
Originally Posted by
cjameshuff
Not that manned missions are necessary, but the gravity "problem" was solved long before we got anything into orbit. We don't need anything more than centrifugal gravity.
Anyway, if they can set up a volatile-harvesting operation in orbit, that opens up a huge variety of opportunities. Resupply, orbital tug services, etc. Much of the cost of putting anything in orbit is delta-v, the cost of delta-v is largely propellant, and being able to extract propellant from orbital sources instead of lifting it out of Earth's gravity well on low-Isp high-thrust rockets would be a major benefit. As we do things now, launching to LEO is about half the cost of launching to geosynchronous orbits...with cheap propellant in orbit, a tug service hauling satellites from LEO to GSO could turn quite a profit while reducing the cost of those satellites, while reducing insurance costs by reducing the risk of the satellite getting stranded in the wrong orbit. They could even sell slots on geosynchronous orbital busses that provide power, stationkeeping, backup communications, and regular access by robotic servicing missions, vastly reducing the complexity and risk of putting hardware in orbit...all ultimately resulting from availability of volatiles from orbital sources. There's numerous large potential markets in orbit just waiting for someone to come along and provide goods and services.
Returning large quantities of anything to Earth is a very long term goal, but it's also not remotely as expensive as sending mass in the other direction. One approach...shape a crude iron shell, possibly give it some minimal heat shielding, stuff your payload inside if it's not embedded in the iron itself, and drop it off with a tug. Once you have enough infrastructure set up in orbit, the only continuing cost is propellant...which once again, does not have to be launched from Earth.
That requires a fair bit of infrastructure for processing in orbit, which will take time and money to put in place...but these people are explicitly not looking for a short term profit. In the early stages, though, the scarcity of asteroid material in usefully shaped, workable, undamaged pieces could easily make it more valuable than any mineral content. Artworks made from materials that few people have ever seen before would not sell at the market price of their mineral content. Mass produced sample retrieval missions could at least offset some of their cost while getting material to test industrial processes on.
It's clear that djellison just refuses to even acknowledge any of the approaches that could actually make it feasible. All his arguments presume one-shot missions with NASA style system development, operations, and budgets, all equipment and material being launched from Earth, and a narrow minded focus on short term profits from material brought to Earth's surface. That's not a feasible approach, no. That's also not how anyone seriously proposing orbital industry thinks it'll be done, and it's foolish to continue arguing on that basis.