by vision-master » Tue 22 Oct 2013, 15:15:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Keith_McClary', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', 'A')ll that would be required to start the next space race would be for NASA to report the discovery of a 500 ton gold asteroid. Then we would be stampeding into space, as once we stampeded into a harsh environment called the Yukon. A stampede that is still going on.
Is that more or less probable than finding a 500 ton gold nugget in the Yukon? Would you care to estimate numbers for each probability?
My point is, we have a pretty good idea of what asteroids (and the Earth) are made of, and it's not stuff that is going to start a gold rush.
Who is going to put up vast amounts of money so that the descendants of a minuscule fraction of the Earth's population can grow and multiply in space habitats. Can you see governments spending that money? Or capitalists? How would you sell such a high-risk investment with a generational payback time?
First of all, in the beginning there was only hydrogen. All the heavier elements are produced within the cores of stars by fusion, nova explosions, and supernova explosions. The process is called stellar nucleosynthesis and makes for interesting reading. In fact, all the gold, cobalt, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, osmium, palladium, platinum, rhenium, rhodium, ruthenium, and tungsten mined from Earth's crust, and that are essential for economic and technological progress, came originally from the rain of asteroids that hit Earth after the crust cooled. The prevalence of gold in space should actually be higher than on the Earth, since one of the primary forces causing aggregation of nickle/iron cored planets is magnetic attraction. Gold asteroids (and platinum and cobalt and all heavier elements) are highly probable. After billions of years of orbital mechanics, figuring out where the heavy element asteroid orbits are is of primary interest, and not easily modeled via mathematics - we need to prospect. Once we have figured out where the heavy elements are clustered in the asteroid belt, there is every reason to believe a "heavy element rush" will begin.
The development of space will be private enterprise, and the initial market for many such elements will be Earth. The heavy elements above can be sourced in space with no environmental impacts from mining. The nickle/iron asteroids, the lighter hydrocarbon/ice comets, etc. (which are of no interest on Earth) are the raw materials of the space colonies.
Many such asteroid miners will initially be planning or hoping to "strike it rich" and return to Earth. At some point, the further deterioration of the Earth and the increasing numbers of ever-more-comfortable space habitats, will result in a space-based human society.
Exactly WHEN this process happens is an interesting question, not easy to predict. I would say the bounds are from a few decades to a few centuries, but I would not want to be more specific than that. If anything else, the recent changes to the "Peak Oil" hydrocarbon-related forecasts have emphasized how uncertain such predictions are.
Although I talked of a gold asteroid and gold is a valuable industrial element, the platinum group metals are probably of the most use in industry. The recent recognition of the iridium layer at the K-Pg boundary (formerly the K-T boundary) indicates that the "dinosaur killer" asteroid of 65 million years ago was a platinum group asteroid.
But gold asteroids of 500 tons are entirely possible. However, gold nuggets of that size are not - because such an asteroid when super-heated by atmospheric friction and broken apart by impact forces, would spread over a huge area as gold dust, gold flakes, and gold nuggets. Which is where all the gold on Earth came from - gold asteroids.
You can be certain there will be a rush into space motivated by greed.
I've already explained to you why 'we' can't leave our solar system, yet you keep blithering on and on.