Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 7997;andrew.cmu.edu;Ted Anderson Received: from hogtown.andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr11/tm2b/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu (->+dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr11/tm2b/space/space.dl) (->ota+space.digests) ID ; Sat, 9 Feb 91 01:54:33 -0500 (EST) Message-ID: Precedence: junk Reply-To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU From: space-request+@Andrew.CMU.EDU To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU Date: Sat, 9 Feb 91 01:54:27 -0500 (EST) Subject: SPACE Digest V13 #138 SPACE Digest Volume 13 : Issue 138 Today's Topics: Re: SPACE Digest V13 #075 Re: Solar Impact Mission. Manoeuvring using rope and anchor(was: Solar Impact Mission.) Re: Japan's Space Industry Re: Mir Sweepstakes Organizers Arrested Administrivia: Submissions to the SPACE Digest/sci.space should be mailed to space+@andrew.cmu.edu. Other mail, esp. [un]subscription requests, should be sent to space-request+@andrew.cmu.edu, or, if urgent, to tm2b+@andrew.cmu.edu ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Tue, 05 Feb 91 17:32:45 EST From: tommy mac <18084TM%MSU.BITNET@BITNET.CC.CMU.EDU> Subject: Re: SPACE Digest V13 #075 Re: Energy harvesting Via moons moving in Jupiters Magnetic field. I have to stand my belief that Ganymeade is no good as a second colony. It is perhaps true that you could use stations on one or more of the moons of Jupiter to harvest electricity, much as an alternator 'harvests' electricity from the momentum of a car engine. It is also true that the station and the moon would eventually tumble head-long into tha planet, as the moon's orbital momentum is removed as electricity. Please recalculate your $$$ estimates, returns, etc. Include not only the imminent demise of said station, but also travel times. P.S. - How do you ship energy from Jupiter to anywhere else? a beam? a pencil sized beam spreads to nearly a kilometer just from GEO. Imagine from 9e+8 km? - Enegry harvesting in the asteroids is as expensive as your reflector - It is estimated (see SPACE RESOURCES (author;s name forgotten)) that 7% of all asteroids are iron-nickel type, and that these types contain nearly 15% platinum-type metals (Au, Hg, Pt, U, Cu, etc). Nick, yer way ahead of yourself. I said that the second colony won't be on ganymeade. I didn't say there would NEVER be a colony there. Tommy Mac -What's Israel's national Bird? -Duck Acknowledge-To: <18084TM@MSU> ------------------------------ Date: 6 Feb 91 04:09:12 GMT From: elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!dali.cs.montana.edu!milton!sumax!thebes!polari!crad@ames.arc.nasa.gov (Charles Radley) Subject: Re: Solar Impact Mission. Here is an article from Duncan Lunana. He sent it to several NSS cahpters inlucing us in Ventura. We believ it is public domain and ok to post her and lsewhere:- Waverider by Duncan Lunan From October 17 to 19, The University of Maryland was host to a major event - the First International Hypersonic Waverider Symposium. This represented the rebirth of a concept of major scientific and political importance, long associated with Glasgow University, and something of a triumph for an amateur group which continued to push for the concept's recognition when it had largely been forgotten. The Waverider re-entry vehicle was devised by Prof. Terrence Nonweiler, Professor of Aeronautics and Fluid Mechanics and later Dean of Engineering of Glasgow University. It was intended to be the manned spacecraft in a British space program based on the Blue Streak missile in the 1960's - canceled by the Macmillan government, and largely forgotten thereafter. Its basis is a shape known as the 'caret wing', which generates a plane shock wave, attached to the leading edges, instead of the sonic boom generated by conventional wings at high speeds. The high-pressure area trapped under the Waverider wing generates lift, and the vehicle functions as a very high-performance glider. Waverider was conceived a a space shuttle, and its job is to deliver payloads from space to the surface of a planet with an atmosphere. In the 1970's, discussions at ASTRA (the Association in Scotland to Research into Astronautics) brought out a number of major jobs for the vehicle in the exploration of Mars, Venus, Jupiter and the rest of the outer planets. In the longer term, when we come to practical exploitation of the Solar System's resources, it will have to be on an international basis and with safeguards for the rights of developing nations. Waverider has a major role to play because its low wing-loading allows it a landing 'footprint', descending from space, which literally envelops the Earth, and also allows it a touchdown speed of less than 160 kph. A delivery vehicle which can land anywhere on Earth, on ordinary runways, will be of great political importance. Other ideas from the ASTRA discussions suggested that in the late 21st century transport Waveriders could have a role comparable to that of Containers in the late 20th. In 1981 ASTRA's Waverider study took a practical turn, and by late 1984 Gordon Dick of ASTRA had achieved the first free flights of hand-launched Waveriders. (Gordon Dick is a designer of sails an hang-gliders, now working as a technician at the Glasgow School of Art.) The first rocket launch took place in 1985, witnessed by Dr. Jim Randolph of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, which is responsible for the Mariner/Viking/Voyager series of space probes. Dr. Randolph is head of the Starprobe project, which is intended to place an instrumented probe within two million miles of the surface of the Sun - described in some quarters as the most important scientific mission of the century. No rocket in existence can achieve that, so it has to be brought about by planetary slingshot - what's termed an 'aerogravity maneuver', in which the probe would fly through the atmosphere of Venus and Mars to redirect its path towards the Sun. In April of this year Dr. Randolph paid his third visit to ASTRA in Scotland, and confirmed that he regards Waverider as the prime candidate for the Starprobe carrier. The setting up of the Waverider conference in October was due in large part to Dr. Randolph's support of the concept, since he first learned of it from ASTRA in 1984. At his urging the University of Maryland undertook computer studies which resolved the major problem with the Waverider design, eliminating turbulence on the upper surface of the wing, thereby confirming work done in Scotland by Gordon Dick. This result was announced at a small Waverider symposium last year, and the effect was dramatic: the Call for Papers for this year's conference has been answered by no fewer than 78 speakers, and the American space agency NASA is now officially co-sponsoring the event. ASTRA will be represented by Duncan Lunan and Gordon Dick, who will unveil the latest version of his Waverider space shuttle design - including a control system which he hopes will be valid for all Waverider applications. Jim Randolph's Starprobe project will not go before the US Senate and Congress for funding until 1994. Meanwhile work in ASTRA continues, with radio-controlled models and wind-tunnel tests, with the future possibility of rocket flights sponsored by NASA; no amateur society has ever pushed a space project so close to official acceptance before, and the October conference was a very big forward step in that direction. (Ed. - This manuscript, written before the conference, was received after the conference was held. We hope to have further news of the conference and Waverider progress in later issues.) ------------------------------ Date: 6 Feb 91 00:02:06 GMT From: mcsun!hp4nl!charon!jack@uunet.uu.net (Jack Jansen) Subject: Manoeuvring using rope and anchor(was: Solar Impact Mission.) Would it be technically possible to extend the idea of dipping into the atmosphere by throwing an anchor out to a planet and swinging around it? What I'm thinking of is, say, a 10Km Kevlar (or Twaron, for us Dutch:-) cable with something like an anchor at the end, have the anchor impact a reasonably sized asteroid (a couple Km diameter, enough orders of magnitude difference in mass that you don't accidentally send the asteroid somewhere you don't want it to be), and release anchor and cable once you're facing the direction you want to go? I miss even a feeling for too many numbers (tensile strength required, tensile strength of available materials, positioning accuracy needed and attainable, g-forces survivable by the average spacecraft) to start calculating, but maybe someone else wants to give it a try (or, probably, tell me why this is a ridiculous idea in the first place)... -- -- Een volk dat voor tirannen zwicht | Oral: Jack Jansen zal meer dan lijf en goed verliezen | Internet: jack@cwi.nl dan dooft het licht | Uucp: hp4nl!cwi.nl!jack ------------------------------ Date: 6 Feb 91 06:33:28 GMT From: zephyr.ens.tek.com!tektronix!sequent!crg5!szabo@uunet.uu.net (Nick Szabo) Subject: Re: Japan's Space Industry In article yamauchi@cs.rochester.edu (Brian Yamauchi) writes: >In article <197.27AE8D32@nss.FIDONET.ORG> Paul.Blase@nss.FIDONET.ORG (Paul Blase) writes: > > NS> The only thing the Japanese really have over us is efficiency -- > > The key is that Japanese Industry is taking the initiative and not merely > relying upon government funding. Maybe we're more innovative, but they > are DOING it. > >Japanese companies also seem to have more of a long-term vision with >regard to space development. I've heard that Shimizu has plans for an >orbital space station (for tourism), a lunar base, and a Mars base, >and that Ohbayashi has plans for a lunar mining complex. The U.S. also has "plans" for this space mythology, for what it is worth. No profitable corporation in either country is spending serious money for any of this. BTW the slogan of NASDA -- "quick is beautiful" -- is the opposite of the U.S. space program's fetish with "long term planning", a euphimism for putting off until tomorrow what should be done today. >Whether these plans will be translated into reality is another issue, >but, still, I wonder whether one could suggest similar ideas to an >American Fortune 500 company without being laughed out of the >boardroom... (or whether one would get to the boardroom in the first >place). You would get laughed out of any boardroom of any organization that had even the slightest interest in and knowledge of economic payback. There has yet to be created a business plan for space stations and space bases that is anything close to reasonable in terms of cash flow. The costs are two or more orders of magnitude away from economic payback. I challenge anybody on the net to present a business plan -- the market plan, R&D plan, projected financing and cash flows will suffice -- for any one of the following: * space station * lunar base * Martian base using current launch costs, historical R&D costs for manned space capsules, space-qualified machinery, etc. Fact is, nobody on this net or anywhere else on this planet can present a sound business plan that is within even two orders of magnitude in cost to being profitable. The space station/lunar base/Mars spiel is simply a tradition of space lore mimicked from the previous generation, with no grounding in the technological, economic or scientific reality of the past half-century or next century. Communications satellites and space exploration probes have already turned the previous generation's space plan on its head, and modern automation technology puts it away for good. For the pioneers of today, the plans of the past consist of exactly zero in creativity and imagination, and a big empty set in vision. Not to mention huge losses on the balance sheet of any organization that cares to try them. -- Nick Szabo szabo@sequent.com Embrace Change... Keep the Values... Hold Dear the Laughter... ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 6 Feb 91 21:12:38 -0500 From: "Allen W. Sherzer" Subject: Re: Mir Sweepstakes Organizers Arrested Newsgroups: sci.space Cc: In article Brian Yamuchi writes: >According to a UPI story on Clarinet (clari.tw.space), the organizers >of the Mir Sweepstakes were arrested today (2/6) and charged with >running an illegal lottery by the local DA. This is a felony charge >which carries a penalty of 2-10 years in prison. Well, a while ago the DA threatened to do something like this. A lot of phone calls seems to have changed their minds at that time. Pity it didn't take. It might be a good idea to try some calls again. If you want to call, the Houston DA's number is 713-221-5800. If you call, pe polite and calmly tell them how you feel about it. Don't threaten anything or anybody. If you are from Houston, make sure they know that. You might also tell them if you entered and that you don't feel duped (unless you do) even though you don't expect to win (I myself figure I am five times more likely to be killed in a car crash as fly on Mir). Allen -- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |Allen Sherzer |A MESSAGE FROM THE ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT TO THE PEOPLE OF KUWAIT: | |aws@iti.org | "If rape is inevitable, enjoy it!" | +-----------------------------------------------------------------------------+ ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V13 #138 *******************