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NASA to explore space rock worth so much money it would DESTROY world economy
Daily Star ^
| 16th January 2017
| Peter Truman
Posted on 01/16/2017 4:24:39 PM PST by COBOL2Java
THE American space agency is planning to send a spacecraft to a lump of metal in space worth quadrillions of dollars.
The 200km-wide asteroid is currently orbiting the sun between Mars and Jupiter. It is made up of various precious metals such as iron, nickel and gold.
Experts believe the iron alone in the rock would be worth $10,000 quadrillion enough to cause the worlds economy, worth $73.7 trillion, to promptly collapse altogether.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailystar.co.uk ...
TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: 201701; asteroid; asteroidmining; asteroids; astronomy; gold; iron; jupiter; mars; metal; nasa; nickel; nickelmining; science; spaceforce
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To: bleach
81
posted on
01/16/2017 6:58:25 PM PST
by
pa_dweller
(Trump 304, Clinton 227 - The vote heard 'round the world.)
To: Blue Highway
82
posted on
01/16/2017 7:01:52 PM PST
by
Arlis
To: COBOL2Java
Drill down and build an underground space station. Then build a a giant rail gun that shoots cargo to and fro.
83
posted on
01/16/2017 7:02:27 PM PST
by
Fhios
To: COBOL2Java
It won't destroy the word economy, it will add to it.
Or the Solar System's economy, once we get there.
84
posted on
01/16/2017 7:12:10 PM PST
by
BitWielder1
(I'd rather have Unequal Wealth than Equal Poverty.)
To: MHGinTN
85
posted on
01/16/2017 7:14:31 PM PST
by
Axenolith
(Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
To: Arlis
You wouldn’t USE anything except maybe a few wildly exotic isotopes found there, on earth. You would use that rock as a ready made mine/factory for building stuff out there.
86
posted on
01/16/2017 7:24:05 PM PST
by
Axenolith
(Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
To: COBOL2Java
Short gold tomorrow. Will be worth $100 by 2117
To: COBOL2Java
Delivery cost for the metals currently prohibitive.
88
posted on
01/16/2017 7:38:34 PM PST
by
Some Fat Guy in L.A.
(Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite it's unfashionability)
To: al baby
Planetray Resources and Deep Space I dustries are planning on doing exactly that. Right now...
89
posted on
01/16/2017 7:40:54 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(A Psalm in napalm...)
To: from occupied ga
Scale that up/ There’s a billion dollars buried in Antarctica. You have the gps coordinates. All you gotta do is go get it...
90
posted on
01/16/2017 7:43:10 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(A Psalm in napalm...)
To: dr_lew
2025. Possibly sooner if Shawyer’s Em Drive works as adverized...
91
posted on
01/16/2017 7:44:43 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(A Psalm in napalm...)
To: EQAndyBuzz
You’re confusing it with Phobos.
92
posted on
01/16/2017 7:46:55 PM PST
by
MHGinTN
(A dispensational perspective is a powerful tool for spiritual discernment)
To: Dead Corpse
Can’t scale it up. Should scale it down. Not sure if you’re unaware of the costs or are ignoring the because science fiction appeals to you
Scale it up to a billion but then you have to scale up the cost of getting there to about $100,000,000,000,000
93
posted on
01/16/2017 7:58:42 PM PST
by
from occupied ga
(Your government is your most dangerous enemy)
To: Dead Corpse
A little economic education:
Cost of the Apollo pgm in today's dollars $110 billion Total weight brought back 861 lb Now that's from the moon our CLOSEST neighbor but it still cost $127,758,420/pound returned. Now multiply that by 1600 distance ratio asteroid to moon and you get $204,413,472,706 per pound transportation cost. Something the space kadets gloss over.
94
posted on
01/16/2017 8:13:57 PM PST
by
from occupied ga
(Your government is your most dangerous enemy)
To: from occupied ga
Not so sure. The cost of getting of getting a small amount would be too high. But the larger the total amount one is after, the less it will cost per unit with industrious engineering.
I would not go to Antarctica for a single $500 dollar buried gem. But if there were billions of these gems it might at some point be cost effective to get some kind of enterprise going to efficiently find and extract them.
Of course, this presumes a plan to make it cost effective at scale would be conceived and competently implemented...and NASA is a government agency....
To: from occupied ga
In a maned craft, yes. In an unmanned miner robot, much... much... much cheaper.
96
posted on
01/16/2017 8:23:32 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(A Psalm in napalm...)
To: from occupied ga
That’s government doing it. Planetary Resources and DSI are private companies.
You are also thinking in terms of 60’s technology. My iPhone has more computing power than all of the computers used in Apollo combined...
And then there is this...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/RF_resonant_cavity_thruster
Game changer...
97
posted on
01/16/2017 8:26:09 PM PST
by
Dead Corpse
(A Psalm in napalm...)
To: Dead Corpse
Bring it home? the dinosaurs tried that and look how it worked out for them.
To: COBOL2Java
99
posted on
01/16/2017 8:35:45 PM PST
by
JoeProBono
(SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
To: entropy12
Wow can you imagin the smell! Whew!!
100
posted on
01/16/2017 8:40:09 PM PST
by
Empireoftheatom48
(God did help the Republic, can we keep it.)
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