Hot Topics | |
---|---|
As Rob emailed me earlier today, "After all those rockets have self-destructed, this seems like a 'logical' alternative."Jack wrote:What you make of this?...
Jack wrote:Now the finest scientific minds of Japan
Midwinter wrote:Well that made my day.
Did anyone read Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy? When one of these bad boys snaps and falls back to terra firma, you don't want to be anywhere nearby.
Buraku wrote:Very much a dream of mine also after reading some scifi books, the space elevator is one of the few things that can make access to space cheap and affordable. It currently costs something like $12,000 per kilogram lifted into space so you can see why space tourism on rockets is so expensive and getting Shuttle to truck water supplies to the space station can cost billions
The space elevator might one day change this
However facts are the elevator really is just a cartoonish scifi dream we would need big advances in material tech and other scifi stuff like nano technology to allow the elevator to handle the enormous stresses of space
It's the type of project which would make the Empire State building like a dot
rockets are what we got now, they are not some scifi dream they are real and their efficiency can be improved and rockets will be here to stay for a long time.
james wrote:yup! quite some time ago.. about 10 years i guess, but i remember thoroughly enjoying it.
Taro Toporific wrote:I cannot wish on anyone the 14 hours of J-pop elevator music (which is the estimated time the space elevator will take to escape the earth).
Jack wrote:They should work to cure cancer instead.
Jack wrote:That means this thing has to travel at a speed of 2,600 km/h for 14 hours. Hmmm...
How do you build something 36,000 km long/tall? Why do people waste time on useless projects like this? They should work to cure cancer instead.
james wrote:i think the problem is with the article itself as it would seem they're out by a couple of orders of magnitude on the distance. if i recall, minimal orbital altitudes typically start at 350km not 35,000km.
Jack wrote:Why do people waste time on useless projects like this? They should work to cure cancer instead.
FG Lurker wrote:The elevator wouldn't have to travel the entire 35,000km but the cable would need to be 35,000km (probably 36,000km) long to reach geostationary orbit.
Greji wrote:I don't understand this project! Afterall, TIJ! Why aren't they building an escalator? Long escalators are all the rage right now!
james wrote:you know.. given the less than impeccable safety record of japanese elevator companies i'm starting to wonder if this is really such a good idea afterall.
Greji wrote:There are J-people who will be quick to point out that the record of J-lift companies is quite good. It's those foreign elevators that have the bad track record and are dangerous (of course not mentioning that all of the employees of these gaijin dens of peril, below certain executives, are Japanese)!
"Climb me to the moon"
150m Battery SE Climber Race brought to you by JSEA
Date: August 8 (sat) - 9 (Sun) , 2009
(It postpone until next weekend in case of bad weather or the strong wind.)
Location: Nihon University Futawa Field
Futawa 1-2, Funabashi, Chiba Prefecture, Japan (facing of Futawa high school)
Access
From Tokyo: JR-Sobu line -> Tobu-Noda line ->Shin-Keisei line /1 hour and walk 20 min
- From Tokyo: ShinKeisei Bus Terminal #3 /North exit of JR-Sobu line Funabashi Sta. -> Futawa Michi bus-stop / 15 min and walk 10 min
- There are some parking lots
Cooperation: College of Science and Technology, Nihon University
More information will be soon.
If you want to know more details, comtact to info@jsea.jp.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests