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#1 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Ring Habitat on Mars Doughnut Torus » Today 17:21:05

If we can cast basalt into specific shapes, maybe we can build structural walls in the same way that we build precast concrete fences?
Single-sided-rock-face-600x608.jpg

We plant basalt I-beams into the ground and then slot basalt panels between them.  Once we have built up a rectangular building, we heap regolith all around it.  Once regolith provides enough back pressure to buttress the walls, we can put on the roof.  This would be a semicircular arch os basalt tiles that are glued together, with the base sitting on the basalt panel wall.  The whole structure is then covered with regolith and pressurised.

This would seem to be a structure that we could build very quickly, as we are slotting together some simple, repeatable units.  Once we have a pressurised structure, we can use a mixture of cast basalt, brick, stone and adobe, to divide the volume into habitable spaces for various uses.

You could build a ring habitat this way as well.  Just be careful that the radius of curvature is large enough that panels can still fit into the slots of I-beams that aren't perfectly in line.

#2 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » KBD512 Biosphere structure of cast basalt » Today 14:17:17

I decided to do some research into the composition and likely melting point of martian black sand.  This appears to be the most suitable material for cast basalt on the Martian surface.

Curiosity's Investigation of the Bagnold Dunes, Gale Crater [black sands]
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com … 18GL079032

'CheMin data show that sands from Phases 1 and 2 are composed of five main components: plagioclase feldspar, olivine, augite, pigeonite, and X-ray amorphous materials (Achilles et al., 2017; Ehlmann et al., 2017; Rampe et al., 2018). Minor amounts of hematite, magnetite, anhydrite, and quartz are detected in both Gobabeb and Ogunquit Beach, and ~7 wt.% phyllosilicate is detected in Ogunquit Beach.'

Plagioclase feldspar: melting point is 1100°C for sodium based plagioclas, to 1553°C for pure calcium plagioclas.
https://www.science.smith.edu/~jbrady/p … page04.php

My analysis of this document, which analyses the plagioclase in Martian meteorites, suggests a 60% Ca and 40% Na abundance on average.  This suggests that melting will begin at 1220°C and the sample will be fully liquid at 1400°C.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/a … 3709005651

Martian olivine appears to average at 30% Fe and 70% Mg, by number density.  This suggests a complete liquidus at 1700°C, with melting starting at 1200°C.  The two components are quite well intermixed.
https://www.science.smith.edu/~jbrady/p … page04.php

Augite is the most common pyroxene.  It melts at ~1000°C.
http://mingen.hk/augite.html

Pigeonite is part of the pyroxine group of minerals.  Melting point ~1000°C.

To summarise: Martian black sand consists of a mixture of basalt based minerals.  Melting will begin at 1000°C and complete liquidus will not occur until 1700°C.  At 1250°C, a substantial fraction of the components are liquid.  The material will have the properties of a viscous colloidal paste.  This may be suitable for injection moulding.  However, the presence of suspended solids within the paste may make it relatively abrasive.  We need to keep this in mind when designing equipment that is designed to process this hot material.

On the other hand, this reference suggests that all silicate based basaltic rock will be fully molten at 1200°C and complete solidification can be assumed at 600°C.
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hb … trock.html

Either way, temperatures in the ~1200°C range appear to be adequate to turn the sand into a mouldable liquid.  The exact reological properties of the liquid (viscosity, solud content, abrasiveness, etc) are things that we would need to test on a simulant material here on Earth, because they have a bearing on exactly how we can use this material.  If the liquid is relatively fluid in this temperature range, then we can sand cast it in cast iron moulds.  These are things that we could initially import but should be able to make on Mars once we have the ability to produce iron from native materials.

#3 Re: Not So Free Chat » Copper, Silver, and other Metals » Yesterday 06:44:44

Aluminium alloys have better strength-weight ratio and are already favoured in power distribution.  For building cabling, there were early problems with fires caused by oxidation and thermal expansion at junctions.  This has largely been solved by the use of specific electrical grade aluminium alloys.  So yes, there is plenty of room for substitution of aluminium alloys for copper.

A while back on this forum, I looked into the idea of using iron bars for electrical cabling.  This only works for DC.  It turns out that iron is actually more energy intensive than aluminium, because the electrical conductivity of iron is much lower than aluminium.  It would require thick and heavy conductors to handle the same current.  So that idea turned out to be a bad one.

We have periodically explored the idea of non-electrical power transmission on this forum.  This would involve hydraulics, compressed air or mechanical transmission.  This is more cumbersome than electrical systems, but there is scope to expand this approach if copper supply begins to fall short.

#4 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » Yesterday 05:41:22

Robert, the statistics you referenced are questionable to say the least.  In the UK, immigrants are far more likely to commit crimes.
https://yournews.com/2025/03/11/3292903 … 71-higher/

The illiegal migrants flooding into the US are the same sort of people.  How do you account for the divergence between UK statistics and the stats you referenced?

#5 Re: Not So Free Chat » What collections of people think people should be property? » Yesterday 02:13:47

The hard truths revealed by the Epstein files.
https://www.youtube.com/live/nb5Kqqerg5o

This piece discusses who Epstein actually was.  A networker for Jewish groups, who made extra money by networking for other people.  He viewed young women as property, but they were things that he used to make his networking events more attractive to the powerful men that he wanted to draw in.

#6 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » Yesterday 00:56:24

kbd512 wrote:

Calliban,

KBD512 would like to see more goods consumed by americans made by americans.

KBD512 would also like to see more goods consumed by the british made by the british.

KBD512 would also like to see more goods consumed by canadians made by canadians.

KBD512 would also like to see more goods consumed by... if the pattern isn't already clear, then it never will be.

That sounds good in theory.

At least we won't be starting from a point of "bad theory", such as "send your manufacturing overseas and then your (already opulently wealthy) people will be a little wealthier".  That is the "economic theory" we've been operating from during my entire life, which hasn't improved the lives of average workers, and never will, because it was never intended to do that.

But different parts of the manufacturing process require labour at different skill levels and price points.  There are also issues with economy of scale that make it difficult for individual nations to produce complex products for a limited internal market.

It sounds like you're telling me that we must prioritize which products and services to focus our efforts on, so as to "economize" on labor and capital inputs, rather than exploiting poorer people in foreign countries so some of us can lead better lives.  It also sounds like you don't really want to pay your fellow countrymen a living wage for certain products or services, so you'd have to learn to live without things you're not actually wiling to pay your own people to produce.  Maybe you only have 5 different brands of tea instead of 500, but you still have tea to drink at the end of the day.

I'm not saying I am against what Trump is trying to achieve by relocalising production.  But if we are heading for a world where more of the production chain takes place in high wage countries, the same high wage countries where goods are consumed, then manufactured goods are going to be more expensive to the consumer.  That may mean people being poorer overall.  Maybe that is a hit that we should all be prepared to take for the greater good of a more equal society?  That may be the case.  But understand that there are consequences.  Disrupting trade could end up triggering some severe recessions.

The situation is different for Canada.  There, you have a smaller and older population.  For Canada to transition to a domestic economy, in the way Trump seems to be pushing the US, will be much more difficult.  Manufacturing complex items requires scale economies because of high capital costs.  The Canadian internal market is just too small.  Which is why I think CANZUK is a good idea for the four anglosphere countries involved.  Individually, they are small.  But a unified market of 160 million people, is big enough for companies that manufacture complex things like phones, computers, machinery, etc.  The Canadians made the mistake of electing another left-wing government at the last election as a kind a tantrum against Trump.  That was unfortunate because grownups will need to be in charge to build something like CANZUK, which is going to take a lot of work to set up.

Trump has effectively ended NAFTA.  For better of worse, it has happened.  It is time for the rest of the world to stop complaining and realign accordingly.

#7 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » Yesterday 00:37:09

Void wrote:

And Anglicans are a bit more self-righteous, arrogant, and poorly informed or falsifiers of reality from my point of view.  This topic is about Greenland though.

Ending Pending smile

Void, I would be wary of taking that Prometheus channel too much to heart.  It is run by two women with massive chips on their shoulders.  Like all conspiracy theory nuts, they get some things right.  But there is a whole load of downright fantasy as well.

#8 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-02-03 23:55:53

In the UK, the government has active programmes for ethnically cleansing British people from their own land.
https://youtu.be/RGNINb3Vh38

Would you rather have that government, or a government that is at least trying to keep you safe by removing invaders from your land?  I wish we had some version of ICE.

#9 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-02-03 23:50:18

The ICE agents are enforcing the law and removing people who have entered the US illegally.  No one should have a problem with that process.  If you do, then you are not on the same side as the American people.  Arresting illegal migrants is often quite violent, because they resist arrest and may be armed.  This means that they are frequently injured and are sometimes killed.  That isn't a good outcome, but the whole process tends to be rough, with officers afraid for their own safety.  You need to be realistic about what is going to happen when police officers arrest people who resist arrest and officers are afraid for their own safety.  People are going to be injured and some will die.  It isn't a good outcome and you don't have to like it.  But it is inevitable under the circumstances.  These people are protecting your borders and doing their job.  Need I say more?

#10 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-02-02 10:04:42

Whilst tarrifs have their uses, Trump's use of tarrifs as a political weapon in every dispute or negotiation is damaging to American industry.  Businesses make investments with return windows measured in years to decades.  They are now in a situation where they have no certainty at all about whether a particular business case is profitable or not, because the tarrif rate changes at the drop of hat.  That makes future investment in cross border supply chains very risky.  KBD512 would like to see more goods consumed by americans made by americans.  That sounds good in theory.  But different parts of the manufacturing process require labour at different skill levels and price points.  There are also issues with economy of scale that make it difficult for individual nations to produce complex products for a limited internal market.  The smaller a nation is, the more difficult that becomes.

#11 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Wind Energy Capture - All methods in one topic » 2026-01-27 15:15:50

Maintaining German windmills.
https://www.youtube.com/live/fNGzynWgg2k

I have watched but half of this thus far.  The mill with the spring loaded sails is relatively modern design, that negates the need to furl sails as windspeed fluctuates.  There were later improvement by Dutch millers in the 1930s, which further increased the efficiency of the blades.

#12 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-01-23 11:06:22

kbd512 wrote:

They don't truly need to be.  That was my point, and it is factually true.  America has all the manufacturing and tech required to do it completely domestically, whether it's typically done that way or not.  Do you know who else does as well?  Canada and Mexico.  All 3 nations have all the metals, plastics, rubbers, and electronics manufacturing facilities, small though they may be in certain cases, that 100% American made or 100% Canadian made or 100% Mexican made vehicles are achievable using ONLY existing domestic manufacturing facilities already in operation.  These vehicles won't all be precisely equivalent, but they would still be 100% functional passenger motor vehicles.

We know that this is true, because we have done it before.  The UK once had several car companies.  We made our own fighter jets.  We even built our own space launch vehicles under the Black Arrow programme.  Canada could do it as well.  The problem is that cars and fighter jets have grown more and more complex.  And development cost has increased accordingly.  But a very simple car could even be homemade.  So any competant nation could build a workable car of good quality.  Just maybe without all of the superfluous electronics.

#13 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Planetary Cores and potentials for geothermal power. » 2026-01-23 08:49:55

Mars has a thicker crust, a more rigid mantle and no extant plate techtonics.  But recent discoveries have shown that there are extant magma plumes within the Martian mantle that do reach the surface.  But only in a few locations.  Geothermal power on Mars is only realistic in specific locations.  The area to the south of Elysium appears to be one such area.  Unfortunately, it also appears to be the most seismically active part of Mars.  Not ideal if you want to build an underground base.

#14 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-01-23 08:39:12

A close alliance of Canada, UK, Australia, NZ, could potentially punch at the same weight as the US, miltarily.  We would still have only half of the population.  But more land and natural resources overall and a better position to project power.  If someone from France, Germany, Japan, Mexico, Latin America, Russia or China, proposed an alliance capable of replacing the US, it would be hubris.  But for Canada, UK, Australia, NZ, it is a realistic proposal.  But only if we combine our resources.  The old British empire was a UK centric creation.  Given that Australia and Canada are now peer powers, all three would be equal partners.  I think CANZUK could do just as good a job of colonising Mars as the US.  If we can work with the US on that project, it becomes more realistic for all of humanity.

#15 Re: Not So Free Chat » Politics » 2026-01-23 07:14:35

RobertDyck wrote:

Ballotpedia: Presidential candidates, 2024
For the 2024 US presidential election, there were 24 candidates. You didn't have to chose between Satan vs Beelzebub. Media may claim only 2 parties, but those are the ones that pay mainstream media billions of dollars. You don't have to vote for the ones that bribe media. Why didn't you vote for the Libertarian candidate?

Robert, Donald Trump is actually a godsend in disguise for Canada.  Let me explain why.

The combination of Trump trade policies, BREXIT and Chinese aggression against Australia, raise a geopolitical opportunity for the CANZUK alliance.  The combined populations of Canada, UK, Australia and NZ are greater than 150 million - that is half the population of the US.  All are wealthy, educated, first world countries.  Collectively, this alliance would be the third largest economy on Earth, would control about half of the worlds natural resources and would be in a position to police and control all of the worlds major trade routes.  These four countries need to work together to produce a powerful, global nuclear navy.  Once that is done, we can approach other nations like Singapore, Egypt, Panama, Sri Lanka and ultimately Japan.  With those countries part of the alliance, we control the routes of trade and basically rule the world.  But Canada, UK, Australia and NZ need to form a close alliance supported by a strong nuclear navy to be a credible partner for these countries.  Individually, none of us can do this and they wouldn't take us seriously as a security guarenteur.  But all four of us can, by working together to build that world-spanning nuclear navy.

Donald Trump has proven to be very useful.  America is withdrawing from the world stage and Trump's style of diplomacy and extortion is alienating allies that were previously tight with the US.  That includes many countries hosting US bases, that could later become CANZUK bases.  Trump is the perfect catalyst for bringing into being an alliance that could ultimately supplant the US as the dominant world power.  Our four nations working together are the only ones in a position to do this.  Russia cannot do it.  Neither can China, given its internal problems.  All four white commonwealth countries are needed to do this, because we need the population, industry, resources and consumer base of all four.  We ideally need conservative governments in all four countries to kick this off.  Given the direction of travel, that is entirely possible.

This would have been much more difficult without Donald Trump.  If he wants to continue strong arming and bullying foreign allies, I say we let him, even encourage it.  In 20 years, we could be in a position to approach those countries with a better deal and a navy equivelant to that of the US.  If Trump and the subsequent Vance administration has bullied them for all that time, it only strengthens our hand in negotiating with them.  We offer them something that he didn't: an equitable partnership that respects their dignity.

#16 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Geothermal Storage of Renewable Thermal Energy » 2026-01-23 04:09:23

Underground geothermal storage works best for storage of relatively low grade heat, at temperatures low enough to avoid boiling groundwater and causing explosions.  The low thermal conductivity of groundrock (1-5W/m.K) means that boreholes need to be close together.  This increases upfront drilling cost.  But unlike normal geothermal energy extraction, this is not heat mining because the heat is being stored and replenished.  So the infrastructure does not face the same life limiting problems associated with hot dry rock geothermal.  With the latter, once heat has been drained from an area, you have to move your power station because it takes millenia for conduction and radioactive decay to heat the local rock up again.  If you are using the rock to store externally supplied energy, that limitation doesn't apply.

This kind of technology could have a number of applications.  In situations where an industry needs a year round supply of relatively low grade heat, ~100°C, solar thermal infrastructure can charge this in the summer and the store allows heat to be used constantly throughout the year.  That has a lot of potential applications.  This technology really excels if we are prepared to make the investment in piped heating systems, i.e district heating.  This is expensive to set up, but if done properly it will last for centuries.  It is necessary because geothermal energy storage requires that heat be stored in a centralised volume.  A piping system is therefore needed to distribute heat to dispersed consumers.  A potential application for this technology is in small modular reactors providing waste heat for district heating.  The reactors will operate 24/7/365.  But heat demand is concentrated in the winter.

Another application is in solar assisted steam cycles.  We build hybrid solar biomass/coal powerplants.  In places away from the equator, the sun provides all of the energy to raise high quality steam in the summer, but cannot do so for the other 75% of the year.  So we othersize the collector relative to the boilers.  Heat is stored in boreholes at temperatures between 100 and 200°C.  Outside of summer, stored heat is used to heat water between 100-200°C is a combined cycle boiler system.  Coal or biomass provide the rest of the heating needed to provide high quality steam 300 - 400°C.  Using the geothermal store, you get a power station that uses a combination of solar heat and fuel to provide baseload power.  It is valuable, because biomass is a limited resource and it reduces CO2 emissions.  We can use biomass as a fuel in the autumn and early winter and then switch to coal when biomass runs out in the spring and early summer.  By using stored heat and leveraging fuel in this way, we get a baseload power source with reduced CO2 emissions and obviate the need to transport and store huge amounts of biomass.

Downsides: Every time you move heat you need a thermal gradient.  The low thermal conductivity of the rock means that the heat source must be substantially hotter than the store.  You end using higher grade heat to store lower grade heat.  But maybe that is a hit you can afford to take.  The other obvioys downside is that this is capital intensive infrastructure, that requires longterm investment horizons.  Humanity needs to begin thinking in this way.  We need to think of our grandchildren when we make investments.

#17 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-23 03:17:10

NATO and Donald Trump have reached an agreement.  The US can now place missiles on Greenland and mine the rare earth resources that it needs.  In the meantime, Greenland remains Danish territory, on paper at least.
https://youtu.be/y8hULV9zdY0

The video explains that this is exactly the deal Trump wanted in the first place.  A lot of people (myself included) underestimated Trump and assumed that he must be insane because we failed to understand how he negotiates what he wants.  In fairness, he published a book 'The Art of the Deal' some 40 years ago, explaining how he negotiates.  He starts with an outragious demand that no one would agree to.  This creates a storm of fear and anger on the other side. He then reaches what would appear to be a compromise, but is in reality exactly what he wanted in the first place.  Everyone breathes a sigh of relief, thinking they have achieved some kind of compromise and got something that they wanted.  In reality, they have been played.  He gets what he wanted.  The whole unhinged, petulant child routine is an act, because he needed the other side to believe that the invasion was a real possibility.

When you understand how he operates and look at the whole routine in heinsight, it is actually an act of genius.  This guy knows exactly how to play people.  If he had gone to the Danes in the first place and asked for the right to mine whatever he wanted and put missiles on Greenland, he would have got pushback.  Playing it the way he did, he ended up with everything he wanted in the first place.  We should have read his book.

The only downside is that he can only pull this trick so many times, before people cotton on.  Maybe the rights to Greenland were worth exposing the tell.  On that point, I do have some doubts.  Greenland has never been a very valuable territory for anyone.  There is a reason why none of the great powers ever seriously challenged Danish sovereignty over Greenland since the middle ages.  It is a horribly cold and windy environment and working conditions are probably harder than they would be on Mars.  The terrain that isn't covered in an ice cap, is mountainous and rugged, making inland transport almost impossible.  None of the fjords are really ice free, making it difficult to establish a port that can transport ores out.  Mining Greenland will be expensive.  The Chinese have tried it and largely failed.  Time will tell if US companies can make it work where the Chinese could not.

#18 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Asteroid/off-Earth mining » 2026-01-21 17:40:24

The rotational energy of asteroids can be converted into linear kinetic energy by extending a tether into space, far beyond the geostationary point.  The tip speed of the tether is proportional to its length.  Within the limits of tensile strength, a tether can be used to accelerate a payload to arbitrary speed.  If the tether extends far enough, it can be used to accelerate payloads to escape velocity, possibly resulting in velocity change of many km/s.  This is effectively free energy, as it derives directly from the rotational energy of the asteroid.

The kinetic energy stored in a rotating body is given by:

Ke = 0.5 x I x w^2

Where I is moment of inertia and w is angular velocity in radians per second.  Let us assume a roughly spherical asteroid.  The moment of inertia of a uniform density sphere is given by:

I = 2/5 x MR^2

Where M is the mass of the asteroid and R is its radius.  For a spherical body, mass is given by:

M = Rho x 4/3 x pi x R^3

Where rho is density.  Substituting into the moment of inertia equation:

I = rho x 8/15 x pi x R^5

Substituting I into the KE equation gives:

KE = 4/15 x rho x pi x R^5 x w^2.

In this example, we find an asteroid with a diameter of 710m and a rotation rate of once every 1.88 minutes.  That is an angular velocity of 0.0557 rad/s.
https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/news … -2025-mn45

If we assume a stony iron composition and a density of 2600kg.m-3, we can use the rotational energy equation to estimate the amount of energy available to a tether system.

KE = 4/15 x rho x pi x R^5 x w^2

KE = 4/15 x 2600 x pi x 355^5 x 0.0557^2 = 3.81E13J (10.58GWh).

Suppose we were to use half of that energy to change the velocity of a mass by 2km/s.  How much mass could we accelerate?

M = 1.91E13 / (0.5 x 2000^2) = 9,526,103kg (~9500 metric tonnes).

This is only 0.002% of the total mass of the asteroid.  But it could potentially be valuable in the early years of asteroid mining, before advanced nuclear propulsion systems are available.  It could also be sufficient to make fast rotating asteroids into dangerous weapons.

#19 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Vera C Rubin Observatory » 2026-01-21 17:39:18

This telescope started operation in 2025.  It is expected to detect hundreds of thousands of new small bodies in the solar system.

One interesting recent discovery is a main belt asteroid some 710m in diameter, rotating once every 1.88 minutes.  That is a surface velocity of 19.8m/s.
https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/news … -2025-mn45

It occurs to me that rapidly rotating bodies like this could provide free energy accelerating spacecraft onto different orbits.  They are also potential weapons in a future solar system.  Using this body in particular, a tether with a length of 101 asteroid radii (35.85km) would have a tip speed of 2km/s.  Such a tether could hurl projectiles onto trajectories that would collide with planets and space colonies.  This would be relatively cheap and technically easy to do.

Something like this was featured in the sci-fi series The Expanse.  The Belters hurled space rocks and lumps of iron onto a collision course with Earth.  They coated them with stealth tech composites to prevent them from being detected and taken out by nuclear tipped missiles and rail guns before impact.  Using rapidly rotating asteroids as slings, this sort of thing could actually happen in the centuries ahead.  In the nearer future, tapping asteroid rotation can be used to reduce the propulsive dV needed to bring ores mined on asteroids back to Earth orbit.


Edit SpaceNut: Copied your post before closing the other one.

#21 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-18 15:22:35

Void, perhaps the Russians have read Sun Tzu's The Art of War.  Specifically, the part that says 'never interupt your enemy whilst he is making a mistake'.  If Trump annexes Greenland, I cannot see any other nation in the world wanting a US base on their soil in the future.  Overnight, US bases would stop looking like security guarentees and look more like stategic threats.  The arrogance of what Trump is doing is quite staggering.  Can you imagine a situation where a country like Britain, France or Russia, threatened to use troops to sieze Alaska, if the US did not hand it over to them peacefully?  What on Earth makes anyone here think America can play by different rules to everyone else?

What Trump is doing is nothing short of extortion.  It poses a grave risk to global security, because it is likely to weaken trust between the US and allied nations.  Without cooperation from those nations and their willingness to have you on their soil, a large part of US power projection capability disappears almost overnight.  No wonder the Russians are keeping quiet about this.  They undoubtably want it to happen.  I said before that I didn't think Trump was a Russian agent.  I'm not so sure now.  If a US president were a Russian agent and wanted to damage the relationship between the US and the rest of the world, he would be doing exactly what Trump is doing.

#22 Re: Not So Free Chat » Greenland » 2026-01-16 14:48:27

I don't think Trump is a Russian agent.  The Russian collusion hoax was a smear campaign invented by the Obama administration on behalf of Hillary Clinton.  It was a convenient lie that they literally pulled out of thin air.  People will happily believe whatever nonsense is thrown at them if it supports their ingrained political prejudices. People that don't like Trump because of his politics will talk whatever nonsense they think will make him look bad.  It is called 'throwing mud'.

What the events of the past several days have shown is that Trump is a poor statesman. He is neither a politician nor a diplomat.  And he has managed to convince all of Europe that the US is a potential enemy that they need to rally together to guard against.  The amount of damage he has inflicted on America's reputation and foreign policy is incalculable.  They now see the US as a threat to their security on a par with Russia.  All of this for Greenland, which the US already had access to anyway.  Trump didn't need to be a Russian asset to do this.  He just needed to be what he undeniably is.  A poorly educated and underqualified old man, trying to do a job that is beyond his capabilities.  The problem isn't so much a problem of his personal politics.  It is a problem of his personal competance.  And he has a weak yes man as vice president, who either doesn't understand the situation or is incapable of standing up to his boss and telling him hard truths.

#23 Re: Science, Technology, and Astronomy » Fusion power in the offing? » 2026-01-02 17:42:30

This is interesting.
https://evidencenetwork.ca/germany-is-m … ar-fusion/

The Germans have invested hundreds of millions of euros into inertial confinement fusion using femtosecond lasers.  ICF uses lasers to heat the surface of a frozen pellet of hydrogen isotopes.  As the surface heats up, x-ray pressure sends shockwaves through the interior of the pellet and the outer layers ablate off. The laser drivers used up to now, have delivered the energy to the pellet surface slowly.  The problem is that plasma ablated from the pellet tends to shield the surface from recieving additional laser light.  This makes laser drivers relatively inefficient.  Femtosecond lasers could substantially improve driver efficiency as energy is delivered to the surface before a plasma bubble can form around the pellet.

The National Ignition Facility, without the benefit of femtosecond lasers, made history in 2022, by generating 3.15MJ of fusion energy from 2MJ of laser energy.  The low efficiency of lasers means that this is nowhere near breakeven from a net energy perspective.  But if driver efficiency can be improved through use of femtosecond lasers, it should take this technology much closer to net energy breakeven.  If femtosecond lasers allow overall breakeven to be reached, then ICF will be efficient enough to provide a neutron source for breed and burn hybrid fusion fission reactors.  This would dramatically improve the sustainability of the fission fuel cycle, whilst avoiding the need for reprocessing.

#24 Re: Martian Politics and Economy » Money » 2025-12-24 04:37:47

Peter Zeihan pointed out that there is nowhere near sufficient gold in reserves to cover the value of trade that modern economies undertake.  This is a fair enough point.  Traditionally, the currencies were e changeable for gold and silver.  But even though they were theoretically exchangeable, very few people ever took a pound note to the Bank of England and demanded a pound of silver.  In the modern world, we could base the value of a currency on a basket of non-perishable commodities.  Instead of the promiss to pay 1 pound sterling, our banks would pay one pound sterling or its equivelent value in other non-perishables.  This could be gold, silver, copper, aluminium ingots, pig iron, gem stones, rare earths, ethanol, oil, etc.  Gold and silver are always better from the point of view of being value-dense and easy to ship for barter.  But 100te of pig iron still has the same value as 1kg of gold.  Others have suggested that currency could be valued in energy units.  This may make more sense, as wealth is very much a product of energy and energy use scales with GDP.

#25 Re: Exploration to Settlement Creation » Buried geodesic domes » 2025-12-23 17:07:17

Previously, we examined building a 200m wide catenary dome from Martian bricks as the site of a town hoysing 3000 - 10,000 people, depending upon the density of construction.  I wonder if a steel structure would be quicker and easier to produce?  Repeatable hexagonal units can be produced in large numbers.  These can be welded into a frame structure that is then covered in loose rocks and regolith.

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