A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
They're on the verge of sending up their own space station.
Mr Awe
A siginificantly smaller space station (ISS has about fifty times the mass of Tiangong 1).
A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
They're on the verge of sending up their own space station.
Mr Awe
In reality, it's not that big a deal: Vitaly Davydov, deputy director of Russia's Federal Space Agency, was simply stating current policy when he told TV interviewers that the station would be in use until 2020 or so, and that it would have to be taken out of orbit when it's obsolete.
The interview from "Good Morning Russia" ("Utro Rossii") caused a stir when a Russian-language transcript turned up on the space agency's website, but don't panic: If anything, the International Space Station will be in operation well after 2020. Russia, NASA and the other partners in the 16-nation venture are looking into extending the station's lifetime to 2028 — that is, if they can verify that its components will still be in working order that far into the future.
Still, if there is room, maybe they should leave it up for emergencies.
Okay, then maybe they can sell it to Richard Branson.I don't know if they'd want it, but it would be better than a de-orbit.A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
They started building it in 1998. 22 years is hardly a "short while." It was originally intended to only last until 2015-16 to begin with, so 2020 is actually beyond its planned lifespan.
Does change the fact that it was a big freaking waste of a money pit!!
Mr Awe
Space exploration in general is a "money pit."
A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
They're on the verge of sending up their own space station.
Mr Awe
A siginificantly smaller space station (ISS has about fifty times the mass of Tiangong 1).
Will it be crashed on Russian Earth territory or on Russian Moon territory though?"planned crash so that there is no space junk left behind."
The space station would indeed make a nice space inn, at least compared to what's been in space before it. It's spacious, it has an acceptable toilet, has a lot of living space, and the living space is comfy. It's certainly the closest thing we have to one, and it might remain that way for a long time. And if you're a space nerd, it is probably be the most awesome hotel in existence.Nonono, sell it to Richard Branson. The first space hotel.
The 2020 deorbit is actually current policy by all the stakeholders in the ISS.
I don't know about that. People travel thousands of miles, literally every say, to resort hotels and never leave them for the duration of their stay.3. A space hotel needs attraction. You don't go to a hotel for the hotel.
Quite a lot. The station is 417289 kg, and lifting something from LEO to higher orbit requires like half of the fuel to get it in LEO in the first place. The largest rocket currently in existence can lift 1/10 of the station to LEO.Would it actually cost too much money in rocket fuel to push it into a higher or a Lunar orbit?
I like that idea a lot better.Okay, then maybe they can sell it to Richard Branson.I don't know if they'd want it, but it would be better than a de-orbit.A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
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It's a reference to this Thread.Will it be crashed on Russian Earth territory or on Russian Moon territory though?"planned crash so that there is no space junk left behind."
^ Were you joking, or did the Russians seriously claim territory on the moon?![]()
Hm... Very true... In fact to move the station you need low thrust, moving it slowly, otherwise it will break into pieces. Ion thrusters are 10 times more efficient than solid rockets, and VASIMR even more, and what's more, a VASIMR will be installed on the station this or the next year. It will cost 1/20 of the cost of the current chemical rockets that are used now for station-keeping.Are you sure about that? Most of the fuel needed to put something into orbit is burned speeding it up to orbital velocity. I believe it's possible to put a low thrust, highly efficient engine (like an ion engine) on the station to get it to a higher orbit, but it would take a LONG time for it to do so. I'd have to dig though my old orbital mechanics books to get any hard numbers, though.
* Moving the station to GEO would cost $800 million, moving it to the moon would cost $1.2 billion. But this cost doesn't take a great deal of things into account, so it's probably a huge underestimation.
Exactly; first use electric power in a tether to raise it to a higher orbit, then -possibly- to power a retrofitted ion-drive... also my thoughtsThat's exactly what I'd like to see.Well, I don't like that idea. I still hate that Skylab and Mir have been lost. I'd rather see the thing pushed up to a higher orbit and preserved.
Or at the very least shove it far out into Lunar orbit or many even a Langragian Point.
Start an orbit museum.![]()
Probably. I was just expressing dismay at these things that have been lost to History. On the other hand, somebody may be able to figure out a cheap way to do it. There was an interesting story in Analog a few years back that was based on the idea of the power generated by the Space Shuttle as it passes through the Earth's magnetic field. This causes the orbit to decay. What they did was use solar panels to pump energy back into the magnetic field which caused the Shuttle's orbit to increase without expending fuel. It might also be possible to use a couple of those ion engines to slowly inch it up to a high orbit over a period of months or years.Wouldn't it take a ridiculous amount of fuel to push something as big as the ISS up to an orbit high enough where it's going to be out of the way?
Better stick a mighty big disclaimer on it first; when that ol' thing falls to pieces with a truckload of Chinese taikonauts they'll want to sue someone.I don't know if they'd want it, but it would be better than a de-orbit.A serious suggestions.
Maybe we can sell it to the Chinese?
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