Is it possible? If so, what would the ramp length and height need to be?
So… define you’re gonna have to define what 'into space" means. 160km is the bare minimum for LEO (its still low enough it’ll degrade, but not so low that you can’t make a full orbit.) the ISS is still in LEO, and still requires some occasional burns to lift it back into orbit at 400km. To get above the atomosphere so you can (mostly) float endlessly inspace, you’d need to go to 1,000km
Pick one. that’s how high you need to be.
If you want to just technically reach orbital speeds… you could do that at sea level by going about 7.9 km/s. there’s a small problem of air resistance causing you to burn up and, if you somehow survive that, well, here’s mountains to go splat into.
If yo wanted to orbit at 160km’s amid musk’s space junk… that’s about 7.8km/s, 400 is about 7.67, and 1000 is about 7.35.
There are some systems that may or may not be viable in the future that don’t rely on rockets at all, for example, the launch loop which is basically a cable held up by making it rotate really fast. (yeah. talk about whacky.) This thing, as propose, is 60km high and several thousand km long. The idea is that you lift up a mag train and then that mag train accelerates at a comfy 3g. You then use relatively inexpensive kicker motors to circularize your orbit as you reach apoapsis (aka, the point of an orbit that is furthest away from the body you’re orbiting.) This raises (or lowers, depending on which way you’re pointed,) periapsis, which is the closest point.
The thing about ramps, though, is that if your rocket car is already accelerating at 3 or whatever g (most modern launches push 3-4g, mostly limited by the squishy payload.)… you don’t really need a ramp, and trying to use one anyhow just introduces more inefficiency into the system.
The point of the launch loop is that it gets us off dumping shit loads of CO2 and other greenhouse gasses- it can be powered by nearly any kind of power (though nuclear is the proposed plant,) and the train is accelerated by riding eddy currents off the loop itself.
makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world 3 days ago
So for physics reasons it doesn’t really matter what technique you’re using to leave Earth. If you’re going to try to go to space successfully, you’re going to have to go a minimum speed of 25,000 miles per hour. That’s called the escape velocity and it’s a different value for every body of mass in space
glimse@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Yeah but like what if the ramp went past the exosphere? Drive that rocketship up at 1mph for 100 days and you’ll be in space!
FuglyDuck@lemmy.world 3 days ago
the longer you spend at sub orbital speeds, the longer you’re spending energy to counter gravity. Building a ramp and lifting it up slowly would only be feasible if you had cheap power to do it. but over all, you’re still using most the same amount of energy to get there anyways.
also… if you’re going to slow, you’ll just fall back down…
makeshiftreaper@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Some more physics things, every planet has a limit on how high the tallest possible mountain is based off their surface gravity, the type of rocks present in the crust, and thickness of the crust. On Earth it turns out that limit is pretty close to Mt Everest’s height. Space is still about 50 miles above Everest so I don’t think humans could build this ramp with our current understanding of physics
If you want to go to space slowly then you can just do what Felix Baumgartner did and take a special type of balloon to get into space. Unfortunately, if you’re not traveling 25,000 mph relative to the surface of the planet, you’re going to fall back to the planet. Just like Felix did
null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 days ago
I don’t know anything about physics and orbits other than what I learned from Simple Rockets on android, but from what I know it’s always about how fast you’re moving rather than how far away you are.
You’re thinking that if you get far enough away then earth’s gravity won’t effect you any more, but it’s not really like that. The effect does diminish as you move further away (inverse square law!) but you’re still going to be effected, as in “how far away from this star do I need to go before I can no longer see it?”
In practice, you’ll become far more effected by the Sun’s gravity than you are by Earth’s gravity, long before you really escape Earth’s gravity.
That’s why the answer to this question is how fast you need to go, rather than how high you need to be. If you could fire yourself out of a canon at 25,000 mph and were uneffected by atmospheric drag you’d leave Earth’s area of influence faster than Earth can haul you back - so you escape.
However, if you were floating stationary 25,000 miles from Earth and uneffected by any other cellestial bodies, you’re going to fall down Earth’s gravity well.
Again, I don’t really know anything about orbital mechanics so I suppose someone and their LLM will be along shortly to tell me how wrong I am.
Witchfire@lemmy.world 2 days ago
It would probably have to spiral outwards around the Earth like the world’s greatest off-ramp
pinball_wizard@lemmy.zip 2 days ago
I think you’ve designed a horizontal space elevator. I like it.