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Scientist sees space elevator in 15 years by k at 8:15 pm EDT, Jun 27, 2004 |
] "It's not new physics nothing new has to be ] discovered, nothing new has to be invented from scratch," ] he says. "If there are delays in budget or delays in ] whatever, it could stretch, but 15 years is a realistic ] estimate for when we could have one up." ] ] Edwards is not just some guy with an idea. He's head of ] the space elevator project at the Institute for ] Scientific Research in Fairmont, W.Va. NASA already has ] given it more than $500,000 to study the idea, and ] Congress has earmarked $2.5 million more. ] ] "A lot of people at NASA are excited about the idea," ] said Robert Casanova, director of the NASA Institute of ] Advanced Concepts in Atlanta. ] ] Edwards believes a space elevator offers a cheaper, safer ] form of space travel that eventually could be used to ] carry explorers to the planets. ] ] Edwards' elevator would climb on a cable made of ] nanotubes - tiny bundles of carbon atoms many times ] stronger than steel. The cable would be about three feet ] wide and thinner than a piece of paper, but capable of ] supporting a payload up to 13 tons. [ I love space stuff, and the things i've read about space elevators all excite me to no end. I really want to see a viable plan. I want to blow my retirement funds on a trip to space. So, the scientists have 40 years, at the outside, to get it working... hop to! -k] |
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RE: Scientist sees space elevator in 15 years by Laughing Boy at 6:04 pm EDT, Jun 30, 2004 |
k wrote: ] ] "It's not new physics nothing new has to be ] ] discovered, nothing new has to be invented from scratch," ] ] he says. "If there are delays in budget or delays in ] ] whatever, it could stretch, but 15 years is a realistic ] ] estimate for when we could have one up." ] ] ] ] Edwards is not just some guy with an idea. He's head of ] ] the space elevator project at the Institute for ] ] Scientific Research in Fairmont, W.Va. NASA already has ] ] given it more than $500,000 to study the idea, and ] ] Congress has earmarked $2.5 million more. ] ] ] ] "A lot of people at NASA are excited about the idea," ] ] said Robert Casanova, director of the NASA Institute of ] ] Advanced Concepts in Atlanta. ] ] ] ] Edwards believes a space elevator offers a cheaper, safer ] ] form of space travel that eventually could be used to ] ] carry explorers to the planets. ] ] ] ] Edwards' elevator would climb on a cable made of ] ] nanotubes - tiny bundles of carbon atoms many times ] ] stronger than steel. The cable would be about three feet ] ] wide and thinner than a piece of paper, but capable of ] ] supporting a payload up to 13 tons. ] ] [ I love space stuff, and the things i've read about space ] elevators all excite me to no end. I really want to see a ] viable plan. I want to blow my retirement funds on a trip to ] space. So, the scientists have 40 years, at the outside, to ] get it working... hop to! -k] Here here. Spaceship One is very exciting, but $100,000 for a sub orbital? Don't think so. I want orbit - I want to VACATION in space for a few DAYS. I have a friend who did some parabola manuvers in a small plane with me on board, so I've experienced "weightlessness" (about 10 seconds each time) and it IS as much fun as it looks, but I wouldn't pay $100,000 for 3 minutes of that. Now a week in orbit might be worth $100k if you had the $$$, but I think if this elevator becomes a reality, you might eventually see a week jaunt in orbit for under $10,000. -LB |
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Scientist sees space elevator in 15 years by Laughing Boy at 12:10 am EDT, Jun 27, 2004 |
] "It's not new physics nothing new has to be ] discovered, nothing new has to be invented from scratch," ] he says. "If there are delays in budget or delays in ] whatever, it could stretch, but 15 years is a realistic ] estimate for when we could have one up." ] ] Edwards is not just some guy with an idea. He's head of ] the space elevator project at the Institute for ] Scientific Research in Fairmont, W.Va. NASA already has ] given it more than $500,000 to study the idea, and ] Congress has earmarked $2.5 million more. ] ] "A lot of people at NASA are excited about the idea," ] said Robert Casanova, director of the NASA Institute of ] Advanced Concepts in Atlanta. ] ] Edwards believes a space elevator offers a cheaper, safer ] form of space travel that eventually could be used to ] carry explorers to the planets. ] ] Edwards' elevator would climb on a cable made of ] nanotubes - tiny bundles of carbon atoms many times ] stronger than steel. The cable would be about three feet ] wide and thinner than a piece of paper, but capable of ] supporting a payload up to 13 tons. |
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