100% Sebastian about the Moon Is a Harsh Mistress - and glad to see someone else read that great book. I'd go for burning hydrogen - not hydrogen fusion - if we can extract water from the Moon with solar power as the initial kick-starter. We will need the hydrogen for future rockets launched from the Moon's lower gravity to Mars and beyond too... On Mon, Mar 17, 2025 at 10:01 AM Sebastian Moeller via Nnagain < nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote: > > > > On 17. Mar 2025, at 13:41, Douglas Goncz A.A.S. M.E.T. 1990 via Nnagain < > nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote: > > > > Hello Dr. David. > > > > The gravity at the surface of the Moon is larger than might be expected > since the volume to radius ratio is as r squared, so that with a difference > of 100 times that is a factor of 100x in gravity at surface we can predict > that the rocks they'll be throwing at us we'll be falling up that is thrown > out of the gravity wall for 1/10 the trip roughly and falling down that is > falling into that gravity well for 9/10 of the trip causing an overall > Factor of enormous acceleration. Offhand I would say the process would > achieve 80% of escape velocity. > > > > The Australian science agency has a nice chart out for asteroid type > objects on their website. It summarizes the relationship between the many > many small rocks which are in our system and the very few large rocks which > accompany them as they move at various speeds knowing only statistical > information about how many rocks of which size and how fast they're moving > and what energy the net result is > > > > They quote figures of atta joules. So once given the upward that is > towards the Earth impetus a mere Boulder could do really significant damage > assuming that the transit time could be controlled carefully in their was > either accurate aiming or some type of midcourse correction to get the > target secured. > > > > Trying to find my way back on topic to Net neutrality. Maybe a moon base > could be set up with a transmitter powered by a small nuclear reactor > > Mmmh, radionuclear power generation seems realistic, a nuclear reactor > less so, given that you somehow need to dispose of waste heat eventually > and vacuum ist a good isolator... then again, for a sufficiently large moon > base you might actually want a heating source to make up for the radiative > heat loss. > > That said, you know what they say about the moon being a harsh mistress, > eh? > > > > receiving signals from Earth and retransmitting them to make the > connections for data and voice. Compared to lofting a satellite having the > time to construct such an item on the surface of the Moon would be > advantageous the way it seems to me. I'm pretty sure that a satellite would > have to be put into place in orbit with its power supply and all that and > that's what starling does bloody bloody blah. > > > > By the way I'm running for president. > > / / < GONCZ2028 > / > > > > > > Cheers > > Doug > > > > > > > > > > > > On Mon, Oct 7, 2024, 10:04 AM David Bray, PhD > > wrote: > > > > ... > > > > > > Meanwhile China probably will land humans on the moon within the next > four > > > years of whomever is the next U.S. President. That may happen before > the > > > U.S. returns to the Moon. Either way, a "base" on the Moon by 2035 > (which > > > is PRC's goal) even if it's robots - or humans with the risk of loss of > > > life) raises some challenges in terms of SIGINT, GEOINT, and the > general > > > ability to hurl rocks into Earth's gravity well.... > > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Nnagain mailing list > > Nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net > > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/nnagain > > _______________________________________________ > Nnagain mailing list > Nnagain@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/nnagain >