Unbeknownst to the majority of
Americans a NASA spacecraft named Dawn is even now slowly approaching
the dwarf planet Ceres preparing to enter orbit around that
mysterious body floating in the void between Mars and Jupiter. This
would normally only be important to planetary scientists and civilian
space geeks like me since most bodies in the asteroid belt are about
as exciting as the average Idaho potato, curiously something they
strongly resemble.
Not Ceres, it is the largest body in the asteroid belt, roughly the size of Texas, with a significant
portion of its mass consisting of water ice. There are also strong
hints that it may harbor a subsurface ocean like the Jovian moon,
Europa is thought to possess. For several decades in the ninetieth
century, it was actually classified as a planet before some grumpy
scientists got together and busted it down to glorified space junk.
Up until a couple of days ago the boys and girls at NASA seemed to be preparing for the usual science nerdfest as the Dawn spacecraft closed in on Ceres, then something fairly weird happened. Two bright spots appeared on the surface
centered inside an impact crater. Now, “bright spots” are a
relative term since in actuality Ceres is as black as a lump of coal
but still the appearance of these two highly reflective areas has
sent everyone involved with the project into a tizzy.
More than likely what Dawn spotted is
the eruption of some sort of ice volcano, absolutely scientifically
cool since that would mean that there is a subsurface ocean of liquid
water. That alone would make the astrobiology crowd extremely happy
since the general consensus is that where there is liquid water, some
form of life could exist. Given Ceres location in the solar system it
would be far easier to send another probe to it than try and land on
Europa and then somehow penetrate several miles of ice to reach its
ocean. The bad news for any possible lifeforms native to Ceres is
that circumstances will eventually make it a valuable piece of real
estate.
No, I didn't suddenly have a nasty,
unplanned acid flashback that caused my brain to phase out from
reality. See the asteroid belt has millions of rocks of various sizes
floating around waiting for someone to come claim them. Why would
anyone want one of these leftover pieces from the formation of the
solar system? Because a good number of them are made up of iron,
nickel, and other rare and extremely precious metals. John S Lewis,author of Mining the Sky, has done the numbers and says that an asteroid one-kilometer in diameter would have a mass of about two billion tons and consist in part of about 30 million tons of nickel,1.5 million tons of metal cobalt, and 7500 tons of platinum. The platinum alone would be worth about 105 billion dollars. All told the mineral wealth in the asteroid belt could amount up to 100 billion dollars for each person on Earth.
Yes, going into space to claim and then
begin processing asteroids for their metals has been problematic for
several reasons but just two have been the real show stoppers. The
first being that while precious metals are becoming rarer on Earth we
haven't quite exhausted every source here. Although, the demand for
these metals is growing exponentially with no end in sight. The
second reason has to do with a dependable source of water and that is
where Ceres comes into play. The water on Ceres could be separated to
provide hydrogen and oxygen for fuel for spacecraft for both
exploration and the return trip home to Earth. The water on Ceres
would also be used in life support systems for any possible base
built on the surface and for manned spacecraft.
None of this will happen overnight,
currently purposed asteroid mining plans have everything done by
robot probes but these are all small scale ventures. It is not hard
to foresee a scenario where production is quickly ramped up with
humans having to be on-site to oversee operations.
Some have mixed feeling about humans
spreading out into the solar system. They have compared us to locust
or viruses and you can't really argue with their point. Since the
advent of civilization we have just about ruined the planet with our
numbers, wars, and pollution. Others like me see the possibility of
asteroid mining and other space-borne industrial operations as away
to lessen human impact on a gravely injured planet. Whatever the
case, unless we blow ourselves up sheer pressure from resource
depletion will eventually push someone into space to take advantage
of what is just floating around in the void.
7 comments:
I don't know much about it but anything to do with 'space' fascinates me!
I happen to find the average Idaho potato immensely exciting, thank you very much, especially sliced thin with some peanut oil heating up close by.
;)
I'll have to check out that link to Dawn a bit more, because now I have more and more questions...
Akelamalu: Since the 1980's I've been patiently waiting for the next phase of the "Space Age" where such things as asteroid mining become possible. It's still a few years down the road but I may actually see it in the 2020's.
Mike: Good point.
Pixel: It goes into orbit around Ceres on Friday. I can't wait for better pictures of the bright spots.
I am thinking that water would be the resource most needed in future here on earth.
But it is so damned heavy!
Perhaps separation into component gasses then re-formation after transport?
Interesting--"cool" ice volcanoes and all! Nice writing.
Are you familiar with the author Dana Stabenow? She writes the Kate Shugak mystery series (set in Alaska - FABULOUS books). Anyway, before she wrote those she wrote a not very well received series of sci-fi books about this very subject. Sort of. Anyway, if you're interested, the first one is called Second Star (1991).
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