|
|
 | | From: | Brad Guth | | Subject: | Re: Space elevator now possible? | | Date: | 20 Jan 2005 17:03:07 -0800 |
|
|
 | Actually, once we've created the artificial lunar atmosphere by way of bombing it with the likes of CO2/Rn, thus creating 1e6 tonnes of vaporised basalt per tonne of CO2/Rn, as that's where roughly 50% of the lunar basalt becomes O2, and thereby chances are certainly improving for the parachute alternative.
At 0.01 bar the parachute notion should become worth four times the payload of Mars, and everybody knows getting folks affordably and safely to/from Mars is a done deal. And, our NASA/Apollo teams proved that the surface of our moon isn't nasty, as there's hardly any radiation, it's not actually all that hot and never once a speck of anything arriving via 30+km/s, thereby offering folks just another EVA moonsuit walk in the park.
Regards, Brad Guth / GASA-IEIS http://guthvenus.tripod.com/gv-topics.htm
|
|
 | | From: | N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\) | | Subject: | Re: Space elevator now possible? | | Date: | Thu, 20 Jan 2005 19:49:44 -0700 |
|
|
 | Dear Brad Guth:
"Brad Guth" wrote in message news:1106269387.698583.248420@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com... .... > radiation, it's not actually all that hot and never once a speck of > anything arriving via 30+km/s, thereby offering folks just another EVA
Those craters on the Moon must have been made by the *last* attempt to colonize it then? Not by any old pesky falling objects...
David A. Smith
|
|
|