"I suppose"? Which angle are you talking about? The faces of many of the biggest Egyptian pyramids range from 51° to 53°, with edge angles of between 41° and 43°.What angle would it be stable at? 45 degrees would be most stable I suppose but surely it could rise at a steeper angle and still remain stable?
Are you talking about a space elevator? I thought that the only known material which is strong enough (or rather has the potential to be strong enough) are carbon nanotubes which haven't been built on an industrial scale. I would think a pyramid would simply collapse under it's own weight, as well as being rather pointless and unbelievably expensive (unlike a space elevator).
"I suppose"? Which angle are you talking about? The faces of many of the biggest Egyptian pyramids range from 51° to 53°, with edge angles of between 41° and 43°.What angle would it be stable at? 45 degrees would be most stable I suppose but surely it could rise at a steeper angle and still remain stable?
Personally, I like this idea about building a pyramid to space. Think of the potential here, they could use it to lift space parts, like satellites and other space needs into orbit quite easily. It would be a massively hybrid structure, think of the possibilities, hotel, resort, shopping, bio-dome type living, tourism and an elevator to space. There is potential in every sector here.
If you are interested in putting things in orbit, it would be much more cost efficient to have some sort of maglev track that went up a mountain, or something like that. That combined with some sort of rocket to get you up to speed to achieve escape velocity would be a much better solution.
I have this great idea, inspired by Tacky, for making a giant canoe large enough to hold the entire population of Poland. And it'll travel through space!!!
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