Another Important Idea That Everyone Should Know About :-)
Capture a small asteroid. Stick it into geosynchronous orbit above a reasonably stable part of the Equator. Attach it to the ground with a big cable. It will need to be a very strong cable to support its own weight (to reach geosynchronous orbit, it would have to be nearly 36,000 km long), so you'd better make it out of carbon nanotubes. Run a railway line up the side. Ta-da! You've just reduced the cost of reaching geosynchronous orbit by a factor of more than 100.
What you have just built is called a Space Elevator.
This idea isn't actually as daft as I've just made it sound, and some very bright people (including NASA) are working on building one. In fact, if you want to go to Mars, it would probably be cheaper to build a space elevator first. These guys reckon they can do it by 2031. There's lots more information in the Wikipedia article linked; I'd also recommend Arthur C. Clarke's excellent novel The Fountains of Paradise, which is half about the construction of a space elevator and half about his beloved Sri Lanka.
Capture a small asteroid. Stick it into geosynchronous orbit above a reasonably stable part of the Equator. Attach it to the ground with a big cable. It will need to be a very strong cable to support its own weight (to reach geosynchronous orbit, it would have to be nearly 36,000 km long), so you'd better make it out of carbon nanotubes. Run a railway line up the side. Ta-da! You've just reduced the cost of reaching geosynchronous orbit by a factor of more than 100.
What you have just built is called a Space Elevator.
This idea isn't actually as daft as I've just made it sound, and some very bright people (including NASA) are working on building one. In fact, if you want to go to Mars, it would probably be cheaper to build a space elevator first. These guys reckon they can do it by 2031. There's lots more information in the Wikipedia article linked; I'd also recommend Arthur C. Clarke's excellent novel The Fountains of Paradise, which is half about the construction of a space elevator and half about his beloved Sri Lanka.
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Something I've never seen discussed (probably because I've never read a scientific paper on the subject) is the fact that a space elevator would have to withstand a horizontal force from anything climbing up or down it: an object in geostationary orbit is moving much faster around the centre of the Earth than an object on the ground. I think this would (a) cause the elevator to swing very slightly, akin to giving the string of a pendulum a little push, and (b) increase the tension in the cable slightly.
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Horizontal force: Sounds about right (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Elevator#Angular_momentum.2C_speed_and_cable_lean). You can help somewhat by pairing climbers going up with climbers coming down.
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Not that getting an asteroid isn't a nifty idea but it does increase the cost of the thing, just a wee bit.
Also of note you can inject satellites into LEO with a space elevator. Just let go sligtly below GEO and your load will shape an eccentric orbit. Rocket motor to circularize your orbit at LEO and you're set.
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