Live-action remake of "Heavy Metal."![]()
That may be a good reason! It depends on the actresses.I said a GOOD reason.

Live-action remake of "Heavy Metal."![]()
That may be a good reason! It depends on the actresses.I said a GOOD reason.
I gave the lowball figures on the previous page, just accounting for launch costs and assuming a "starter" powersat or powersat array. My high-ball figure with "real world" technology is actually similar to yours, except I based the launch costs on the Space Shuttle payload rate (assuming somebody is using the SLS for the launch and deployment and assuming SLS is as efficient as the STS). Even ignoring the actual development and construction costs, I estimated the cost of launching the solar panels plus the mass of supporting truss and power conditioning hardware to be:So to replace all of humanity's existing sources, one would need something like 10^(8 - 9) metric tons of solar panel. With SpaceX's launch costs of about $5*10^6 per mt, that becomes $500 - $5000 trillion. But if an Earth-based system costs only $10,000 per mt, as I'd estimated earlier, that because $1 - $10 trillion. So if we ever succeed in building enough space-based manufacturing capability to make launch costs irrelevant, Earth-based systems will have taken over long ago.
Mass production can drive that cost down. I thought we wanted more launches and business for spaceflight.
Now if you'd rather have the same or more money on the Pentagon's endless wish list--be my guest.
So help me--but space advocates have become their own worst enemy--sniping on big projects the L5 folks used to push when politicians weren't listening.
Congress is about as pro-space as they have ever been--and here we are in a circular firing squad.
Not if you're using the SLS.Mass production can drive that cost down.
"Circular firing squad" because we are torpedoing an idea that makes no economic sense, has no net benefit to humanity, will consume financial and military resources hundreds of times beyond anything America has ever spent on space, and that no one in NASA or the aerospace community even wants to try?Congress is about as pro-space as they have ever been--and here we are in a circular firing squad.
Wasting the money they do get on a pointless project such as this would not help our future in space since. Given how much cheaper ground based solar is.
Not if you're using the SLS. .
"Circular firing squad" because we are torpedoing an idea that makes no economic sense, has no net benefit to humanity...
That's what they said about the space shuttle originally. History showed these claims to be untrue: even at the zenith of the shuttle program, when NASA was able to manage 5 or 6 launches per year, they still weren't getting their costs down below about $600 million per launch. This with the shuttle orbiter -- and its engines -- being fully reusable. SLS doesn't have a reusable upper stage or reusable engines, which means NASA has to rebuild and re-certify the entire thing every time they launch one.Yes--because of SLS. More flights are what you want for costs to come down.
Incorrect: The Jim Webb telescope has already cost over $8 billion JUST TO BUILD IT. The SLS program has nothing to do with it.Again--Webb is costly because it lacks an HLLV
If you want to "enjoy spaceflight," go play a fucking videogame. When we start doing ACTUAL WORK in space, then we'll have a reason to live there.Humanity enjoys spaceflight despite economic sense, not because of it.
No, take the telecom model. Companies like orbital sciences have developed new spacecraft buses, new technologies, new standards, new systems, and have been using them in space for half a century. Communication satellites are big business. They are valuable commodities and worthwhile investments, and because of this the United States has launched THOUSANDS of them into orbit since the space age began. We overlook this fact because unmanned spacecraft aren't as glamorous or fancy as manned ones, but it remains the case that the privatization of space exploration has been well underway since at least the Gemini program.Again--take the Very Light Jet/Air Taxi model...
No, R-7 was pushed by military necessity and, amusingly, subverted by scientists who had more peaceful purposes in mind.But R-7 was pushed by national pride...
Yes, and exploiting a the militaristic wet dreams of a psychopath and redirecting his funding towards a totally different purpose is a frankly EXCELLENT example of what I would call "subversive" behavior. I actually tell that story to my son sometimes, the moral being "When the guy you work for is an asshole, the best thing you can do is make that asshole work for you."I wouldn't say subverted. The space activists were the only ones who knew how to build rockets. They could have waited for smaller warheads and storables--but that worked against their interest. They exploited uncle joe's militarism--to get something useful out of the mil-budget.
No you're not. Korolev subverted Stalin's militarism by redirecting the funding for an ICBM into a system that worked poorly as an ICBM but excellently as a manned space booster.wink wink--that's what I'm doing here.
The Jim Webb telescope has already cost over $8 billion JUST TO BUILD IT. The SLS program has nothing to do with it.
Even if NASA could build orbital solar platforms using Falcon-9 rockets - they'd still wind up with $10 billion in launch costs for a powerplant that barely outperforms a $400 million ground-based solar collector.
No, take the telecom model.
If you expand those needs, companies like SpaceX and Orbital Sciences can expand their services and their capabilities.
I actually tell that story to my son sometimes, the moral being "When the guy you work for is an asshole, the best thing you can do is make that asshole work for you."
You're talking about subverting an industry..
Korolev subverted Stalin's militarism by redirecting the funding for an ICBM into a system that worked poorly as an ICBM but excellently as a manned space booster.
1) Bigelow flew on an Atlas because the Falcon wasn't ready to launch it at the time. Falcon's payload faring diameter is actually very similar to the AtlasIt cost 8 bil because the damn LV it was going in was too small. That's why it cost so much. size and payload diameter has everything to do with it--thats why Bigelow flew atop Atlas, not Falcon.
All of which were originally developed by industry FOR the military in the first place. The government gave them assistance in repurposing those missiles into civilian launch programs and they've been profitable ever since.Which did not exist Ex nihilo, but arouse out of what many thought a costly ICBM program. Actually IRBM--since Deltas a re really stretched Thors
3,700 and counting.Telecom is onlu going to get you so many payloads on its own.
Sure they would, but that's too expensive of a project just to do it for PRACTICE. Give them a compelling reason to build a larger structure in space and let them make money doing it, and then it will happen. We don't NEED an orbital solar power plant, so there's no reason to gain experience in building them.Building larger strutrues in space--for its own sake--is to me a worthy goal--and Elon and others would enjoy the business.
Testbed? With two VASIMR rockets and a thousand square meters of solar array you could send ISS to Mars and back. Why the hell would we waste time dicking around with microwave power transmission at that point?Could you accept, say having larger solar panels attached to ISS--with VASIMR added to it for station keeping? That'd be a test bed we could all agree upon.
It's nothing to do with fusion.So the fusion supporters say at least
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