I remember asking once, we don’t we just shoot our surplus trash off into the sun and was told that by the cost of launching it outweighs the benefits. Fair!

But what about all of the old satellites and space stations? Why don’t we just send a giant magnet around the earth once or twice and then slingshot all that space junk into the sun and thus giving all science fiction writers (when they return from their strike) a plot point they can no longer use in their film scripts?

Seriously though, without the cost of breaching the atmosphere, this seems really cheap to pull, why don’t we do this? Why isn’t this a standard thing?

  • @hordenduopol
    link
    English
    41 year ago

    After a good chunk of asking and following up AI gave me a nice sounding answer: “That’s a good question. According to an article on NASA, it takes 55 times more energy to go to the Sun than it does to go to Mars. The reason is that Earth is traveling very fast — about 67,000 miles per hour — almost entirely sideways relative to the Sun. The only way to get to the Sun is to cancel that sideways motion. It takes a lot of energy to do that.”

    • @[email protected]OPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31 year ago

      But sling shots? I saw something that mentioned NASA used sling shots and centrifugal force to get something somewhere and in fact, haven’t they sent a bunch of stuff to Venus lately? We just need so keep sling shotting around planets until boom, we’re in orbit of the sun circling until we get low enough to get melted!

      • @AdrianTheFrog
        link
        English
        21 year ago

        It’s called a gravity assist and can save a lot of fuel at the cost of travel time. (no centrifugal force involved) It also takes a lot of planning effort. It still takes a fair amount of fuel to reach the moon, and to set up more gravity assists. It’s much easier to slow things down just enough that they will fall and burn in the atmosphere.