Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

Using a Space Elevator To Get Water Off Ceres


We might not currently have any technology that would make a space elevator viable on Earth. But that doesn’t mean they wouldn’t work on other bodies around the solar system. One of the most interesting places that one could work is around Ceres, the Queen of the Asteroid Belt, and potentially one of the biggest sources of resources for humanity’s expansion into space. A new paper from researchers at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and Industrial CNT, a manufacturer of Carbon Nanotube (one potential material for the space elevator), details just how useful such an elevator could be.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on Universe Today

Read more on:

Photo of space elevator

space elevator

Photo of Ceres

Ceres

Photo of Water

Water

Related news:

News photo

Webb Shows That Young Stars Inherit Their Water From the Cosmos

News photo

Sculpting the surface of the water - EurekAlert!

News photo

A new study suggests water first formed billions of years earlier than expected — as early as 100 million years after the big bang. According to these simulations, huge volumes of water, the primary ingredient for life, formed close to cosmic dawn — the moment the first generation of stars was born.