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In reply to the discussion: Solar belt around the moon planned by Japanese engineers [View all]MADem
(135,425 posts)87. Well, we'd need to shift our world paradigm from confrontation to cooperation.
Anyone controlling that satellite could jink the thing to aim at some city and fry it.
We'd need a LOT of trust to do anything like that.
Not saying it won't ever happen but we have a ways to go before we, as earthlings, are "boldly going" without trying to steal from one another and gain advantage.
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Yeah, like beaming massive amounts of energy down on the earth, controlled by one nation, is a good
MADem
Nov 2013
#1
OK--it IS "dreams," proposals, concepts. There are no plans--this is just an idea barn.
MADem
Nov 2013
#43
Art, this is a pipe dream. I don't see this happening in our lifetimes, or even in the lifetimes
MADem
Nov 2013
#51
I know they are working on solar roofs that aren't "panels"--the solar tech is embedded in the
MADem
Nov 2013
#64
Whoever masters this technology and uses it, that country will be the Saudi Arabia of the 21st cent.
Katashi_itto
Nov 2013
#84
Dude/dudette...you can't fry anything, not with the tech that would be used.
Katashi_itto
Nov 2013
#88
I agree, I have always thought geosynchronous orbital powersats are more realistic.
Katashi_itto
Nov 2013
#116
When they put the new Hilton Hotel up there, and people start playing Moon Polo up there,
MADem
Nov 2013
#157
Non-trivial, but significantly less problematic than building them on earth.
AtheistCrusader
Nov 2013
#54
I think the servicable lifespan of those panels might be a tad longer.
AtheistCrusader
Nov 2013
#131
I didn't look to see if there might be any filter-capable materials, but
AtheistCrusader
Nov 2013
#135
It would be a big deal, and the technology doesn't really exist yet
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#96
And the machinery to extract that hydrogen will have to be transported up there
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#104
Totally Incorrect. Three tonnes of rock are needed to produce each tonne of oxygen
Katashi_itto
Nov 2013
#109
'sigh' - that's about carrying hydrogen to the moon, and then using it in a cycle
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#122
At least read the paper you linked to before you claim to know what it says
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#127
Tiny amounts....Hmm I wonder what a ton of O2 broken down to H weighs....
Katashi_itto
Nov 2013
#121
Unless you've become an alchemist, a ton of O2 broken down produces zero hydrogen
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#123
Sending enough solar panels for a smelter is still quite a weight
muriel_volestrangler
Nov 2013
#143
I've got a hunch that the Soviet reactors weren't quite big enough to power this scheme.
wercal
Nov 2013
#108
Of course, nothing could possibly go wrong with such an exquisitely simple plan.
WheelWalker
Nov 2013
#7
K&R. Sounds a lot better than fracturing all the shale and pumping toxic chemicals into the ground
Overseas
Nov 2013
#28
Suppose this (or some other approach(es)) succeeded and we actually had unlimited energy
MikeDuffy
Nov 2013
#77
Lets see. Meteors. Asteroids. Space debris. No. It's not likely a solar belt would be
Lint Head
Nov 2013
#102
Are you calling me a bigot or a racist? I am not referring to "all" Japanese people.
Lint Head
Nov 2013
#136
The concept is basically Dr. David Criswell's Lunar Solar Power proposal from the 1980s
LongTomH
Nov 2013
#112
If they use microwaves, wouldn't that heat the water vapour in the atmosphere?
OnlinePoker
Nov 2013
#138