Douglas B. Clark
Community Manager & Editor, ChEnected
AIChE
Douglas Clark is a copywriter and speechwriter with a healthy appetite for all things digital. He has more than 15 years' agency and independent experience in corporate and marketing communication, and his clients come from diverse industries, specializing in anything from financial products and toothpaste to software for the visualization of computational fluid dynamics data. Among his clients are Accenture, American Express, Coca-Cola, Colgate-Palmolive, Hewlett-Packard, and Panasonic.


Do you think we'll be mining asteroids for minerals in 10 years?
Diagram: Hexi Baoyin, Yang Chen, Jungeng Li; Illustration: composite of NASA photos, istockphoto
Comments
I imagine the cost to actually set-up mining equipment and transport minerals back to earth from an asteroid would be prohibitive. Even the simplest PHA on the process would ask “what if the asteroid experienced orbital decay and slammed into the earth”? I would also guess the captured asteroid’s velocity would have to be constantly adjusted as its Mass is being reduced due to the mining activity, to conserve angular momentum, otherwise we may lose the asteroids orbit. Interesting concept, probably not with in ten years, and probably not business viable until all methods to extract minerals and recycle minerals from earth have nearly exhausted themselves. Can you imagine thousands of asteroids being pulled into earth’s orbit, so that the hundreds of companies and countries competing with each other can service their business or national interest? Now that makes for a good Sci-Fi movie.
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