0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
@ Wiybit - This is a different concept, no cable is required. You shoot a stream of iron pellets through a tube containing a vacuum. Everything is accomplished by electromagnetic forces. The space fountain tower has a magnetic deflector at the top and bottom. At the top, the magnets used to redirect the pellets back down the tower have an upward force naturally exerted on them through their magnetic interaction with the pellets. At the bottom, the pellets are again subjected to magnetic forces to redirect them upwards again, and to accelerate them to the proper speed. By using magnetic energy harvesting devices on the sides of the tower on the upward route, and coil guns on the downward route, forces are transferred that are sufficient to support the weight of the tower. By magnetically transferring forces around, the system can be made very efficient, losing little energy, so not a huge amount of power would need to be pumped into it. The idea has been fleshed out and the numbers have been crunched as much as they have been with space elevators. Theoretically it is absolutely doable, but unlike with a space elevator, currently available materials would be adequate to do the job. Launch loops are a fairly similar idea, also depending on the use of electromagnetic forces.
I'm not sure the economics are better. These pellets have to overcome gravity as they are fired p to space type altitudes, and that takes power. Power which could be used directly to get them into space instead of support a structure.
I also think any life in space is going to be hard. At the moment it is like being stuck for months in a submarine in free fall with regular radiation leaks (solar wind). No doubt it will become easier, though.
I think my long Cable idea would be cheaper.
QuoteI think my long Cable idea would be cheaper.No space elevator concept i know of is currently possible, so estimating cost is hard - but i get the impression a space fountain would be cheaper, because no new cable material is required, and you can build from the ground up instead of launching everything you use into space first. Most of the materials used would be cheap, standard construction stuff.I don't know how your tether scheme works, but it does sound like the cable would probably snap.
That's why I suggested dropping a cable from space. Then designing a system to climb it, it's cheaper and simpler, have a station in orbit using a cable also reduces problems involved with staying in a geostationary orbit, the cable can be tightened and loosened as needs be.
Quote from: Wiybit on 03/04/2011 21:15:38That's why I suggested dropping a cable from space. Then designing a system to climb it, it's cheaper and simpler, have a station in orbit using a cable also reduces problems involved with staying in a geostationary orbit, the cable can be tightened and loosened as needs be.I think you would need to assemble the whole space elevator in geosynchronous orbit; it's way too massive for a single rocket launch. Then you could feed the cable out in both directions (up and down) simultaneously while keeping the center of gravity at geosynchronous height. (Note: I think center of gravity is not the same as center of mass in this case.) As the top and bottom get farther from geosynchronous height, gravity and centrifugal force would pull the ends increasingly harder away from the middle. There would also be some Coreolis effect tending to twist the whole thing away from vertical. You would need to resist the cable as you feed it out slowly; otherwise, it would hit the atmosphere so fast it would burn up or snap in two. It might take months to reel it out.
If the top of the fountain is not close to geosynchronous orbit, your satellite will need a rocket to give it orbital speed after it detaches from the top of the fountain, so you don't gain that much by putting it there.
To hold the top up, the pellets would have to be moving extremely fast as they go around the top. The force needed to reverse their direction (f = dp/dt) would need to be greater than the weight of the tube plus the climber plus anything else at the top (the wiki illustration shows some sort of magnet). So the tube would need to be almost perfectly frictionless.
Though perhaps not being as tall as a space elevator, the tube would still have to support its own weight up to where the pellets begin accelerating around the top. The closer it is to geosynchronous orbit the closer it is to a space elevator, requiring a material of the same strength to weight ratio.
How are the pellets supposed to be turned around at the bottom?
The basic concept of a space fountain smells a lot like a McGyverism to me. To prove it is possible, they would have to build several small scale versions,
Building it from the ground out into space I do not think will ever work, understanding all the tensions involved.
QuoteIf the top of the fountain is not close to geosynchronous orbit, your satellite will need QuoteThe basic concept of a space fountain smells a lot like a McGyverism to me. To prove it is possible, they would have to build several small scale versions,It does sound pretty outlandish, but the credentials of the people who proposed the idea are pretty impressive.
If the top of the fountain is not close to geosynchronous orbit, your satellite will need
QuoteBuilding it from the ground out into space I do not think will ever work, understanding all the tensions involved. What tensions?
Do you think the Fountain could with-stand a hurracain? or tornado? or an earth quake?
QuoteDo you think the Fountain could with-stand a hurracain? or tornado? or an earth quake?I'm going to beg off a little bit here by saying i asked about this because i'd like to know more about it - everything i know right now is from summaries on three or four different websites. But that said - a space fountain is an active structure concept, meaning it is held up not so much by its structural, material strength, but by it's energy.
Just as a person remains standing because of the energy exerted by their muscles, otherwise we would fall.
Typically, because active structures can adapt, they are more stable than other buildings. But that is only true if the structure can adjust for changes in the forces applied to it in a timely fashion. That is mostly a software issue though, not a hardware issue. You already have all kinds of machines of one kind or another running, redistributing and redirecting the forces at work on the tower - now you just need to program them to adjust properly when informed of changes in the forces affecting the tower.It is important to keep in mind the weight of the tower rests only in part on its foundation - only in relatively small part, i believe. The transfer of magnetic forces is levitating every section of the tower with a coil gun or a drag device (there doesn't seem to be an explanation for exactly what a drag device is,
but it must involve electricity generation through magnetic braking) and there is also upward force at the loop at the top. In fact, if you increase the power being put into the system, the upwards force increases. The main vulnerability of the tower is the chance that the power source might get cut off. For this reason it needs several independent power sources, and the job of lifting should be distributed among at least three pellet streams.
But if the power were to be shut off, it would be hours before the tower began to wobble because of the momentum the pellets would have. Don't ask me to explain that, it's just what the specs say.
it is an active structure, and so requires constant power input to make up energy losses and remain erect.
You are enchanted with your space elevator concept, but there is no reason to discard space fountains out of hand. I don't know enough about the physics involved to comment on your idea that using a re-entry vehicle would make it easier to deploy a cable. I have read about space elevators as much as i have about space fountains (or launch loops), and the designs all involved playing out the cable slowly, starting from geosynchronous orbit, that's all i know.