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THE Titan Thread (merged)

Discussions of conventional and alternative energy production technologies.

Re: Harvesting hydrocarbons from Titan: not feasible.

Unread postby Omnitir » Sat 03 Sep 2005, 03:06:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', '
')Until I remembered the overhead in energy required to accelerate the (so far) unburned rocket fuel, it appeared to be a near thing as to whether this could or couldn't be done.

Why do you insist on assuming anyone would even consider attempting such inter-solar travel with low-tech chemical rockets? They were good for short jumps to the moon, or accelerating small probes into deeper space, but as you’ve pointed out, they are completely unfeasible for transferring large payloads.

There are much better solutions then chemical rockets for space propulsion. The Ion engine just requires a large electrical power supply and a small payload of gas for ionisation. The propulsion system would be much smaller then a chemical rocket system designed for a similar trip, and the velocity an Ion engine is capable is far greater then simple a chemical explosion can provide.

This kind of technology completely invalidates your argument, because there is no rocket fuel to worry about.

There is a range of different electric propulsion technologies, then there is solar-sail technology which does not even require a power source, and nuclear fission technology.

To me your argument is severely flawed. How can you look at one single technology – which happens to be our most primitive form of space propulsion – and conclude that large payload trips are impossible? It’s a bit like someone in the pre jet age saying that aircraft will never travel faster then X speed or higher then Y hight, because props can’t provide enough thrust.
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Re: Harvesting hydrocarbons from Titan: not feasible.

Unread postby Licho » Sat 03 Sep 2005, 05:43:05

Omnitir, what kind of energy resources exists on asteroids? I'm unaware of any...
There can be some trace ammount of hydrocarbons (not worth it), some heavy elements and perhaps in water frozen isotopes of hydrogen usefull for fusion (but useless to gather from space, we have plenty in oceans). So what would you mine, uranium?
Do you think we can really make automated facility that would find it, process it, mine, enrich and fill up ship's reactor in zero gravity and temperatures frequently changing by hundreds of derees?
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Re: Harvesting hydrocarbons from Titan: not feasible.

Unread postby Omnitir » Sat 03 Sep 2005, 07:34:03

Asteroids have many valuable resources including volatiles such as methane, and water and oxygen. Here’s an interesting research paper researching the feasibility of asteroid mining: The Technical and Economic Feasibility of Mining the Near-Earth Asteroids

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')The natural resources in space include metallic nickel-iron alloy, silicate minerals, hydrated minerals, bituminous material, and various volatiles, including water, ammonia, carbon dioxide, methane, and others. These have all been identified either in meteorites, or spectroscopically in asteroids and comets.

Some Near-Earth Asteroids offer very promising targets as future orebodies for in-space resources, for reasons of accessibility, ease of return, apparent variety of source materials, and probable ease of extraction of both metals and volatiles, both of which are likely to be in heavy demand during the development of large-scale space infrastructure.


Setting up automated robotic systems to mine and process asteroid resources is not a complicated issue, and in many regards it would be much easier to do in space then it is here on Earth – though of course that’s not to say it’s not without it’s challenges. However they are challenges well within our means to overcome.

Space itself is ideal for large-scale electrical generation through space based solar power collectors, since the powerful energy from the sun is unfiltered through Earths atmosphere. I personally believe space based solar power presents the best long-term solution for large-scale sustainable energy supply.

There is virtually an inexhaustible supply of valuable resources orbiting the inner-solar system. This should be strong enough reason for humanity to learn to manoeuvre and capture asteroids, not only because of the immense wealth easily attainable once the technology is developed, but also because there is a great possibility of one of those things destroying all life on Earth, and with a little investment, we could prevent that.

Image


Harvesting resources from space is essential if we are to ever achieve space industrialism, and achieving space industrialism is essential if there is to be long-term survival of the human race. Screw peak oil, and screw the powerdown option. We need to put all we can into developing space while we still can. Unfortunately I fear it may be too late, and humanity is doomed to extinction. That’s the price we may pay for giving up on NASA after Apollo.
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Re: Harvesting hydrocarbons from Titan: not feasible.

Unread postby Jenab » Sat 03 Sep 2005, 13:56:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Omnitir', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Jenab', '
')Until I remembered the overhead in energy required to accelerate the (so far) unburned rocket fuel, it appeared to be a near thing as to whether this could or couldn't be done.

Why do you insist on assuming anyone would even consider attempting such inter-solar travel with low-tech chemical rockets? They were good for short jumps to the moon, or accelerating small probes into deeper space, but as you’ve pointed out, they are completely unfeasible for transferring large payloads.

There are much better solutions then chemical rockets for space propulsion. The Ion engine just requires a large electrical power supply and a small payload of gas for ionisation. The propulsion system would be much smaller then a chemical rocket system designed for a similar trip, and the velocity an Ion engine is capable is far greater then simple a chemical explosion can provide.

This kind of technology completely invalidates your argument, because there is no rocket fuel to worry about.

There is a range of different electric propulsion technologies, then there is solar-sail technology which does not even require a power source, and nuclear fission technology.

To me your argument is severely flawed. How can you look at one single technology – which happens to be our most primitive form of space propulsion – and conclude that large payload trips are impossible? It’s a bit like someone in the pre jet age saying that aircraft will never travel faster then X speed or higher then Y hight, because props can’t provide enough thrust.

Ion engines do require reaction mass. But they need less of it (for the same delta-vee) because the exhaust velocity is higher than for chemical rockets. The actual thrust of an ion rocket is very low, however. It's a trade-off between efficiency and thrust time. The celestial mechanics used for ion rockets is different from the impulse-then-coast math that I use for transfer orbits because you have to account for the long duration acceleration maneuvers of the ion engines.

Jerry Abbott
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Saturn Moon Gas to supply all the energy we need

Unread postby ex_nasa_consultant » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 07:07:28

Hello, my first post here, let me tell you what I know. I was employed in the engineering department of a gasket manufacturer, automotive gaskets, head gaskets of very high strength and durability. My company became involved in a highly secretive project, a collaboration between nasa and the major "energy" companies, government, big oil are all throwing money at this thing.
Construction has already begun on a super-high tech outer-space pipeline which will deliver a steady supply of super-chilled liquid methane from the moons of Saturn. I worked on the design of a high pressure, multi-layer steel gasket, similar in design to an automotive head gasket, which is needed to seal each cast aluminum flange to the next, connecting pipe segments. The pipe wall itself is some kind of high tech carbon fiber which seals to the aluminum flange with a bolt-in capture ring.
This excellent fuel will provide all the energy the American Global Empire will ever need, the methane rivers of a Saturnian moon are as endless as the rivers of water on earth. The atmosphere rains liquid methane. And because the space station serving as reception terminal will be placed in geosyncronous orbit, only Americans will have access to it. We will fill up our cars with dirt-cheap Moon Gas. Our militaries will withdraw from the Mid-east, leaving China and India to scramble for control of whats left in the ground over there.
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby americandream » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 07:29:19

Flying pigs at two o' clock!
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby mekrob » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 07:52:38

Why go through the entire paragraph? Do you really have nothing else to do? Just write a short blip about it or any other annoying half baked ideas: ethanol, hydrogen, helium-3, grass clipping, HHO gas, etc.

I give it a 3. It was too long with not enough funny stupidity, mostly just plain idiocy. Try not wasting our time. It's fine if you have nothing else, but not others.
I want to put out the fires of Hell, and burn down the rewards of Paradise. They block the way to God. I do not want to worship from fear of punishment or for the promise of reward, but simply for the love of God. - Rabia
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas to supply all the energy we need

Unread postby Battle_Scarred_Galactico » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 07:55:00

Off you go then sweetheart, go collect all that lovley moon gas for us. We'll all throw a brilliant party for you when you get back.

See you soon.
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Battle_Scarred_Galactico » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 07:59:26

Attn MODS, he has posted this turd in multiple forums, can someone get rid of it?
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas to supply all the energy we need

Unread postby Gorm » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:00:25

Considering that earth is rotating around the sun, and so is saturn, but not at the same speed, this "pipline" will have to bee weeeeeeeeeeery elastic.

And, i guess the amount of materials to make this "pipline" will be challange to get, not to say anything about the possiblity to get it out in space...

Troll anyone?
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby dinopello » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:01:08

Titan is the moon with the methane. Didn't even bother to name the moon. So sad. Titan is also 290F degrees below zero. You would probably have to fight a war with the Titans to take their methane as they need it to heat their homes.
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby EnergyUnlimited » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:04:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', 'W')hy go through the entire paragraph? Do you really have nothing else to do? Just write a short blip about it or any other annoying half baked ideas: ethanol, hydrogen, helium-3, grass clipping, HHO gas, etc.

I give it a 3. It was too long with not enough funny stupidity, mostly just plain idiocy. Try not wasting our time. It's fine if you have nothing else, but not others.


I think, someone is taking a piss...
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Rambo » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:10:39

Hold on me may have something here.

How do flying pigs get their power :P
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Serendipity » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:10:44

Can you give us an EROI estimation of that solution ?
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas to supply all the energy we need

Unread postby Rambo » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:13:06

The pipeline will be supported on sky hooks and will be guarded by flying pigs
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby paoniapbud » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 08:56:58

Where do I begin? What amount of resources would theoretically be required?

By the way, the ship that went to the center of the Earth should be back in a few weeks... :lol:
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Zardoz » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 09:12:20

Comedians, everywhere you turn. Everybody thinks they're the next Robin Williams.

(OTOH, I did chuckle quite a bit. Thanks for that...)
"Thank you for attending the oil age. We're going to scrape what we can out of these tar pits in Alberta and then shut down the machines and turn out the lights. Goodnight." - seldom_seen
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Falconoffury » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 09:12:32

Unless this is a 100 or 200 year project or longer, I don't see the logic. What buffoon would think that this could be a quick fix to our current energy problems?
"If humans don't control their numbers, nature will." -Pimentel
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby Cynus » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 09:19:13

ex_nasa_consultant, I have a hundred thousand dollars in cash I would like to give you to invest in your moon gas pipline.

Soon that moon gas will be mine! All mine!
One of these now am I too, a fugitive from the gods and a wanderer, at the mercy of raging Strife.
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Re: Saturn Moon Gas: all the energy we need

Unread postby paoniapbud » Thu 20 Jul 2006, 09:24:05

How about a pipe to suck all of the C02 out of our atmosphere? I also want a pipe going to Blargon-9 to visit me Grandmum!
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