Naturally, I have to wonder about legal issues related to dropping a pile of precious metal on some emtpy space ; How would property laws work if the asteroid hit a piece of empty space that actually belonged to someone?

Moderators: Alyrium Denryle, Edi, K. A. Pital
From what I can tell, the law is unclear if someone can actually claim an asteroid. NASA has previously used the Outer Space Treaty to say that they didn't need to pay parking fee's to someone who had bought the rights to an asteroid; but that was outside of a courtroom so it probably means nothing. It seems like any processed material from said asteroid would belong to the company, in which case if the metal landed in private property, it would still belong the company that processed the metal.PeZook wrote:If the asteroid is full of platinum or something, you could just chop off largeish chunks and deorbit them to be processed earthside at your leisure, because who the fuck cares that half of it burns off? And while this could in fact collapse platinum prices eventually, suddenly the hydrogen economy becomes a lot more viable, and opportunities begin opening up...
Naturally, I have to wonder about legal issues related to dropping a pile of precious metal on some emtpy space ; How would property laws work if the asteroid hit a piece of empty space that actually belonged to someone?
You know when we figured out how to bring down a large hunk of metal from orbit relatively undamaged? April 12, 1961, with Wostok 1.HMS Conqueror wrote:2. How do you return the material to earth? The current cost of earth-LEO dV is in the range of the weight of whatever you are moving's price in silver to its price in gold. The alternative to decelerating it all the way with rockets is atmospheric braking, but thermal ablation then destroys most of what you're trying to mine. You also have the problem of where to land it.
Added value. Sure, raw gold price might drop, but with larger supply, new applications would apply. Zero-G manufactured processors from space Iridium?3. Given that we're looking at something only worthwhile for an asteroid mainly made of platinum or something, how much is it actually going to yield if you return it to earth? Gold may be expensive right now, but if you find a way to produce vast amounts of it then the price is likely to crash, as the Spanish discovered in the 16th and 17th centuries.
For one, vehicle that can use its own engines again to brake instead of dropping like a brick doesn't need huge ablative armor. Which means less mass to carry to orbit (cheaper!) and stops bad things from happening, like Challenger and Columbia might attest.HMS Conqueror wrote:I don't understand what this has to do with reusable launch vehicles, but maybe I missed something. Reusable vehicles use atmospheric breaking to return to earth, so what do they want this fuel for?
This application of money is better than 95% of the stuff billionaires spend money on, IMHO.Chirios wrote:If not, then it will be a cool, if unsuccessful, attempt by billionaires to make our lives ever so slightly more awesome.
Out of curiosity, what's ghetto edit?Skgoa wrote:ghetto edit: sorry, that was a geometry fail. -_-
When you want to edit your previous post but the edit window has closed, so you're forced to double post.Irbis wrote:Out of curiosity, what's ghetto edit?Skgoa wrote:ghetto edit: sorry, that was a geometry fail. -_-
...that's not how supply works. The asteroid miners can only constrict their own supply, not the existing supply. At worst, they don't sell any gold/platinum/whatever at all, and we're in exactly the same position we're in right now. But if they do that they're left sitting on a ton of metal where their ton of cash used to be, and there's no profit in that.Companion Cube wrote:Would the price of gold/platinum/whatever necessarily fall? Asteroid miners would basically be a cartel, and could constrict the supply however they please.
This research paper (PDF) says that they've found relatively high platinum-metal concentrations in a particular kind of Near-Earth Asteroid, called the LL Chondrites (greater than 50 grams per ton of material from meteorite samples). That's still a lot of rock that you'd have to go through to get the Platinum Group Metals, but most smaller asteroids aren't solid chunks of rock anyways - they're loosely held clumps of rubble. If you had the fuel, you could just pull the asteroid apart until you get to the bits of rock that have the valuable stuff in them.Sky Captain wrote:What kind of concentrations of rare earth metals may be possible in asteorids? It's not like they are going to suddenly find asteorids made of almost pure gold and platinum. Most of them likely will be rock and nickel iron with only few percent at most of really valuable stuff. Mining water and manufacturing rocket fuel to provide boost services initially actually makes most sense because since the fuel already is in space it is highly valuable and extracting water to produce fuel will be much easier than extracting and refining metals.
Incorrect. While we'll never run out of Iron Ore; there will be a crossover point where asteroidal mining is cost effective for certain other materials, like say Platinum; which had only 239 tonnes mined in 2006. If you could drop 50 tonnes/year of asteroidal Platinum onto the world market; that'd let a lot more technologies use Platinum.Zinegata wrote:Mining asteroids was never really going to end resource scarcity, because it's simply cheaper to reopen depleted mines on Earth that mine them in space.
BZZT. Wrong.HMS Conqueror wrote:Space water isn't worth anything.
Unless you're Bear Grylls...MKSheppard wrote:I mean, "drink your own piss fifty times over" is not a good selling point for space tourism.
Yeah, but why 'ghetto'?Grumman wrote:When you want to edit your previous post but the edit window has closed, so you're forced to double post.
As you stated, space iron is worth 19.000$ per kilo in today's prices, and while dropping it to the Earth would destroy that value, there is place where it would still be just as valuable.MKSheppard wrote:Incorrect. While we'll never run out of Iron Ore;
I would guess it's a shorter way of saying 'poor man's edit', in the sense of 'improvised due to lack of proper resources'.Irbis wrote:Yeah, but why 'ghetto'?Grumman wrote:When you want to edit your previous post but the edit window has closed, so you're forced to double post.
What would you be doing on the Moon that requires imported raw materials? You don't need the Moon to get He3 (assuming He3 fusion ever becomes commercially viable as a power source). Actually using any raw materials dropped on the Moon would require that you send up some really compact foundries and on-site manufacturing plants. Unless you have people who really, really want to live there and can pay for it, there's not really much need to actually make anything there as opposed to sending it from Earth (or Low Earth Orbit).Irbis wrote:As you stated, space iron is worth 19.000$ per kilo in today's prices, and while dropping it to the Earth would destroy that value, there is place where it would still be just as valuable.MKSheppard wrote:Incorrect. While we'll never run out of Iron Ore;
The Moon.
Any kind of human activity on the Moon, be it mining of Hel-3, or just constructing permanent base, would rely on materials brought from Earth... Or replaced by materials brought from somewhere else. Dumping "waste" iron on Moon to make habitats, mass drivers, mines, etc. would work just as good and make the venture much cheaper. And once we move on to mine actual asteroid belt, moving material from there to Mars and Jupiter would be trivial compared to sending resources there directly from Earth.
Experiments maybe? Trying to make microgravity materials and shit like that?Guardsman Bass wrote:What would you be doing on the Moon that requires imported raw materials?
Part of the reason why I like their plan is because this is what they are focusing on. Having H2/O2 depots in space would cut down costs by a huge margin, but one of the physics guys will have to come along and explain what is actually necessary to keep H2/O2 in space long term.Back on topic, any water ice on asteroids would be useful as propellant. You could crack it into oxygen and hydrogen using the abundant solar power in space.
a reusable launch vehicle is lucky to get to LEO, because it has to carry around fucktons of crap and rocket science is a bitch.I don't understand what this has to do with reusable launch vehicles, but maybe I missed something.
keeping H2 cool in space is a bitch, but there are already designs from the ULA that reuse what little boil-off there is to reboost itself every now and then.but one of the physics guys will have to come along and explain what is actually necessary to keep H2/O2 in space long term.
Asteroid belt is a bit too disperse to make sense as mining area. thankfully there are fucktons of NEOs we can redirect or crash on the Moon to be mined.And once we move on to mine actual asteroid belt, moving material from there to Mars and Jupiter would be trivial compared to sending resources there directly from Earth.
I'm thinking the intent is not to move into an existing market (getting fuel to orbit) but to create a new one to supply the "next big thing". Think of it like a new boom town, first building to go up is a pub (well usually by Australian standards): somewhere with accommodation, food, etc a position currently filled somewhat by ISS, the next buildings are the supply stores and build/repair workshops be they blacksmiths or petrol stations.Sarevok wrote:But who would buy the water ? The ISS requires only 15000 pounds a year. If you are turning the water into propellant or fuel very few satellites ever go beyond LEO. At the prices they suggest it is not really much cheaper than launching it from Earth.