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ABSTRACT
Exploitation of extraterrestrial mineral resources will follow practices in terrestrial mineral exploitation. In the various steps in exploration many decision points must be met and passed to undertake the next step toward development of the possible resource into a mine. For a resource to become a mine it must be able to show a profit. The decision points that follow must be met and passed successfully before going on to the next step along the road to discovery and development of a mineral deposit into a mine.
INTRODUCTION
At the present time, everything in
LEO Water, the source and sustainer of life on Earth, is a very rare commodity in our solar system, while ice is plentiful. Sixty percent of the terrestrial fresh water is tied up as ice at the poles and in alpine glaciers. Our understanding of the role and behavior of ices (water, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen, methane ices, etc.) will be of fundamental importance as humans move out from Earth.(D) The large bulk of mass placed in orbit is low-technology materials, mainly propellant. These might be obtained from the Moon, nearby asteroids or Phobos and Deimos. From
LEO Availability of propellants on nearby bodies in space is of crucial importance.(L1) Space is the driest of deserts! In a desert, no resource is of any value unless there is water, first for life support, and then to process the resource. With water everything is possible. Without water nothing is possible. Water is used for life support, propellants, chemical and mineralogical processing. We are mostly water. ![]()
Figure 1. Drill rig proposed in "Exploitation of Space Oases" in 1995 (K)
To date, there are two NEOs that should have water ice at depth. One is comet Wilson Harrington (1979 VA) with perihelion near the Earth's orbit. Rendezvous at perihelion will require a dVp = 11.4 km/sec or rendezvous at aphelion with a dVa - 6.8 km/sec in a 4.3 year orbit. At aphelion it is 4.3 AU from the sun and receives 1/16 the energy it would receive at perihelion. The high dV needed and the long time from launch to return eliminate Wilson-Harrington fromconsideration as an early source of water. Deimos (the outer moon of Mars) is the other NEO that should have water ice at depth. It is accessible every two years.(L1) A comparison of NEOs and their dVs in km/sec follows. dV for Transfers from
LEO Phobos has not been considered at this time because of the severe cracking due to the Stickney crater event. To drill for ices under these conditions would entail too great a risk of encountering cracks and loss of circulation of drilling fluid and any product. Pre-Exploration: The first thing before money is spent on exploration is to eliminate as many questionable targets as possible. The first cut is to eliminate bodies with inclinations greater than 150. Next, eliminate those with long periods, in this case those with periods greater than three years. Next, figure the periods of transfer orbits both at perihelion and at aphelion along with the combination of half periods. These should be some integer multiple of the Earth's period of one year. Of the NEOs reported in 1996, fifteen objects survive the above cuts. There are 11 Apollos, 1996 AJ1, 1996 AW1, 1996 BG1, 1996 BT, 1996 FG3, 1996 FT1, 1996 GF17, 1996 MO, 1996 TD9, 1996 TY11 and 1996 VB3; one Arjuna, 1996 XB27, and three Amors, 1996 AS1, 1996 F03 and 1996 GT. The Axnors are assigned a lower priority than the Apollos and Arjuna because of their longer periods and less intensive solar illumination. Because of their high solar illumination at perihelion, 1996 BT at 0.20 AU and 1996 AJ1 at 0.29 AU, get very hot and 1996 TY11 gets hot at 0.57 AU. The closer to the sun the body travels, the more energy is available for drilling and processing as well as for propulsion. The other Apollos and the Ariuna all are warmer at perihelion than the Amors. About half of the Apollos selected have orbits with shorter periods than the Amors. Thus a table of priorities can be developed for further steps in the investigation. Exploration: A choice of objects to investigate must be made. Resources are never available to investigate all possible targets. First, which objects offer the best possibilities of containing economically recoverable quantities of water ice. Size: Objects less than 100 meters in diameter are unlikely to contain enough water ice to be worth exploiting. This eliminates some of the very small objects detected by Spacewatch. This eliminates bodies such as 1991 BA with a diameter of 8 meters, 1991 VG at 14 m, 1993 BD3 with a diameter of about 20 meters,(C) 1993 KA2 at 7, 1994 GL at 80 m,(S) 1994 XM1 at 10 m,(B) and some 30 other bodies of less than 50 meters diameter.(R) Orbits: Any NEOs (Near-Earth Objects) to be considered must have proper synodic or phasing constraints on launch and return arrival times to be considered as targets. Launch opportunities are separated by long periods of time, making them one opportunity targets. This eliminates most as early opportunity targets. Only those asteroids that are accessible by transfer orbits that have periods that are multiples of the Earth's period can be considered. This applies to aphelion and perihelion rendezvous orbits.(S) A third type of orbit is a combination of one half of aphelion rendezvous, perihelion rendezvous and one half of the asteroids period, which would provide a long half period mining season. Any of these should still be limited to total periods that are integer multiples of the Earth's orbit, i.e. 1,2,3 and later possibly 4 and 5 years. This further cuts from early consideration many of the objects larger than 100 meters. Spectroscopy: NEOs that meet the above criteria must have the right composition to be considered as targets. First, this will require obtaining a visible light spectra. If this indicates the right composition, then infrared and ultraviolet spectra may be obtained to further define the composition. High albedo very bright objects should be eliminated. Carbonaceous bodies all have low albedos. This means that most NEOs that are easily seen are of little interest at this stage of exploration, for they are unlikely to contain ices. Combined water of hydration in minerals requires temperatures of near 10000C for recovery, while water ice can be vaporized at temperatures below 0 degrees C in the low pressures available in the vacuum of space. This eliminates many C-class asteroids which contain combined water. Unless the C-type body also contains water ice it is of no immediate interest. This focuses our attention to class P and D bodies which can contain ices without having combined water. Class D bodies are found in space near the orbit of Jupiter at 5 AU. Class P objects are located between the class C and class D objects at about 4 AU. Some class P objects show some water of hydration. Visible light spectra can distinguish the various types of bodies. This is the first actual exploration method to be applied to those bodies selected as possible targets. Spectra should cost about $2,500 each to obtain. Since large telescopes have their time committed to other programs, it will be necessary to schedule spectral observations ahead of time at times when the NEO is most visible. If the NEO is a type P or D, infra-red and ultraviolet spectra should be obtained to further define the composition. Again this requires careful scheduling. Outgassing: For exploring for water ice in a body that has passed the above tests, outgassing would indicate volatiles at depth. outgassing might be detected by duplicating the Russian Phobos II'S detection of a shock front cone for Deimos. A magnetometer might be passed through a possible shock front cone formed by the solar wind colliding with any outgasing. A solar sail might be used as the vehicle to carry the magnetometer. If any outgassing can be detected telescopically, this should be attempted before spending for the magnetometer survey. If outgassing is detected by one or both of these methods, the NEO should be included in the list of targets for sampling and possible water recovery testing. Sampling: Two possible approaches for obtaining a sample for analysis are to land a penetrator to recover a sample for return to Earth and/or to send a wildcat miniature production drill to recover water and other volatiles for return to HEEO or
LEO If water and volatiles are not found in quantity by the wildcat miniature drill, a decision must be made whether to use the drilling fluid and such volatiles that are obtained for propellant to return to
LEO Exploitation: The decision to attempt commercial exploitation of any deposit is dependant on the many decisions made in the above steps having been correct and successful. Table 2, is a projection of what might take place financially if a company is formed to exploit NEOs and Deimos for water. It proposes developing a robotic drill rig and vehicle for testing recovery of ices from NEOs and Deimos. The first launch is in the year 2000 to a NEO with return of 100 tonnes of ices and drill cuttings to HEEO or
LEO Once propellant is produced in
LEO Robotic: Robotic exploitation of the deposit is more risky than a manned exploitation. It has the advantage of requiring no life support and a smaller less expensive launch vehicle. The drill proposed in "Exploitation of Space Oases" serves as a test of recovery of any ices at depth as well as possibly returning water ice to HEEO or
LEO The mass of the drill rig, the heaviest part of the system is shown in table 1. The drilling equipment and materials gross less than 200 kg. Thus a total mass of the vehicle, drill and product bag should gross about 600 kg. For the Deimos drills the gross weight should be under one tonne. This leaves 4 tons for propellant/drill fluid for the Deimos systems and 2 tons for the NEO systems. Larger more robust drilling systems can be designed and sent to bodies that test successfully with the small test drill. Development of the larger drill will depend on a market developing for more water than can be supplied by the test drills. Manned: This requires the largest capital expense, but it has the capability for large scale exploitation of the resource. This should only be undertaken if robotic test exploitation is successful in recovering and returning a cargo of water ice to HEEO or
LEO Markets: All commodities lose real value with time. All material in
LEO Initially, the market will be very small, limited to the small scale operations of Mir
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Table 1. Mass of Drill and equipment for the Deimos version of the drill presented in "Exploitation of Space Oases" presented at Princeton May 1995. The total mass is in grams. The drill pipe is titanium for lightness and chemical resistance to corrosion.
Table 2. Hypothetical cash flow for the project using the drill rig vehicle presented in "Exploitation of Space Oases" at Princeton in 1995. This uses nine of the original twelve drill rig vehicles.
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Proposed cash flow | 12 initial vehicles | ||||||||
Year | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | |
Development & Construction | " 3 | " 2 | |||||||
Drill & Vehicle | "@$12.5m | 37.5m | 25m | ||||||
Launches @ $70m | |||||||||
Phobos/Deimos | Sea Launch | 210m | 140m | ||||||
Launches @ $60m | Proton | ||||||||
General Expense | Estimate | 10m | 10m | 10m | 10m | 10m | 10m | 10m | 10m |
External tank to Mir | 10m | 10m | |||||||
Totals | 10m | 10m | 10m | 257.5m | 10m | 185m | 20m | 10m | |
Interest @ 20% | 2m | 4.4m | 7.3m | 60.2m | 74.3m | 128.1m | 155.8m | ||
Grand Total | 10m | 22m | 36.4m | 301.2m | 371.4m | 630.7m | 778.9m | 944.7m | |
Product Sales | |||||||||
100 tonnes | Deimos/Phobos | "@$8k/kg | 800m | ||||||
200 tonnes | Deimos/Phobos | "@$6k/kg | 1,200m | ||||||
Total Gross Income | Estimate | 800m | 1,200m | ||||||
Accumulated Net Profit | 169.2m | 1,055.3m |