indeedI'm certainly no physicist...
I'm certainly no physicist...
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Oslama and his crew would have a feild day with that thing if it were ever made 
Also they would need to make it out of some carbon like stuff, very close to diamond, if i rememer correctly?
Where the fuck are you gonna find that much diamond like stuff?

Also they would need to make it out of some carbon like stuff, very close to diamond, if i rememer correctly?
Where the fuck are you gonna find that much diamond like stuff?
Where were you when the West was defeated?
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http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/diamond.htmlDon Carlos wrote: Where the fuck are you gonna find that much diamond like stuff?
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very cool, in a way!+JuggerNaut+ wrote:http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/11.09/diamond.htmlDon Carlos wrote: Where the fuck are you gonna find that much diamond like stuff?
Where were you when the West was defeated?
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Tsakali_ wrote:now how the hell do you get the "rope" from earth to the counter-weight(or the other way around)
any ideas? not to mention that it will prolly end up having to be build in sections
fire a rocket into orbit, when its almost out of the stratosphere eject some sort of counter weight which will fall to earth, rocket reaches orbit object is still falling, towards earth
simple.
................^
................|

................|
............... |
............... |
............. rocket -(ounter weight) (zero g)
................-- (stratosphere)
................-- (release point)
................|
................|

................|
...............weight
................
................
................-- (Ground)
Traditional wayTsakali_ wrote:not gonna work the "rope " itself not to mention the counterweight will be too heavy for the rocket, and not to mention the effect of the atmospheric winds...I don't think it's that simple.
One early plan involved lifting the entire mass of the elevator into geosynchronous orbit, and simultaneously lowering one cable downwards towards the Earth's surface while another cable is deployed upwards directly away from the Earth's surface. Tidal forces (gravity and centrifugal force) would naturally pull the cables directly towards and directly away from the Earth and keeps the elevator balanced around geosynchronous orbit.
However, this approach requires lifting hundreds or even thousands of tons on conventional rockets. This would be very expensive.
[edit]
Brad Edwards' proposal
Bradley C. Edwards, Director of Research for the Institute for Scientific Research (ISR), based in Fairmont, West Virginia, is a leading authority on the space elevator concept. He proposes that a single hairlike 20 short ton (18 metric ton) 'seed' cable be deployed in the traditional way, giving a very lightweight elevator with very little lifting capacity.
Then, progressively heavier cables would be pulled up from the ground along it, repeatedly strengthening it until the elevator reaches the required mass and strength. This is much the same technique used to build suspension bridges.
Although 20 short tons for a seed cable may sound like a lot, it would actually be very lightweight — the proposed average mass is about 0.2 kilogram per kilometer. Conventional copper telephone wires running to consumer homes weigh about 4 kg/km.
Wouldn't a counter-weight be rendered useless as there is no weight in space? Even with centrifugal force the tension of the two ends would be incredible.
Could anyone calculate the intensity of the 'gravity' that would result from the 'swinging' of the outside 'anchor'?
edit: Or would there be any since there is no weght?
Could anyone calculate the intensity of the 'gravity' that would result from the 'swinging' of the outside 'anchor'?
edit: Or would there be any since there is no weght?
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Funnily, there is actually the least amount of tension at the two ends. If you read the wiki you'll see that a possible design has the base of the rope on earth as being less than 1mm thick. Tension is actually greatest in the middle, at the geosynchronous orbit. This is a point where the greater centripetal cancels out the effect of gravity towards earth, making an object located at this orbit 'float' in space. Objects below this orbit are attracted towards earth, while objects above this line have the opposite effect of being repelled from earth. A space elevator is an object that has exactly half its mass below geosynchronous orbit and the other half above. These two masses, located where they are, cancel out the repelling and attraction forces, making it 'float' above earth. Tension is strongest at the geosynchronous point, and if you read the wiki they talk about how a space elevator made of steel would have to be over 100 miles thick at that point. That's why this idea will never 'get off the ground' until we're able to use stronger materials like carbon nanotube.scourge34 wrote:Wouldn't a counter-weight be rendered useless as there is no weight in space? Even with centrifugal force the tension of the two ends would be incredible.
Could anyone calculate the intensity of the 'gravity' that would result from the 'swinging' of the outside 'anchor'?
edit: Or would there be any since there is no weght?
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The first step toward the mass production of nanotubes has been taken.
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I knew I should read it but I couldn't be bothered :icon32:mjrpes wrote:Traditional wayTsakali_ wrote:not gonna work the "rope " itself not to mention the counterweight will be too heavy for the rocket, and not to mention the effect of the atmospheric winds...I don't think it's that simple.
One early plan involved lifting the entire mass of the elevator into geosynchronous orbit, and simultaneously lowering one cable downwards towards the Earth's surface while another cable is deployed upwards directly away from the Earth's surface. Tidal forces (gravity and centrifugal force) would naturally pull the cables directly towards and directly away from the Earth and keeps the elevator balanced around geosynchronous orbit.
However, this approach requires lifting hundreds or even thousands of tons on conventional rockets. This would be very expensive.
[edit]
Brad Edwards' proposal
Bradley C. Edwards, Director of Research for the Institute for Scientific Research (ISR), based in Fairmont, West Virginia, is a leading authority on the space elevator concept. He proposes that a single hairlike 20 short ton (18 metric ton) 'seed' cable be deployed in the traditional way, giving a very lightweight elevator with very little lifting capacity.
Then, progressively heavier cables would be pulled up from the ground along it, repeatedly strengthening it until the elevator reaches the required mass and strength. This is much the same technique used to build suspension bridges.
Although 20 short tons for a seed cable may sound like a lot, it would actually be very lightweight ? the proposed average mass is about 0.2 kilogram per kilometer. Conventional copper telephone wires running to consumer homes weigh about 4 kg/km.
edit:
oooo I got a shinny new icon :icon26:
Yeah, in theory. In practical use though, I don't see it without major problems with atmospheric conditions. Yes, I read the wiki on the atmosphere and all that. I'm not convinced. I think there will be extreme problems with maintaining structural integrity especially if the anchor point is 1 mm.mjrpes wrote:Funnily, there is actually the least amount of tension at the two ends. If you read the wiki you'll see that a possible design has the base of the rope on earth as being less than 1mm thick. Tension is actually greatest in the middle, at the geosynchronous orbit. This is a point where the greater centripetal cancels out the effect of gravity towards earth, making an object located at this orbit 'float' in space. Objects below this orbit are attracted towards earth, while objects above this line have the opposite effect of being repelled from earth. A space elevator is an object that has exactly half its mass below geosynchronous orbit and the other half above. These two masses, located where they are, cancel out the repelling and attraction forces, making it 'float' above earth. Tension is strongest at the geosynchronous point, and if you read the wiki they talk about how a space elevator made of steel would have to be over 100 miles thick at that point. That's why this idea will never 'get off the ground' until we're able to use stronger materials like carbon nanotube.scourge34 wrote:Wouldn't a counter-weight be rendered useless as there is no weight in space? Even with centrifugal force the tension of the two ends would be incredible.
Could anyone calculate the intensity of the 'gravity' that would result from the 'swinging' of the outside 'anchor'?
edit: Or would there be any since there is no weght?
edit: For example, I work around 60 to 80 feet off the ground every day. The amount of flexablility that the rig I work on daily at just that height would make some people hurl at the shaking and twisting that it does. I can't even imagine the flexability that you'd have to have at 100km above the earth.
Really, there isn't any fundamental reason it needs to be secured to the ground. If they wanted to, they could design a space elevator that floats 1 foot off the ground. The benefits of securing it to the ground is that it doesn't wonder from a stationary point on earth. From the wiki, it could also be secured to a ship, so that if a storm moves in it could move to a safer place.
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You spent a bit of time on that there graphic, didn't you?[FTF]Pyro wrote:Tsakali_ wrote:now how the hell do you get the "rope" from earth to the counter-weight(or the other way around)
any ideas? not to mention that it will prolly end up having to be build in sections
fire a rocket into orbit, when its almost out of the stratosphere eject some sort of counter weight which will fall to earth, rocket reaches orbit object is still falling, towards earth
simple.
................^
................|---- orbit point
................|
............... |
............... |
............. rocket -(ounter weight) (zero g)
................-- (stratosphere)
................-- (release point)
................|
................|------- rope
................|
...............weight
................
................
................-- (Ground)