|
Published by C1ay 08-30-2005
| ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| | ||||||||||
|
#1
By
infamous
on
08-30-2005
|
| Re: Plastic Spaceships I really enjoyed this article C1ay, this is what I call thinking out of the box. At least for me it seemed like a revolutionary idea. Even if the trip to Mars needs to be put off for a while, this material may come into popular use with our current space missions. Considering that this plastic is so much lighter, launching vehicles into orbit would become a much easier task. |
|
#3
By
nkt
on
08-31-2005
|
| Re: Plastic Spaceships I have to wonder, by this logic, why the lighter metals aren't considered? Lithium plates would do a great job as radiation armour, by the logic of this arguement. Strength matters very little in reality in space - you hit a big thing, you die, you hit a lot of small things at great speed, you die. You patch small holes as they happen. And they aren't going to get wet if you wrap them in this polythene beforehand, and deep sapce is quite dry, just like Mars. |
|
#4
By
alxian
on
08-31-2005
|
| Re: Plastic Spaceships last step is creating a viable magnetic field for deflecting those higher energy field. sheild technology is well on its way. sci-fi says superconducting magnetic coils are the answer, but we've yet to find a way to create universal magnetism (magnetism beyond the electron, gravity, something that also acts on the static non charged objects (perhaps charging them without adversly affecting their nature), a superconducting magnetic coil, a directional gravity field generator. a side benefit would be antigravity. if we can create such a gravity coil we can solve dozens of problems. namely gravity on a spaceship not based on centripetal force but opposing feild coils inside/below/within deck plating (pulling down on one side and neutral on the other lest one is to sit on the ceiling). |
|
#5
By
Tormod
on
08-31-2005
| |
| Re: Plastic Spaceships Quote:
| |
|
#6
By
alxian
on
08-31-2005
|
| Re: Plastic Spaceships possibly simply because they could insulate heat and not become rigid and brittle from the cold of space, they would however like the metals melt at some high temperature, mixing in some heat resistant materials like ceramics or carbon could provide heat resistance while conserving the remarkable weight saving vs metals. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Article: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Article Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Article | Article Starter | Category | Comments | Last Post |
| The Clear Plastic Bag | OpenMind5 | The Lounge | 4 | 08-23-2005 |
| The World of Plastic | OpenMind5 | Medical Science | 11 | 02-01-2005 |