Plan to Turn Asteroids into Spaceships Could Spur Off-Earth Mining
A
few decades from now, asteroids may be flying themselves to mining outposts in
space, nobly sacrificing their abundant resources to help open the final
frontier to humanity.
That's
the vision of California-based company Made In Space, which was recently
awarded NASA funding to investigate how to turn asteroids into
giant, autonomous spacecraft.
The
project, known as RAMA (Reconstituting Asteroids into Mechanical Automata), is
part of Made In Space's long-term plan to enable space colonization by helping
make off-Earth manufacturing efficient and economically viable. [How Asteroid
Mining Could Work (Info graphic)
Today,
we have the ability to bring resources from Earth," Made In Space co-founder and chief technology
officer Jason Dunn told Space.com. "But when we get to a tipping point
where we need the resources in space, then the question becomes, 'Where do they
come from and how do we get them, and how do we deliver them to the location
that we need?' This is a way to do it.
The plan
Made
in Space's idea involves sending an advanced, robotic "Seed Craft"
out to rendezvous with a succession of near-Earth
asteroids in space.
The
Seed Craft would harvest material from the space rocks, then use this feedstockto construct propulsion, navigation, energy-storage and other key systems
onsite with the aid of 3D printing and other technologies. (Made In Space has
considerable 3D-printing expertise; the company built the two 3D printers that
were installed
aboard the International Space Station in the past year and a
half.)
Thus
transformed into autonomous spacecraft, the asteroids could be programmed to
fly to a mining station in Earth-moon space, or anywhere else they were needed.
This approach would be much more efficient than launching a new capture probe
(or probes) to every single space rock targeted for resource exploitation, Made
In Space representatives said.
The
converted asteroids wouldn't resemble the traditional idea of spacecraft, with
rocket engines and complex electronic circuitry. Rather, everything would be
mechanical and relatively primitive.
For
example, the computer would be analog, akin, perhaps, to the Antikythera
mechanism invented by the ancient Greeks to chart the motion of heavenly
bodies, Dunn said. And the propulsion system might be some sort of catapult
that launches boulders or other material off the asteroid in a controlled way,
thereby pushing the space rock in the opposite direction (as described by
Newton's Third Law of Motion), he added.
At
the end of the day, the thing that we want the asteroid to be is technology
that has existed for a long time. The question is, 'Can we convert an asteroid
into that technology at some point in the future?'" Dunn said. "We
think the answer is yes.
Project
is not starting from scratch. Autonomous 3D printers that
use mechanically driven systems already exist, Dunn noted, as do mechanical
computers made of 3D-printed parts.
Still,
making it happen will require significant advances in a number of areas,
including in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) the art of living off the land. Made In Space
is counting on NASA to push ISRU technology forward, Dunn said. (Advanced ISRU
tech will be vital for supporting astronauts on Mars and other off-Earth
outposts, NASA officials have said
Early days yet
Made
In Space's larger vision won't be realized for a while, because RAMA is still
in the very early stages.
In
April, the project received a Phase 1 grant from the NASA Innovative Advanced
Concepts (NIAC) program, which aims to encourage the development of potentially
revolutionary space-exploration technologies.
Phase
1 NIAC awardees get $100,000 for nine months' worth of initial feasibility
studies. (Recipients can then apply for a Phase 2 NIAC award, which is worth
about $500,000 and funds two years of further concept development.)
Any
discussion of Project RAMA timelines is therefore incredibly speculative, Dunn
stressed. Still, he estimated that the effort might require 20 years or so of
technology development and other work. If that's the case, the first Seed Craft
may get off the ground in the late 2030s perhaps just as asteroid-mining and
off-Earth manufacturing are coming into their own.
"The
anticipation is that the RAMA architecture is a long time line, and when it
becomes capable is about the same time that people really need the
resources," Dunn said.
Project
RAMA could also have applications here on Earth, he added, saying that machines
similar to Seed Craft could do a variety of jobs around the planet.
You
could build infrastructure in remote locations somewhat autonomously, and
convert resources into useful devices and mechanical machines," Dunn said.
"This actually could solve some pretty big problems on Earth, from housing
to construction of things that make people's lives better.
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