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originally posted by: Bedlam
Why not do the David Brin thing, make it hollow and send spacecraft to the top with helium balloons?
originally posted by: wildespace
originally posted by: Bedlam
Why not do the David Brin thing, make it hollow and send spacecraft to the top with helium balloons?
Because the Earth's gravity makes sure our atmosphere (which allows helium balloons to float up) stay close to the surface? I'm sure you've seen what happens to helium balloons launched into top layers of the atmosphere: they expand until they burst. Even if they are made not to burst, at the top of the atmosphere density gradient will equalise and the balloon will stop rising.
A Seattle-based team has won $900,000 in this year's Space Elevator Games, a NASA-sponsored contest to build machines powered by laser beams that can climb a cable in the sky.
The homemade cable-climber built by the team LaserMotive of Washington state climbed a 3,000-foot (900-meter) tether suspended by a helicopter at a speed of about 8 mph (13 kph) during a Wednesday attempt. The entry ultimately managed to climb the cable four times in two days, with a best time of about 3 minutes and 48 seconds.
The feat was the best performance yet of a miniature space elevator prototype and qualified LaserMotive to win the second-level prize of NASA?s $2 million Power Beaming Challenge this week at the Dryden Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base in the California desert. The contest requires competitors to beam power from a remote source to propel their vehicles up a 1/4-inch thick steel cable dangling from a helicopter.
The 2009 Space Elevator Games are the first in which prize money has been awarded and has "been a very successful competition," said NASA's Centennial Challenges director Andy Petro. "Power beaming is truly a 21st century technology."
originally posted by: JadeStar
Japan already on it.. From last years news:
Japanese company plans space elevator by 2050 - CNET - Sept. 23, 2014
And from my city and even further back in time....
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: JadeStar
Japan already on it.. From last years news:
Japanese company plans space elevator by 2050 - CNET - Sept. 23, 2014
And from my city and even further back in time....
Dr Ron Finnila came up with the idea in the op in 1979.
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: Bedlam
originally posted by: JadeStar
Japan already on it.. From last years news:
Japanese company plans space elevator by 2050 - CNET - Sept. 23, 2014
And from my city and even further back in time....
Dr Ron Finnila came up with the idea in the op in 1979.
Before carbon nanotubes or other materials which would be necessary to build it. Remarkable.