos (moon)|Phobos]] is in a low orbit, and intersects the equator regularly (twice every orbital period of 11 h 6 min). A collision between the elevator and the 22.2 km diameter moon would have to be avoided through active steering of the elevator, or perhaps by moving the moon itself out of the area. One simpler way to resolve the problem of Phobos (1.1 degree orbital inclination) or [[Deimos (moon)|Deimos]] (1.8 degree orbital inclination) interaction is to position the tether anchor perhaps five (5) degrees off the Martian equator. There would be a small payload penalty, but the tether would pass outside the orbital inclination of the two moons. Also, the tether would depart the Martian anchor at 5–10 degrees from vertical. |
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Climbers would need to be paced at optimal timings so as to minimize cable stress and oscillations and to maximize throughput. Lighter climbers could be sent up more often, with several going up at the same time. This would increase throughput somewhat, but would lower the mass of each individual payload.<ref name="LangGTOSS">{{cite web |url=http://spaceelevatorwiki.com/wiki/images/2/2b/Paper_Lang_Climber_Transit.pdf |last=Lang |first=David D. |title=Space Elevator Dynamic Response to In-Transit Climbers |access-date=9 February 2016 |archive-date=28 May 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160528232403/http://spaceelevatorwiki.com/wiki/images/2/2b/Paper_Lang_Climber_Transit.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
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Conversely, a [[Venus]]ian space elevator would need to be much longer. Although a tether placed at the stationary orbit of the slowly rotating Venus would intersect the Sun, one could be constructed that rotated with the fast-moving cloud decks of the planet which take only four Earth days to make a complete cycle. The cable would need to exceed 100,000 kilometers long but, counter-intuitively, would experience less stress due to the slightly smaller gravity exerted on the cable. Such an elevator could service [[aerostat]]s or [[Floating cities (science fiction)|floating cities]] in the benign regions of the [[atmosphere of Venus|atmosphere]]. |
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[[File:Space elevator balance of forces--circular Earth--more accurate force vectors.svg|thumb|upright=1.2|As the car climbs, the cable takes on a slight lean due to the Coriolis force. The top of the cable travels faster than the bottom. The climber is accelerated horizontally as it ascends by the Coriolis force which is imparted by angles of the cable. The lean-angle shown is exaggerated.]] |
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A [[lunar space elevator]] would need to be very long (more than twice the length of an Earth elevator) but due to the low gravity of the Moon, can be made of existing engineering materials. Alternatively, due to the lack of atmosphere on the Moon, a rotating [[tether]] could be used with its center of mass in orbit around the Moon with a [[counterweight]] (e.g. a [[space station]]) at the short end and a [[payload]] at the long end. The path of the payload would be an [[epicycloid]] around the Moon, touching down at some integer number of times per orbit. Thus, payloads are lifted off the surface of the Moon, and flung away at the high point of the orbit. |
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The horizontal speed, i.e. due to orbital rotation, of each part of the cable increases with altitude, proportional to distance from the center of the Earth, reaching low [[orbital speed]] at a point approximately 66 percent of the height between the surface and geostationary orbit, or a height of about 23,400 km. A payload released at this point would go into a highly eccentric elliptical orbit, staying just barely clear from atmospheric reentry, with the [[periapsis]] at the same altitude as low earth orbit (LEO) and the [[apoapsis]] at the release height. With increasing release height the orbit would become less eccentric as both periapsis and apoapsis increase, becoming circular at geostationary level.<ref>{{cite web |first=Blaise |last=Gassend |title=Falling Climbers |url=http://gassend.net/spaceelevator/falling-climbers/index.html |access-date=16 December 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Space elevator to low orbit? |url=http://www.endlessskyway.com/2010/05/space-elevator-to-low-orbit.html |date=19 May 2010 |website=Endless Skyway |access-date=16 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131216184533/http://www.endlessskyway.com/2010/05/space-elevator-to-low-orbit.html |archive-date=16 December 2013 |url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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When the payload has reached GEO, the horizontal speed is exactly the speed of a circular orbit at that level, so that if released, it would remain adjacent to that point on the cable. The payload can also continue climbing further up the cable beyond GEO, allowing it to obtain higher speed at jettison. If released from 100,000 km, the payload would have enough speed to reach the asteroid belt.<ref name="PhaseII" /> |
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Rapidly spinning asteroids or moons could use cables to eject materials in order to move the materials to convenient points, such as Earth orbits; or conversely, to eject materials in order to send the bulk of the mass of the asteroid or moon to Earth orbit or a [[Lagrangian point]]. This was suggested by [[Russell Johnston]] in the 1980s. [[Freeman Dyson]], a physicist and mathematician, has suggested using such smaller systems as power generators at points distant from the Sun where solar power is uneconomical. |
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As a payload is lifted up a space elevator, it would gain not only altitude, but horizontal speed (angular momentum) as well. The angular momentum is taken from the Earth's rotation. As the climber ascends, it is initially moving slower than each successive part of cable it is moving on to. This is the [[Coriolis force]]: the climber "drags" (westward) on the cable, as it climbs, and slightly decreases the Earth's rotation speed. The opposite process would occur for descending payloads: the cable is tilted eastward, thus slightly increasing Earth's rotation speed. |
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It may also be possible to construct space elevators at the three smaller [[gas giant]]s, [[Saturn]], [[Uranus]] and [[Neptune]]. These would all involve tapering several times greater than those of the inner solar system, and would need to be approximately 50–60 thousand kilometers long, yet are still within the limits of advanced nano-tubes. These outer space elevators could facilitate the exchange of supplies and [[helium-3]] between floating mining colonies in the atmospheres and local moon settlements. However, difficulties such as the equatorially orbiting lower rings and moons of these giant planets would first need to be overcome. |
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The overall effect of the <!--n.b. the elevator is in a non inertial reference frame, so centrifugal is correct--->centrifugal force acting on the cable would cause it to constantly try to return to the energetically favorable vertical orientation, so after an object has been lifted on the cable, the counterweight would swing back toward the vertical, a bit like a pendulum.<ref name="LangGTOSS" /> Space elevators and their loads would be designed so that the center of mass is always well-enough above the level of geostationary orbit<ref>{{cite web |url=http://gassend.net/spaceelevator/center-of-mass/index.html |title=Why the Space Elevator's Center of Mass is not at GEO |first=Blaise |last=Gassend |access-date=30 September 2011}}</ref> to hold up the whole system. Lift and descent operations would need to be carefully planned so as to keep the pendulum-like motion of the counterweight around the tether point under control.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.actaastro.2008.10.003|title=The effect of climber transit on the space elevator dynamics|year=2009|last1=Cohen|first1=Stephen S.|last2=Misra|first2=Arun K.|journal=Acta Astronautica|volume=64|issue=5–6|pages=538–553|bibcode=2009AcAau..64..538C}}</ref> |
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==Construction== |
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The construction of a space elevator would be a vast project, requiring advances in engineering and physical technology. [[NASA]] has identified "Five Key Technologies for Future Space Elevator Development": |
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# '''[[materials science|Material]]''' for ''cable'' (e.g. [[carbon nanotube]] and [[nanotechnology]]) and ''tower'' |
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# '''[[tether propulsion|Tether]]''' deployment and control |
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# '''[[world's tallest structures|Tall tower]]''' construction |
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# '''[[Electromagnetic propulsion]]''' (e.g. [[magnetic levitation]]) |
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# '''Space infrastructure''' and the development of [[space industry]] and economy |
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Climber speed would be limited by the Coriolis force, available power, and by the need to ensure the climber's accelerating force does not break the cable. Climbers would also need to maintain a minimum average speed in order to move material up and down economically and expeditiously.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Courtland|first=Rachel|title=Space elevator trips could be agonisingly slow|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16223-space-elevator-trips-could-be-agonisingly-slow/|access-date=2021-05-28|website=New Scientist|language=en-US}}</ref> At the speed of a very fast car or train of {{convert|300|km/h|mph|abbr=on}} it will take about 5 days to climb to geosynchronous orbit.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fawcett |first1=Bill |title=LIFTPORT |last2=Laine |first2=Michael |last3=Nugent Jr. |first3=Tom |date=2006 |publisher=Meisha Merlin Publishing, Inc. |isbn=978-1-59222-109-7 |location=Canada |page=103 |language=en |name-list-style=amp}}</ref> |
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Two different ways to deploy a space elevator have been proposed. |
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=== |
===Powering climbers=== |
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Both power and energy are significant issues for climbers – the climbers would need to gain a large amount of potential energy as quickly as possible to clear the cable for the next payload. |
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One early plan involved lifting the entire mass of the elevator into [[geosynchronous orbit]], and simultaneously lowering one cable downwards towards the Earth's surface while another cable is deployed upwards directly away from the Earth's surface. |
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Various methods have been proposed to provide energy to the climber: |
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[[Tidal force]]s ([[Gravitational force|gravity]] and [[centrifugal force]]) would naturally pull the cables directly towards and directly away from the Earth and keep the elevator balanced around geosynchronous orbit. As the cable is deployed, [[coriolis force]]s would pull the upper portion of the cable somewhat to the West and the lower portion of the cable somewhat to the East, this effect can be controlled by varying the deployment speed. |
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* Transfer the energy to the climber through [[wireless energy transfer]] while it is climbing. |
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* Transfer the energy to the climber through some material structure while it is climbing. |
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* Store the energy in the climber before it starts – requires an extremely high [[specific energy]] such as nuclear energy. |
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* Solar power – After the first 40 km it is possible to use solar energy to power the climber<ref>{{cite web |last1=Swan |first1=P. A. |last2=Swan |first2=C. W. |last3=Penny |first3=R. E. |last4=Knapman |first4=J. M. |last5=Glaskowsky |first5=P. N. |title=Design Consideration for Space Elevator Tether Climbers |url=http://isec.org/pdfs/isec_reports/2013_ISEC_Design_Considerations_for_Space_Elevator_Tether_Climbers_Final_Report.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170116175959/http://isec.org/pdfs/isec_reports/2013_ISEC_Design_Considerations_for_Space_Elevator_Tether_Climbers_Final_Report.pdf |archive-date=16 January 2017 |publisher=[[International Space Elevator Consortium|ISEC]] |quote=During the last ten years, the assumption was that the only power available would come from the surface of the Earth, as it was inexpensive and technologically feasible. However, during the last ten years of discussions, conference papers, IAA Cosmic Studies, and interest around the globe, many discussions have led some individuals to the following conclusions: • Solar Array technology is improving rapidly and will enable sufficient energy for climbing • Tremendous advances are occurring in lightweight deployable structures.}}</ref> |
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Wireless energy transfer such as [[laser power beaming]] is currently considered the most likely method, using megawatt-powered free electron or solid state lasers in combination with adaptive mirrors approximately {{convert|10|m|ft|abbr=on}} wide and a photovoltaic array on the climber tuned to the laser frequency for efficiency.<ref name="Edwards" /> For climber designs powered by power beaming, this efficiency is an important design goal. Unused energy would need to be re-radiated away with heat-dissipation systems, which add to weight. |
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However, this approach requires lifting hundreds or even thousands of tons on conventional [[rocket]]s. This would be very expensive. |
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Yoshio Aoki, a professor of precision machinery engineering at [[Nihon University]] and director of the Japan Space Elevator Association, suggested including a second cable and using the conductivity of carbon nanotubes to provide power.<ref name="JapanUKTimes" /> |
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===Brad Edwards' proposal=== |
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[[Bradley C. Edwards]], former Director of Research for the [[Institute for Scientific Research]] (ISR), based in [[Fairmont, West Virginia]] has presented a plausible scheme showing how a space elevator could be built in little more than a decade, rather than the far future. |
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===Counterweight=== |
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He proposes that a single hair-like 18 [[tonne|metric ton]] (20 short [[ton]]) 'seed' cable be deployed in the traditional way, giving a very lightweight elevator with very little lifting capacity. |
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[[File:Nasa space elev.jpg|thumb|Space elevator with space station]] |
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Several solutions have been proposed to act as a counterweight: |
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* a heavy, captured [[asteroid]]<ref name="NASASci" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.popsci.com/building-hanging-from-an-asteroid/ |title=This building hanging from an asteroid is absurd – but let's take it seriously for a second |work=Popular Science |first=Sara |last=Chodosh |date=29 March 2017 |language=en|access-date=4 September 2019}}</ref> |
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* a [[space dock]], [[space station]] or [[spaceport]] positioned past geostationary orbit |
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* a further upward extension of the cable itself so that the net upward pull would be the same as an equivalent counterweight |
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* parked spent climbers that had been used to thicken the cable during construction, other junk, and material lifted up the cable for the purpose of increasing the counterweight.<ref name="PhaseII">Edwards BC, Westling EA. (2002) ''The Space Elevator: A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System.'' San Francisco, California: Spageo Inc. {{ISBN|0-9726045-0-2}}.</ref> |
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Extending the cable has the advantage of some simplicity of the task and the fact that a payload that went to the end of the counterweight-cable would acquire considerable velocity relative to the Earth, allowing it to be launched into interplanetary space. Its disadvantage is the need to produce greater amounts of cable material as opposed to using just anything available that has mass. |
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==Applications== |
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Then, progressively heavier [[cable]]s would be pulled up from the ground along it, repeatedly strengthening it until the elevator reaches the required [[mass]] and [[Strength of materials|strength]]. This is much the same technique used to build [[suspension bridge]]s. |
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===Launching into deep space=== |
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An object attached to a space elevator at a radius of approximately 53,100 km would be at [[escape velocity]] when released. Transfer orbits to the L1 and L2 [[Lagrangian point]]s could be attained by release at 50,630 and 51,240 km, respectively, and transfer to lunar orbit from 50,960 km.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.spaceelevator.com/docs/iac-2004/iac-04-iaa.3.8.3.04.engel.pdf |title=IAC-04-IAA.3.8.3.04 Lunar transportation scenarios utilising the space elevator |author=Engel, Kilian A. |publisher=www.spaceelevator.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120424230830/http://www.spaceelevator.com/docs/iac-2004/iac-04-iaa.3.8.3.04.engel.pdf |archive-date=24 April 2012}}</ref> |
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At the end of Pearson's {{convert|144,000|km|mi|abbr=on}} cable, the tangential velocity is 10.93 kilometers per second (6.79 mi/s). That is more than enough to [[escape velocity|escape]] Earth's gravitational field and send probes at least as far out as [[Jupiter]]. Once at Jupiter, a [[gravitational assist]] maneuver could permit solar escape velocity to be reached.<ref name="aravind">{{cite journal|title=The physics of the space elevator |author=Aravind, P. K.|year=2007|journal=American Journal of Physics|volume=45|issue=2|doi=10.1119/1.2404957|page=125 |url=http://users.wpi.edu/~paravind/Publications/PKASpace%20Elevators.pdf |bibcode=2007AmJPh..75..125A|access-date=7 January 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181221130720/http://users.wpi.edu/~paravind/Publications/PKASpace%20Elevators.pdf |archive-date=21 December 2018|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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Although 18 tonnes for a seed cable may sound like a lot, it would actually be very lightweight — the proposed average mass is about 200 gram per kilometer. In comparison, conventional [[copper]] telephone wires running to consumer homes weigh about 4 kg/km. |
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=== |
===Extraterrestrial elevators=== |
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A space elevator could also be constructed on other planets, asteroids and moons. |
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These are far less well developed, and will be mentioned here only in passing. |
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A [[Mars|Martian]] tether could be much shorter than one on Earth. Mars' surface gravity is 38 percent of Earth's, while it rotates around its axis in about the same time as Earth. Because of this, Martian [[areostationary orbit|stationary orbit]] is much closer to the surface, and hence the elevator could be much shorter. Current materials are already sufficiently strong to construct such an elevator.<ref>Forward, Robert L. and Moravec, Hans P. (22 March 1980) [http://www.frc.ri.cmu.edu/~hpm/project.archive/1976.skyhook/1982.articles/elevate.800322 Space Elevators]. Carnegie Mellon University. "Interestingly enough, they are already more than strong enough for constructing skyhooks on the moon and Mars."</ref> Building a Martian elevator would be complicated by the Martian moon [[Phobos (moon)|Phobos]], which is in a low orbit and intersects the Equator regularly (twice every orbital period of 11 h 6 min). Phobos and Deimos may get in the way of an areostationary space elevator; on the other hand, they may contribute useful resources to the project. Phobos is projected to contain high amounts of carbon. If carbon nanotubes become feasible for a tether material, there will be an abundance of carbon near Mars. This could provide readily available resources for future colonization on Mars. |
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If the cable provides a useful tensile strength of about 62.5 GPa or above, then it turns out that a constant width cable can reach beyond geosynchronous orbit without breaking under its own weight. The far end can then be turned around and passed back down to the Earth forming a constant width loop. The two sides of the loop are naturally kept apart by [[coriolis force]]s due to the rotation of the Earth and the cable. By exponentially increasing the thickness of the cable from the ground a very quick buildup of a new elevator may be performed (it helps that no active climbers are needed, and power is applied mechanically.) However, because the loop runs at constant speed, joining and leaving the loop may be somewhat challenging, and the strength of the loop is lower than a conventional tapered design, reducing the maximum payload that can be carried without snapping the cable.<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.mit.edu/people/gassend/publications/ExponentialTethers.pdf |
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|title=Exponential Tethers for Accelerated Space Elevator Deployment? |
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|first=Blaise |
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|last=Gassend |
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|format=PDF |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> |
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[[File:Space elevator Phobos.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Space elevator [[Phobos (moon)|Phobos]]]] |
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Other structures such as mechanically-linked multiple looped designs hanging off of a central exponential tether might also be practical, and would seem to avoid the laser power beaming; this design has higher capacity than a single loop, but still requires perhaps twice as much tether material. |
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[[File:Earth vs Mars gravity at elevation.webp|thumb|upright=1.35|[[Gravity of Earth|Earth]] vs [[Gravity of Mars|Mars]] vs [[Moon]] [[gravity]] at [[elevation]]]] |
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[[Phobos (moon)|Phobos]] is [[tidal locking|tide-locked]]: one side always faces its primary, Mars. An elevator extending 6,000 km from that inward side would end about 28 kilometers above the [[Martian surface]], just out of the denser parts of the [[atmosphere of Mars]]. A similar cable extending 6,000 km in the opposite direction would [[counterbalance]] the first, so the center of mass of this system remains in Phobos. In total the space elevator would extend out over 12,000 km which would be below [[areostationary orbit]] of Mars (17,032 km). A rocket launch would still be needed to get the rocket and cargo to the beginning of the space elevator 28 km above the surface. The surface of Mars is rotating at 0.25 [[km/s]] at the equator and the bottom of the space elevator would be rotating around Mars at 0.77 km/s, so only 0.52 km/s (1872 km/h) of [[Delta-v]] would be needed to get to the space elevator. Phobos orbits at 2.15 km/s and the outermost part of the space elevator would rotate around Mars at 3.52 km/s.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Weinstein |first1=Leonard M. |title=Space Colonization Using Space-Elevators from Phobos |journal=AIP Conference Proceedings |date=January 2003 |volume=654 |pages=1227–1235 |doi=10.1063/1.1541423 |s2cid=1661518 |bibcode=2003AIPC..654.1227W |hdl=2060/20030065879 |url=https://space.nss.org/wp-content/uploads/2003-Space-Colonization-Using-Space-Elevators-From-Phobos.pdf |access-date=23 December 2022 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite conference |last1=Weinstein |first1=Leonard |title=AIP Conference Proceedings |chapter=Space Colonization Using Space-Elevators from Phobos |conference=AIP Conference Proceedings|year=2003 |volume=654 |pages=1227–1235 |doi=10.1063/1.1541423 |bibcode=2003AIPC..654.1227W |hdl=2060/20030065879 |hdl-access=free}}</ref> |
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The Earth's [[Moon]] is a potential location for a [[Lunar space elevator]], especially as the [[specific strength]] required for the tether is low enough to use currently available materials. The Moon does not rotate fast enough for an elevator to be supported by centrifugal force (the proximity of the Earth means there is no effective lunar-stationary orbit), but differential gravity forces means that an elevator could be constructed through [[Lagrangian point]]s. A near-side elevator would extend through the Earth-Moon [[Inner lagrangian point|L1]] point from an anchor point near the center of the visible part of Earth's Moon: the length of such an elevator must exceed the maximum L1 altitude of 59,548 km, and would be considerably longer to reduce the mass of the required apex counterweight.<ref name="Pearson 2005" /> A far-side lunar elevator would pass through the L2 Lagrangian point and would need to be longer than on the near-side; again, the tether length depends on the chosen apex anchor mass, but it could also be made of existing engineering materials.<ref name="Pearson 2005">{{cite web |last1=Pearson |first1=Jerome |last2=Levin |first2=Eugene |last3=Oldson |first3=John |last4=Wykes |first4=Harry |year=2005 |title=Lunar Space Elevators for Cislunar Space Development Phase I Final Technical Report |url=http://www.niac.usra.edu/files/studies/final_report/1032Pearson.pdf}}</ref> |
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==Failure modes, safety issues and construction difficulties== |
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As with any structure, there are a number of ways in which things could go wrong. A space elevator would present a considerable navigational hazard, both to aircraft and spacecraft. Aircraft could be dealt with by means of simple air-traffic control restrictions, but impacts by space objects (in particular, by meteoroids and micrometeorites) pose a more difficult problem. |
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[[File:16 Psyche space elevator.webp|thumb|upright=1.4|[[16 Psyche]] space elevator concept—the [[surface gravity]] is less than 2% of earths at ~{{val|0.144|u=m/s2}}<ref name=Shepard-Richardson-etal-2017> |
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===Satellites=== |
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{{cite journal |
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If nothing were done, essentially all satellites with [[perigee]]s below the top of the elevator would eventually collide with the elevator cable. Twice per day, each orbital plane intersects the elevator, as the rotation of the Earth swings the cable around the equator. Usually the satellite and the cable will not line up. However, except for synchronized orbits, the elevator and satellite will eventually occupy the same place at the same time, almost certainly leading to structural failure of the space elevator and destruction of the satellite. |
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|last1=Shepard |first1=Michael K. |
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|last2=Richardson |first2=James |
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|last3=Taylor |first3=Patrick A. |
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|display-authors=etal |
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|year=2017 |
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|title=Radar observations and shape model of asteroid 16 Psyche |
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|journal=Icarus |
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|volume=281 |pages=388–403 |
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|bibcode=2017Icar..281..388S |
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|doi=10.1016/j.icarus.2016.08.011 |doi-access=free |
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}} |
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</ref>]] |
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[[File:Ceres space elevator.webp|thumb|upright=1.4|[[Ceres (dwarf planet)|Ceres]] space elevator concept –<br />[[Surface gravity]] is {{ubl|{{Gr|0.938|469.7|3}} [[Acceleration|m/s{{sup|2}}]]{{refn|groupname=lower-alpha|name="known parameters"|Calculated based on known parameters: |
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* Surface area: 4πr{{sup|2}} |
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* Surface gravity: {{sfrac|GM|r{{sup|2}}}} |
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* Escape velocity: {{sqrt|{{sfrac|2GM|r}}}} |
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* Rotation velocity: {{sfrac|rotation period|circumference}}}}|0.029 [[g-force|''g'']]}} less than 3% of [[Earth]]'s]] |
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Rapidly spinning asteroids or moons could use cables to eject materials to convenient points, such as Earth orbits;<ref>Ben Shelef, the Spaceward Foundation. [http://www.spaceward.org/documents/papers/ASE.pdf Asteroid Slingshot Express – Tether-based Sample Return] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130806051254/http://www.spaceward.org/documents/papers/ASE.pdf|date=6 August 2013}}.</ref> or conversely, to eject materials to send a portion of the mass of the asteroid or moon to Earth orbit or a [[Lagrangian point]]. [[Freeman Dyson]], a physicist and mathematician, suggested{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}} using such smaller systems as power generators at points distant from the Sun where solar power is uneconomical. |
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A space elevator using presently available engineering materials could be constructed between mutually tidally locked worlds, such as [[Pluto]] and [[Charon (moon)|Charon]] or the components of binary asteroid [[90 Antiope]], with no terminus disconnect, according to Francis Graham of Kent State University.<ref>{{cite book|author=Graham FG |title=45th AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE Joint Propulsion Conference & Exhibit|doi=10.2514/6.2009-4906|chapter=Preliminary Design of a Cable Spacecraft Connecting Mutually Tidally Locked Planetary Bodies|year=2009|isbn=978-1-60086-972-3}}</ref> However, spooled variable lengths of cable must be used due to ellipticity of the orbits. |
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Most active satellites are capable of some degree of orbital maneuvering and could avoid these predictable collisions, but inactive satellites and other orbiting debris would need to be either preemptively removed from orbit by "garbage collectors" or would need to be closely watched and nudged whenever their orbit approaches the elevator. The impulses required would be small, and need be applied only very infrequently; a [[laser broom]] system may be sufficient to this task. In addition, Brad Edward's design actually allows the elevator to move out of the way, because the fixing point is at sea and mobile. Further, transverse oscillations of the cable could be controlled so as to ensure that the cable avoids satellites on known paths—the required amplitudes are modest, relative to the cable length. |
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==Construction== |
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===Meteoroids and micrometeorites=== |
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{{Main|Space elevator construction}} |
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[[Meteoroids]] present a more difficult problem, since they would not be predictable and much less time would be available to detect and track them as they approach Earth. It is likely that a space elevator would still suffer impacts of some kind, no matter how carefully it is guarded. However, most space elevator designs call for the use of multiple parallel cables separated from each other by [[strut]]s, with sufficient margin of safety that severing just one or two strands still allows the surviving strands to hold the elevator's entire weight while repairs are performed. If the strands are properly arranged, no single impact would be able to sever enough of them to overwhelm the surviving strands. |
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The construction of a space elevator would need reduction of some technical risk. Some advances in engineering, manufacturing and physical technology are required.<ref name="Edwards" /> Once a first space elevator is built, the second one and all others would have the use of the previous ones to assist in construction, making their costs considerably lower. Such follow-on space elevators would also benefit from the great reduction in technical risk achieved by the construction of the first space elevator.<ref name="Edwards" /> |
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Far worse than meteoroids are [[micrometeorites]]; tiny high-speed particles found in high concentrations at certain altitudes. Avoiding micrometeorites is essentially impossible, and they will ensure that strands of the elevator are continuously being cut. Most methods designed to deal with this involve a design similar to a [[hoytether]] or to a network of strands in a cylindrical or planar arrangement with two or more helical strands. Constructing the cable as a mesh instead of a ribbon helps prevent collateral damage from each micrometeorite impact. |
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Prior to the work of Edwards in 2000,<ref name="EDWARDS_PHASE_I_2000_472Edwards.html" /> most concepts for constructing a space elevator had the cable manufactured in space. That was thought to be necessary for such a large and long object and for such a large counterweight. Manufacturing the cable in space would be done in principle by using an [[asteroid]] or [[Near-Earth object]] for source material.<ref name="Smitherman"/><ref>Hein, A. M., [https://www.academia.edu/2111184/A.M._Hein_Producing_a_Space_Elevator_Tether_using_a_NEO_A_Preliminary_Assessment_ Producing a Space Elevator Tether Using a NEO: A Preliminary Assessment], International Astronautical Congress 2012, IAC-2012, Naples, Italy, 2012.</ref> These earlier concepts for construction require a large preexisting [[space infrastructure|space-faring infrastructure]] to maneuver an asteroid into its needed orbit around Earth. They also required the development of technologies for manufacture in space of large quantities of exacting materials.<ref name="ISEC_SE_way_forward_2013">{{cite book |editor-last1=Swan |editor-first1=Peter A. |editor-last2=Raitt |editor-first2=David I. |editor-last3=Swan |editor-first3=Cathy W. |editor-last4=Penny |editor-first4=Robert E. |editor-last5=Knapman |editor-first5=John M. |date=2013 |title=Space Elevators: An Assessment of the Technological Feasibility and the Way Forward |url=http://www.virginiaedition.com/media/spaceelevators.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140516231842/http://www.virginiaedition.com/media/spaceelevators.pdf |archive-date=16 May 2014 |publisher=[[International Academy of Astronautics]] |isbn=9782917761311}}</ref>{{rp|326}} |
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===Failure cascade=== |
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It is not enough that other fibers be able to take over the load of a failed strand — the system must also survive the immediate, dynamical effects of fiber failure, which generates projectiles aimed at the cable itself. For example, if the cable has a working stress of 50 GPa and a [[Young's modulus]] of 1000 GPa, its strain will be 0.05 and its stored elastic energy will be 1/2 × 0.05 × 50 GPa = 1.25×10<sup>9</sup> joules per cubic meter. Breaking a fiber will result in a pair of de-tensioning waves moving apart at the speed of sound in the fiber, with the fiber segments behind each wave moving at over 1,000 m/s (more than the [[muzzle velocity]] of a standard [[.223]] [[caliber]] ([[5.56mm]]) round fired from an [[M16 rifle]]). Unless these fast-moving projectiles can be stopped safely, they will break yet other fibers, initiating a failure cascade capable of severing the cable. The challenge of preventing fiber breakage from initiating a catastrophic failure cascade seems to be unaddressed in the current (January, 2005) literature on terrestrial space elevators. Problems of this sort would be easier to solve in lower-tension applications (e.g., lunar elevators). |
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Since 2001, most work has focused on simpler methods of construction requiring much smaller space infrastructures. They conceive the launch of a long cable on a large spool, followed by deployment of it in space.<ref name="Edwards" /><ref name="EDWARDS_PHASE_I_2000_472Edwards.html" /><ref name="ISEC_SE_way_forward_2013" />{{rp|326}} The spool would be initially parked in a geostationary orbit above the planned anchor point. A long cable would be dropped "downward" (toward Earth) and would be balanced by a mass being dropped "upward" (away from Earth) for the whole system to remain on the geosynchronous orbit. Earlier designs imagined the balancing mass to be another cable (with counterweight) extending upward, with the main spool remaining at the original geosynchronous orbit level. Most current designs elevate the spool itself as the main cable is payed out, a simpler process. When the lower end of the cable is long enough to reach the surface of the Earth (at the equator), it would be anchored. Once anchored, the center of mass would be elevated more (by adding mass at the upper end or by paying out more cable). This would add more tension to the whole cable, which could then be used as an elevator cable. |
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===Corrosion=== |
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Corrosion is a major risk to any thinly built tether (which most designs call for). In the upper atmosphere, [[atomic oxygen]] steadily eats away at most materials. A tether will consequently need to either be made from a corrosion-resistant material or have a corrosion-resistant coating, adding to weight. [[Gold]] and [[platinum]] have been shown to be practically immune to atomic oxygen; several far more common materials such as [[aluminum]] are damaged very slowly and could be repaired as needed. |
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One plan for construction uses conventional rockets to place a "minimum size" initial seed cable of only 19,800 kg.<ref name="Edwards" /> This first very small ribbon would be adequate to support the first 619 kg climber. The first 207 climbers would carry up and attach more cable to the original, increasing its cross section area and widening the initial ribbon to about 160 mm wide at its widest point. The result would be a 750-ton cable with a lift capacity of 20 tons per climber. |
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Another potential solution to the corrosion problem is a continuous renewal of the tether surface (which could be done from standard, though possibly slower elevators). This process would depend on the tether composition and it could be done in a nanoscale (by replacing individual fibers) or in segments. |
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===Safety issues and construction challenges=== |
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===Material defects=== |
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{{Main|Space elevator safety}} |
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Any structure as large as a space elevator will have massive numbers of tiny defects in the construction material. It has been suggested,<ref>http://xxx.lanl.gov/ftp/cond-mat/papers/0601/0601668.pdf</ref><ref>http://www.msm.cam.ac.uk/phase-trans/2005/SWpaper/index.html</ref> that, because large structures have more defects than small structures, that large structures are inherently weaker than small, giving an estimated carbon nanotube strength of only 24 GPa down to only 1.7 GPa in millimetre-scale samples, the latter equivalent to many high-strength steels, which would be vastly less than that needed to build a space elevator for a reasonable cost. |
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For early systems, transit times from the surface to the level of geosynchronous orbit would be about five days. On these early systems, the time spent moving through the [[Van Allen radiation belts]] would be enough that passengers would need to be protected from radiation by shielding, which would add mass to the climber and decrease payload.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn10520 |title=Space elevators: 'First floor, deadly radiation!' |access-date=2 January 2010 |date=13 November 2006|work=New Scientist |publisher=Reed Business Information Ltd.}}</ref> |
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A space elevator would present a navigational hazard, both to aircraft and spacecraft. Aircraft could be diverted by [[air-traffic control]] restrictions. All objects in stable orbits that have [[perigee]] below the maximum altitude of the cable that are not synchronous with the cable would impact the cable eventually, unless avoiding action is taken. One potential solution proposed by Edwards is to use a movable anchor (a sea anchor) to allow the tether to "dodge" any space debris large enough to track.<ref name="Edwards" /> |
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===Weather=== |
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In the atmosphere, the risk factors of wind and lightning come into play. The basic mitigation is location. As long as the tether's anchor remains within two degrees of the equator, it will remain in the quiet zone between the Earth's [[Hadley cell]]s, where there is relatively little violent weather. Remaining storms could be avoided by moving a floating anchor platform. The lightning risk can be minimized by using a nonconductive fiber with a water-resistant coating to help prevent a conductive buildup from forming. The wind risk can be minimized by use of a fiber with a small cross-sectional area that can rotate with the wind to reduce resistance. Ice forming on the cable also presents a potential problem. It could add significantly to the cable's weight and affect the passage of elevator cars. Also, ice falling from the cable could damage elevator cars or the cable itself. To get rid of ice, special elevator cars could scrape the ice off. |
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Impacts by space objects such as meteoroids, micrometeorites and orbiting man-made debris pose another design constraint on the cable. A cable would need to be designed to maneuver out of the way of debris, or absorb impacts of small debris without breaking.{{Citation needed|date=July 2022}} |
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===Sabotage=== |
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Sabotage is a relatively unquantifiable problem. A space elevator might prove an attractive target for a terrorist or other politically motivated attack. Concern over sabotage may have an effect on location, adding the constraint of avoiding unstable territories to the existing requirement of an equatorial site. |
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=== |
===Economics=== |
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{{Main|Space elevator economics}} |
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A final risk of structural failure comes from the possibility of vibrational [[harmonic]]s within the cable. Like the shorter and more familiar strings of stringed musical instruments, the cable of a space elevator has a natural [[resonance|resonant]] frequency. If the cable is excited at this frequency, for example by the travel of elevators up and down it, the vibrational energy could build up to dangerous levels and exceed the cable's tensile strength. This can be avoided by the use of suitable damping systems within the cable, and by scheduling travel up and down the cable keeping its resonant frequency in mind. It may be possible to dampen the resonant frequency against the Earth's magnetosphere. |
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With a space elevator, materials might be sent into orbit at a fraction of the current cost. As of 2022, conventional rocket designs cost about US$12,125 per [[kilogram]] (US$5,500 per [[Pound (mass)|pound]]) for transfer to geostationary orbit.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.spacex.com/rideshare/#:~:text=%24275k%20for%2050kg%20to,LEO%2C%20GTO%2C%20and%20TLI.|title=Smallsat Rideshare Program|date=1 March 2022|work=SpaceX|access-date=1 May 2023}}</ref> Current space elevator proposals envision payload prices starting as low as $220 per kilogram ($100 per [[Pound (mass)|pound]]),<ref>{{cite web |author=The Spaceward Foundation |title=The Space Elevator FAQ |url=http://www.spaceward.org/elevator-faq |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090227115101/http://www.spaceward.org/elevator-faq |archive-date=27 February 2009 |access-date=3 June 2009 |location=Mountain View, California}}</ref> similar to the $5–$300/kg estimates of the [[Launch loop]], but higher than the $310/ton to 500 km orbit quoted to Dr. [[Jerry Pournelle]] for an orbital airship system.<ref>{{cite web |first=Jerry |last=Pournelle |date=23 April 2003 |url=http://www.jerrypournelle.com/archives2/archives2view/view306.html#Friday |title=Friday's VIEW post from the 2004 Space Access Conference |access-date=1 January 2010}}</ref> |
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Philip Ragan, co-author of the book ''Leaving the Planet by Space Elevator'', states that "The first country to deploy a space elevator will have a 95 percent cost advantage and could potentially control all space activities."<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.news.com.au/news/race-to-build-worlds-first-space-elevator/story-fna7dq6e-1111118059040 |title=Race on to build world's first space elevator |date=17 November 2008|work=news.com.au|first=Andrew |last=Ramadge|author2=Schneider, Kate|access-date=January 14, 2016|url-status=dead|archive-date=13 September 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150913204538/http://www.news.com.au/news/race-to-build-worlds-first-space-elevator/story-fna7dq6e-1111118059040}}</ref> |
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===In the event of failure=== |
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If despite all these precautions the elevator is severed anyway, the resulting scenario depends on where exactly the break occurred: |
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==International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC)== |
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====Cut near the anchor point==== |
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The International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC) is a US Non-Profit [[501(c)(3) organization|501(c)(3)]] Corporation<ref>{{Cite web|title=ISEC IRS filing |url=https://apps.irs.gov/app/eos/displayAll.do?dispatchMethod=displayAllInfo&Id=4984679&ein=800302896&country=US&deductibility=all&dispatchMethod=searchAll&isDescending=false&city=&ein1=80-0302896&postDateFrom=&exemptTypeCode=al&submitName=Search&sortColumn=orgName&totalResults=1&names=&resultsPerPage=25&indexOfFirstRow=0&postDateTo=&state=IL|website=apps.irs.gov |access-date=9 February 2019}}</ref> formed to promote the development, construction, and operation of a space elevator as "a revolutionary and efficient way to space for all humanity".<ref name="isec">{{cite web |url=http://www.isec.org/index.php/what-is-isec |work=ISEC |title=What is ISEC? : About Us |access-date=2 June 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120707201835/http://www.isec.org/index.php/what-is-isec |archive-date=7 July 2012}}</ref> It was formed after the Space Elevator Conference in [[Redmond, Washington]] in July 2008 and became an affiliate organization with the [[National Space Society]]<ref>{{Cite web|title=NSS Affiliates|website=www.nss.org |url=http://www.nss.org/about/affiliates.html|access-date=30 August 2015|archive-date=16 October 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151016040656/http://www.nss.org/about/affiliates.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> in August 2013.<ref name="isec" /> ISEC hosts an annual Space Elevator conference at the [[Seattle Museum of Flight]].<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.space.com/27225-space-elevator-technology.html|title=Space Elevator Advocates Take Lofty Look at Innovative Concepts |first=Leonard |last=David |date=22 September 2014 |website=Space.com |language=en|access-date=13 February 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://space.nss.org/the-international-space-elevator-consortium-isec-2017-space-elevator-conference/ |title=The International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC) 2017 Space Elevator Conference |date=14 August 2017|publisher=National Space Society |language=en-US|access-date=13 February 2019}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://spaceref.com/space-elevator/annual-space-elevator-conference-set-for-august-25-27.html |title=Annual Space Elevator Conference Set for August 25–27 |website=SpaceRef |first=Marc |last=Boucher |date=17 July 2012 |access-date=13 February 2019 }}{{Dead link|date=December 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> |
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If the elevator is cut at its anchor point on Earth's surface, the outward force exerted by the counterweight would cause the entire elevator to rise upward into an unstable orbit and escape to interplanetary space. |
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ISEC coordinates with the two other major societies focusing on space elevators: the Japanese Space Elevator Association<ref>{{Cite web|title = Japan Space Elevator Association|url = http://www.jsea.jp/links/|script-website = ja:一般|JSEA 一般社団法人 宇宙エレベーター協会|access-date = 30 August 2015}}</ref> and EuroSpaceward.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://www.eurospaceward.org/|title = Eurospaceward|date = 30 August 2015|access-date = 30 August 2015|website = Eurospaceward}}</ref> ISEC supports symposia and presentations at the International Academy of Astronautics<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://iaaweb.org/content/view/624/823/|title = Homepage of the Study Group 3.24, Road to Space Elevator Era|date = 2 October 2014|access-date = 30 August 2015|website = The International Academy of Astronautics (IAA)|last = Akira|first = Tsuchida}}</ref> and the International Astronautical Federation Congress<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.iafastro.org/events/iac/iac-2014/meetings/|title = IAC 2014 Meeting Schedule|access-date = 30 August 2015|website = International Astronautical Federation|archive-date = 24 September 2015|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150924032203/http://www.iafastro.org/events/iac/iac-2014/meetings/|url-status = dead}}</ref> each year. |
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The ultimate [[altitude]] of the severed lower end of the cable would depend on the details of the elevator's [[mass]] distribution. In theory, the loose end might be secured and fastened down again. This would be an extremely tricky operation, however, requiring careful adjustment of the cable's center of gravity to bring the cable back down to the surface again at just the right location. It may prove to be easier to build a new system in such a situation. |
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==Related concepts== |
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====Cut at about 25,000 km==== |
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The conventional current concept of a "Space Elevator" has evolved from a static compressive structure reaching to the level of GEO, to the modern baseline idea of a static tensile structure anchored to the ground and extending to well above the level of GEO. In the current usage by practitioners (and in this article), a "Space Elevator" means the Tsiolkovsky-Artsutanov-Pearson type as considered by the International Space Elevator Consortium. This conventional type is a static structure fixed to the ground and extending into space high enough that cargo can climb the structure up from the ground to a level where simple release will put the cargo into an [[orbit]].<ref>"CLIMB: The Journal of the International Space Elevator Consortium", Volume 1, Number 1, December 2011, This journal is cited as an example of what is generally considered to be under the term "Space Elevator" by the international community. [http://www.isec.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=28&Itemid=31] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131218085857/http://www.isec.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=28&Itemid=31|date=18 December 2013}}.</ref> |
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If the break occurred at higher altitude, up to about 25,000 km, the lower portion of the elevator would descend to Earth and drape itself along the equator east of the anchor point, while the now unbalanced upper portion would rise to a higher orbit. Some authors (such as science fiction writers [[David Gerrold]] in ''[[Jumping off the Planet]]'', [[Kim Stanley Robinson]] in ''[[Red Mars]]'', and [[Ben Bova]] in ''[[Mercury (book)|Mercury]]'') have suggested that such a failure would be catastrophic, with the thousands of kilometers of falling cable creating a swath of meteoric destruction along Earth's surface. However, in most cable designs, the upper portion of any cable that fell to Earth would burn up in the [[Earth's atmosphere|atmosphere]]. Additionally, because proposed initial cables (the only ones likely to be broken) have very low mass (roughly 1 kg per kilometer) and are flat, the bottom portion would likely settle to Earth with less force than a sheet of paper due to [[air resistance]] on the way down. |
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Some concepts related to this modern baseline are not usually termed a "Space Elevator", but are similar in some way and are sometimes termed "Space Elevator" by their proponents. For example, [[Hans Moravec]] published an article in 1977 called "A Non-Synchronous Orbital [[Skyhook (structure)|Skyhook]]" describing a concept using a rotating cable.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Moravec, Hans P. |title=A Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhook|journal=Journal of the Astronautical Sciences|volume=25 |date=October–December 1977|bibcode=1977JAnSc..25..307M|pages=307–322}}</ref> The rotation speed would exactly match the orbital speed in such a way that the tip velocity at the lowest point was zero compared to the object to be "elevated". It would dynamically grapple and then "elevate" high flying objects to orbit or low orbiting objects to higher orbit. |
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If the break occurred at the counterweight side of the elevator, the lower portion, now including the "central station" of the elevator, would entirely fall down if not prevented by an early self-destruct of the cable shortly below it. Depending on the size, however, it would burn up on re-entry anyway. Simulations have shown that as the descending portion of the space elevator "wraps around" Earth the stress on the remaining length of cable increases, resulting in its upper sections breaking off and being flung away. The details of how these pieces break and the trajectories they take are highly sensitive to initial conditions.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.mit.edu/people/gassend/spaceelevator/breaks/index.html| title=Animation of a Broken Space Elevator| first=Blaise| last= Gassend| year=2004| accessdate=2007-01-14}}</ref> |
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The original concept envisioned by Tsiolkovsky was a compression structure, a concept similar to an [[Radio masts and towers|aerial mast]]. While such structures might reach [[Karman line|space]] (100 km, 62 mi), they are unlikely to reach geostationary orbit. The concept of a Tsiolkovsky tower combined with a classic space elevator cable (reaching above the level of GEO) has been suggested.<ref name="JBIS1999"/> Other ideas use very tall compressive towers to reduce the demands on launch vehicles.<ref name="TorontoProposal"/> The vehicle is "elevated" up the tower, which may extend as high as [[Karman line|above the atmosphere]], and is launched from the top. Such a tall tower to access near-space altitudes of {{cvt|20|km|mi}} has been proposed by various researchers.<ref name="TorontoProposal">{{cite journal |last1=Quine |first1=B. M. |last2=Seth |first2=R. K. |last3=Zhu |first3=Z. H. |year=2009 |title=A free-standing space elevator structure: A practical alternative to the space tether |url=http://pi.library.yorku.ca/dspace/bitstream/handle/10315/2587/AA_3369_Quine_Space_Elevator_Final_2009.pdf |journal=Acta Astronautica |volume=65 |issue=3–4 |page=365 |bibcode=2009AcAau..65..365Q |citeseerx=10.1.1.550.4359 |doi=10.1016/j.actaastro.2009.02.018}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |doi = 10.2514/6.1998-3737|chapter = Compression structures for Earth launch |title = 34th AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE Joint Propulsion Conference and Exhibit|year = 1998|last1 = Landis|first1 = Geoffrey}}</ref><ref>Hjelmstad, Keith, [http://hieroglyph.asu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Hjelmstad-on-Stephenson-Structural-Design-of-the-Tall-Tower.pdf "Structural Design of the Tall Tower"], ''Hieroglyph'', 30 November 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2015.</ref> |
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====Elevator climbers==== |
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Any climbers on the falling section would also reenter Earth's atmosphere, but it is likely that the climbers will already have been designed to withstand such an event as an emergency measure. It is almost inevitable that some objects — climbers, structural members, repair crews, etc. — will accidentally fall off the elevator at some point. Their subsequent fate would depend upon their initial altitude. Except at geosynchronous altitude, an object on a space elevator is not in a stable orbit and so its trajectory will not remain parallel to it. The object will instead enter an [[elliptical orbit]], the characteristics of which depend on where the object was on the elevator when it was released. |
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The aerovator is a concept invented by a Yahoo Group discussing space elevators, and included in a 2009 book about space elevators. It would consist of a >1000 km long ribbon extending diagonally upwards from a ground-level hub and then levelling out to become horizontal. Aircraft would pull on the ribbon while flying in a circle, causing the ribbon to rotate around the hub once every 13 minutes with its tip travelling at 8 km/s. The ribbon would stay in the air through a mix of [[aerodynamic lift]] and centrifugal force. Payloads would climb up the ribbon and then be launched from the fast-moving tip into orbit.<ref>{{Citation |last=Van Pelt |first=Micheal |title=Space Elevators |date=2009 |work=Space Tethers and Space Elevators |pages=143–178 |editor-last= |editor-first= |url=https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-76556-3_6 |access-date=2023-12-27 |place=New York, New York |publisher=Springer |language=en-us |doi=10.1007/978-0-387-76556-3_6 |isbn=978-0-387-76556-3}}.</ref> |
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If the initial height of the object falling off of the elevator is less than 23,000 km, its [[orbit]] will have an [[apogee]] at the altitude where it was released from the elevator and a [[perigee]] within Earth's atmosphere — it will intersect the atmosphere within a few hours, and not complete an entire orbit. Above this critical altitude, the perigee is above the atmosphere and the object will be able to complete a full orbit to return to the altitude it started from. By then the elevator would be somewhere else, but a [[spacecraft]] could be dispatched to retrieve the object or otherwise remove it. The lower the altitude at which the object falls off, the greater the eccentricity of its orbit. |
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Other concepts for [[non-rocket spacelaunch]] related to a space elevator (or parts of a space elevator) include an [[orbital ring]], a [[space fountain]], a [[launch loop]], a [[Skyhook (structure)|skyhook]], a [[space tether]], and a buoyant "SpaceShaft".<ref>{{Cite web |title=Space Shaft: Or, the story that would have been a bit finer, if only one had known.... |url=https://ksj.mit.edu/tracker-archive/space-shaft-or-story-would-have-been-bit/ |access-date=2024-04-18 |website=Knight Science Journalism @MIT |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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If the object falls off at the geostationary altitude itself, it will remain nearly motionless relative to the elevator just as in conventional orbital flight. At higher altitudes the object would again be in an elliptical orbit, this time with a perigee at the altitude the object was released from and an apogee somewhere higher than that. The eccentricity of the orbit would increase with the altitude from which the object is released. |
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==Notes== |
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Above 47,000 km, however, an object that falls off of the elevator would have a velocity greater than the local [[escape velocity]] of Earth. The object would head out into interplanetary space, and if there were any people present on board it might prove impossible to rescue them. |
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{{reflist|group=note}} |
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===Van Allen Belts=== |
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[[Image:Van Allen radiation belt.svg|thumb|Van Allen radiation belts]] |
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The space elevator would run through the [[Van Allen radiation belt|Van Allen belts]]. This is not a problem for most freight, but the amount of time a climber spends in this region would cause [[radiation poisoning]] to any unshielded human or other living things.<ref>{{cite news|title=Space elevators: "First floor, deadly radiation!"|date=[[2006-11-13]]|work=[[New Scientist]]|author=Kelly Young|url=http://space.newscientist.com/article/dn10520-space-elevators-first-floor-deadly-radiation.html}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|journal=Acta Astronautica|volume=60|issue=3|date=February 2007|pages=189–209||doi=10.1016/j.actaastro.2006.07.014|publisher=Elsevier Ltd.|title=Passive radiation shielding considerations for the proposed space elevator|author=A.M. Jorgensena, S.E. Patamiab, and B. Gassendc}}</ref> Some speculate that passengers would continue to travel by high-speed rocket, while space elevators haul bulk cargo. Research into lightweight [[radiation shielding|shielding]] and techniques for clearing out the belts is underway. |
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More conventional and faster [[atmospheric reentry]] techniques such as [[aerobraking]] might be employed on the way down to minimize radiation exposure. De-orbit burns use relatively little fuel and are cheap. |
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An obvious option would be for the elevator to carry shielding to protect passengers, though this would reduce its overall capacity, of course. Alternatively, the shielding itself could in some cases consist of useful payload, for example food, water, fuel or construction/maintenance materials, and no additional shielding costs are then incurred on the way up. |
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To shield passengers from the radiation in the Van Allen belt, perhaps counter-intuitively, material composed of light elements should be used, as opposed to lead shielding. In fact, high energy [[electron]]s in the Van Allen belts produce dangerous [[X-ray]]s when they strike [[atom]]s of [[heavy element]]s. This is known as [[bremsstrahlung]], or braking radiation. Materials containing great amounts of [[hydrogen]], such as [[water]] or (lightweight) [[plastic]]s such as [[polyethylene]] and lighter metals such as [[aluminium]] are better than heavier ones such as [[lead]] for preventing this secondary radiation. Such light-element shielding, if it were strong enough to protect against the Van Allen particle radiation, would also provide adequate protection against X-ray radiation coming from the sun during [[solar flares]] and [[coronal mass ejection]] events. |
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==Economics== |
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{{main|Space elevator economics}} |
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With a space elevator, materials might be sent into orbit at a fraction of the current cost. Modern rocketry gives prices that are on the order of thousands of [[U.S. dollar]]s per [[kilogram]] for transfer to [[low earth orbit]], and roughly twenty thousand dollars per kilogram for transfer to geosynchronous orbit. For a space elevator, the price could be on the order of a few hundred dollars per kilogram, or possibly much less. |
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Space elevators have high capital cost but low operating expenses, so they make the most economic sense in a situation where it would be used over a long period of time to handle very large amounts of payload. The current launch market may not be large enough to make a compelling case for a space elevator, but a dramatic drop in the price of launching material to orbit would likely result in new types of space activities becoming economically feasible. In this regard they share similarities with other transportation infrastructure projects such as highways or railroads. |
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Development costs might be roughly equivalent, in modern dollars, to the cost of developing the shuttle system. A question subject to speculation is whether a space elevator would return the investment, or if it would be more beneficial to instead spend the money on developing rocketry further. If the elevator did indeed cost roughly the same as the shuttle program, recovering the development costs would take less than about a hundred thousand tons launched to low earth orbit or five thousand tons launched to geosynchronous orbit. |
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==Political issues == |
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One potential problem with a space elevator would be the issue of ownership and control. Such an elevator would require significant investment (estimates ''start'' at about [[United States dollar|US$]]5 billion for a very primitive tether), and it could take at least a decade to recoup such expenses. At present, few entities are able to spend in the space industry at that magnitude. |
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Assuming a multi-national governmental effort was able to produce a working space elevator, many political issues would remain to be solved. Which countries would use the elevator and how often? Who would be responsible for its defense from [[terrorism|terrorists]] or enemy states? A space elevator could potentially cause rifts between states over the military applications of the elevator. Furthermore, establishment of a space elevator would require knowledge of the positions and paths of all existing satellites in Earth orbit and their removal if they cannot adequately avoid the elevator (unless the base station itself can move in order to make the elevator avoid satellites, as proposed by Edwards). |
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An initial elevator could be used in relatively short order to lift the materials to build more such elevators, but the owners of the first elevator might refuse to carry such materials in order to maintain their [[monopoly]]. |
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As space elevators (regardless of the design) are inherently fragile but militarily valuable structures, they would likely be targeted immediately in any major conflict with a state that controls one. Consequently, most militaries would elect to continue development of conventional rockets (or other similar launch technologies) to provide effective backup methods to access space. |
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The cost of the space elevator is not excessive compared to other projects and it is conceivable that several countries or an international consortium could pursue the space elevator. Indeed, there are companies and agencies in a number of countries that have expressed interest in the concept. Generally, projects on the scale of a space elevator need to be either joint public-private partnership ventures or government ventures, and they involve multiple partners. |
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The political motivation for a collaborative effort comes from the potential destabilizing nature of the space elevator. The space elevator clearly has military applications, but more critically it would give a strong economic advantage for the controlling entity. Information flowing through satellites, future energy from space, planets full of real estate and associated minerals, and basic military advantage could all potentially be controlled by the entity that controls access to space through the space elevator. An international collaboration could result in multiple elevators at various locations around the globe, since subsequent elevators would be significantly cheaper, thus allowing general access to space and consequently eliminating the instabilities a single system might cause. |
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[[Arthur C. Clarke]] compared the space elevator project to [[Cyrus Field]]'s efforts to build the first [[transatlantic telegraph cable]], "the Apollo Project of its age".<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.spaceelevator.com/docs/acclarke.092079.se.2.html |
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|title=The Space Elevator: 'Thought Experiment', or Key to the Universe? (Part 2) |
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|last=Clarke |
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|first=Arthur C. |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05 |
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|year=2003 |
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}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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===Early concepts=== |
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The concept of the space elevator first appeared in 1895 when a [[Russia]]n scientist [[Konstantin Tsiolkovsky]] was inspired by the [[Eiffel Tower]] in [[Paris]] to consider a tower that reached all the way into space. He imagined placing a "celestial castle" at the end of a spindle-shaped cable, with the "castle" orbiting [[Earth]] in a geosynchronous orbit (i.e. the castle would remain over the same spot on Earth's surface). The tower would be built from the ground up to an altitude of [[1 E7 m|35,790 kilometers]] above mean sea level ([[geostationary orbit]]). Comments from [[Nikola Tesla]] suggest that he may have also conceived such a tower. Tsiolkovsky's notes were sent behind the [[Iron Curtain]] after his death. |
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Tsiolkovsky's tower would be able to launch objects into orbit without a rocket. Since the elevator would attain orbital velocity as it rode up the cable, an object released at the tower's top would also have the orbital velocity necessary to remain in geosynchronous orbit. |
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===Twentieth century=== |
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Building from the ground up, however, proved an impossible task; there was no material in existence with enough compressive strength to support its own weight under such conditions. It took until 1957 for another Russian scientist, [[Yuri N. Artsutanov]], to conceive of a more feasible scheme for building a space tower. Artsutanov suggested using a geosynchronous [[satellite]] as the base from which to construct the tower. By using a [[counterweight]], a cable would be lowered from geosynchronous orbit to the surface of Earth while the counterweight was extended from the satellite away from Earth, keeping the center of gravity of the cable motionless relative to Earth. Artsutanov published his idea in the Sunday supplement of ''[[Komsomolskaya Pravda]]'' in 1960. He also proposed tapering the cable thickness so that the tension in the cable was constant—this gives a thin cable at ground level, thickening up towards [[geostationary orbit|GEO]].<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.liftport.com/files/Artsutanov_Pravda_SE.pdf |
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|title=To the Cosmos by Electric Train |
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|year=1960 |
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|publisher=Young Person's Pravda |
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|last=Artsutanov |
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|first=Yu |
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|format=PDF |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> |
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Making a cable over 35,000 [[kilometer]]s long is a difficult task. In 1966, four [[United States|American]] engineers decided to determine what type of material would be required to build a space elevator, assuming it would be a straight cable with no variations in its cross section. They found that the strength required would be twice that of any existing material including [[graphite]], [[quartz]], and [[diamond]]. |
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In 1975 an American scientist, [[Jerome Pearson]], designed<ref name="pearson"/> a tapered cross section that would be better suited to building the elevator. The completed cable would be thickest at the geosynchronous orbit, where the tension was greatest, and would be narrowest at the tips to reduce the amount of weight per unit area of cross section that any point on the cable would have to bear. He suggested using a counterweight that would be slowly extended out to 144,000 kilometers (almost half the distance to the [[Moon]]) as the lower section of the elevator was built. Without a large counterweight, the upper portion of the cable would have to be longer than the lower due to the way [[gravity|gravitational]] and [[centrifugal force]]s change with distance from Earth. His analysis included disturbances such as the gravitation of the Moon, wind and moving payloads up and down the cable. The weight of the material needed to build the elevator would have required thousands of [[Space Shuttle]] trips, although part of the material could be transported up the elevator when a minimum strength strand reached the ground or be manufactured in space from [[asteroid]]al or lunar ore. |
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In 1977, [[Hans Moravec]] published an article called "A Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhook", in which he proposed a modification of the space elevator idea into a more feasible [[tether propulsion]] system. (''Journal of the Astronautical Sciences'', Vol. 25, Oct.-December 1977) |
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[[Arthur C. Clarke]] introduced the concept of a space elevator to a broader audience in his 1978 novel, ''[[The Fountains of Paradise]]'', in which engineers construct a space elevator on top of a mountain peak in the fictional island country of ''Taprobane'' (which is actually an early name for Sri Lanka). |
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In [[Robert A. Heinlein]]'s 1982 novel ''[[Friday (novel)|Friday]]'' the principal character makes use of the "Nairobi Beanstalk" in the course of her travels. |
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In 1999, [[Larry Niven]] authored the book [[Rainbow Mars]] which contained a "Hanging Tree" - an organic 'Skyhook' which was capable of interstellar travel. The book skillfully discussed several merits/demerits of such an approach to the Beanstalk - the primary demerit being that the water necessary to sustain such an enormous 'tree' would require the drying up of all of its host planet's water bodies - which is used as a plot device to explain the drying up of Mars. |
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===21st century=== |
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[[David Smitherman]] of [[NASA]]/Marshall's Advanced Projects Office has compiled plans for an elevator. His publication, "Space Elevators: An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium",<ref>http://flightprojects.msfc.nasa.gov/fd02_elev.html - 404 error as of 2006-03-05</ref> is based on findings from a space infrastructure conference held at the Marshall Space Flight Center in 1999. |
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Another American scientist, [[Bradley C. Edwards]], suggests creating a 100,000 km long paper-thin ribbon, which would stand a greater chance of surviving impacts by meteors. The work of Edwards has expanded to cover: the deployment scenario, climber design, power delivery system, [[Space debris|orbital debris]] avoidance, anchor system, surviving atomic oxygen, avoiding lightning and hurricanes by locating the anchor in the western equatorial pacific, construction costs, construction schedule, and environmental hazards. Plans are currently being made to complete engineering developments, material development and begin construction of the first elevator. Funding to date has been through a grant from [[NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts]]. Future funding is sought through NASA, the [[United States Department of Defense]], private, and public sources. The largest holdup to Edwards' proposed design is the technological limits of the tether material. His calculations call for a fiber composed of epoxy-bonded [[carbon nanotube]]s with a minimal tensile strength of 130 [[Pascal (unit)|GPa]] (including a [[safety factor]] of 2); however, tests in 2000 of individual single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs), which should be notably stronger than an epoxy-bonded rope, indicated the strongest measured as 52 GPa.<ref name="Yu 2000 PRL"/> Multi-walled carbon nanotubes have been measured with tensile strengths up to 63 GPa.<ref> |
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{{cite journal |
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| author = Min-Feng Yu, Oleg Lourie, Mark J. Dyer, Katerina Moloni, Thomas F. Kelly, Rodney S. Ruoff |
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| year = 2000 |
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| title = Strength and Breaking Mechanism of Multiwalled Carbon Nanotubes Under Tensile Load |
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| journal = Science |
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| volume = no. 287 |
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| issue = 5453 |
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| pages = pp. 637–640 |
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| url = http://sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/287/5453/637 |
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}} |
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</ref> |
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Space elevator proponents are planning competitions for space elevator technologies,<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://msnbc.msn.com/id/5792719/ |
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|title=Space elevator contest proposed |
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|first=Alan |
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|last=Boyle |
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|publisher=MSNBC |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.elevator2010.org/ |
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|title=The Space Elevator - Elevator:2010 |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> similar to the [[Ansari X Prize]]. [[Elevator:2010]] will organize annual competitions for climbers, ribbons and power-beaming systems. The Robolympics Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://robolympics.net/rules/climbing.shtml |
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|title=Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing Robot Competition Rules |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> organizes climber-robot building competitions. In March of 2005 NASA's [[Centennial Challenges]] program announced a partnership with the [[Spaceward Foundation]] (the operator of Elevator:2010), raising the total value of prizes to US$400,000.<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2005/mar/HQ_m05083_Centennial_prizes.html |
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|title=NASA Announces First Centennial Challenges' Prizes |
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|year=2005 |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.space.com/news/050323_centennial_challenge.html |
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|title=NASA Details Cash Prizes for Space Privatization |
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|first=Robert Roy |
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|last=Britt |
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|publisher=Space.com |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> |
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On [[April 27]], [[2005]] "the [[LiftPort Group]] of space elevator companies has announced that it will be building a carbon nanotube manufacturing plant in [[Millville, New Jersey]], to supply various glass, plastic and metal companies with these strong materials. Although LiftPort hopes to eventually use carbon nanotubes in the construction of a 100,000 km (62,000 mile) space elevator, this move will allow it to make money in the short term and conduct research and development into new production methods."<ref>{{cite web |
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|url=http://www.universetoday.com/am/publish/liftport_manufacture_nanotubes.html?2742005 |
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|title=Space Elevator Group to Manufacture Nanotubes |
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|year=2005 |
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|publisher=Universe Today |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> On [[September 9]] the group announced that they had obtained permission from the [[Federal Aviation Administration]] to use airspace to conduct preliminary tests of its high altitude robotic lifters.<ref>{{cite web | title=Space Elevator Gets FAA Lift | work=Space.com | url=http://www.space.com/astronotes/astronotes.html | accessmonthday=September 19 | accessyear=2005}}</ref> The experiment was successful. |
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On [[February 13]], [[2006]] the LiftPort Group announced that, earlier the same month, they had tested a mile of 'space elevator tether' (sic) made of carbon-fibre composite strings and fibreglass tape measuring 5 centimetres wide and 1 mm (approx. 6 sheets of paper) thick, lifted with balloons.<ref>{{cite news |
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|url=http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn8725.html |
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|title=Space-elevator tether climbs a mile high |
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|date=[[2006-02-15]] |
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|work=NewScientist.com |
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|publisher=[[New Scientist]] |
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|first=Kimm |
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|last=Groshong |
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|accessdate=2006-03-05}}</ref> |
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The x-Tech Projects company has also been founded to pursue the prospect of a commercial Space Elevator. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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{{Portal|Spaceflight|Science}} |
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* [[Space elevator in fiction]] |
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*[[Gravity elevator]] |
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* [[Space elevator economics]] discusses capital and maintenance costs of a space elevator. |
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*[[Orbital ring]] |
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* [[Lunar space elevator]] for the moon variant |
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* [[Space fountain]] |
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* The [[Aresian Well]] is a proposal to use a beanstalk (space elevator) to export water mined from Mars's north polar cap. |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{reflist|1=25em}} |
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=== Specific === |
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{{reflist|2}} |
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== |
==Further reading== |
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{{Refbegin}} |
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<div class="references-small"> |
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* [http://www.nss.org/resources/library/spaceelevator/2000-SpaceElevator-NASA-CP210429.pdf A conference publication based on findings from the Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether "Space Elevator" Concepts] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150328040627/http://www.nss.org/resources/library/spaceelevator/2000-SpaceElevator-NASA-CP210429.pdf |date=28 March 2015 }} (PDF), held in 1999 at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama. Compiled by D.V. Smitherman Jr., published August 2000 |
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* Edwards BC, Ragan P. "Leaving The Planet By Space Elevator" Seattle, USA: Lulu; 2006. ISBN 978-1-4303-0006-9 [http://www.leavingtheplanet.com/ See Leaving The Planet] |
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* "The Political Economy of Very Large Space Projects" [http://www.jetpress.org/volume4/space.htm HTML] [http://www.jetpress.org/volume4/space.pdf PDF], John Hickman, Ph.D. ''[[Journal of Evolution and Technology]]'' Vol. 4 – November 1999 |
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* Edwards BC, Westling EA. ''The Space Elevator: A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System.'' San Francisco, USA: Spageo Inc.; 2002. ISBN 0-9726045-0-2. |
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* [https://spectrum.ieee.org/a-hoist-to-the-heavens A Hoist to the Heavens] By Bradley Carl Edwards |
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*[http://flightprojects.msfc.nasa.gov/pdf_files/elevator.pdf Space Elevators - An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium] <nowiki>[PDF]</nowiki>. A conference publication based on findings from the Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether "Space Elevator" Concepts, held in 1999 at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama. Compiled by D.V. Smitherman, Jr., published August 2000. |
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* Ziemelis K. (2001) "Going up". In [[New Scientist]] '''2289''': 24–27. [http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=337 Republished in SpaceRef] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220112075348/http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=337 |date=12 January 2022 }}. Title page: "The great space elevator: the dream machine that will turn us all into astronauts." |
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*"The Political Economy of Very Large Space Projects" [http://www.jetpress.org/volume4/space.htm HTML] [http://www.jetpress.org/volume4/space.pdf PDF], [[John Hickman]], Ph. D. ''[[Journal of Evolution and Technology]]'' Vol. 4 - November 1999. |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20101104104658/http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/space_elevator_020327-1.html The Space Elevator Comes Closer to Reality]. An overview by Leonard David of space.com, published 27 March 2002 |
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*[http://isr.us/Downloads/niac_pdf/contents.html The Space Elevator] [[NIAC]] report by Dr. Bradley C. Edwards |
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* Krishnaswamy, Sridhar. Stress Analysis – [https://web.archive.org/web/20060519133820/http://www.cqe.northwestern.edu/sk/C62/OrbitalTower_ME362.pdf The Orbital Tower] (PDF) |
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*[http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/aug05/1690 A Hoist to the Heavens] By Bradley Carl Edwards |
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* [[LiftPort]]'s Roadmap for Elevator To Space [https://web.archive.org/web/20070710032602/http://www.liftport.com/papers/SE_Roadmap_v1beta.pdf SE Roadmap] (PDF) |
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*Ziemelis K. "Going up". In [[New Scientist]] 2001-05-05, no.2289, p.24–27. [http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=337 Republished in SpaceRef]. Title page: "The great space elevator: the dream machine that will turn us all into astronauts." |
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* {{cite news |date=28 March 2008 |first=David |last=Shiga |url=https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn13552-space-elevators-face-wobble-problem/ |title=Space elevators face wobble problem |work=New Scientist}} |
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*[http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/space_elevator_020327-1.html The Space Elevator Comes Closer to Reality]. An overview by Leonard David of space.com, published [[27 March]] [[2002]]. |
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* Alexander Bolonkin, "[https://archive.org/details/Non-rocketSpaceLaunchAndFlight Non Rocket Space Launch and Flight]". Elsevier, 2005. 488 pgs{{ISBN|978-0-08044-731-5}}. |
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* Krishnaswamy, Sridhar. Stress Analysis — [http://www.cqe.northwestern.edu/sk/C62/OrbitalTower_ME362.pdf The Orbital Tower] (PDF) |
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{{Refend}} |
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</div> |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Commons category|Space elevators}} |
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{{Spoken Wikipedia|Space_elevator.ogg|2006-05-29}} |
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{{Spoken Wikipedia|Space_elevator.ogg|date=2006-05-29}} |
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* [http://economist.com/science/tq/displayStory.cfm?story_id=7001786 The Economist: Waiting For The Space Elevator] (8 June 2006 – subscription required) |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20060806021241/http://www.radio.cbc.ca/programs/quirks/archives/01-02/nov0301.htm CBC Radio Quirks and Quarks November 3, 2001] ''Riding the Space Elevator'' |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090209051838/http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/driving/features/article5529668.ece Times of London Online: Going up ... and the next floor is outer space] |
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* [http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK1.HTM ''The Space Elevator: 'Thought Experiment', or Key to the Universe?''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200201205032/http://www.islandone.org/LEOBiblio/CLARK1.HTM |date=1 February 2020 }}. By Sir Arthur C. Clarke. Address to the XXXth International Astronautical Congress, Munich, 20 September 1979 |
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* [https://www.isec.org/ International Space Elevator Consortium Website] |
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* [http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/space_elevator Space Elevator] entry at ''[[The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction]]'' |
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{{Space elevator}} |
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===Organizations=== |
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{{Non-rocket spacelaunch}} |
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*[http://seattlewebcrafters.com/nsecc/ The National Space Society Special Interest Chapter for the Space Elevator (NSECC)] |
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{{Emerging technologies|topics=yes|space=yes}} |
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*[http://www.ing-math.net/ Ing-Math.Net (Germany)] - Ing-Math.Net (German Max-Born Space Elevator Team 2006) |
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{{Authority control}} |
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*[http://www.elevator2010.org/ Elevator:2010] Space elevator prize competitions |
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*[http://www.isr.us/SEHome.asp?m=1 Space elevator, Institute for Scientific Research] Last news item on web site dated July, 2004. |
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*[http://www.isr.us/Spaceelevatorconference/ The Space Elevator: 3rd Annual International Conference] [[28 June]]-30, 2004 in Washington, D.C. |
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*[http://www.isr.us/Spaceelevatorconference/2003presentations.html 3rd Annual International Conference Presentations] |
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*[http://www.isr.us/Spaceelevatorconference/2004presentations.html 4th Annual International Conference Presentations] |
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*[http://liftwatch.org/ LiftWatch.org - Space Elevator News] |
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*[http://www.liftport.com/ Liftport Group] - The Space Elevator Companies |
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*[http://www.usst.ca/ University of Saskatchewan Space Design Team] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Space Elevator}} |
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===Animations=== |
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[[Category:Space elevator| ]] |
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*[http://www.isr.us/SEanimation.asp View space elevator animation] [[Windows Media Video]] (WMV) file - Institute for Scientific Research |
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[[Category:Articles containing video clips]] |
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*[http://www.isr.us/video/SE-INTRO_Final-1stream-384.wmv Download space elevator animation] [[Windows Media Video]] (WMV) file - Institute for Scientific Research |
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*[http://wid.ap.org/video/video/elevator.rm Brief video (realmedia format) of the space elevator concept] |
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===Miscellaneous links=== |
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*[http://www.leavingtheplanet.com/ Leaving The Planet By Space Elevator] |
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*[http://kcspacepirates.com/ Kansas City Space Pirates] |
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*[http://www.warr.de/projekte.php?projekt=space_elevator Project of the Scientific Workgroup for Rocketry and Spaceflight](WARR) (German) |
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*[http://www.spaceelevator.com/ The Space Elevator Reference] |
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*[http://www.gizmonicsinc.com/elevator/ California Engineering Company's Site Regarding Improvements to Current Designs] |
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*[http://groups.yahoo.com/group/space-elevator/ Space Elevator Yahoo Group] A discussion list for space elevator related topics |
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*[http://spacelift.gondor.ru/ A major Russian site about space elevators, by Y. Artsutanov and D. Tarabanov] |
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*[http://gizmonicsinc.com/elevator/ Some technical papers and a numerical/graphical tool for calculating ribbon properties and deployment scenarios.] |
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*[http://science.howstuffworks.com/space-elevator.htm/ HowStuffWorks article on the space elevator] |
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*[http://www.liftport.com/files/521Edwards.pdf The Space Elevator: A Brief Overview] |
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*[http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php?Cat=0&Board=EarthTransportation&Number=387676&fpart=1&PHPSESSID= Space Elevator in 3D] for [[Google Earth]] |
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*[http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/3401/02.html] NOVA:Science Now Segment |
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*[http://www.geocities.com/jcsherwood/ACClinks2.htm Arthur C. Clarke links & image archive] |
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*[http://spacelf8r.blogspot.com Space Elevator Journal] |
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*[http://google.com/coop/cse?cx=007554473059150349008:_oqnsivumzk Space Elevator Search Engine] |
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*[http://keithcu.com/wordpress/?p=17 Interview with Brad Edwards] |
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===Articles=== |
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*[http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,57536,00.html To the Moon in a Space Elevator? ([[4 February]] [[2003]] Wired News)] |
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*[http://liftoff.msfc.nasa.gov/academy/TETHER/spacetowers.html Liftoff (teenage education): Space Towers] |
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*[http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2000/ast07sep_1.htm Audacious & Outrageous: Space Elevators] |
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*[http://www.mit.edu/people/gassend/elevator/ Various thoughts on space elevators posted by Blaise Gassend] |
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* There have been accusations of corruption in NIAC's award process see: [http://english.pravda.ru/mailbox/22/98/396/14417_NASA.html] and [http://www.inauka.ru/mifs/article51866.html]. |
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*[http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9454786/ Space elevator robot passes 1,000-foot mark] |
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*[http://economist.com/science/tq/displayStory.cfm?story_id=7001786 The Economist : Waiting For The Space Elevator] (June 8 2006 - subscription required) |
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*[http://www.radio.cbc.ca/programs/quirks/archives/01-02/nov0301.htm CBC Radio Quirks and Quarks November 3, 2001] ''Riding the Space Elevator'' |
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*[http://spacemonitor.blogspot.com/2006/12/space-elevators-future-i-can-invision.html Space Elevators: A Future I can Envision...Part 1] (December 23, 2006) and [http://spacemonitor.blogspot.com/2006/12/space-elevators-future-i-can-invision_24.html Part 2] (January 15, 2007) from [http://www.spacemonitor.blogspot.com The Space Monitor] |
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Latest revision as of 02:30, 3 January 2025
A space elevator, also referred to as a space bridge, star ladder, and orbital lift, is a proposed type of planet-to-space transportation system,[1] often depicted in science fiction. The main component would be a cable (also called a tether) anchored to the surface and extending into space. An Earth-based space elevator would consist of a cable with one end attached to the surface near the equator and the other end attached to a counterweight in space beyond geostationary orbit (35,786 km altitude). The competing forces of gravity, which is stronger at the lower end, and the upward centrifugal force, which is stronger at the upper end, would result in the cable being held up, under tension, and stationary over a single position on Earth. With the tether deployed, climbers (crawlers) could repeatedly climb up and down the tether by mechanical means, releasing their cargo to and from orbit.[2] The design would permit vehicles to travel directly between a planetary surface, such as the Earth's, and orbit, without the use of large rockets.
History
[edit]Early concept
[edit]The idea of the space elevator appears to have developed independently in different times and places. The earliest models originated with two Russian scientists in the late nineteenth century. In his 1895 collection Dreams of Earth and Sky,[3] Konstantin Tsiolkovsky envisioned a massive sky ladder to reach the stars as a way to overcome gravity.[4][5][6] Decades later, in 1960, Yuri Artsutanov independently developed the concept of a "Cosmic Railway", a space elevator tethered from an orbiting satellite to an anchor on the equator, aiming to provide a safer and more efficient alternative to rockets.[7][8][9] In 1966, Isaacs and his colleagues introduced the concept of the 'Sky-Hook', proposing a satellite in geostationary orbit with a cable extending to Earth.[10]
Innovations and designs
[edit]The space elevator concept reached America in 1975 when Jerome Pearson began researching the idea, inspired by Arthur C. Clarke's 1969 speech before Congress. After working as an engineer for NASA and the Air Force Research Laboratory, he developed a design for an "Orbital Tower", intended to harness Earth's rotational energy to transport supplies into low Earth orbit. In his publication in Acta Astronautica[11], the cable would be thickest at geostationary orbit where tension is greatest, and narrowest at the tips to minimize weight per unit area. He proposed extending a counterweight to 144,000 kilometers (89,000 miles) as without a large counterweight, the upper cable would need to be longer due to the way gravitational and centrifugal forces change with distance from Earth. His analysis included the Moon's gravity, wind, and moving payloads. Building the elevator would have required thousands of Space Shuttle trips, though material could be transported once a minimum strength strand reached the ground or be manufactured in space from asteroidal or lunar ore. Pearson's findings, published in Acta Astronautica, caught Clarke's attention and led to technical consultations for Clarke's science fiction novel The Fountains of Paradise (1979),[12] which features a space elevator.[13][14]
The first gathering of multiple experts who wanted to investigate this alternative to space flight took place at the 1999 NASA conference 'Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether Space Elevator Concepts'. in Huntsville, Alabama.[4] D.V. Smitherman, Jr., published the findings in August of 2000 under the title Space Elevators: An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium, concluding that the space elevator could not be built for at least another 50 years due to concerns about the cable's material, deployment, and upkeep.[15][page needed]
Dr. B.C. Edwards suggested that a 100,000 km (62,000 mi) long paper-thin ribbon, utilizing a carbon nanotube composite material could solve the tether issue due to their high tensile strength and low weight [16] The proposed wide-thin ribbon-like cross-section shape instead of earlier circular cross-section concepts would increase survivability against meteoroid impacts. With support from NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC), his work was involved more than 20 institutions and 50 participants.[17][page needed] The Space Elevator NIAC Phase II Final Report, in combination with the book The Space Elevator: A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System (Edwards and Westling, 2003)[18] summarized all effort to design a space elevator[17][page needed] including deployment scenario, climber design, power delivery system, orbital debris avoidance, anchor system, surviving atomic oxygen, avoiding lightning and hurricanes by locating the anchor in the western equatorial Pacific, construction costs, construction schedule, and environmental hazards.[2][15][page needed][19] Additionally, he researched the structural integrity and load-bearing capabilities of space elevator cables, emphasizing their need for high tensile strength and resilience. His space elevator concept never reached NIAC's third phase, which he attributed to submitting his final proposal during the week of the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.[4]
21st century advancements
[edit]To speed space elevator development, proponents have organized several competitions, similar to the Ansari X Prize, for relevant technologies.[20][21] Among them are Elevator:2010, which organized annual competitions for climbers, ribbons and power-beaming systems from 2005 to 2009, the Robogames Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing competition,[22] as well as NASA's Centennial Challenges program, which, in March 2005, announced a partnership with the Spaceward Foundation (the operator of Elevator:2010), raising the total value of prizes to US$400,000.[23][24] The first European Space Elevator Challenge (EuSEC) to establish a climber structure took place in August 2011.[25]
In 2005, "the LiftPort Group of space elevator companies announced that it will be building a carbon nanotube manufacturing plant in Millville, New Jersey, to supply various glass, plastic and metal companies with these strong materials. Although LiftPort hopes to eventually use carbon nanotubes in the construction of a 100,000 km (62,000 mi) space elevator, this move will allow it to make money in the short term and conduct research and development into new production methods."[26] Their announced goal was a space elevator launch in 2010. On 13 February 2006, the LiftPort Group announced that, earlier the same month, they had tested a mile of "space-elevator tether" made of carbon-fiber composite strings and fiberglass tape measuring 5 cm (2.0 in) wide and 1 mm (0.039 in) (approx. 13 sheets of paper) thick, lifted with balloons.[27] In April 2019, Liftport CEO Michael Laine admitted little progress has been made on the company's lofty space elevator ambitions, even after receiving more than $200,000 in seed funding. The carbon nanotube manufacturing facility that Liftport announced in 2005 was never built.[28]
In 2007, Elevator:2010 held the 2007 Space Elevator games, which featured US$500,000 awards for each of the two competitions ($1,000,000 total), as well as an additional $4,000,000 to be awarded over the next five years for space elevator related technologies.[29] No teams won the competition, but a team from MIT entered the first 2-gram (0.07 oz), 100-percent carbon nanotube entry into the competition.[30] Japan held an international conference in November 2008 to draw up a timetable for building the elevator.[31]
In 2012, the Obayashi Corporation announced that it could build a space elevator by 2050 using carbon nanotube technology.[32] The design's passenger climber would be able to reach the level of geosynchronous equatorial orbit (GEO) after an 8-day trip.[33] Further details were published in 2016.[34]
In 2013, the International Academy of Astronautics published a technological feasibility assessment which concluded that the critical capability improvement needed was the tether material, which was projected to achieve the necessary specific strength within 20 years. The four-year long study looked into many facets of space elevator development including missions, development schedules, financial investments, revenue flow, and benefits. It was reported that it would be possible to operationally survive smaller impacts and avoid larger impacts, with meteors and space debris, and that the estimated cost of lifting a kilogram of payload to GEO and beyond would be $500.[35]: 10–11, 207–208 [36][page needed]
In 2014, Google X's Rapid Evaluation R&D team began the design of a Space Elevator, eventually finding that no one had yet manufactured a perfectly formed carbon nanotube strand longer than a meter. They thus put the project in "deep freeze" and also keep tabs on any advances in the carbon nanotube field.[37]
In 2018, researchers at Japan's Shizuoka University launched STARS-Me, two CubeSats connected by a tether, which a mini-elevator will travel on.[38][39] The experiment was launched as a test bed for a larger structure.[40]
In 2019, the International Academy of Astronautics published "Road to the Space Elevator Era",[41] a study report summarizing the assessment of the space elevator as of summer 2018. The essence is that a broad group of space professionals gathered and assessed the status of the space elevator development, each contributing their expertise and coming to similar conclusions: (a) Earth Space Elevators seem feasible, reinforcing the IAA 2013 study conclusion (b) Space Elevator development initiation is nearer than most think. This last conclusion is based on a potential process for manufacturing macro-scale single crystal graphene[42] with higher specific strength than carbon nanotubes.
Materials
[edit]A significant difficulty with making a space elevator for the Earth is strength of materials. Since the structure must hold up its own weight in addition to the payload it may carry, the strength to weight ratio, or Specific strength, of the material it is made of must be extremely high.
Since 1959, most ideas for space elevators have focused on purely tensile structures, with the weight of the system held up from above by centrifugal forces. In the tensile concepts, a space tether reaches from a large mass (the counterweight) beyond geostationary orbit to the ground. This structure is held in tension between Earth and the counterweight like an upside-down plumb bob. The cable thickness is tapered based on tension; it has its maximum at a geostationary orbit and the minimum on the ground.
The concept is applicable to other planets and celestial bodies. For locations in the Solar System with weaker gravity than Earth's (such as the Moon or Mars), the strength-to-density requirements for tether materials are not as problematic. Currently available materials (such as Kevlar) are strong and light enough that they could be practical as the tether material for elevators there.[43]
Available materials are not strong and light enough to make an Earth space elevator practical.[44][45][46] Some sources expect that future advances in carbon nanotubes (CNTs) could lead to a practical design.[2][15][page needed][26] Other sources believe that CNTs will never be strong enough.[47][48][49] Possible future alternatives include boron nitride nanotubes, diamond nanothreads[50][51] and macro-scale single crystal graphene.[42]
In fiction
[edit]In 1979, space elevators were introduced to a broader audience with the simultaneous publication of Arthur C. Clarke's novel, The Fountains of Paradise, in which engineers construct a space elevator on top of a mountain peak in the fictional island country of "Taprobane" (loosely based on Sri Lanka, albeit moved south to the Equator), and Charles Sheffield's first novel, The Web Between the Worlds, also featuring the building of a space elevator. Three years later, in Robert A. Heinlein's 1982 novel Friday, the principal character mentions a disaster at the “Quito Sky Hook” and makes use of the "Nairobi Beanstalk" in the course of her travels. In Kim Stanley Robinson's 1993 novel Red Mars, colonists build a space elevator on Mars that allows both for more colonists to arrive and also for natural resources mined there to be able to leave for Earth. Larry Niven's book Rainbow Mars describes a space elevator built on Mars. In David Gerrold's 2000 novel, Jumping Off The Planet, a family excursion up the Ecuador "beanstalk" is actually a child-custody kidnapping. Gerrold's book also examines some of the industrial applications of a mature elevator technology. The concept of a space elevator, called the Beanstalk, is also depicted in John Scalzi's 2005 novel Old Man's War. In a biological version, Joan Slonczewski's 2011 novel The Highest Frontier depicts a college student ascending a space elevator constructed of self-healing cables of anthrax bacilli. The engineered bacteria can regrow the cables when severed by space debris.
Physics
[edit]Apparent gravitational field
[edit]An Earth space elevator cable rotates along with the rotation of the Earth. Therefore, the cable, and objects attached to it, would experience upward centrifugal force in the direction opposing the downward gravitational force. The higher up the cable the object is located, the less the gravitational pull of the Earth, and the stronger the upward centrifugal force due to the rotation, so that more centrifugal force opposes less gravity. The centrifugal force and the gravity are balanced at geosynchronous equatorial orbit (GEO). Above GEO, the centrifugal force is stronger than gravity, causing objects attached to the cable there to pull upward on it. Because the counterweight, above GEO, is rotating about the Earth faster than the natural orbital speed for that altitude, it exerts a centrifugal pull on the cable and thus holds the whole system aloft.
The net force for objects attached to the cable is called the apparent gravitational field. The apparent gravitational field for attached objects is the (downward) gravity minus the (upward) centrifugal force. The apparent gravity experienced by an object on the cable is zero at GEO, downward below GEO, and upward above GEO.
The apparent gravitational field can be represented this way:[52]: Table 1
where
At some point up the cable, the two terms (downward gravity and upward centrifugal force) are equal and opposite. Objects fixed to the cable at that point put no weight on the cable. This altitude (r1) depends on the mass of the planet and its rotation rate. Setting actual gravity equal to centrifugal acceleration gives:[52]: p. 126
This is 35,786 km (22,236 mi) above Earth's surface, the altitude of geostationary orbit.[52]: Table 1
On the cable below geostationary orbit, downward gravity would be greater than the upward centrifugal force, so the apparent gravity would pull objects attached to the cable downward. Any object released from the cable below that level would initially accelerate downward along the cable. Then gradually it would deflect eastward from the cable. On the cable above the level of stationary orbit, upward centrifugal force would be greater than downward gravity, so the apparent gravity would pull objects attached to the cable upward. Any object released from the cable above the geosynchronous level would initially accelerate upward along the cable. Then gradually it would deflect westward from the cable.
Cable section
[edit]Historically, the main technical problem has been considered the ability of the cable to hold up, with tension, the weight of itself below any given point. The greatest tension on a space elevator cable is at the point of geostationary orbit, 35,786 km (22,236 mi) above the Earth's equator. This means that the cable material, combined with its design, must be strong enough to hold up its own weight from the surface up to 35,786 km (22,236 mi). A cable which is thicker in cross section area at that height than at the surface could better hold up its own weight over a longer length. How the cross section area tapers from the maximum at 35,786 km (22,236 mi) to the minimum at the surface is therefore an important design factor for a space elevator cable.
To maximize the usable excess strength for a given amount of cable material, the cable's cross section area would need to be designed for the most part in such a way that the stress (i.e., the tension per unit of cross sectional area) is constant along the length of the cable.[52][53] The constant-stress criterion is a starting point in the design of the cable cross section area as it changes with altitude. Other factors considered in more detailed designs include thickening at altitudes where more space junk is present, consideration of the point stresses imposed by climbers, and the use of varied materials.[54] To account for these and other factors, modern detailed designs seek to achieve the largest safety margin possible, with as little variation over altitude and time as possible.[54] In simple starting-point designs, that equates to constant-stress.
For a constant-stress cable with no safety margin, the cross-section-area as a function of distance from Earth's center is given by the following equation:[52]
where
Safety margin can be accounted for by dividing T by the desired safety factor.[52]
Cable materials
[edit]Using the above formula, the ratio between the cross-section at geostationary orbit and the cross-section at Earth's surface, known as taper ratio, can be calculated:[note 1]
Material | Tensile strength (MPa) |
Density (kg/m3) |
Specific strength (MPa)/(kg/m3) |
Taper ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steel | 5,000 | 7,900 | 0.63 | 1.6×1033 |
Kevlar | 3,600 | 1,440 | 2.5 | 2.5×108 |
UHMWPE @23°C | 3,600 | 0,980 | 3.7 | 5.4×106 |
Single wall carbon nanotube | 130,000 | 1,300 | 100 | 1.6 |
The taper ratio becomes very large unless the specific strength of the material used approaches 48 (MPa)/(kg/m3). Low specific strength materials require very large taper ratios which equates to large (or astronomical) total mass of the cable with associated large or impossible costs.
Structure
[edit]There are a variety of space elevator designs proposed for many planetary bodies. Almost every design includes a base station, a cable, climbers, and a counterweight. For an Earth Space Elevator the Earth's rotation creates upward centrifugal force on the counterweight. The counterweight is held down by the cable while the cable is held up and taut by the counterweight. The base station anchors the whole system to the surface of the Earth. Climbers climb up and down the cable with cargo.
Base station
[edit]Modern concepts for the base station/anchor are typically mobile stations, large oceangoing vessels or other mobile platforms. Mobile base stations would have the advantage over the earlier stationary concepts (with land-based anchors) by being able to maneuver to avoid high winds, storms, and space debris. Oceanic anchor points are also typically in international waters, simplifying and reducing the cost of negotiating territory use for the base station.[2]
Stationary land-based platforms would have simpler and less costly logistical access to the base. They also would have the advantage of being able to be at high altitudes, such as on top of mountains. In an alternate concept, the base station could be a tower, forming a space elevator which comprises both a compression tower close to the surface, and a tether structure at higher altitudes.[6] Combining a compression structure with a tension structure would reduce loads from the atmosphere at the Earth end of the tether, and reduce the distance into the Earth's gravity field that the cable needs to extend, and thus reduce the critical strength-to-density requirements for the cable material, all other design factors being equal.
Cable
[edit]A space elevator cable would need to carry its own weight as well as the additional weight of climbers. The required strength of the cable would vary along its length. This is because at various points it would have to carry the weight of the cable below, or provide a downward force to retain the cable and counterweight above. Maximum tension on a space elevator cable would be at geosynchronous altitude so the cable would have to be thickest there and taper as it approaches Earth. Any potential cable design may be characterized by the taper factor – the ratio between the cable's radius at geosynchronous altitude and at the Earth's surface.[55]
The cable would need to be made of a material with a high tensile strength/density ratio. For example, the Edwards space elevator design assumes a cable material with a tensile strength of at least 100 gigapascals.[2] Since Edwards consistently assumed the density of his carbon nanotube cable to be 1300 kg/m3,[16] that implies a specific strength of 77 megapascal/(kg/m3). This value takes into consideration the entire weight of the space elevator. An untapered space elevator cable would need a material capable of sustaining a length of 4,960 kilometers (3,080 mi) of its own weight at sea level to reach a geostationary altitude of 35,786 km (22,236 mi) without yielding.[56] Therefore, a material with very high strength and lightness is needed.
For comparison, metals like titanium, steel or aluminium alloys have breaking lengths of only 20–30 km (0.2–0.3 MPa/(kg/m3)). Modern fiber materials such as kevlar, fiberglass and carbon/graphite fiber have breaking lengths of 100–400 km (1.0–4.0 MPa/(kg/m3)). Nanoengineered materials such as carbon nanotubes and, more recently discovered, graphene ribbons (perfect two-dimensional sheets of carbon) are expected to have breaking lengths of 5000–6000 km (50–60 MPa/(kg/m3)), and also are able to conduct electrical power.[citation needed]
For a space elevator on Earth, with its comparatively high gravity, the cable material would need to be stronger and lighter than currently available materials.[57] For this reason, there has been a focus on the development of new materials that meet the demanding specific strength requirement. For high specific strength, carbon has advantages because it is only the sixth element in the periodic table. Carbon has comparatively few of the protons and neutrons which contribute most of the dead weight of any material. Most of the interatomic bonding forces of any element are contributed by only the outer few electrons. For carbon, the strength and stability of those bonds is high compared to the mass of the atom. The challenge in using carbon nanotubes remains to extend to macroscopic sizes the production of such material that are still perfect on the microscopic scale (as microscopic defects are most responsible for material weakness).[57][58][59] As of 2014, carbon nanotube technology allowed growing tubes up to a few tenths of meters.[60]
In 2014, diamond nanothreads were first synthesized.[50] Since they have strength properties similar to carbon nanotubes, diamond nanothreads were quickly seen as candidate cable material as well.[51]
Climbers
[edit]A space elevator cannot be an elevator in the typical sense (with moving cables) due to the need for the cable to be significantly wider at the center than at the tips. While various designs employing moving cables have been proposed, most cable designs call for the "elevator" to climb up a stationary cable.
Climbers cover a wide range of designs. On elevator designs whose cables are planar ribbons, most propose to use pairs of rollers to hold the cable with friction.
Climbers would need to be paced at optimal timings so as to minimize cable stress and oscillations and to maximize throughput. Lighter climbers could be sent up more often, with several going up at the same time. This would increase throughput somewhat, but would lower the mass of each individual payload.[61]
The horizontal speed, i.e. due to orbital rotation, of each part of the cable increases with altitude, proportional to distance from the center of the Earth, reaching low orbital speed at a point approximately 66 percent of the height between the surface and geostationary orbit, or a height of about 23,400 km. A payload released at this point would go into a highly eccentric elliptical orbit, staying just barely clear from atmospheric reentry, with the periapsis at the same altitude as low earth orbit (LEO) and the apoapsis at the release height. With increasing release height the orbit would become less eccentric as both periapsis and apoapsis increase, becoming circular at geostationary level.[62][63]
When the payload has reached GEO, the horizontal speed is exactly the speed of a circular orbit at that level, so that if released, it would remain adjacent to that point on the cable. The payload can also continue climbing further up the cable beyond GEO, allowing it to obtain higher speed at jettison. If released from 100,000 km, the payload would have enough speed to reach the asteroid belt.[54]
As a payload is lifted up a space elevator, it would gain not only altitude, but horizontal speed (angular momentum) as well. The angular momentum is taken from the Earth's rotation. As the climber ascends, it is initially moving slower than each successive part of cable it is moving on to. This is the Coriolis force: the climber "drags" (westward) on the cable, as it climbs, and slightly decreases the Earth's rotation speed. The opposite process would occur for descending payloads: the cable is tilted eastward, thus slightly increasing Earth's rotation speed.
The overall effect of the centrifugal force acting on the cable would cause it to constantly try to return to the energetically favorable vertical orientation, so after an object has been lifted on the cable, the counterweight would swing back toward the vertical, a bit like a pendulum.[61] Space elevators and their loads would be designed so that the center of mass is always well-enough above the level of geostationary orbit[64] to hold up the whole system. Lift and descent operations would need to be carefully planned so as to keep the pendulum-like motion of the counterweight around the tether point under control.[65]
Climber speed would be limited by the Coriolis force, available power, and by the need to ensure the climber's accelerating force does not break the cable. Climbers would also need to maintain a minimum average speed in order to move material up and down economically and expeditiously.[66] At the speed of a very fast car or train of 300 km/h (190 mph) it will take about 5 days to climb to geosynchronous orbit.[67]
Powering climbers
[edit]Both power and energy are significant issues for climbers – the climbers would need to gain a large amount of potential energy as quickly as possible to clear the cable for the next payload.
Various methods have been proposed to provide energy to the climber:
- Transfer the energy to the climber through wireless energy transfer while it is climbing.
- Transfer the energy to the climber through some material structure while it is climbing.
- Store the energy in the climber before it starts – requires an extremely high specific energy such as nuclear energy.
- Solar power – After the first 40 km it is possible to use solar energy to power the climber[68]
Wireless energy transfer such as laser power beaming is currently considered the most likely method, using megawatt-powered free electron or solid state lasers in combination with adaptive mirrors approximately 10 m (33 ft) wide and a photovoltaic array on the climber tuned to the laser frequency for efficiency.[2] For climber designs powered by power beaming, this efficiency is an important design goal. Unused energy would need to be re-radiated away with heat-dissipation systems, which add to weight.
Yoshio Aoki, a professor of precision machinery engineering at Nihon University and director of the Japan Space Elevator Association, suggested including a second cable and using the conductivity of carbon nanotubes to provide power.[31]
Counterweight
[edit]Several solutions have been proposed to act as a counterweight:
- a heavy, captured asteroid[5][69]
- a space dock, space station or spaceport positioned past geostationary orbit
- a further upward extension of the cable itself so that the net upward pull would be the same as an equivalent counterweight
- parked spent climbers that had been used to thicken the cable during construction, other junk, and material lifted up the cable for the purpose of increasing the counterweight.[54]
Extending the cable has the advantage of some simplicity of the task and the fact that a payload that went to the end of the counterweight-cable would acquire considerable velocity relative to the Earth, allowing it to be launched into interplanetary space. Its disadvantage is the need to produce greater amounts of cable material as opposed to using just anything available that has mass.
Applications
[edit]Launching into deep space
[edit]An object attached to a space elevator at a radius of approximately 53,100 km would be at escape velocity when released. Transfer orbits to the L1 and L2 Lagrangian points could be attained by release at 50,630 and 51,240 km, respectively, and transfer to lunar orbit from 50,960 km.[70]
At the end of Pearson's 144,000 km (89,000 mi) cable, the tangential velocity is 10.93 kilometers per second (6.79 mi/s). That is more than enough to escape Earth's gravitational field and send probes at least as far out as Jupiter. Once at Jupiter, a gravitational assist maneuver could permit solar escape velocity to be reached.[52]
Extraterrestrial elevators
[edit]A space elevator could also be constructed on other planets, asteroids and moons.
A Martian tether could be much shorter than one on Earth. Mars' surface gravity is 38 percent of Earth's, while it rotates around its axis in about the same time as Earth. Because of this, Martian stationary orbit is much closer to the surface, and hence the elevator could be much shorter. Current materials are already sufficiently strong to construct such an elevator.[71] Building a Martian elevator would be complicated by the Martian moon Phobos, which is in a low orbit and intersects the Equator regularly (twice every orbital period of 11 h 6 min). Phobos and Deimos may get in the way of an areostationary space elevator; on the other hand, they may contribute useful resources to the project. Phobos is projected to contain high amounts of carbon. If carbon nanotubes become feasible for a tether material, there will be an abundance of carbon near Mars. This could provide readily available resources for future colonization on Mars.
Phobos is tide-locked: one side always faces its primary, Mars. An elevator extending 6,000 km from that inward side would end about 28 kilometers above the Martian surface, just out of the denser parts of the atmosphere of Mars. A similar cable extending 6,000 km in the opposite direction would counterbalance the first, so the center of mass of this system remains in Phobos. In total the space elevator would extend out over 12,000 km which would be below areostationary orbit of Mars (17,032 km). A rocket launch would still be needed to get the rocket and cargo to the beginning of the space elevator 28 km above the surface. The surface of Mars is rotating at 0.25 km/s at the equator and the bottom of the space elevator would be rotating around Mars at 0.77 km/s, so only 0.52 km/s (1872 km/h) of Delta-v would be needed to get to the space elevator. Phobos orbits at 2.15 km/s and the outermost part of the space elevator would rotate around Mars at 3.52 km/s.[72][73]
The Earth's Moon is a potential location for a Lunar space elevator, especially as the specific strength required for the tether is low enough to use currently available materials. The Moon does not rotate fast enough for an elevator to be supported by centrifugal force (the proximity of the Earth means there is no effective lunar-stationary orbit), but differential gravity forces means that an elevator could be constructed through Lagrangian points. A near-side elevator would extend through the Earth-Moon L1 point from an anchor point near the center of the visible part of Earth's Moon: the length of such an elevator must exceed the maximum L1 altitude of 59,548 km, and would be considerably longer to reduce the mass of the required apex counterweight.[74] A far-side lunar elevator would pass through the L2 Lagrangian point and would need to be longer than on the near-side; again, the tether length depends on the chosen apex anchor mass, but it could also be made of existing engineering materials.[74]
Rapidly spinning asteroids or moons could use cables to eject materials to convenient points, such as Earth orbits;[77] or conversely, to eject materials to send a portion of the mass of the asteroid or moon to Earth orbit or a Lagrangian point. Freeman Dyson, a physicist and mathematician, suggested[citation needed] using such smaller systems as power generators at points distant from the Sun where solar power is uneconomical.
A space elevator using presently available engineering materials could be constructed between mutually tidally locked worlds, such as Pluto and Charon or the components of binary asteroid 90 Antiope, with no terminus disconnect, according to Francis Graham of Kent State University.[78] However, spooled variable lengths of cable must be used due to ellipticity of the orbits.
Construction
[edit]The construction of a space elevator would need reduction of some technical risk. Some advances in engineering, manufacturing and physical technology are required.[2] Once a first space elevator is built, the second one and all others would have the use of the previous ones to assist in construction, making their costs considerably lower. Such follow-on space elevators would also benefit from the great reduction in technical risk achieved by the construction of the first space elevator.[2]
Prior to the work of Edwards in 2000,[16] most concepts for constructing a space elevator had the cable manufactured in space. That was thought to be necessary for such a large and long object and for such a large counterweight. Manufacturing the cable in space would be done in principle by using an asteroid or Near-Earth object for source material.[15][79] These earlier concepts for construction require a large preexisting space-faring infrastructure to maneuver an asteroid into its needed orbit around Earth. They also required the development of technologies for manufacture in space of large quantities of exacting materials.[35]: 326
Since 2001, most work has focused on simpler methods of construction requiring much smaller space infrastructures. They conceive the launch of a long cable on a large spool, followed by deployment of it in space.[2][16][35]: 326 The spool would be initially parked in a geostationary orbit above the planned anchor point. A long cable would be dropped "downward" (toward Earth) and would be balanced by a mass being dropped "upward" (away from Earth) for the whole system to remain on the geosynchronous orbit. Earlier designs imagined the balancing mass to be another cable (with counterweight) extending upward, with the main spool remaining at the original geosynchronous orbit level. Most current designs elevate the spool itself as the main cable is payed out, a simpler process. When the lower end of the cable is long enough to reach the surface of the Earth (at the equator), it would be anchored. Once anchored, the center of mass would be elevated more (by adding mass at the upper end or by paying out more cable). This would add more tension to the whole cable, which could then be used as an elevator cable.
One plan for construction uses conventional rockets to place a "minimum size" initial seed cable of only 19,800 kg.[2] This first very small ribbon would be adequate to support the first 619 kg climber. The first 207 climbers would carry up and attach more cable to the original, increasing its cross section area and widening the initial ribbon to about 160 mm wide at its widest point. The result would be a 750-ton cable with a lift capacity of 20 tons per climber.
Safety issues and construction challenges
[edit]For early systems, transit times from the surface to the level of geosynchronous orbit would be about five days. On these early systems, the time spent moving through the Van Allen radiation belts would be enough that passengers would need to be protected from radiation by shielding, which would add mass to the climber and decrease payload.[80]
A space elevator would present a navigational hazard, both to aircraft and spacecraft. Aircraft could be diverted by air-traffic control restrictions. All objects in stable orbits that have perigee below the maximum altitude of the cable that are not synchronous with the cable would impact the cable eventually, unless avoiding action is taken. One potential solution proposed by Edwards is to use a movable anchor (a sea anchor) to allow the tether to "dodge" any space debris large enough to track.[2]
Impacts by space objects such as meteoroids, micrometeorites and orbiting man-made debris pose another design constraint on the cable. A cable would need to be designed to maneuver out of the way of debris, or absorb impacts of small debris without breaking.[citation needed]
Economics
[edit]With a space elevator, materials might be sent into orbit at a fraction of the current cost. As of 2022, conventional rocket designs cost about US$12,125 per kilogram (US$5,500 per pound) for transfer to geostationary orbit.[81] Current space elevator proposals envision payload prices starting as low as $220 per kilogram ($100 per pound),[82] similar to the $5–$300/kg estimates of the Launch loop, but higher than the $310/ton to 500 km orbit quoted to Dr. Jerry Pournelle for an orbital airship system.[83]
Philip Ragan, co-author of the book Leaving the Planet by Space Elevator, states that "The first country to deploy a space elevator will have a 95 percent cost advantage and could potentially control all space activities."[84]
International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC)
[edit]The International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC) is a US Non-Profit 501(c)(3) Corporation[85] formed to promote the development, construction, and operation of a space elevator as "a revolutionary and efficient way to space for all humanity".[86] It was formed after the Space Elevator Conference in Redmond, Washington in July 2008 and became an affiliate organization with the National Space Society[87] in August 2013.[86] ISEC hosts an annual Space Elevator conference at the Seattle Museum of Flight.[88][89][90]
ISEC coordinates with the two other major societies focusing on space elevators: the Japanese Space Elevator Association[91] and EuroSpaceward.[92] ISEC supports symposia and presentations at the International Academy of Astronautics[93] and the International Astronautical Federation Congress[94] each year.
Related concepts
[edit]The conventional current concept of a "Space Elevator" has evolved from a static compressive structure reaching to the level of GEO, to the modern baseline idea of a static tensile structure anchored to the ground and extending to well above the level of GEO. In the current usage by practitioners (and in this article), a "Space Elevator" means the Tsiolkovsky-Artsutanov-Pearson type as considered by the International Space Elevator Consortium. This conventional type is a static structure fixed to the ground and extending into space high enough that cargo can climb the structure up from the ground to a level where simple release will put the cargo into an orbit.[95]
Some concepts related to this modern baseline are not usually termed a "Space Elevator", but are similar in some way and are sometimes termed "Space Elevator" by their proponents. For example, Hans Moravec published an article in 1977 called "A Non-Synchronous Orbital Skyhook" describing a concept using a rotating cable.[96] The rotation speed would exactly match the orbital speed in such a way that the tip velocity at the lowest point was zero compared to the object to be "elevated". It would dynamically grapple and then "elevate" high flying objects to orbit or low orbiting objects to higher orbit.
The original concept envisioned by Tsiolkovsky was a compression structure, a concept similar to an aerial mast. While such structures might reach space (100 km, 62 mi), they are unlikely to reach geostationary orbit. The concept of a Tsiolkovsky tower combined with a classic space elevator cable (reaching above the level of GEO) has been suggested.[6] Other ideas use very tall compressive towers to reduce the demands on launch vehicles.[97] The vehicle is "elevated" up the tower, which may extend as high as above the atmosphere, and is launched from the top. Such a tall tower to access near-space altitudes of 20 km (12 mi) has been proposed by various researchers.[97][98][99]
The aerovator is a concept invented by a Yahoo Group discussing space elevators, and included in a 2009 book about space elevators. It would consist of a >1000 km long ribbon extending diagonally upwards from a ground-level hub and then levelling out to become horizontal. Aircraft would pull on the ribbon while flying in a circle, causing the ribbon to rotate around the hub once every 13 minutes with its tip travelling at 8 km/s. The ribbon would stay in the air through a mix of aerodynamic lift and centrifugal force. Payloads would climb up the ribbon and then be launched from the fast-moving tip into orbit.[100]
Other concepts for non-rocket spacelaunch related to a space elevator (or parts of a space elevator) include an orbital ring, a space fountain, a launch loop, a skyhook, a space tether, and a buoyant "SpaceShaft".[101]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Specific substitutions used to produce the factor 4.85×107:
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "What is a Space Elevator?". The International Space Elevator Consortium. 2014. Retrieved 22 August 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Edwards, Bradley Carl. The NIAC Space Elevator Program (Report). NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts. Archived from the original on 12 May 2008. Retrieved 24 November 2007.
{{cite report}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Tsiolkovsky, Konstanti (2004). Dreams of Earth and Sky. Athena Books. ISBN 9781414701639.
- ^ a b c Derek J. Pearson (2022). "The Steep Climb to Low Earth Orbit: A History of the Space Elevator Community's Battle Against the Rocket Paradigm".
- ^ a b "The Audacious Space Elevator". NASA Science News. Archived from the original on 19 September 2008. Retrieved 27 September 2008.
- ^ a b c Landis, Geoffrey A. & Cafarelli, Craig (1999). "The Tsiolkovski Tower Reexamined". Journal of the British Interplanetary Society. 52. Presented as paper IAF-95-V.4.07, 46th International Astronautics Federation Congress, Oslo, Norway, 2-6 October 1995: 175–180. Bibcode:1999JBIS...52..175L.
- ^ Artsutanov, Y. V Kosmos na Elektrovoze (Into Space by Funicular Railway). Komsomolskaya Pravda (Young Communist Pravda), 31 July 1960. Contents described in Lvov, Science 158:946, 17 November 1967
- ^ Lvov, Vladimir (17 November 1967). "Sky-Hook: Old Idea". Science. 158 (3803): 946–947. Bibcode:1967Sci...158..946L. doi:10.1126/science.158.3803.946. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17753605.
- ^ Artsutanov, Yu (1960). "To the Cosmos by Electric Train" (PDF). liftport.com. Young Person's Pravda. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 May 2006. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ Isaacs, J. D.; Vine, A. C.; Bradner, H.; Bachus, G. E. (1966). "Satellite Elongation into a True 'Sky-Hook'". Science. 151 (3711): 682–683. Bibcode:1966Sci...151..682I. doi:10.1126/science.151.3711.682. PMID 17813792. S2CID 32226322.
- ^ Pearson, J. (1975). "The orbital tower: a spacecraft launcher using the Earth's rotational energy" (PDF). Acta Astronautica. 2 (9–10): 785–799. Bibcode:1975AcAau...2..785P. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.530.3120. doi:10.1016/0094-5765(75)90021-1.
- ^ Clarke, Arthur C. (1979). The fountains of Paradise. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. ISBN 9780151327737.
- ^ Boucher, Marc (8 April 2013). "The Space Elevator: 'Thought Experiment', or Key to the Universe?". SpaceRef. Retrieved 30 May 2024.
- ^ Edwards, Bradley C. (2004). "A Space Elevator Based Exploration Strategy". AIP Conference Proceedings. 699. AIP: 854–862. Bibcode:2004AIPC..699..854E. doi:10.1063/1.1649650.
- ^ a b c d Smitherman, Jr., D.V., ed. (August 2000). Space Elevators: An Advanced Earth-Space Infrastructure for the New Millennium (PDF) (Report). NASA. Archived (PDF) from the original on 28 March 2015.
- ^ a b c d Bradley C. Edwards, "The Space Elevator".
- ^ a b Edwards, Bradley C. (1 March 2003). The Space Elevator: NIAC Phase II Final Report (PDF) (Report). Eureka Scientific.
- ^ Bradley C. Edwards; Eric A. Westling (2003). The Space Elevator: A Revolutionary Earth-to-Space Transportation System. BC Edwards. ISBN 9780974651712.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Science @ NASA, "Audacious & Outrageous: Space Elevators" Archived 19 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine, September 2000.
- ^ Boyle, Alan (27 August 2004). "Space elevator contest proposed". NBC News. Archived from the original on 14 December 2013.
- ^ "The Space Elevator – Elevator:2010". Archived from the original on 6 January 2007. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ "Space Elevator Ribbon Climbing Robot Competition Rules". Archived from the original on 6 February 2005. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ "NASA Announces First Centennial Challenges' Prizes". 2005. Archived from the original on 8 June 2005. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ Britt, Robert Roy (24 March 2005). "NASA Details Cash Prizes for Space Privatization". Space.com. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ "What's the European Space Elevator Challenge?". European Space Elevator Challenge. Archived from the original on 15 August 2011. Retrieved 21 April 2011.
- ^ a b Cain, Fraser (27 April 2005). "Space Elevator Group to Manufacture Nanotubes". Universe Today. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ Groshong, Kimm (15 February 2006). "Space-elevator tether climbs a mile high". New Scientist. Retrieved 5 March 2006.
- ^ "If a space elevator was ever going to happen, it could have gotten its start in N. J. Here's how it went wrong". NJ.com. 28 March 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2019.
- ^ Elevator:2010 – The Space Elevator Challenge. spaceward.org.
- ^ Spaceward Games 2007. The Spaceward Foundation.
- ^ a b Lewis, Leo (22 September 2008). "Japan hopes to turn sci-fi into reality with elevator to the stars". The Times. London, England. Retrieved 23 May 2010. Lewis, Leo; News International Group; accessed 22 September 2008.
- ^ a b "Going up: Japan builder eyes space elevator". Phys.org. 22 February 2012.
- ^ Daley, Jason (5 September 2018). "Japan Takes Tiny First Step Toward Space Elevator". Smithsonian Magazine.
- ^ Ishikawa, Y. (2016). "Obayashi Corporation's Space Elevator Construction Concept". Journal of the British Interplanetary Society. 69: 227–239. Bibcode:2016JBIS...69..227I. Retrieved 5 January 2021.
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'This is extremely complicated. I don't think it's really realistic to have a space elevator,' said Elon Musk during a conference at MIT, adding that it would be easier to 'have a bridge from LA to Tokyo' than an elevator that could take material into space.
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'We understand it's a difficult project,' Yoji Ishikawa says. 'Our technology is very low. If we need to be at 100 to get an elevator built – right now we are around a 1 or 2. But we cannot say this project is not possible.'
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The chief obstacle is that no known material has the necessary combination of lightness and strength needed for the cable, which has to be able to support its own weight. Carbon nanotubes are often touted as a possibility, but they have only about a tenth of the necessary strength-to-weight ratio and cannot be made into filaments more than a few centimetres long, let alone thousands of kilometres. Diamond nanothreads, another exotic form of carbon, might be stronger, but their properties are still poorly understood.
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Feng Ding of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University and his colleagues simulated CNTs with a single atom out of place, turning two of the hexagons into a pentagon and heptagon, and creating a kink in the tube. They found this simple change was enough to cut the ideal strength of a CNT to 40 GPa, with the effect being even more severe when they increased the number of misaligned atoms... That's bad news for people who want to build a space elevator, a cable between the Earth and an orbiting satellite that would provide easy access to space. Estimates suggest such a cable would need a tensile strength of 50 GPa, so CNTs were a promising solution, but Ding's research suggests they won't work.
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recent calculations by Nicola Pugno of the Polytechnic of Turin, Italy, suggest that carbon nanotube cables will not work... According to their calculations, the cable would need to be twice as strong as that of any existing material including graphite, quartz, and diamond.
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Alright, space elevator plans are back to square one, people. Carbon nanotubes probably aren't going to be our material solution for a space elevator, because apparently even a minuscule (read: atomic) flaw in the design drastically decreases strength.
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During the last ten years, the assumption was that the only power available would come from the surface of the Earth, as it was inexpensive and technologically feasible. However, during the last ten years of discussions, conference papers, IAA Cosmic Studies, and interest around the globe, many discussions have led some individuals to the following conclusions: • Solar Array technology is improving rapidly and will enable sufficient energy for climbing • Tremendous advances are occurring in lightweight deployable structures.
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- Surface area: 4πr2
- Surface gravity: GM/r2
- Escape velocity: √2GM/r
- Rotation velocity: rotation period/circumference
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Further reading
[edit]- A conference publication based on findings from the Advanced Space Infrastructure Workshop on Geostationary Orbiting Tether "Space Elevator" Concepts Archived 28 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), held in 1999 at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama. Compiled by D.V. Smitherman Jr., published August 2000
- "The Political Economy of Very Large Space Projects" HTML PDF, John Hickman, Ph.D. Journal of Evolution and Technology Vol. 4 – November 1999
- A Hoist to the Heavens By Bradley Carl Edwards
- Ziemelis K. (2001) "Going up". In New Scientist 2289: 24–27. Republished in SpaceRef Archived 12 January 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Title page: "The great space elevator: the dream machine that will turn us all into astronauts."
- The Space Elevator Comes Closer to Reality. An overview by Leonard David of space.com, published 27 March 2002
- Krishnaswamy, Sridhar. Stress Analysis – The Orbital Tower (PDF)
- LiftPort's Roadmap for Elevator To Space SE Roadmap (PDF)
- Shiga, David (28 March 2008). "Space elevators face wobble problem". New Scientist.
- Alexander Bolonkin, "Non Rocket Space Launch and Flight". Elsevier, 2005. 488 pgsISBN 978-0-08044-731-5.
External links
[edit]- The Economist: Waiting For The Space Elevator (8 June 2006 – subscription required)
- CBC Radio Quirks and Quarks November 3, 2001 Riding the Space Elevator
- Times of London Online: Going up ... and the next floor is outer space
- The Space Elevator: 'Thought Experiment', or Key to the Universe? Archived 1 February 2020 at the Wayback Machine. By Sir Arthur C. Clarke. Address to the XXXth International Astronautical Congress, Munich, 20 September 1979
- International Space Elevator Consortium Website
- Space Elevator entry at The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction