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Is there any known or guessed quantity of He3 on asteroids or dead
comets? If an object has been orbitting for 4+ billion years, it should have collected some from the solar wind. It seems that He3 would be easier to obtain from something like Eros than the Moon, if it existed in similar density. If there was a supply, collecting and separating He3 could be much simpler in the micro-G environment. I did a quick Google and found little, but am wondering what you think? Josh |
#2
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In article ,
Josh Gigantino wrote: Is there any known or guessed quantity of He3 on asteroids or dead comets? If an object has been orbitting for 4+ billion years, it should have collected some from the solar wind. The big uncertainty is that we know essentially nothing about the depth and age of the regolith on asteroids. Yeah, there'd probably be some, but whether it's worth exploiting is another question. ...If there was a supply, collecting and separating He3 could be much simpler in the micro-G environment. Or not, as the case may be. Handling fine powders may well be easier in gravity. -- MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. | |
#3
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![]() Josh Gigantino wrote: Is there any known or guessed quantity of He3 on asteroids or dead comets? If an object has been orbitting for 4+ billion years, it should have collected some from the solar wind. It seems that He3 would be easier to obtain from something like Eros than the Moon, if it existed in similar density. If there was a supply, collecting and separating He3 could be much simpler in the micro-G environment. I did a quick Google and found little, but am wondering what you think? Josh From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis "But the circumstances of the asteroids differ from those we have studied on the Moon. First, the intensity of the solar wind drops off roughly with the square of the distance from the Sun. Therefore an asteroid near 3.2 AU from the Sun experiences a solar wind flux that is only a tenth that felt by the Moon. Second, accumulation of solar wind gases on the Moon is aided by 'gardening' of the lunar surface by small impacts, which constantly expose fresh material to the solar wind and constantly bury gas-saturated surface grains out of harm's way. On asteroids, even small impact events can remove regolith material by ejecting it at speeds greater than the asteroid's tiny escape velocity. Thus, "mature" surface grains with high contents of implanted gases are preferentially lost, not preserved. Finally, the total exposed surface area of the asteroids is less than the surface area of the Moon. For all these reasons, extraction of helium-3 from the surfaces of asteroids is not likely to be competitive with that from the Moon." An excellent book in my opinion. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...92717?v=glance Although I think the last part of the paragraph must be in error. Surely the surface area of the asteroids is greater than the Moon's (even though the Moon outmasses the asteroids). -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
#4
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![]() Josh Gigantino wrote: Is there any known or guessed quantity of He3 on asteroids or dead comets? If an object has been orbitting for 4+ billion years, it should have collected some from the solar wind. It seems that He3 would be easier to obtain from something like Eros than the Moon, if it existed in similar density. If there was a supply, collecting and separating He3 could be much simpler in the micro-G environment. I did a quick Google and found little, but am wondering what you think? Josh From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis "But the circumstances of the asteroids differ from those we have studied on the Moon. First, the intensity of the solar wind drops off roughly with the square of the distance from the Sun. Therefore an asteroid near 3.2 AU from the Sun experiences a solar wind flux that is only a tenth that felt by the Moon. Second, accumulation of solar wind gases on the Moon is aided by 'gardening' of the lunar surface by small impacts, which constantly expose fresh material to the solar wind and constantly bury gas-saturated surface grains out of harm's way. On asteroids, even small impact events can remove regolith material by ejecting it at speeds greater than the asteroid's tiny escape velocity. Thus, "mature" surface grains with high contents of implanted gases are preferentially lost, not preserved. Finally, the total exposed surface area of the asteroids is less than the surface area of the Moon. For all these reasons, extraction of helium-3 from the surfaces of asteroids is not likely to be competitive with that from the Moon." An excellent book in my opinion. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...92717?v=glance Although I think the last part of the paragraph must be in error. Surely the surface area of the asteroids is greater than the Moon's (even though the Moon outmasses the asteroids). -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
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Hop David wrote:
From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis "[...] For all these reasons, extraction of helium-3 from the surfaces of asteroids is not likely to be competitive with that from the Moon." I wonder if comets may have a larger amount of 3He. This would not be implanted from the solar wind, but trapped in ices as the comets formed in the protostellar nebula. Paul |
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"Paul F. Dietz" wrote in message ...
Hop David wrote: From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis "[...] For all these reasons, extraction of helium-3 from the surfaces of asteroids is not likely to be competitive with that from the Moon." I wonder if comets may have a larger amount of 3He. This would not be implanted from the solar wind, but trapped in ices as the comets formed in the protostellar nebula. Paul That could be. There is an excess of He-3 in interplanetary dust particles, many of which are from comets. He-3 trapped in comets would then not suffer the surface loss mentioned in connection with asteroids. But that makes me wonder about the amount of He-3 in the protostellar nebula, maybe that could be trapped inside asteroids too? |
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Al Jackson wrote:
But that makes me wonder about the amount of He-3 in the protostellar nebula, maybe that could be trapped inside asteroids too? Possibly, but much asteroidal material has been extensively thermally processed. Maybe carbonaceous chondrites? This could be tested by examining meteorites, if it hasn't been already. Paul |
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![]() Paul F. Dietz wrote: Hop David wrote: From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis "[...] For all these reasons, extraction of helium-3 from the surfaces of asteroids is not likely to be competitive with that from the Moon." I wonder if comets may have a larger amount of 3He. This would not be implanted from the solar wind, but trapped in ices as the comets formed in the protostellar nebula. Paul As I understand it ordinary 4He is a product of uranium decay and 3He is from stellar fusion. I'd expect the accretion disk from which the solar system was formed to have more of the lighter isotope than what we see on earth (since its thought the disk was remnants of earlier stars). It seems to me our 4 gas giants would have lots of 3He. Helium is a gas at Neptune distances. How would the lighter bodies in the Kuiper Belt accrete a gas? -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
#9
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Hop David wrote:
It seems to me our 4 gas giants would have lots of 3He. Helium is a gas at Neptune distances. How would the lighter bodies in the Kuiper Belt accrete a gas? They wouldn't; it might be trapped in growing ice grains. Alternately, 3He is produced in situ by spallation. IIUC, the trapped helium in some meteorites is about 2% 3He (the rest 4He, much of that from radioactive decay.) I don't know the absolute concentration of these isotopes, unfortunately. Paul |
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Hop David wrote in message ...
From pages 204 and 205 of _Mining The Sky_ by John S Lewis snip MTS quote Although I think the last part of the paragraph must be in error. Surely the surface area of the asteroids is greater than the Moon's (even though the Moon outmasses the asteroids). Thanks Hop! I sometimes forget there are these strange, rectangular things called "books" next to my computer desk. I've got both "Rain of Iron & Ice" and "Mining the Sky", I'll brush up on what Mr. Lewis says. I agree on the surface area issue. Thousands of roughly spherical objects all rotating slowly should have a vast collective surface. For the NEOs that are "rubble piles", there would be that much more surface area, and a method for trapping He3. Josh |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
He3 on asteroids? | Josh Gigantino | Technology | 13 | February 9th 04 07:05 PM |
Reclaiming asteroids with postglacial vegetation | Jim McCauley | Technology | 0 | November 23rd 03 10:48 PM |
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