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Mining the Moon*
By
Harrison H. Schmitt1
Search and Discovery Article #70012 (2005)
Posted January 14, 2005
*Reprinted
from
Popular
Mechanics, October 2004, p. 56-63, with permission of Popular
Mechanics, with special appreciation to the author and Tracy Saelinger.
The PDF version is a replica of this article that may also be viewed on website
of Popular Mechanics (www.popularmechanics)
at
http://popularmechanics.com/science/space/2004/10/mining_moon/.
1Albuquerque, New Mexico. Apollo Astronaut, former U.S. Senator, AAPG member; see "Geologist Goes to the Moon" near the end of this article.
Foreword
An Apollo astronaut argues that with its vast stores of nonpolluting nuclear fuel, our lunar neighbor holds the key to Earth’s future.
Apollo 17 astronaut Harrison Schmitt left the moon 32 years ago with 244 pounds of rocks and an abiding desire to see humankind continue its exploration of space. Now, in an exclusive essay for POPULAR MECHANICS, Schmitt explains why the time is right for America to return.
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Introduction
A sample of soil
Small quantities of helium-3 previously
discovered on Earth intrigued the scientific community. The unique
atomic structure of helium-3 promised to make it possible to use it as
fuel for nuclear fusion, the process that powers the sun, to generate
vast amounts of electrical power without creating the troublesome
radioactive byproducts produced in conventional nuclear reactors.
Extracting helium-3 That vision seemed impossibly distant during the decades in which manned space exploration languished. Yes, Americans and others made repeated trips into Earth orbit, but humanity seemed content to send only robots into the vastness beyond. That changed on January 14, 2004, when President George W. Bush challenged NASA to “explore space and extend a human presence across our solar system.” It was an electrifying call to action for those of us who share the vision of Americans leading humankind into deep space, continuing the ultimate migration that began 42 years ago when President John F. Kennedy first challenged NASA to land on the moon. We can do so again. If Bush’s initiative is sustained by Congress and future presidents, American leadership can take us back to the moon, then to Mars and, ultimately, beyond. Although the president’s announcement did not mention it explicitly, his message implied an important role for the private sector in leading human expansion into deep space. In the past, this type of public-private cooperation produced enormous dividends. Recognizing the distinctly American entrepreneurial spirit that drives pioneers, the President’s Commission on Implementation of U.S. Space Exploration Policy subsequently recommended that NASA encourage private space-related initiatives. I believe in going a step further. I believe that if government efforts lag, private enterprise should take the lead in settling space. We need look only to our past to see how well this could work. In 1862, the federal government supported the building of the transcontinental railroad with land grants. By the end of the 19th century, the private sector came to dominate the infrastructure, introducing improvements in rail transport that laid the foundation for industrial development in the 20th century. In a similar fashion, a cooperative effort in learning how to mine the moon for helium-3 will create the technological infrastructure for our inevitable journeys to Mars and beyond.
A Reason to Return
Throughout history, the search for precious
resources— Although quantities sufficient for research exist, no commercial supplies of helium-3 are present on Earth. If they were, we probably would be using them to produce electricity today. The more we learn about building fusion reactors, the more desirable a helium- 3-fueled reactor becomes. Researchers have tried several approaches to harnessing the awesome power of hydrogen fusion to generate electricity. The stumbling block is finding a way to achieve the temperatures required to maintain a fusion reaction. All materials known to exist melt at these surface-of-the-sun temperatures. For this reason, the reaction can take place only within a magnetic containment field, a sort of electromagnetic Thermos bottle.
Initially, scientists believed they could
achieve fusion using deuterium, an isotope of hydrogen found in
seawater. They soon discovered that sustaining the temperatures and
pressures needed to maintain the so-called deuterium-deuterium fusion
reaction for days on end exceeded the limits of the magnetic containment
technology. Substituting helium-3 for tritium allows the use of
electrostatic confinement, rather than needing magnets, and greatly
reduces the complexity of fusion reactors as well as eliminates the
production of high-level radioactive waste (Figure
3). These differences will make fusion a practical
It is not a lack of engineering skill that
prevents us
An aggressive program to mine helium-3
Lunar Mining
Samples collected in 1969 by Neil Armstrong
during the first lunar landing showed that helium-3 concentrations in
lunar soil are at least 13 parts per billion (ppb) by weight. Levels may
range Because the concentration of helium- 3 is extremely low, it would be necessary to process large amounts of rock and soil to isolate the material. Digging a patch of lunar surface roughly three-quarters of a square mile to a depth of about 9 ft. should yield about 220 pounds of helium-3— enough to power a city the size of Dallas or Detroit for a year.
Although considerable lunar soil would have
to be processed, the mining costs would not be high by terrestrial
standards. Automated machines, perhaps like those shown in
Figure 1, might perform the work. Extracting
the isotope would not be particularly difficult. Heating and agitation
release gases trapped in the soil. As the vapors are cooled to absolute
zero, the various gases present sequentially separate out of the mix. In
the final step, special membranes would separate helium-3 The total estimated cost for fusion development, rocket development, and starting lunar operations would be about $15 billion. The International Thermonuclear Reactor Project, with a current estimated cost of $10 billion for a proof-of-concept reactor, is just a small part of the necessary development of tritium-based fusion and does not include the problems of commercialization and waste disposal.
The second-generation approach to controlled
fusion power involves combining deuterium and helium-3. This reaction
produces a high-
New SpacecraftPerhaps the most daunting challenge to mining the moon is designing the spacecraft to carry the hardware and crew to the lunar surface. The Apollo Saturn V spacecraft remains the benchmark for a reliable, heavy-lift moon rocket. Capable of lifting 50 tons to the moon, Saturn V’s remain the largest spacecraft ever used. In the 40 years since the spacecraft’s development, vast improvements in spacecraft technology have occurred. For an investment of about $5 billion it should be possible to develop a modernized Saturn capable of delivering 100-ton payloads to the lunar surface for less than $1500 per pound.
Returning to the moon would
be a worthwhile pursuit even if obtaining helium-3 were the only goal.
But over time the pioneering venture would pay more valuable dividends.
Settlements established for helium-3 mining would branch out into other
activities that support space exploration. Even with the next generation
of Saturns, it will not be economical to lift the massive quantities of
oxygen, water and structural materials needed to create permanent human
settlements in space. We must acquire the technical skills to extract
these vital materials With such tremendous business potential, the entrepreneurial private sector should support a return to the moon, this time to stay. For an investment of less than $15 billion—about the same as was required for the 1970s Trans Alaska Pipeline—private enterprise could make permanent habitation on the moon the next chapter in human history.
A Geologist Goes to the Moon
BUDGET cuts, a public bored with space and
fear of losing a crew—Apollo 13 was still a vivid memory—turned
Apollo 17 into the last moon mission of the 20th century. NASA
decided to get the most scientific data possible
Postscript: Living Off The Land (Stefano Coledan)
Exploration of the solar system will be fueled by materials found scattered across asteroids, moons and planets (Figure 7).
Moon
The discovery of a helium isotope, helium-3,
on the moon (Figure 7) has given scientists
ideas on how to produce electricity far more efficiently than with
hydrocarbons or curent nuclear plants. The large amounts of
Studies conducted by NASA and others have
determined that water, rocket propellant, and chemicals needed to
sustain a human outpost could be manufactured
Scientists believe these leftovers of the
solar system’s formation (Figure 7),
floating between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars, may contain rare
elements and water. Mining these rocks, some as big as mountains, will
be neither easy nor cheap. Using technologies previously developed to
extract precious materials
As early as next year (2005), we may learn
whether Saturn’s largest moon, Titan (Figure 7),
preserves organic molecules similar to those believed to exist on
primeval Earth. The Cassini-Huygens spacecraft is designed to determine
whether the atmosphere of Titan indeed contains ammonia and hydrocarbons
such as ethane and methane. All these chemicals contain a common
element: hydrogen. Extracting this gas in a minus 400oF
environment could be easier than on Earth since it would be already
liquefied and ready to be used as the most powerful chemical rocket
fuel. With organic chemicals as ingredients, a limitless
Earthlings first learned about the existence
of the solar wind 35 years ago when Apollo 11 astronauts Neil
Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin deployed a silver-colored sheet on the moon.
Scientists wanted to intercept particles coming
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