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(New page: Asteroids are a class of small astronomical objects (Major planets, Comets) that orbit the sun. The moons of Mars most likely were asteroids that were captured. Those in high...)
 
 
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Asteroids are a class of small astronomical objects ([[Major planets]], [[Comets]]) that orbit the sun.  The moons of [[Mars]] most likely were asteroids that were captured.  Those in highly irregular orbits are likely to be the baked rocky core of comets that have long since lost most if not all of their volatile gasses.  In terms of size asteroids range from the biggest [[1 Ceres]] at about 930 kilometers in diameter to objects of a couple hundred tons of mass.  Smaller objects are considered [[Meteorites]] or [[Comet Debris]].
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{{Fork2space}}
  
In terms of Lunar and other space development the main boil down to these two.  What chance do you or your base stand of getting hit by one?  Are the asteroids a better source of water than the moon?
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Asteroids are a class of small astronomical objects (minor planets, [[Comet|Comets]]) that orbit the sun. The moons of [[Mars]] may have been asteroids that were captured. Those in highly irregular orbits are likely to be the baked rocky cores of comets that have long since lost most if not all of their [[volatiles|volatile gasses]]. In terms of size asteroids range from the biggest 1 [[Ceres]] at about 930 kilometers in diameter to objects of a couple hundred tons of mass. Smaller objects are considered [[Meteorite|Meteorites]] or [[Comet Debris]].
  
==Categories of Asteriods ranked by semi-axis distance==
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In terms of Lunar and other space development the main questions boil down to these two: 1)What chance do you or your base stand of getting hit by one? 2)Are the asteroids a better source of water than the [[moon]]?
  
:Near Earth Asteriods [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-Earth_asteroid]
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==Asteroids and Luna==
::Aten [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aten_asteroid]
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/asteroids-and-why-they-matter Asteroids and why they matter]
::Apollo [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_asteroid]
 
::Amor [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amor_asteroid]
 
  
:Mars Crossing Asteriods
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==Categories of Asteroids ranked by semi-axis distance==
  
:Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter
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:Near Earth Asteroids [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near-Earth_asteroid]
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::Aten [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aten_asteroid]
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::Apollo [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_asteroid]
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::Amor [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amor_asteroid]
  
:Hilda Asteriods that are close to Jupiters orbit
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:Mars Crossing Asteroids
  
:Jovian Trojans [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_asteroid]
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:Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter
  
:Centaurs between Jupiter and Neptune [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centaur_%28planetoid%29]
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:Hilda Asteroids that are close to Jupiter's orbit
  
==Spectral Classication of Asteroids==
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:Jovian Trojans [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trojan_asteroid]
  
C - Carbonaceous 75% of known asteroids (Includes B,D,F,G types)
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:Centaurs between Jupiter and Neptune [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centaur_%28planetoid%29]
S - Silicaceous 17% of known asteroids (Includes A,E,K,L types)
 
M - Metallic 8% of known asteroids
 
  
==Lunar Meteorite Hazard==
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==Spectral Classification of Asteroids==  
  
The current calculated risk of an astronaut on the moon being hit with a micrometeorite is 0.0003 per six hour period (Lunar Base handbook p.526).  The odds of getting hit by anything bigger assumes you did not pick it up via radar and blast it.  The bigger concern involves comets and dusty NEO's that get too close.  This could cause a rain of medium velocity particles with a fairly intense flux.  As seen with the annual comet swarms, their trails extend for millions of kilometers and vary tremendously in concentration.
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* C - [[Carbonaceous]] 75% of known asteroids (Includes B,D,F,G types)  
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* S - [[Silicaceous]] 17% of known asteroids (Includes A,E,K,L types)
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* M - [[Metallic]] 8% of known asteroids
  
==Asteroids as potential sources of water==
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==Lunar [[Meteorite]] Hazard==  
  
If the Moon turns out to have very little water that is accessible, the next logical place to get it is either Mars or the water bearing Asteriods (by spectral analysis).  Water is key for sustained development in space for use as rocket fuel and the ability to grow large scale amounts of foodWithout it you are always sending expensive things up through the atmosphere of Earth. It takes a lot of water to farm with.
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The current calculated risk of an astronaut on the moon being hit with a [[micrometeorite]] is 0.0003 per six hour period ([[Lunar Base handbook]] p.526).  Assuming the same flux for the Earth and moon then for meteoroids larger than 10 microns in diameter, the rate of impact is 1 per square meter per year.<ref>McGRAW-HILL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF Science & Technology, 8th Edition, (c)1997 volume 11, page 151.</ref> The odds of getting hit by anything bigger assumes you did not pick it up via [[radar]] and blast it. The bigger concern involves [[comets]] and dusty [[NEO]]s that get too close. This could cause a rain of medium velocity particles with a fairly intense flux. As seen with the annual [[comet]] swarms, their trails extend for millions of kilometers and vary tremendously in concentration.  
  
The closest asteroids with a strong spectral signature of water are found about with a perihelion of 2.1 AU.  Any closer to the sun or with an axial orientation angled into the sun and the water will have been evaporated from the surface eons ago.  THere many be water below the surface yet this is a gamble without verification.
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==Asteroid Defense==
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/planetary-defense-detection-part-1 Planetary Defense - Detection (Part 1)]
  
Asteroids with near guaranteed water start with 1 Ceres which is the biggest and seems to have had the gravity to hold on to its water. The density calculations for Ceres strongly suggest a rocky core and 60-100km deep ocean with a thin covering of dust & meteorites.  Farther out the spectra for water gets stronger and stronger.  If an outer main belt asteroid did not form from some major collision, it probably has water.  The trick is getting to it and exploiting it.
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/planetary-defense-characterization-part-2 Planetary Defense - Characterization (Part 2)]
  
The major drawback to all asteroid development is the distance involved. Unlike the moon which is close enough to remotely control robots from Earth, you are looking at delays of 12-30 minutes before a command is received. If you send astronauts they will have to be in transit for years unless you can afford a very large rocket. At Mars you can at least count on aerobraking to slow you down. Not so at the asteroids. Lastly it is very cold on most of these asteroids and that can cause all sorts of problems when the temperature drops to 50 kelvin in the shade.
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/neo-threat-summary-chart-2018 The "Threat" of Asteroid Impacts - Breaking Down the Comprehensive Chart by the US Government]
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==Asteroid mining==
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/asteroid-mining-is-not-dead Asteroid mining is (not) dead]
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[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com/asteroid-mining-first-mission-off-ground Asteroid Mining: Getting the first mission off the ground]
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==Asteroids as potential sources of water==
 +
 
 +
If the [[Moon]] appears to have very little [[water]] that is accessible, after Earth, the next logical place to get it is the water bearing Asteroids (by [[spectral analysis]]). Water is key for sustained development in space for use as rocket fuel and the ability to grow large scale amounts of food. Without it you are always sending expensive things up through the atmosphere of Earth. It takes a lot of water to farm with.
 +
 
 +
The closest asteroids with a strong spectral signature of water are found about with a [[perihelion]] of 2.1 [[Astronomical Unit|AU]]. Any closer to the [[sun]] or with an axial orientation angled into the sun and the water will have been evaporated from the surface eons ago. There many be water below the surface yet this is a gamble without verification.
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 +
Asteroids with near guaranteed water start with 1 [[Ceres]] which is the biggest and seems to have had the [[gravity]] to hold on to its water. The density calculations for Ceres strongly suggest a rocky core and 60-100km deep ocean with a thin covering of dust & meteorites. Farther out the [[spectra]] for water gets stronger and stronger. If an outer main belt asteroid did not form from some major collision, it probably has water. The trick is getting to it and exploiting it.
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The major drawback to all asteroid development is the distance involved. Unlike the moon which is close enough where a round trip journey takes a few days, round trip journeys to asteroids take several years using standard [[rocket]]s. This means that an investor would have to wait years to get a return on their investment, making it economically less attractive than the Moon.
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Also, with [[Progress in Remotely Operated Equipment|remotely control robot]]s from Earth, you are looking at delays of 12-30 minutes before a command is received.  
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Astronauts will have to be in transit for years unless you can afford a very large [[rocket]], or use [[nuclear propulsion]]. Although Mars has a deep gravity well, at Mars you can at least count on [[aerobrake|aerobraking]] to slow you down. Not so at the asteroids, although the asteroids are most attractive because they have a very shallow gravity well making it easier to recover material from them. Lastly it is very cold on most of these asteroids and that can cause all sorts of problems when the temperature drops to 50 [[kelvin]] in the shade.  
  
 
In short if you can solve the hibernation issues and do without base support for years, the asteroids are a viable source for water.
 
In short if you can solve the hibernation issues and do without base support for years, the asteroids are a viable source for water.
  
==External Links==
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==Robotic miner/tankers==
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroids Wikipedia:Asteroids]
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One possibility is a robotic spacecraft acting as a combination miner and tanker. The only abundant energy source in interplanetary space is sunlight, which points to some form of [[ion propulsion]] or [[solar sail]]. The probe would sync orbits and dock with a small icy asteroid with negligible surface gravity. Such a maneuver has already been successfully attempted by the Japanese [[Hayabusa]] mission. Solar power (either electrical or via reflectors) would be used to heat the asteroid surface, releasing volatiles such as water vapor which would be captured and condensed into storage tanks. A portion of the collected volatiles could then be used as ion thruster reaction mass for the return journey.
 +
 
 +
Both ion propulsion and solar sailing give continuous but very low thrust, so trips would be long term enterprises lasting decades.  The long return times could be made up for in volume; mass production of such water mining craft would amortize the initial design investment and tooling over hundreds of trips.
  
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet Wikipedia:Comets]
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==External Links==
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*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asteroids Wikipedia:Asteroids]
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*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comet Wikipedia:Comets]
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*[https://www.asteroidanalytics.com Asteroid Analytics]
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*[https://asteroidday.org Asteroid Day]
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*[https://b612foundation.org B612 Foundation]
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== Reference ==
 +
<references/>
 +
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[[Category:Solar System]]
 +
[[Category:Mining Locations]]
 +
[[Category:Water Supply]]

Latest revision as of 17:10, 25 May 2019

It is requested that a fork of this article be installed to Exoplatz.



Asteroids are a class of small astronomical objects (minor planets, Comets) that orbit the sun. The moons of Mars may have been asteroids that were captured. Those in highly irregular orbits are likely to be the baked rocky cores of comets that have long since lost most if not all of their volatile gasses. In terms of size asteroids range from the biggest 1 Ceres at about 930 kilometers in diameter to objects of a couple hundred tons of mass. Smaller objects are considered Meteorites or Comet Debris.

In terms of Lunar and other space development the main questions boil down to these two: 1)What chance do you or your base stand of getting hit by one? 2)Are the asteroids a better source of water than the moon?

Asteroids and Luna

Asteroids and why they matter

Categories of Asteroids ranked by semi-axis distance

Near Earth Asteroids [1]
Aten [2]
Apollo [3]
Amor [4]
Mars Crossing Asteroids
Main Belt between Mars and Jupiter
Hilda Asteroids that are close to Jupiter's orbit
Jovian Trojans [5]
Centaurs between Jupiter and Neptune [6]

Spectral Classification of Asteroids

  • C - Carbonaceous 75% of known asteroids (Includes B,D,F,G types)
  • S - Silicaceous 17% of known asteroids (Includes A,E,K,L types)
  • M - Metallic 8% of known asteroids

Lunar Meteorite Hazard

The current calculated risk of an astronaut on the moon being hit with a micrometeorite is 0.0003 per six hour period (Lunar Base handbook p.526). Assuming the same flux for the Earth and moon then for meteoroids larger than 10 microns in diameter, the rate of impact is 1 per square meter per year.[1] The odds of getting hit by anything bigger assumes you did not pick it up via radar and blast it. The bigger concern involves comets and dusty NEOs that get too close. This could cause a rain of medium velocity particles with a fairly intense flux. As seen with the annual comet swarms, their trails extend for millions of kilometers and vary tremendously in concentration.

Asteroid Defense

Planetary Defense - Detection (Part 1)

Planetary Defense - Characterization (Part 2)

The "Threat" of Asteroid Impacts - Breaking Down the Comprehensive Chart by the US Government

Asteroid mining

Asteroid mining is (not) dead

Asteroid Mining: Getting the first mission off the ground

Asteroids as potential sources of water

If the Moon appears to have very little water that is accessible, after Earth, the next logical place to get it is the water bearing Asteroids (by spectral analysis). Water is key for sustained development in space for use as rocket fuel and the ability to grow large scale amounts of food. Without it you are always sending expensive things up through the atmosphere of Earth. It takes a lot of water to farm with.

The closest asteroids with a strong spectral signature of water are found about with a perihelion of 2.1 AU. Any closer to the sun or with an axial orientation angled into the sun and the water will have been evaporated from the surface eons ago. There many be water below the surface yet this is a gamble without verification.

Asteroids with near guaranteed water start with 1 Ceres which is the biggest and seems to have had the gravity to hold on to its water. The density calculations for Ceres strongly suggest a rocky core and 60-100km deep ocean with a thin covering of dust & meteorites. Farther out the spectra for water gets stronger and stronger. If an outer main belt asteroid did not form from some major collision, it probably has water. The trick is getting to it and exploiting it.

The major drawback to all asteroid development is the distance involved. Unlike the moon which is close enough where a round trip journey takes a few days, round trip journeys to asteroids take several years using standard rockets. This means that an investor would have to wait years to get a return on their investment, making it economically less attractive than the Moon.

Also, with remotely control robots from Earth, you are looking at delays of 12-30 minutes before a command is received.

Astronauts will have to be in transit for years unless you can afford a very large rocket, or use nuclear propulsion. Although Mars has a deep gravity well, at Mars you can at least count on aerobraking to slow you down. Not so at the asteroids, although the asteroids are most attractive because they have a very shallow gravity well making it easier to recover material from them. Lastly it is very cold on most of these asteroids and that can cause all sorts of problems when the temperature drops to 50 kelvin in the shade.

In short if you can solve the hibernation issues and do without base support for years, the asteroids are a viable source for water.

Robotic miner/tankers

One possibility is a robotic spacecraft acting as a combination miner and tanker. The only abundant energy source in interplanetary space is sunlight, which points to some form of ion propulsion or solar sail. The probe would sync orbits and dock with a small icy asteroid with negligible surface gravity. Such a maneuver has already been successfully attempted by the Japanese Hayabusa mission. Solar power (either electrical or via reflectors) would be used to heat the asteroid surface, releasing volatiles such as water vapor which would be captured and condensed into storage tanks. A portion of the collected volatiles could then be used as ion thruster reaction mass for the return journey.

Both ion propulsion and solar sailing give continuous but very low thrust, so trips would be long term enterprises lasting decades. The long return times could be made up for in volume; mass production of such water mining craft would amortize the initial design investment and tooling over hundreds of trips.

External Links

Reference

  1. McGRAW-HILL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF Science & Technology, 8th Edition, (c)1997 volume 11, page 151.