1 / 12

SPACE ELEVATOR

SPACE ELEVATOR. SPACE ELEVATOR: A NEW WAY TO REACH THE STARS. The Space Elevator is a cable-like tool which could connect the Earth with a fixed structure in outer space. It would provide a permanent link between Earth and outer space. The Space Elevator in Science Fiction.

justus
Download Presentation

SPACE ELEVATOR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SPACE ELEVATOR

  2. SPACE ELEVATOR: A NEW WAY TO REACH THE STARS The Space Elevatoris a cable-like tool which could connect the Earth with a fixed structure in outer space. It would provide a permanent link between Earth and outer space.

  3. The Space Elevator in Science Fiction

  4. Properties Of Carbon Nanotubes Strong – 200 times stronger than steel. – the first synthetic material to have greater strength than spider silk. Light – 1 square kilometre = 30kg Flexible – Compared to most materials. Heat resistant – resists burning like a metal.

  5. Ribbon Design • The final ribbon is one-meter wide and composed of parallel high-strength fibers • Interconnects maintain structure and allow the ribbon to survive small impacts • Initial, low-strength ribbon segments have been built and tested

  6. Climbers • Climbers built with current satellite technology • Drive system built with DC electric motors • Photovoltaic array (GaAs or Si) receives power from Earth • 7-ton climbers carry 13-ton payloads • Climbers ascend at 200 km/hr • 8 day trip from Earth to geosynchronous altitude

  7. Power Beaming • Power is sent to deployment spacecraft and climbers by laser • Solid-state disk laser produces kWs of power and being developed for MWatts • Mirror is the same design as conventional astronomical telescopes (Hobby-Eberly, Keck)

  8. Anchor • Anchor station is a mobile, ocean-going platform identical to ones used in oil drilling • Anchor is located in eastern equatorial pacific, weather and mobility are primary factors

  9. Challenges • Induced Currents: milliwatts and not a problem • Induced oscillations: 7 hour natural frequency couples poorly with moon and sun, active damping with anchor • Radiation: carbon fiber composites good for 1000 years in Earth orbit (LDEF) • Atomic oxygen: <25 micron Nickel coating between 60 and 800 km (LDEF) • Environmental Impact: Ionosphere discharging not an issue • Malfunctioning climbers: up to 3000 km reel in the cable, above 2600 km send up an empty climber to retrieve the first • Lightning, wind, clouds: avoid through proper anchor location selection • Meteors: ribbon design allows for 200 year probability-based life • LEOs: active avoidance requires movement every 14 hours on average to avoid debris down to 1 cm • Health hazards: under investigation but initial tests indicate minimal problem • Damaged or severed ribbons: collatoral damage is minimal due to mass and distribution

  10. Advantages • Low operations costs - US$250/kg to LEO, GEO, Moon, Mars, Venus or the asteroid belts • No payload envelope restrictions • No launch vibrations • Safe access to space - no explosive propellants or dangerous launch or re-entry forces • Easily expandable to large systems or multiple systems • Easily implemented at many solar system locations

  11. Summary • The space elevator is a revolutionary Earth-to-space transportation system that will enable space exploration • Design, deployment and operational scenarios for the first space elevator have been put together. Potential challenges have been laid out and solutions developed. • Development of the space elevator requires an investment in materials and engineering but is achievable in the near future with a reasonable investment and development plan.

  12. Bochnicek, Z. (2013). A carbon nanotube cable for a space elevator. Physics teacher. Nove2013, Vol. 51 Issue 8, p462- 464. • Bonsor, K. (2000). How space elevators will work. Retrieved from http://www.howstuffworks.com/space-elevator.htm • Clarke, A. C. (1979). The Space Elevator: “Thought Experiment” or Key to the Universe? Advances in Earth Oriented Applied Science Technology • Georgia, F. (2006). The 62,000 mile elevator ride. Business 2.0. Mar2006 Vol. 7 Issue 2, p78-80. • Jorgensen, A.M. (2007). Passive radiation shielding considerations for the proposed space elevator. ActaAstronautica. Feb2007, Vol.60 Issure 3, p198-209. • Markos, P.A. (2013). A heuristic approach for the positioning of elevator hoistways based on the utilization intensity index. Architectural Engineering & Design Management Nov2013,Vol.9 Issue 4. • Nasa. (n.d.). Kennedy space center. Frequently asked questions. Retrieved from. http://www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/about/information/shuttle_faq.html#1 • Powell, J. (2006). Startram: an ultra-low cost launch system. AIP conference proceedings. 2006, Vol. 813 issue 1, p1071- 1082. 12p. • Pugno, N. M. (2006). On the strength of the carbon nanotube-based space elevator cable: from nanomechanics to megamechanics. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter, 18(33), S1971 • Pugno, N.M.(2013). Towards the artsutanov’s dream of the space elevator. the ultimate design of a 35 GPa strong tether thanks to graphene. ActaAstronautica. Feb2013, Vol. 82 Issue 2, p221-224. • Takeichi, N. (2012). Geostationary station keeping control of a space elevator during initial cable deployment. Acta Astronautica. Jan2012, Vol. 70, p85-94. • Williams, P. (2009). Dynamic multi body modeling for tethered space elevators. ActaAstronautica. Aug2009, Vol. 65 Issue ¾.

More Related