|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Perpetual Motion on the Moon
What better place for the "Sterling" engine to run. It works on heat
exchange (hot and cold) The moon has extreme temperature difference from Sun to shade. Saw a small model of the Sterling engine running on the energy of hot cup of coffee . One large sterling engine could run a generator,and the moon theoretically could have unlimited electricity. The ultimate free lunch. The Sterling engine was shown on "History" channel this week Bert |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Now all we have to do is get that energy here. I wonder what the losses
are on 300,000 miles of cable? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Moon satellite made by man and having a diameter of 15 miles.Made of
clear plastic 99% hollow. Inside made with plasma gas(same as in a fluorescent lighting) GE,Goodyear Gates and NASA should get together on this project. Sterling engine supplying electricity. Orbiting the Moon at 7300 miles. Bright enough to be seen from Earth with no trouble. First direct glowing object other than stars in the universe. It is mans gift to our solar system. It is my gift to Darla so she has a light house to make it Easier to find Earth and me. Bert |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
nightbat wrote
G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: Moon satellite made by man and having a diameter of 15 miles.Made of clear plastic 99% hollow. Inside made with plasma gas(same as in a fluorescent lighting) GE,Goodyear Gates and NASA should get together on this project. Sterling engine supplying electricity. Orbiting the Moon at 7300 miles. Bright enough to be seen from Earth with no trouble. First direct glowing object other than stars in the universe. It is mans gift to our solar system. It is my gift to Darla so she has a light house to make it Easier to find Earth and me. Bert nightbat Forget gazillion costing 15 mile nightlight for remember we have your millions or billions of always leaking toy blowup sex doll oxygen helium escaping hot gas Earth tail that can probably be spotted from Andrometa's arms. Anyway Nasa can't even resupply the ISS how do you plan on getting that nightlight up there, refurbished Delta? ponder on, the nightbat |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Hi nightbat NASA is going to have to go with more powerful
rockets(someday). To help pay for the cost NASA is going to have to return 25% of the money it stole. Gates can throw in 15 billion and Allen 8 billion.GE and Goodyear can supply the gas and plastic. Balloons are easy to build in space. It would be lighter than the ISS. Not as hard to build as the Great pyramid,and 9 billion people would take pride in seeing it. It could be used to lighten up the back side of the Moon. It could have a good effect for all humankind.. Bert |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
nightbat wrote
G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: Hi nightbat NASA is going to have to go with more powerful rockets(someday). To help pay for the cost NASA is going to have to return 25% of the money it stole. Gates can throw in 15 billion and Allen 8 billion.GE and Goodyear can supply the gas and plastic. Balloons are easy to build in space. It would be lighter than the ISS. Not as hard to build as the Great pyramid,and 9 billion people would take pride in seeing it. It could be used to lighten up the back side of the Moon. It could have a good effect for all humankind.. Bert \ nightbat You and your toy blow up balloons, it's fantastic, it's preposterous, it's ridiculous, it just might work. Ok, you pitch it to Gates and the rest of the boys, I'll see if McDonald's golden arches wants in and maybe some of the Los Alamos scientist's during their lunch break. I mean this can't be as bad as that net space elevator idea, heck and Earth air or gas to blow the thing up is free right? ponder on, the nightbat |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Moon satellite made by man and having a diameter of 15 miles.Made of clear plastic 99% hollow. Inside made with plasma gas(same as in a fluorescent lighting) GE,Goodyear Gates and NASA should get together on this project. Sterling engine supplying electricity. Orbiting the Moon at 7300 miles. Bright enough to be seen from Earth with no trouble. First direct glowing object other than stars in the universe. It is mans gift to our solar system. It is my gift to Darla so she has a light house to make it Easier to find Earth and me. Bert You wouldn't need to put the sterling engine in a lunar satellite, Bert. You can use the moon itself as a platform. Since the gas operates inside on a heat gradient, just have the 'hot' end lying near the rim of a crater in the sun, and have the 'cold' end inside the crater where sunlight never reaches. You have a 200-300 degree difference in heat potential and the gas sealed inside will merrily move around and let you generate electricity, which you can turn into microwaves and beam back to earth. The efficiency will beat using solar cells - anything else you do is fluff (like lighting up a laser torch). Greysky |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: Hi nightbat NASA is going to have to go with more powerful rockets(someday). To help pay for the cost NASA is going to have to return 25% of the money it stole. Gates can throw in 15 billion and Allen 8 billion.GE and Goodyear can supply the gas and plastic. Balloons are easy to build in space. Ever tried it? It would be lighter than the ISS. Not as hard to build as the Great pyramid,and 9 billion people would take pride in seeing it. You sure are free and easy with figures, Bert. What 9 billion people? The Earth's current population is only 6 billion (precisely 6,379,157,361 as of this morning). It could be used to lighten up the back side of the Moon. Light pollution! What about those lunar observatories I have planned? It could have a good effect for all humankind.. Bert Double-A |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Hi nightbat NASA is going to have to go with more powerful rockets(someday). To help pay for the cost NASA is going to have to return 25% of the money it stole. Gates can throw in 15 billion and Allen 8 billion.GE and Goodyear can supply the gas and plastic. Balloons are easy to build in space. It would be lighter than the ISS. Not as hard to build as the Great pyramid,and 9 billion people would take pride in seeing it. It could be used to lighten up the back side of the Moon. It could have a good effect for all humankind.. Bert Bert .. Are you willing to lend some insight into the "Crop Circles" L Bee |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
Hi Double-A by the time this Moon satellite is finished there will be 9
billion people watching it. My thoughts(math) was a time 27 years into the future,and hopefully humankind was sexy as ever. Bert |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ (is not spam) :-) | Nathan Jones | Misc | 6 | July 29th 04 06:14 AM |
The Apollo Hoax FAQ | darla | Misc | 10 | July 25th 04 02:57 PM |
significant addition to section 25 of the faq | heat | Astronomy Misc | 1 | April 15th 04 01:20 AM |
The Apollo FAQ (moon landings were faked) | Nathan Jones | Misc | 8 | February 4th 04 06:48 PM |
Moon key to space future? | James White | Policy | 90 | January 6th 04 04:29 PM |