just use large solar concentrators to collect sunlight and melt the ore instead of generating electricity etc. you can do it in the belt too of course but inverse square means theyd have to be enormous. instead just move closer to the sun!
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if you're smart, you move the whole asteroid, instead of mining it out there. slow the rock, let it slip into an elliptical orbit so it goes down towards the sun, then use high intensity sunlight to park it at a closer orbit where you can refine it using sunlight
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when you need to send the material back out, no problem, you've got high-intensity sunlight and higher solar wind density so you can either use solar sails for that, or concentrate the sunlight to make solar thermal rockets
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also, since space is already full of radiation, there's no point in NOT using nuclear thermal rockets. you're not polluting space with more radiation than is already there, unlikely on earth. so if you're really worried about transport, it's fine, you have plenty of thrust
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Antwort an @beka_valentine
don't NTRs release a bunch of radionuclides, at fairly low velocities? those last a while and probably _will_ end up polluting some areas, especially if you're building at stable points
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Antwort an @NoraDotCodes
low velocities in space are still quite fast. but also, the expanding gas cloud will be so low density within minutes that it wont matter really it depends on the kind of rocket design anyway. gas core rockets can be way nastier b/c of the mixing of radionuclides with propellant
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Antwort an @beka_valentine @NoraDotCodes
this is a place where
@BeyondNerva would have a lot to say tho. im only passingly familiar, but from what i know, solid core NTRs are perfectly capable of running fairly cleanly and gas cores spew radiation but not so much as to be a problem1 Antwort 0 Retweets 1 Gefällt mir -
just.. dont do it in atmo
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Antwort an @beka_valentine @BeyondNerva
lol yeah that's a bad move but i mean, emitting radiation and even light radionuclides is fine but long lived transuranics can really ruin someone's day, especially if you're using NTRs to boost away from stable point facilities that are large and have a lot of traffic
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Antwort an @NoraDotCodes @beka_valentine
So... In a lot of cases the TUEs are the least problematic for a number of reasons: at low velocities and when ionized (likely just from solar wind) they're easily blocked using magnetic shielding (almost a certainty in an industrially developed location)... (hot take coming)
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hadn't thought about the fact they'd be really almost entirely ionized. that's a really good point, thank you!
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Antwort an @NoraDotCodes @beka_valentine
Unfortunately, the really nasty stuff is too... and it's traveling at relativistic speeds! Shielding against that makes fissile or transuranics kinda trivial in comparison.
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