up and down the land, rattling buildings and shaking the earth.
Today, another fireball exploded over Bellevue, Washington, His name is Eric C Anderson. He was the primary driving source and fount of knowledge for the Planetary Resources press conference. An amazing and dynamic fellow. He wants to make Bellevue, WA, the "silicon valley of space".
I've been listening the the Planetary Resources pep rally/public announcement for the last two hours, it just ended, about their intent to mine the asteroids.
Here is their website: http://www.planetaryresources.com/
When I first heard of it I was skeptical. Now that I have heard their plan, I am not. It is doable. The man landing on the Moon took ten years and the resources and talent of the most advanced nation on the Earth at the time. Now, a group of billionaires and the creme'-de-la-creme' of our space scientists and engineers are going to build robot satellites no bigger than your family car, using water extracted from asteroids as fuel for unannounced engines. (Solar energy to break them into H2 & O2 and then burn them?).
I read one estimate that Platinum, for example, was present in asteroids at one ounce per ton. I am curious now to see how they plan to use satellites no bigger than cars to extract that one ounce from that ton of dust.
I remember listening to JFK as he announced that he was committing the USA to "to put a man on the Moon by the end of this decade". It gave me goose-bumps listening to him and he instantly raised the excitement level around the country to a fever pitch. I got the same goose bumps listening to this announcement. They will be launching a swarm of Arkyd 100 series space telescopes to search for near earth objects (NEO) during the next two or three years. Then they place to launch Arkyd 200 series robotic miners to the objects they discover that are close enough to reach with on board fuel. Using water extracted from those objects as fuel the robots will visit other objects, etc.... Currently it takes $20,000 to put a liter of water into low earth orbit. ($10,000 per pound). Using water found in space (IF they can find it and extract it) is one way they plan to reduce the cost of exploration and mining by and order of two or more.
Chris Lewicki, President and Chief Engineer of Planetary Resources: "Science fiction is fiction right up to the point that it becomes fact". (Lewicki was the flight director for the Mars Rovers.)
I may live to see the first robot mining launches, if I make it to 80! :cool:
Today, another fireball exploded over Bellevue, Washington, His name is Eric C Anderson. He was the primary driving source and fount of knowledge for the Planetary Resources press conference. An amazing and dynamic fellow. He wants to make Bellevue, WA, the "silicon valley of space".
I've been listening the the Planetary Resources pep rally/public announcement for the last two hours, it just ended, about their intent to mine the asteroids.
Here is their website: http://www.planetaryresources.com/
When I first heard of it I was skeptical. Now that I have heard their plan, I am not. It is doable. The man landing on the Moon took ten years and the resources and talent of the most advanced nation on the Earth at the time. Now, a group of billionaires and the creme'-de-la-creme' of our space scientists and engineers are going to build robot satellites no bigger than your family car, using water extracted from asteroids as fuel for unannounced engines. (Solar energy to break them into H2 & O2 and then burn them?).
I read one estimate that Platinum, for example, was present in asteroids at one ounce per ton. I am curious now to see how they plan to use satellites no bigger than cars to extract that one ounce from that ton of dust.
I remember listening to JFK as he announced that he was committing the USA to "to put a man on the Moon by the end of this decade". It gave me goose-bumps listening to him and he instantly raised the excitement level around the country to a fever pitch. I got the same goose bumps listening to this announcement. They will be launching a swarm of Arkyd 100 series space telescopes to search for near earth objects (NEO) during the next two or three years. Then they place to launch Arkyd 200 series robotic miners to the objects they discover that are close enough to reach with on board fuel. Using water extracted from those objects as fuel the robots will visit other objects, etc.... Currently it takes $20,000 to put a liter of water into low earth orbit. ($10,000 per pound). Using water found in space (IF they can find it and extract it) is one way they plan to reduce the cost of exploration and mining by and order of two or more.
Chris Lewicki, President and Chief Engineer of Planetary Resources: "Science fiction is fiction right up to the point that it becomes fact". (Lewicki was the flight director for the Mars Rovers.)
I may live to see the first robot mining launches, if I make it to 80! :cool:
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