You guys have any idea of the technology needed to construct a space elevator?
Most problematically, the cable must be made of a material with an extremely high tensile strength/density ratio (the limit to which a material can be stretched without irreversibly deforming divided by its density). At the minimum a space elevator could be made relatively economically if a cable with a density similar to graphite, with a tensile strength of ~65–120 GPa couldbe produced in bulk at a reasonable price.
By comparison, most steel has a tensile strength of under 1 GPa, and the strongest steels no more than 5 GPa. The much lighter material Kevlar has a tensile strength of 2.6–4.1 GPa, while quartz fiber can reach upwards of 20 GPa; even the tensile strength of diamond filaments would theoretically only be minimally higher.
Carbon nanotubes could be an option. While theoretically carbon nanotubes can have tensile strengths beyond 120 GPa, in practice the highest tensile strength ever observed in a single-walled tube is 63 GPa, and such tubes averaged breaking between 30 and 50 GPa. Even the strongest fiber made of nanotubes is likely to have notably less strength than its components. Using VnW bonded yarn could be an option but that is still in its infancy.
This is just one tiny problem for the idea of a space elevator (there are many more) so i doubt it will happen for a while. But god damn they look cool
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