posted on Sep, 29 2011 @ 01:26 AM
Yes. I would feel much safer. Good point you bring up. I wonder why they haven't brought this to the old JPL/NASA table already. It makes perfect
sense. Using 20th century rocket science even, you can engineer multiple solid fuel rockets to be attacked to a platform, use a nano-polymer (possibly
carbon nano-tubes?) to replace the concrete, and everything else so that the only heavy thing on the reactor platform is the ore itself. In case there
was a nuclear event, just press a button, and it sends the entire nuclear reactor platform into orbit, and away from the earth utilizing the necessary
amount of said attached rockets to this platform. The only problem I see, is the concrete dome replacement, and stability of launching a rectangle
shaped platform without some sort of complex gyroscopic stabilizing device which would also add weight, and then the energy transfer to fuel the gyro
motors would entail large and very heavy batteries for the flight stabilization, because it's not just a cone/rod shape going up, it's a large
rectangular platform going up. There are a few minor engineering obstacles that to be overcome, but other than that, it's possible, so in adding
that, yes. I would feel much more safe if we had the ability to launch anything potentially deadly straight up into space. Maybe we can put our
nuclear reactors in space, and have a really long tether that was coated with a polymer acrylic/ceramic resin to withstand friction in the atmosphere,
have it dangle from space, then as it drags across the globe, have it run against a track that would attract the current, store and disperse it. If we
can do this, then we won't have to worry about the little engineering feat back on earth needed to launch our reactors into space. You are right,
miniaturizing the reactors is key to safety, if we make them smaller, we can just put a reactor in a rocket, and shoot it right out of the dang
earth's orbit. Good idea!