Thank flying duck for rich people. James Cameron and Google co-founder Larry Page have unveiled a brand new resources company that plan to mine
asteroids floating near the Earth. I hear Michael Bay and the guys over at Yahoo
were thinking of starting up a gardening business based on solitaire.
If you don’t know what Planetary Resources Inc. are up to by now you must have been hiding under a
rock outside the asteroid belt, but have a look at video below.
How awesome/bat shit crazy is that? I’ve imagined them
sitting around a futuristic board room telling each other “it’s so crazy it
just might work…”
There are more than 8000 asteroids that boffins classify as “near
Earth” that could be rich
in rare and important metals that can be brought back to Earth, but more importantly the asteroids could contain water.
“Big deal, I can understand about the metals and shit, but
we have water here,” I hear you say (that’s right; I’ve bugged your place. You shouldn't swear - it degrades you). But believe me, water in space is a big
deal.
When you go hiking you can either take all your water with
you or you can organise for water to be waiting for you along the way. If you
are boldly going where no one has gone before, you need to take all your water
with you. That can be heavy. Every day you need about 2 litres of water per person for
drinking, cooking, washing, etc. But if you could have water waiting
for you, you need only take the amount of water you need to get you there. This means
carrying less water, lighter payloads in space shuttles, and therefore less
energy to get that shit into space. Astro-dudes will be able to grow their own
food, have longer showers, swim a few laps before breakfast, wet t-shirt competition...
You know live a little.
This will allow us probe (he he) the special vast regions
(he he) of space (he… oh wait, there’s no euphemism there), and who doesn't want
more probing? H.G Wells is probably an exception; he knows what happened last
time.
Some of these “near Earth” asteroids are a better choice
than the moon for a drive through for two reasons; it takes less energy to get there and leave in some cases, and the moon is so 1960’s. Despite the Soviets getting there in 1959 with an unmanned craft that had less processing power than a
modern air-conditioner.
I wish Planetary Resources all the best. If you find
Unobtainium James, leave it the fuck there. Michael and I don’t want to have sit through another Avatar mate. But if we get Richard Branson away from being the face of space
travel, it will be worth the risk.
If you could send an appliance to space, which one would you
blow into the sky?
If i could send an appliance into space... my sister electric keyboard. Does that count? Cause man, would that make my life easier!
ReplyDelete/following//
It does count, especially if she is playing Rick Astley
Deletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ
I'd send iphones into space, so they could land on other planets, aliens could pick them up and they could discover that there's an app that would allow them to finally provide power to their space crafts.
ReplyDeleteAliens are less likely to invade once they start playing Angry Birds
DeleteThis is so cool, but sounds like it came out of a movie.
ReplyDeleteThat's why I think James Cameron is an advisor
DeleteSure, nearby water is good, but I bet what an astronaut would really love is a nice cold beer waiting for him on an asteroid. And women. I don't suppose they can have 'nearby scantily clad women' too?
ReplyDeleteGood point, but having water means that there is always going to be beer available for brewing during the trip ;)
DeleteAnd with an entire environment totally temperature controlled, even the dodgiest homebrew will be awesome and fresh. Welcome to the future.
There is a stout brewed to be drunk in space. Less carbonation so as not to lose it all over the shuttle.
You said probe. Lol.
ReplyDeleteSorry that's the best I can do right now. I'm so tired. Buck flogs.
If Richard Branson is the face of space travel I quit.
Probe is just a naturally comical word.
Deletehe he
Probe