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Asteroid mining

Asteroid mining is the hypothetical extraction of materials from asteroids and other minor planets, including near-Earth objects.[1]

Overview of the Inner Solar System asteroids up to the Jovian System

Notable asteroid mining challenges include the high cost of spaceflight, unreliable identification of asteroids which are suitable for mining, and the challenges of extracting usable material in a space environment.

Asteroid sample return research missions, such as Hayabusa, Hayabusa2, and OSIRIS-REx illustrate the challenges of collecting ore from space using current technology. As of 2023, less than 7 grams of asteroid material has been successfully returned to Earth from space.[2] In progress missions promise to increase this amount to approximately 60 grams (two ounces). Asteroid research missions are complex endeavors and return a tiny amount of material (less than 1 milligram Hayabusa, 100 milligrams Hayabusa2, 70 grams OSIRIS-REx) relative to the size and expense of these projects ($300 million Hayabusa, $800 million Hayabusa2, $1.16 billion OSIRIS-REx).[3][4]

The history of asteroid mining is brief but features a gradual development. Ideas of which asteroids to prospect, how to gather resources, and what to do with those resources have evolved over the decades.

History edit

Prior to 1970 edit

Before 1970, asteroid mining existed largely within the realm of science fiction. Stories such as Worlds of If,[5] Scavengers in Space,[6] and Miners in the Sky[7] told stories about the conceived dangers, motives, and experiences of mining asteroids. At the same time, many researchers in academia speculated about the profits that could be gained from asteroid mining, but they lacked the technology to seriously pursue the idea.[8]

The 1970s edit

The 1969[9] Moon Landing spurred a wave of scientific interest in human space activity far beyond the Earth's orbit. As the decade continued, more and more academic interest surrounded the topic of asteroid mining. A good deal of serious academic consideration was aimed at mining asteroids located closer to Earth than the main asteroid belt. In particular, the asteroid groups Apollo and Amor were considered.[10] These groups were chosen not only because of their proximity to Earth but also because many at the time thought they were rich in raw materials that could be refined.[10]

Despite the wave of interest, many in the space science community were aware of how little was known about asteroids and encouraged a more gradual and systematic approach to asteroid mining.[11]

The 1980s edit

Academic interest in asteroid mining continued into the 1980s. The idea of targeting the Apollo and Amor asteroid groups still had some popularity.[12] However, by the late 1980s the interest in the Apollo and Amor asteroid groups is being replaced with interest in the moons of Mars, Phobos and Deimos.[13]

Organizations like NASA begin to formulate ideas of how to process materials in space[14] and what to do with the materials that are hypothetically gathered from space.[15]

The 1990s edit

 
 
Hayabusa2 asteroid sample-return mission (3 December 2014 - 5 December 2020)

New reasons emerge for pursuing asteroid mining. These reasons tend to revolve around environmental concerns, such as fears over humans over-consuming the Earth's natural resources[16] and trying to capture energy from the Sun in space.[17]

In the same decade, NASA is trying to establish what materials in asteroids could be valuable for extraction. These materials include free-metals, volatiles, and bulk dirt.[18]

The 2010s edit

After a burst of interest in the 2010s, asteroid mining ambitions have shifted to more distant long-term goals and some 'asteroid mining' companies have pivoted to more general-purpose propulsion technology.[19]

Minerals in space edit

As resource depletion on Earth becomes more real, the idea of extracting valuable elements from asteroids and returning these to Earth for profit, or using space-based resources to build solar-power satellites and space habitats,[20][21] becomes more attractive. Hypothetically, water processed from ice could refuel orbiting propellant depots.[22][23][24]

Although asteroids and Earth accreted from the same starting materials, Earth's relatively stronger gravity pulled all heavy siderophilic (iron-loving) elements into its core during its molten youth more than four billion years ago.[25][26][27] This left the crust depleted of such valuable elements until a rain of asteroid impacts re-infused the depleted crust with metals like gold, cobalt, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel, osmium, palladium, platinum, rhenium, rhodium, ruthenium and tungsten (some flow from core to surface does occur, e.g. at the Bushveld Igneous Complex, a famously rich source of platinum-group metals).[28][29][30][31] Today, these metals are mined from Earth's crust, and they are essential for economic and technological progress. Hence, the geologic history of Earth may very well set the stage for a future of asteroid mining.

In 2006, the Keck Observatory announced that the binary Jupiter trojan 617 Patroclus,[32] and possibly large numbers of other Jupiter trojans, are likely extinct comets and consist largely of water ice. Similarly, Jupiter-family comets, and possibly near-Earth asteroids that are extinct comets, might also provide water. The process of in-situ resource utilization—using materials native to space for propellant, thermal management, tankage, radiation shielding, and other high-mass components of space infrastructure—could lead to radical reductions in its cost.[33] Although whether these cost reductions could be achieved, and if achieved would offset the enormous infrastructure investment required, is unknown.

From the astrobiological perspective, asteroid prospecting could provide scientific data for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI). Some astrophysicists have suggested that if advanced extraterrestrial civilizations employed asteroid mining long ago, the hallmarks of these activities might be detectable.[34][35][36]

Mission Δv
Earth surface to LEO 8.0 km/s
LEO to near-Earth asteroid 5.5 km/s[note 1]
LEO to lunar surface 6.3 km/s
LEO to moons of Mars 8.0 km/s

An important factor to consider in target selection is orbital economics, in particular the change in velocity (Δv) and travel time to and from the target. More of the extracted native material must be expended as propellant in higher Δv trajectories, thus less returned as payload. Direct Hohmann trajectories are faster than Hohmann trajectories assisted by planetary and/or lunar flybys, which in turn are faster than those of the Interplanetary Transport Network, but the reduction in transfer time comes at the cost of increased Δv requirements.[citation needed]

The Easily Recoverable Object (ERO) subclass of Near-Earth asteroids are considered likely candidates for early mining activity. Their low Δv makes them suitable for use in extracting construction materials for near-Earth space-based facilities, greatly reducing the economic cost of transporting supplies into Earth orbit.[37]

The table above shows a comparison of Δv requirements for various missions. In terms of propulsion energy requirements, a mission to a near-Earth asteroid compares favorably to alternative mining missions.

An example of a potential target[38] for an early asteroid mining expedition is 4660 Nereus, expected to be mainly enstatite. This body has a very low Δv compared to lifting materials from the surface of the Moon. However, it would require a much longer round-trip to return the material.

Multiple types of asteroids have been identified but the three main types would include the C-type, S-type, and M-type asteroids:

  1. C-type asteroids have a high abundance of water which is not currently of use for mining but could be used in an exploration effort beyond the asteroid. Mission costs could be reduced by using the available water from the asteroid. C-type asteroids also have high amounts of organic carbon, phosphorus, and other key ingredients for fertilizer which could be used to grow food.[39]
  2. S-type asteroids carry little water but are more attractive because they contain numerous metals, including nickel, cobalt, and more valuable metals, such as gold, platinum, and rhodium. A small 10-meter S-type asteroid contains about 650,000 kg (1,433,000 lb) of metal with 50 kg (110 lb) in the form of rare metals like platinum and gold.[39]
  3. M-type asteroids are rare but contain up to 10 times more metal than S-types.[39]

A class of easily retrievable objects (EROs) was identified by a group of researchers in 2013. Twelve asteroids made up the initially identified group, all of which could be potentially mined with present-day rocket technology. Of 9,000 asteroids searched in the NEO database, these twelve could all be brought into an Earth-accessible orbit by changing their velocity by less than 500 meters per second (1,800 km/h; 1,100 mph). The dozen asteroids range in size from 2 to 20 meters (10 to 70 ft).[40]

Asteroid cataloging edit

The B612 Foundation is a private nonprofit foundation with headquarters in the United States, dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikes. As a non-governmental organization it has conducted two lines of related research to help detect asteroids that could one day strike Earth, and find the technological means to divert their path to avoid such collisions.

The foundation's 2013 goal was to design and build a privately financed asteroid-finding space telescope, Sentinel, hoping in 2013 to launch it in 2017–2018. The Sentinel's infrared telescope, once parked in an orbit similar to that of Venus, is designed to help identify threatening asteroids by cataloging 90% of those with diameters larger than 140 metres (460 ft), as well as surveying smaller Solar System objects.[41][42][43] After NASA terminated their $30 million funding agreement with the B612 Foundation in October 2015[44] and the private fundraising did not achieve its goals, the Foundation eventually opted for an alternative approach using a constellation of much smaller spacecraft which is under study as of June 2017.[45] NASA/JPL's NEOCam has been proposed instead.

Mining considerations edit

There are four options for mining:[37]

  1. In-space manufacturing (ISM),[46] which may be enabled by biomining.[47]
  2. Bring raw asteroidal material to Earth for use.
  3. Process it on-site to bring back only processed materials, and perhaps produce propellant for the return trip.
  4. Transport the asteroid to a safe orbit around the Moon or Earth or to the ISS.[24] This can hypothetically allow for most materials to be used and not wasted.[21]

Processing in situ for the purpose of extracting high-value minerals will reduce the energy requirements for transporting the materials, although the processing facilities must first be transported to the mining site. In situ mining will involve drilling boreholes and injecting hot fluid/gas and allow the useful material to react or melt with the solvent and extract the solute. Due to the weak gravitational fields of asteroids, any activities, like drilling, will cause large disturbances and form dust clouds. These might be confined by some dome or bubble barrier. Or else some means of rapidly dissipating any dust could be provided for.

Mining operations require special equipment to handle the extraction and processing of ore in outer space.[37] The machinery will need to be anchored to the body,[citation needed] but once in place, the ore can be moved about more readily due to the lack of gravity. However, no techniques for refining ore in zero gravity currently exist. Docking with an asteroid might be performed using a harpoon-like process, where a projectile would penetrate the surface to serve as an anchor; then an attached cable would be used to winch the vehicle to the surface, if the asteroid is both penetrable and rigid enough for a harpoon to be effective.[48]

Due to the distance from Earth to an asteroid selected for mining, the round-trip time for communications will be several minutes or more, except during occasional close approaches to Earth by near-Earth asteroids. Thus any mining equipment will either need to be highly automated, or a human presence will be needed nearby.[37] Humans would also be useful for troubleshooting problems and for maintaining the equipment. On the other hand, multi-minute communications delays have not prevented the success of robotic exploration of Mars, and automated systems would be much less expensive to build and deploy.[49]

Failed mining projects edit

On April 24, 2012 at the Seattle Museum of Flight, a plan was announced by billionaire entrepreneurs to mine asteroids for their resources.[50] The company was called Planetary Resources and its founders included aerospace entrepreneurs Eric Anderson and Peter Diamandis.[33] The company announced plans to create a propellant depot in space by 2020; splitting water from asteroids into hydrogen and oxygen to replenish satellites and spacecraft. Advisers included film director and explorer James Cameron; investors included Google's chief executive Larry Page, and its executive chairman was Eric Schmidt.[51] [33] Telescope technology proposed to identify and examine candidate asteroids lead to development of the Arkyd family of spacecraft; two prototypes of which were flown in 2015[52] and 2018.[53] Shortly after, all plans for the Arkyd space telescope technology were abandoned; the company was wound down, its hardware auctioned off,[54] and remaining assets acquired by ConsenSys, a blockchain company.[55]

A year after the appearance of Planetary Resources, similar asteroid mining plans were announced in 2013 by Deep Space Industries; a company established by David Gump, Rick Tumlinson, and others.[56] The initial goal was to visit asteroids with prospecting and sample return spacecraft in 2015 and 2016;[57] and begin mining within ten years.[58] Deep Space Industries later pivoted to developing & selling the propulsion systems that would enable its envisioned asteroid operations, including a successful line of water-propellant thrusters in 2018;[59] and in 2019 was acquired by Bradford Space, a company with a portfolio of earth orbit systems and space flight components.[60]

Proposed mining projects edit

At ISDC-San Diego 2013,[61] Kepler Energy and Space Engineering (KESE, llc) announced its intention to send an automated mining system to collect 40 tons of asteroid regolith and return to low Earth orbit by 2020.

In September 2012, the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) announced the Robotic Asteroid Prospector project, which would examine and evaluate the feasibility of asteroid mining in terms of means, methods, and systems.[62]

The TransAstra Corporation develops technology to locate and harvest asteroids using a family of spacecraft built around a patented approach using concentrated solar energy known as optical mining.[63]

In 2022, a startup called AstroForge announced intentions to develop technologies & spacecraft for prospecting, mining, and refining platinum from near-earth asteroids.[64]

Economics edit

Currently, the quality of the ore and the consequent cost and mass of equipment required to extract it are unknown and can only be speculated. Some economic analyses indicate that the cost of returning asteroidal materials to Earth far outweighs their market value, and that asteroid mining will not attract private investment at current commodity prices and space transportation costs.[65][66] Other studies suggest large profit by using solar power.[67][68] Potential markets for materials can be identified and profit generated if extraction cost is brought down. For example, the delivery of multiple tonnes of water to low Earth orbit for rocket fuel preparation for space tourism could generate a significant profit if space tourism itself proves profitable.[69]

In 1997 it was speculated that a relatively small metallic asteroid with a diameter of 1.6 km (1 mi) contains more than US$20 trillion worth of industrial and precious metals.[23][70] A comparatively small M-type asteroid with a mean diameter of 1 km (0.62 mi) could contain more than two billion metric tons of ironnickel ore,[citation needed] or two to three times the world production of 2004.[71] The asteroid 16 Psyche is believed to contain 1.7×1019 kg of nickel–iron, which could supply the world production requirement for several million years. A small portion of the extracted material would also be precious metals.

Not all mined materials from asteroids would be cost-effective, especially for the potential return of economic amounts of material to Earth. For potential return to Earth, platinum is considered very rare in terrestrial geologic formations and therefore is potentially worth bringing some quantity for terrestrial use. Nickel, on the other hand, is quite abundant and being mined in many terrestrial locations, so the high cost of asteroid mining may not make it economically viable.[72]

Although Planetary Resources indicated in 2012 that the platinum from a 30-meter-long (98 ft) asteroid could be worth US$25–50 billion,[73] an economist remarked any outside source of precious metals could lower prices sufficiently to possibly doom the venture by rapidly increasing the available supply of such metals.[74]

Development of an infrastructure for altering asteroid orbits could offer a large return on investment.[75]

Scarcity edit

Scarcity is a fundamental economic problem of humans having seemingly unlimited wants in a world of limited resources. Since Earth's resources are finite, the relative abundance of asteroidal ore gives asteroid mining the potential to provide nearly unlimited resources, which would essentially eliminate scarcity for those materials.

The idea of exhausting resources is not new. In 1798, Thomas Malthus wrote, because resources are ultimately limited, the exponential growth in a population would result in falls in income per capita until poverty and starvation would result as a constricting factor on population.[76] Malthus posited this 226 years ago, and no sign has yet emerged of the Malthus effect regarding raw materials.

  • Proven reserves are deposits of mineral resources that are already discovered and known to be economically extractable under present or similar demand, price and other economic and technological conditions.[76]
  • Conditional reserves are discovered deposits that are not yet economically viable.[76]
  • Indicated reserves are less intensively measured deposits whose data is derived from surveys and geological projections. Hypothetical reserves and speculative resources make up this group of reserves.[76]
  • Inferred reserves are deposits that have been located but not yet exploited.[76]

Continued development in asteroid mining techniques and technology will help to increase mineral discoveries.[77] As the cost of extracting mineral resources, especially platinum group metals, on Earth rises, the cost of extracting the same resources from celestial bodies declines due to technological innovations around space exploration.[76]

As of September 2016, there are 711 known asteroids with a value exceeding US$100 trillion each.[78]

Financial feasibility edit

Space ventures are high-risk, with long lead times and heavy capital investment, and that is no different for asteroid-mining projects. These types of ventures could be funded through private investment or through government investment. For a commercial venture it can be profitable as long as the revenue earned is greater than total costs (costs for extraction and costs for marketing).[76] The costs involving an asteroid-mining venture have been estimated to be around US$100 billion in 1996.[76]

There are six categories of cost considered for an asteroid mining venture:[76]

  1. Research and development costs
  2. Exploration and prospecting costs
  3. Construction and infrastructure development costs
  4. Operational and engineering costs
  5. Environmental costs
  6. Time cost

Determining financial feasibility is best represented through net present value.[76] One requirement needed for financial feasibility is a high return on investments estimating around 30%.[76] Example calculation assumes for simplicity that the only valuable material on asteroids is platinum. On August 16, 2016, platinum was valued at $1157 per ounce or $37,000 per kilogram. At a price of $1,340, for a 10% return on investment, 173,400 kg (5,575,000 ozt) of platinum would have to be extracted for every 1,155,000 tons of asteroid ore. For a 50% return on investment 1,703,000 kg (54,750,000 ozt) of platinum would have to be extracted for every 11,350,000 tons of asteroid ore. This analysis assumes that doubling the supply of platinum to the market (5.13 million ounces in 2014) would have no effect on the price of platinum. A more realistic assumption is that increasing the supply by this amount would reduce the price 30–50%.[citation needed]

The financial feasibility of asteroid mining with regards to different technical parameters has been presented by Sonter[79] and more recently by Hein et al.[80]

Hein et al.[80] have specifically explored the case where platinum is brought from space to Earth and estimate that economically viable asteroid mining for this specific case would be rather challenging.

Decreases in the price of space access matter. The start of operational use of the low-cost-per-kilogram-in-orbit Falcon Heavy launch vehicle in 2018 is projected by astronomer Martin Elvis to have increased the extent of economically minable near-Earth asteroids from hundreds to thousands. With the increased availability of several kilometers per second of delta-v that Falcon Heavy provides, it increases the number of NEAs accessible from 3 percent to around 45 percent.[81]

Precedent for joint investment by multiple parties into a long-term venture to mine commodities may be found in the legal concept of a mining partnership, which exists in the state laws of multiple US states including California. In a mining partnership, "[Each] member of a mining partnership shares in the profits and losses thereof in the proportion which the interest or share he or she owns in the mine bears to the whole partnership capital or whole number of shares."[82]

Mining the Asteroid Belt from Mars edit

 
The asteroids of the inner Solar System and Jupiter: The belt is located between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars.
  Sun
  Jupiter trojans
  Asteroid belt
  Hilda asteroids (Hildas)
  Near-Earth objects (selection)
 
Main Asteroid Belt 42 largest asteroids

Since Mars is much closer to the asteroid belt than Earth is, it would take less Delta-v to get to the asteroid belt and return minerals to Mars. One hypothesis is that the origin of the Moons of Mars (Phobos and Deimos) are actually asteroid captures from the asteroid belt.[83] 16 Psyche in the main belt could have over $10,000 Quadrillion United States dollar worth of minerals. NASA is planning a mission for October 10, 2023 for the Psyche orbiter to launch and get to the asteroid by August 2029 to study.[84] 511 Davida could have $27 quadrillion worth of minerals and resources.[85] Using the moon Phobos to launch spacecraft is energetically favorable and a useful location from which to dispatch missions to main belt asteroids.[86] Mining the asteroid belt from Mars and its moons could help in the Colonization of Mars.[87][88][89]

Phobos as a space elevator for Mars edit

Phobos is synchronously orbiting Mars, where the same face stays facing the planet at ~6,028 km above the Martian surface. A space elevator could extend down from Phobos to Mars 6,000 km, about 28 kilometers from the surface, and just out of the atmosphere of Mars. A similar space elevator cable could extend out 6,000 km the opposite direction that would counterbalance Phobos. In total the space elevator would extend out over 12,000 km which would be below Areostationary orbit of Mars (17,032 km). A rocket launch would still be needed to get the rocket and cargo to the beginning of the space elevator 28 km above the surface. The surface of Mars is rotating at 0.25 km/s at the equator and the bottom of the space elevator would be rotating around Mars at 0.77 km/s, so only 0.52 km/s of Delta-v would be needed to get to the space elevator. Phobos orbits at 2.15 km/s and the outer most part of the space elevator would rotate around Mars at 3.52 km/s.[90]

 
Space elevator Phobos
 
Earth vs Mars vs Moon gravity at elevation

Regulation and safety edit

Space law involves a specific set of international treaties, along with national statutory laws. The system and framework for international and domestic laws have emerged in part through the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs.[91] The rules, terms and agreements that space law authorities consider to be part of the active body of international space law are the five international space treaties and five UN declarations. Approximately 100 nations and institutions were involved in negotiations. The space treaties cover many major issues such as arms control, non-appropriation of space, freedom of exploration, liability for damages, safety and rescue of astronauts and spacecraft, prevention of harmful interference with space activities and the environment, notification and registration of space activities, and the settlement of disputes. In exchange for assurances from the space power, the nonspacefaring nations acquiesced to U.S. and Soviet proposals to treat outer space as a commons (res communis) territory which belonged to no one state.

Asteroid mining in particular is covered by both international treaties—for example, the Outer Space Treaty—and national statutory laws—for example, specific legislative acts in the United States[92] and Luxembourg.[93]

Varying degrees of criticism exist regarding international space law. Some critics accept the Outer Space Treaty, but reject the Moon Agreement. The Outer Space Treaty allows private property rights for outer space natural resources once removed from the surface, subsurface or subsoil of the Moon and other celestial bodies in outer space.[citation needed] Thus, international space law is capable of managing newly emerging space mining activities, private space transportation, commercial spaceports and commercial space stations/habitats/settlements. Space mining involving the extraction and removal of natural resources from their natural location is allowable under the Outer Space Treaty.[citation needed] Once removed, those natural resources can be reduced to possession, sold,[citation needed] traded and explored or used for scientific purposes. International space law allows space mining, specifically the extraction of natural resources. It is generally understood within the space law authorities that extracting space resources is allowable, even by private companies for profit.[citation needed] However, international space law prohibits property rights over territories and outer space land.

Astrophysicists Carl Sagan and Steven J. Ostro raised the concern altering the trajectories of asteroids near Earth might pose a collision hazard threat. They concluded that orbit engineering has both opportunities and dangers: if controls instituted on orbit-manipulation technology were too tight, future spacefaring could be hampered, but if they were too loose, human civilization would be at risk.[75][94][95]

The Outer Space Treaty edit

 
Outer Space Treaty:
  Parties
  Signatories
  Non-parties

After ten years of negotiations between nearly 100 nations, the Outer Space Treaty opened for signature on January 27, 1966. It entered into force as the constitution for outer space on October 10, 1967. The Outer Space Treaty was well received; it was ratified by ninety-six nations and signed by an additional twenty-seven states. The outcome has been that the basic foundation of international space law consists of five (arguably four) international space treaties, along with various written resolutions and declarations. The main international treaty is the Outer Space Treaty of 1967; it is generally viewed as the "Constitution" for outer space. By ratifying the Outer Space Treaty of 1967, ninety-eight nations agreed that outer space would belong to the "province of mankind", that all nations would have the freedom to "use" and "explore" outer space, and that both these provisions must be done in a way to "benefit all mankind". The province of mankind principle and the other key terms have not yet been specifically defined (Jasentuliyana, 1992). Critics have complained that the Outer Space Treaty is vague. Yet, international space law has worked well and has served space commercial industries and interests for many decades. The taking away and extraction of Moon rocks, for example, has been treated as being legally permissible.

The framers of Outer Space Treaty initially focused on solidifying broad terms first, with the intent to create more specific legal provisions later (Griffin, 1981: 733–734). This is why the members of the COPUOS later expanded the Outer Space Treaty norms by articulating more specific understandings which are found in the "three supplemental agreements" – the Rescue and Return Agreement of 1968, the Liability Convention of 1973, and the Registration Convention of 1976 (734).

Hobe (2007) explains that the Outer Space Treaty "explicitly and implicitly prohibits only the acquisition of territorial property rights" but extracting space resources is allowable. It is generally understood within the space law authorities that extracting space resources is allowable, even by private companies for profit. However, international space law prohibits property rights over territories and outer space land. Hobe further explains that there is no mention of “the question of the extraction of natural resources which means that such use is allowed under the Outer Space Treaty” (2007: 211). He also points out that there is an unsettled question regarding the division of benefits from outer space resources in accordance with Article, paragraph 1 of the Outer Space Treaty.[96]

The Moon Agreement edit

 
Participation in the Moon Treaty
  Parties
  Signatories
  Non-parties

The Moon Agreement was signed on December 18, 1979, as part of the United Nations Charter and it entered into force in 1984 after a five state ratification consensus procedure, agreed upon by the members of the United Nations Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS).[97] As of September 2019, only 18 nations have signed or ratified the treaty.[97] The other three outer space treaties experienced a high level of international cooperation in terms of signage and ratification, but the Moon Treaty went further than them, by defining the Common Heritage concept in more detail and by imposing specific obligations on the parties engaged in the exploration and/or exploitation of outer space. The Moon Treaty explicitly designates the Moon and its natural resources as part of the Common Heritage of Mankind.[98]

The Article 11 establishes that lunar resources are "not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means".[99] However, exploitation of resources is suggested to be allowed if it is "governed by an international regime" (Article 11.5), but the rules of such regime have not yet been established.[100] S. Neil Hosenball, the NASA General Counsel and chief US negotiator for the Moon Treaty, cautioned in 2018 that negotiation of the rules of the international regime should be delayed until the feasibility of exploitation of lunar resources has been established.[101]

The objection to the treaty by the spacefaring nations is held to be the requirement that extracted resources (and the technology used to that end) must be shared with other nations. The similar regime in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is believed to impede the development of such industries on the seabed.[102]

The United States, the Russian Federation, and the People's Republic of China (PRC) have neither signed, acceded to, nor ratified the Moon Agreement.[103]

Legal regimes of some countries edit

Luxembourg edit

In February 2016, the Government of Luxembourg said that it would attempt to "jump-start an industrial sector to mine asteroid resources in space" by, among other things, creating a "legal framework" and regulatory incentives for companies involved in the industry.[93][104] By June 2016, it announced that it would "invest more than US$200 million in research, technology demonstration, and in the direct purchase of equity in companies relocating to Luxembourg".[105] In 2017, it became the "first European country to pass a law conferring to companies the ownership of any resources they extract from space", and remained active in advancing space resource public policy in 2018.[106][107]

In 2017, Japan, Portugal, and the UAE entered into cooperation agreements with Luxembourg for mining operations in celestial bodies.[108]

In 2018, the Luxembourg Space Agency was created.[109] It provides private companies and organizations working on asteroid mining with financial support.[110][111]

United States edit

Some nations are beginning to promulgate legal regimes for extraterrestrial resource extraction. For example, the United States "SPACE Act of 2015"—facilitating private development of space resources consistent with US international treaty obligations—passed the US House of Representatives in July 2015.[112][113] In November 2015 it passed the United States Senate.[114] On 25 November U.S. President Barack Obama signed the H.R.2262 – U.S. Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act into law.[115] The law recognizes the right of U.S. citizens to own space resources they obtain and encourages the commercial exploration and utilization of resources from asteroids. According to the article § 51303 of the law:[116]

A United States citizen engaged in commercial recovery of an asteroid resource or a space resource under this chapter shall be entitled to any asteroid resource or space resource obtained, including to possess, own, transport, use, and sell the asteroid resource or space resource obtained in accordance with applicable law, including the international obligations of the United States

On 6 April 2020 U.S. President Donald Trump signed the Executive Order on Encouraging International Support for the Recovery and Use of Space Resources. According to the Order:[117][118]

  • Americans should have the right to engage in commercial exploration, recovery, and use of resources in outer space
  • the US does not view space as a "global commons"
  • the US opposes the Moon Agreement

Environmental impact edit

A positive impact of asteroid mining has been conjectured as being an enabler of transferring industrial activities into space, such as energy generation.[119] A quantitative analysis of the potential environmental benefits of water and platinum mining in space has been developed, where potentially large benefits could materialize, depending on the ratio of material mined in space and mass launched into space.[120]

Research missions to asteroids and comets edit

Proposed or cancelled edit

  • Near Earth Asteroid Prospector - concept for a small commercial spacecraft mission by the private company SpaceDev, the project ran into fundraising difficulties and subsequently cancelled.[121][122][123]

Ongoing and planned edit

  • Hayabusa2 – ongoing JAXA asteroid sample return mission (arrived at the target in 2018, returned sample in 2020)
  • OSIRIS-REx – NASA asteroid sample return mission (launched on September 8, 2016, arrived at target 2020,[124] returned sample on September 24, 2023[125])
  • Fobos-Grunt 2 – proposed Roskosmos sample return mission to Phobos (launch in 2024)
  • VIPER rover – planned NASA mission to prospect for lunar resources in 2024

Completed edit

First of successful missions by country:[126]

Nation Flyby Orbit Landing Sample return
  United States ICE (1985) NEAR (1997) NEAR (2001) Stardust (2006), OSIRIS-REx (2023)
  Japan Suisei (1986) Hayabusa (2005) Hayabusa (2005) Hayabusa (2010), Hayabusa2 (2020)
  European Union ICE (1985) Rosetta (2014) Rosetta (2014)
  Soviet Union Vega 1 (1986)
  China Chang'e 2 (2012)

In fiction edit

 
An astronaut mining an asteroid using a hand drill in the video game Space Engineers.

The first mention of asteroid mining in science fiction apparently[clarification needed] came in Garrett P. Serviss' story Edison's Conquest of Mars, published in the New York Evening Journal in 1898.[127][unreliable source][128][non-primary source needed] Several science-fiction video games include asteroid mining.[citation needed]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This is the average amount; asteroids with much lower delta-v exist.

References edit

  1. ^ O'Leary, B. (1977-07-22). "Mining the Apollo and Amor Asteroids". Science. 197 (4301): 363–366. Bibcode:1977Sci...197..363O. doi:10.1126/science.197.4301.363. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17797965. S2CID 45597532.
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Publications edit

  • Space Enterprise: Beyond NASA / David Gump (1990) ISBN 0-275-93314-8.
  • Mining the Sky: Untold Riches from the Asteroids, Comets, and Planets / John S. Lewis (1998) ISBN 0-201-47959-1
  • Lee, Ricky J. (2012). Law and regulation of commercial mining of minerals in outer space. Dordrecht: Springer. doi:10.1007/978-94-007-2039-8. ISBN 978-94-007-2039-8. OCLC 780068323.
  • Viorel Badescu: Asteroids – prospective energy and material resources. Springer, Berlin 2013, ISBN 978-3-642-39243-6.
  • Ram Jakhu, et al.: Space Mining and Its Regulation. Springer, Cham 2016, ISBN 978-3-319-39245-5.
  • Annette Froehlich: Space Resource Utilization: A View from an Emerging Space Faring Nation. Springer, Cham 2018, ISBN 978-3-319-66968-7.

External links edit

Text edit

  • , M. J. Sonter.
  • Michael Booth: (December 21, 1995)
  • The Plan to Bring an Asteroid to Earth
  • How Asteroids can save mankind
  • Luxembourg aims to be big player in possible asteroid mining, The Guardian, February 2016.
  • Blair, Brad R. (2000). (PDF). Space Resources Roundtable II. 1 (1070): 5. Bibcode:2000srrt.conf....5B. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-12-12. Retrieved 2016-10-08.

Video edit

  • Video Beyond Earth – NEO Destinations NewSpace Conference of the Space Frontier Foundation, Aug 7, 2011
  • Video Moon, Mars, Asteroids – Where to Go First for Resources? Space manufacturing Conference of the Space Studies Institute, October 2010
  • Video Moving An Asteroid California Institute of Technology, Workshop Public Lecture Panel, September 2011
  • Video Asteroid Mining – The Market Problem and Radical Solution, November 2013

asteroid, mining, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, addin. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Asteroid mining news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information May 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Asteroid mining is the hypothetical extraction of materials from asteroids and other minor planets including near Earth objects 1 Overview of the Inner Solar System asteroids up to the Jovian System Notable asteroid mining challenges include the high cost of spaceflight unreliable identification of asteroids which are suitable for mining and the challenges of extracting usable material in a space environment Asteroid sample return research missions such as Hayabusa Hayabusa2 and OSIRIS REx illustrate the challenges of collecting ore from space using current technology As of 2023 less than 7 grams of asteroid material has been successfully returned to Earth from space 2 In progress missions promise to increase this amount to approximately 60 grams two ounces Asteroid research missions are complex endeavors and return a tiny amount of material less than 1 milligram Hayabusa 100 milligrams Hayabusa2 70 grams OSIRIS REx relative to the size and expense of these projects 300 million Hayabusa 800 million Hayabusa2 1 16 billion OSIRIS REx 3 4 The history of asteroid mining is brief but features a gradual development Ideas of which asteroids to prospect how to gather resources and what to do with those resources have evolved over the decades Contents 1 History 1 1 Prior to 1970 1 2 The 1970s 1 3 The 1980s 1 4 The 1990s 1 5 The 2010s 2 Minerals in space 2 1 Asteroid cataloging 3 Mining considerations 4 Failed mining projects 5 Proposed mining projects 6 Economics 6 1 Scarcity 6 2 Financial feasibility 6 3 Mining the Asteroid Belt from Mars 6 3 1 Phobos as a space elevator for Mars 7 Regulation and safety 7 1 The Outer Space Treaty 7 2 The Moon Agreement 7 3 Legal regimes of some countries 7 3 1 Luxembourg 7 3 2 United States 8 Environmental impact 9 Research missions to asteroids and comets 9 1 Proposed or cancelled 9 2 Ongoing and planned 9 3 Completed 10 In fiction 11 Gallery 12 See also 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Publications 15 External links 15 1 Text 15 2 VideoHistory editPrior to 1970 edit Before 1970 asteroid mining existed largely within the realm of science fiction Stories such as Worlds of If 5 Scavengers in Space 6 and Miners in the Sky 7 told stories about the conceived dangers motives and experiences of mining asteroids At the same time many researchers in academia speculated about the profits that could be gained from asteroid mining but they lacked the technology to seriously pursue the idea 8 The 1970s edit The 1969 9 Moon Landing spurred a wave of scientific interest in human space activity far beyond the Earth s orbit As the decade continued more and more academic interest surrounded the topic of asteroid mining A good deal of serious academic consideration was aimed at mining asteroids located closer to Earth than the main asteroid belt In particular the asteroid groups Apollo and Amor were considered 10 These groups were chosen not only because of their proximity to Earth but also because many at the time thought they were rich in raw materials that could be refined 10 Despite the wave of interest many in the space science community were aware of how little was known about asteroids and encouraged a more gradual and systematic approach to asteroid mining 11 The 1980s edit Academic interest in asteroid mining continued into the 1980s The idea of targeting the Apollo and Amor asteroid groups still had some popularity 12 However by the late 1980s the interest in the Apollo and Amor asteroid groups is being replaced with interest in the moons of Mars Phobos and Deimos 13 Organizations like NASA begin to formulate ideas of how to process materials in space 14 and what to do with the materials that are hypothetically gathered from space 15 The 1990s edit nbsp nbsp source source source Hayabusa2 asteroid sample return mission 3 December 2014 5 December 2020 New reasons emerge for pursuing asteroid mining These reasons tend to revolve around environmental concerns such as fears over humans over consuming the Earth s natural resources 16 and trying to capture energy from the Sun in space 17 In the same decade NASA is trying to establish what materials in asteroids could be valuable for extraction These materials include free metals volatiles and bulk dirt 18 The 2010s edit After a burst of interest in the 2010s asteroid mining ambitions have shifted to more distant long term goals and some asteroid mining companies have pivoted to more general purpose propulsion technology 19 Minerals in space editAs resource depletion on Earth becomes more real the idea of extracting valuable elements from asteroids and returning these to Earth for profit or using space based resources to build solar power satellites and space habitats 20 21 becomes more attractive Hypothetically water processed from ice could refuel orbiting propellant depots 22 23 24 Although asteroids and Earth accreted from the same starting materials Earth s relatively stronger gravity pulled all heavy siderophilic iron loving elements into its core during its molten youth more than four billion years ago 25 26 27 This left the crust depleted of such valuable elements until a rain of asteroid impacts re infused the depleted crust with metals like gold cobalt iron manganese molybdenum nickel osmium palladium platinum rhenium rhodium ruthenium and tungsten some flow from core to surface does occur e g at the Bushveld Igneous Complex a famously rich source of platinum group metals 28 29 30 31 Today these metals are mined from Earth s crust and they are essential for economic and technological progress Hence the geologic history of Earth may very well set the stage for a future of asteroid mining In 2006 the Keck Observatory announced that the binary Jupiter trojan 617 Patroclus 32 and possibly large numbers of other Jupiter trojans are likely extinct comets and consist largely of water ice Similarly Jupiter family comets and possibly near Earth asteroids that are extinct comets might also provide water The process of in situ resource utilization using materials native to space for propellant thermal management tankage radiation shielding and other high mass components of space infrastructure could lead to radical reductions in its cost 33 Although whether these cost reductions could be achieved and if achieved would offset the enormous infrastructure investment required is unknown From the astrobiological perspective asteroid prospecting could provide scientific data for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence SETI Some astrophysicists have suggested that if advanced extraterrestrial civilizations employed asteroid mining long ago the hallmarks of these activities might be detectable 34 35 36 Mission Dv Earth surface to LEO 8 0 km s LEO to near Earth asteroid 5 5 km s note 1 LEO to lunar surface 6 3 km s LEO to moons of Mars 8 0 km s An important factor to consider in target selection is orbital economics in particular the change in velocity Dv and travel time to and from the target More of the extracted native material must be expended as propellant in higher Dv trajectories thus less returned as payload Direct Hohmann trajectories are faster than Hohmann trajectories assisted by planetary and or lunar flybys which in turn are faster than those of the Interplanetary Transport Network but the reduction in transfer time comes at the cost of increased Dv requirements citation needed The Easily Recoverable Object ERO subclass of Near Earth asteroids are considered likely candidates for early mining activity Their low Dv makes them suitable for use in extracting construction materials for near Earth space based facilities greatly reducing the economic cost of transporting supplies into Earth orbit 37 The table above shows a comparison of Dv requirements for various missions In terms of propulsion energy requirements a mission to a near Earth asteroid compares favorably to alternative mining missions An example of a potential target 38 for an early asteroid mining expedition is 4660 Nereus expected to be mainly enstatite This body has a very low Dv compared to lifting materials from the surface of the Moon However it would require a much longer round trip to return the material Multiple types of asteroids have been identified but the three main types would include the C type S type and M type asteroids C type asteroids have a high abundance of water which is not currently of use for mining but could be used in an exploration effort beyond the asteroid Mission costs could be reduced by using the available water from the asteroid C type asteroids also have high amounts of organic carbon phosphorus and other key ingredients for fertilizer which could be used to grow food 39 S type asteroids carry little water but are more attractive because they contain numerous metals including nickel cobalt and more valuable metals such as gold platinum and rhodium A small 10 meter S type asteroid contains about 650 000 kg 1 433 000 lb of metal with 50 kg 110 lb in the form of rare metals like platinum and gold 39 M type asteroids are rare but contain up to 10 times more metal than S types 39 A class of easily retrievable objects EROs was identified by a group of researchers in 2013 Twelve asteroids made up the initially identified group all of which could be potentially mined with present day rocket technology Of 9 000 asteroids searched in the NEO database these twelve could all be brought into an Earth accessible orbit by changing their velocity by less than 500 meters per second 1 800 km h 1 100 mph The dozen asteroids range in size from 2 to 20 meters 10 to 70 ft 40 Asteroid cataloging edit Main article B612 Foundation The B612 Foundation is a private nonprofit foundation with headquarters in the United States dedicated to protecting Earth from asteroid strikes As a non governmental organization it has conducted two lines of related research to help detect asteroids that could one day strike Earth and find the technological means to divert their path to avoid such collisions The foundation s 2013 goal was to design and build a privately financed asteroid finding space telescope Sentinel hoping in 2013 to launch it in 2017 2018 The Sentinel s infrared telescope once parked in an orbit similar to that of Venus is designed to help identify threatening asteroids by cataloging 90 of those with diameters larger than 140 metres 460 ft as well as surveying smaller Solar System objects 41 42 43 After NASA terminated their 30 million funding agreement with the B612 Foundation in October 2015 44 and the private fundraising did not achieve its goals the Foundation eventually opted for an alternative approach using a constellation of much smaller spacecraft which is under study as of June 2017 update 45 NASA JPL s NEOCam has been proposed instead Mining considerations editThere are four options for mining 37 In space manufacturing ISM 46 which may be enabled by biomining 47 Bring raw asteroidal material to Earth for use Process it on site to bring back only processed materials and perhaps produce propellant for the return trip Transport the asteroid to a safe orbit around the Moon or Earth or to the ISS 24 This can hypothetically allow for most materials to be used and not wasted 21 Processing in situ for the purpose of extracting high value minerals will reduce the energy requirements for transporting the materials although the processing facilities must first be transported to the mining site In situ mining will involve drilling boreholes and injecting hot fluid gas and allow the useful material to react or melt with the solvent and extract the solute Due to the weak gravitational fields of asteroids any activities like drilling will cause large disturbances and form dust clouds These might be confined by some dome or bubble barrier Or else some means of rapidly dissipating any dust could be provided for Mining operations require special equipment to handle the extraction and processing of ore in outer space 37 The machinery will need to be anchored to the body citation needed but once in place the ore can be moved about more readily due to the lack of gravity However no techniques for refining ore in zero gravity currently exist Docking with an asteroid might be performed using a harpoon like process where a projectile would penetrate the surface to serve as an anchor then an attached cable would be used to winch the vehicle to the surface if the asteroid is both penetrable and rigid enough for a harpoon to be effective 48 Due to the distance from Earth to an asteroid selected for mining the round trip time for communications will be several minutes or more except during occasional close approaches to Earth by near Earth asteroids Thus any mining equipment will either need to be highly automated or a human presence will be needed nearby 37 Humans would also be useful for troubleshooting problems and for maintaining the equipment On the other hand multi minute communications delays have not prevented the success of robotic exploration of Mars and automated systems would be much less expensive to build and deploy 49 Failed mining projects editOn April 24 2012 at the Seattle Museum of Flight a plan was announced by billionaire entrepreneurs to mine asteroids for their resources 50 The company was called Planetary Resources and its founders included aerospace entrepreneurs Eric Anderson and Peter Diamandis 33 The company announced plans to create a propellant depot in space by 2020 splitting water from asteroids into hydrogen and oxygen to replenish satellites and spacecraft Advisers included film director and explorer James Cameron investors included Google s chief executive Larry Page and its executive chairman was Eric Schmidt 51 33 Telescope technology proposed to identify and examine candidate asteroids lead to development of the Arkyd family of spacecraft two prototypes of which were flown in 2015 52 and 2018 53 Shortly after all plans for the Arkyd space telescope technology were abandoned the company was wound down its hardware auctioned off 54 and remaining assets acquired by ConsenSys a blockchain company 55 A year after the appearance of Planetary Resources similar asteroid mining plans were announced in 2013 by Deep Space Industries a company established by David Gump Rick Tumlinson and others 56 The initial goal was to visit asteroids with prospecting and sample return spacecraft in 2015 and 2016 57 and begin mining within ten years 58 Deep Space Industries later pivoted to developing amp selling the propulsion systems that would enable its envisioned asteroid operations including a successful line of water propellant thrusters in 2018 59 and in 2019 was acquired by Bradford Space a company with a portfolio of earth orbit systems and space flight components 60 Proposed mining projects editAt ISDC San Diego 2013 61 Kepler Energy and Space Engineering KESE llc announced its intention to send an automated mining system to collect 40 tons of asteroid regolith and return to low Earth orbit by 2020 In September 2012 the NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts NIAC announced the Robotic Asteroid Prospector project which would examine and evaluate the feasibility of asteroid mining in terms of means methods and systems 62 The TransAstra Corporation develops technology to locate and harvest asteroids using a family of spacecraft built around a patented approach using concentrated solar energy known as optical mining 63 In 2022 a startup called AstroForge announced intentions to develop technologies amp spacecraft for prospecting mining and refining platinum from near earth asteroids 64 Economics editCurrently the quality of the ore and the consequent cost and mass of equipment required to extract it are unknown and can only be speculated Some economic analyses indicate that the cost of returning asteroidal materials to Earth far outweighs their market value and that asteroid mining will not attract private investment at current commodity prices and space transportation costs 65 66 Other studies suggest large profit by using solar power 67 68 Potential markets for materials can be identified and profit generated if extraction cost is brought down For example the delivery of multiple tonnes of water to low Earth orbit for rocket fuel preparation for space tourism could generate a significant profit if space tourism itself proves profitable 69 In 1997 it was speculated that a relatively small metallic asteroid with a diameter of 1 6 km 1 mi contains more than US 20 trillion worth of industrial and precious metals 23 70 A comparatively small M type asteroid with a mean diameter of 1 km 0 62 mi could contain more than two billion metric tons of iron nickel ore citation needed or two to three times the world production of 2004 71 The asteroid 16 Psyche is believed to contain 1 7 1019 kg of nickel iron which could supply the world production requirement for several million years A small portion of the extracted material would also be precious metals Not all mined materials from asteroids would be cost effective especially for the potential return of economic amounts of material to Earth For potential return to Earth platinum is considered very rare in terrestrial geologic formations and therefore is potentially worth bringing some quantity for terrestrial use Nickel on the other hand is quite abundant and being mined in many terrestrial locations so the high cost of asteroid mining may not make it economically viable 72 Although Planetary Resources indicated in 2012 that the platinum from a 30 meter long 98 ft asteroid could be worth US 25 50 billion 73 an economist remarked any outside source of precious metals could lower prices sufficiently to possibly doom the venture by rapidly increasing the available supply of such metals 74 Development of an infrastructure for altering asteroid orbits could offer a large return on investment 75 Scarcity edit Main article Natural resource Classification See also Steady state economy Pushing some of the terrestrial limits into outer space Scarcity is a fundamental economic problem of humans having seemingly unlimited wants in a world of limited resources Since Earth s resources are finite the relative abundance of asteroidal ore gives asteroid mining the potential to provide nearly unlimited resources which would essentially eliminate scarcity for those materials The idea of exhausting resources is not new In 1798 Thomas Malthus wrote because resources are ultimately limited the exponential growth in a population would result in falls in income per capita until poverty and starvation would result as a constricting factor on population 76 Malthus posited this 226 years ago and no sign has yet emerged of the Malthus effect regarding raw materials Proven reserves are deposits of mineral resources that are already discovered and known to be economically extractable under present or similar demand price and other economic and technological conditions 76 Conditional reserves are discovered deposits that are not yet economically viable 76 Indicated reserves are less intensively measured deposits whose data is derived from surveys and geological projections Hypothetical reserves and speculative resources make up this group of reserves 76 Inferred reserves are deposits that have been located but not yet exploited 76 Continued development in asteroid mining techniques and technology will help to increase mineral discoveries 77 As the cost of extracting mineral resources especially platinum group metals on Earth rises the cost of extracting the same resources from celestial bodies declines due to technological innovations around space exploration 76 As of September 2016 update there are 711 known asteroids with a value exceeding US 100 trillion each 78 Financial feasibility edit Space ventures are high risk with long lead times and heavy capital investment and that is no different for asteroid mining projects These types of ventures could be funded through private investment or through government investment For a commercial venture it can be profitable as long as the revenue earned is greater than total costs costs for extraction and costs for marketing 76 The costs involving an asteroid mining venture have been estimated to be around US 100 billion in 1996 76 There are six categories of cost considered for an asteroid mining venture 76 Research and development costs Exploration and prospecting costs Construction and infrastructure development costs Operational and engineering costs Environmental costs Time cost Determining financial feasibility is best represented through net present value 76 One requirement needed for financial feasibility is a high return on investments estimating around 30 76 Example calculation assumes for simplicity that the only valuable material on asteroids is platinum On August 16 2016 platinum was valued at 1157 per ounce or 37 000 per kilogram At a price of 1 340 for a 10 return on investment 173 400 kg 5 575 000 ozt of platinum would have to be extracted for every 1 155 000 tons of asteroid ore For a 50 return on investment 1 703 000 kg 54 750 000 ozt of platinum would have to be extracted for every 11 350 000 tons of asteroid ore This analysis assumes that doubling the supply of platinum to the market 5 13 million ounces in 2014 would have no effect on the price of platinum A more realistic assumption is that increasing the supply by this amount would reduce the price 30 50 citation needed The financial feasibility of asteroid mining with regards to different technical parameters has been presented by Sonter 79 and more recently by Hein et al 80 Hein et al 80 have specifically explored the case where platinum is brought from space to Earth and estimate that economically viable asteroid mining for this specific case would be rather challenging Decreases in the price of space access matter The start of operational use of the low cost per kilogram in orbit Falcon Heavy launch vehicle in 2018 is projected by astronomer Martin Elvis to have increased the extent of economically minable near Earth asteroids from hundreds to thousands With the increased availability of several kilometers per second of delta v that Falcon Heavy provides it increases the number of NEAs accessible from 3 percent to around 45 percent 81 Precedent for joint investment by multiple parties into a long term venture to mine commodities may be found in the legal concept of a mining partnership which exists in the state laws of multiple US states including California In a mining partnership Each member of a mining partnership shares in the profits and losses thereof in the proportion which the interest or share he or she owns in the mine bears to the whole partnership capital or whole number of shares 82 Mining the Asteroid Belt from Mars edit See also Category Main belt asteroids Amor asteroids and Apollo asteroids nbsp The asteroids of the inner Solar System and Jupiter The belt is located between the orbits of Jupiter and Mars Sun Jupiter trojans Orbits of planets Asteroid belt Hilda asteroids Hildas Near Earth objects selection nbsp Main Asteroid Belt 42 largest asteroids Amor asteroid belt Apollo asteroid belt Aten asteroid belt See also List of exceptional asteroids Since Mars is much closer to the asteroid belt than Earth is it would take less Delta v to get to the asteroid belt and return minerals to Mars One hypothesis is that the origin of the Moons of Mars Phobos and Deimos are actually asteroid captures from the asteroid belt 83 16 Psyche in the main belt could have over 10 000 Quadrillion United States dollar worth of minerals NASA is planning a mission for October 10 2023 for the Psyche orbiter to launch and get to the asteroid by August 2029 to study 84 511 Davida could have 27 quadrillion worth of minerals and resources 85 Using the moon Phobos to launch spacecraft is energetically favorable and a useful location from which to dispatch missions to main belt asteroids 86 Mining the asteroid belt from Mars and its moons could help in the Colonization of Mars 87 88 89 Phobos as a space elevator for Mars edit Phobos is synchronously orbiting Mars where the same face stays facing the planet at 6 028 km above the Martian surface A space elevator could extend down from Phobos to Mars 6 000 km about 28 kilometers from the surface and just out of the atmosphere of Mars A similar space elevator cable could extend out 6 000 km the opposite direction that would counterbalance Phobos In total the space elevator would extend out over 12 000 km which would be below Areostationary orbit of Mars 17 032 km A rocket launch would still be needed to get the rocket and cargo to the beginning of the space elevator 28 km above the surface The surface of Mars is rotating at 0 25 km s at the equator and the bottom of the space elevator would be rotating around Mars at 0 77 km s so only 0 52 km s of Delta v would be needed to get to the space elevator Phobos orbits at 2 15 km s and the outer most part of the space elevator would rotate around Mars at 3 52 km s 90 nbsp Space elevator Phobos nbsp Earth vs Mars vs Moon gravity at elevationRegulation and safety editSpace law involves a specific set of international treaties along with national statutory laws The system and framework for international and domestic laws have emerged in part through the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs 91 The rules terms and agreements that space law authorities consider to be part of the active body of international space law are the five international space treaties and five UN declarations Approximately 100 nations and institutions were involved in negotiations The space treaties cover many major issues such as arms control non appropriation of space freedom of exploration liability for damages safety and rescue of astronauts and spacecraft prevention of harmful interference with space activities and the environment notification and registration of space activities and the settlement of disputes In exchange for assurances from the space power the nonspacefaring nations acquiesced to U S and Soviet proposals to treat outer space as a commons res communis territory which belonged to no one state Asteroid mining in particular is covered by both international treaties for example the Outer Space Treaty and national statutory laws for example specific legislative acts in the United States 92 and Luxembourg 93 Varying degrees of criticism exist regarding international space law Some critics accept the Outer Space Treaty but reject the Moon Agreement The Outer Space Treaty allows private property rights for outer space natural resources once removed from the surface subsurface or subsoil of the Moon and other celestial bodies in outer space citation needed Thus international space law is capable of managing newly emerging space mining activities private space transportation commercial spaceports and commercial space stations habitats settlements Space mining involving the extraction and removal of natural resources from their natural location is allowable under the Outer Space Treaty citation needed Once removed those natural resources can be reduced to possession sold citation needed traded and explored or used for scientific purposes International space law allows space mining specifically the extraction of natural resources It is generally understood within the space law authorities that extracting space resources is allowable even by private companies for profit citation needed However international space law prohibits property rights over territories and outer space land Astrophysicists Carl Sagan and Steven J Ostro raised the concern altering the trajectories of asteroids near Earth might pose a collision hazard threat They concluded that orbit engineering has both opportunities and dangers if controls instituted on orbit manipulation technology were too tight future spacefaring could be hampered but if they were too loose human civilization would be at risk 75 94 95 The Outer Space Treaty edit nbsp Outer Space Treaty Parties Signatories Non parties After ten years of negotiations between nearly 100 nations the Outer Space Treaty opened for signature on January 27 1966 It entered into force as the constitution for outer space on October 10 1967 The Outer Space Treaty was well received it was ratified by ninety six nations and signed by an additional twenty seven states The outcome has been that the basic foundation of international space law consists of five arguably four international space treaties along with various written resolutions and declarations The main international treaty is the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 it is generally viewed as the Constitution for outer space By ratifying the Outer Space Treaty of 1967 ninety eight nations agreed that outer space would belong to the province of mankind that all nations would have the freedom to use and explore outer space and that both these provisions must be done in a way to benefit all mankind The province of mankind principle and the other key terms have not yet been specifically defined Jasentuliyana 1992 Critics have complained that the Outer Space Treaty is vague Yet international space law has worked well and has served space commercial industries and interests for many decades The taking away and extraction of Moon rocks for example has been treated as being legally permissible The framers of Outer Space Treaty initially focused on solidifying broad terms first with the intent to create more specific legal provisions later Griffin 1981 733 734 This is why the members of the COPUOS later expanded the Outer Space Treaty norms by articulating more specific understandings which are found in the three supplemental agreements the Rescue and Return Agreement of 1968 the Liability Convention of 1973 and the Registration Convention of 1976 734 Hobe 2007 explains that the Outer Space Treaty explicitly and implicitly prohibits only the acquisition of territorial property rights but extracting space resources is allowable It is generally understood within the space law authorities that extracting space resources is allowable even by private companies for profit However international space law prohibits property rights over territories and outer space land Hobe further explains that there is no mention of the question of the extraction of natural resources which means that such use is allowed under the Outer Space Treaty 2007 211 He also points out that there is an unsettled question regarding the division of benefits from outer space resources in accordance with Article paragraph 1 of the Outer Space Treaty 96 The Moon Agreement edit Main article Moon Agreement nbsp Participation in the Moon Treaty Parties Signatories Non parties The Moon Agreement was signed on December 18 1979 as part of the United Nations Charter and it entered into force in 1984 after a five state ratification consensus procedure agreed upon by the members of the United Nations Committee on Peaceful Uses of Outer Space COPUOS 97 As of September 2019 only 18 nations have signed or ratified the treaty 97 The other three outer space treaties experienced a high level of international cooperation in terms of signage and ratification but the Moon Treaty went further than them by defining the Common Heritage concept in more detail and by imposing specific obligations on the parties engaged in the exploration and or exploitation of outer space The Moon Treaty explicitly designates the Moon and its natural resources as part of the Common Heritage of Mankind 98 The Article 11 establishes that lunar resources are not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty by means of use or occupation or by any other means 99 However exploitation of resources is suggested to be allowed if it is governed by an international regime Article 11 5 but the rules of such regime have not yet been established 100 S Neil Hosenball the NASA General Counsel and chief US negotiator for the Moon Treaty cautioned in 2018 that negotiation of the rules of the international regime should be delayed until the feasibility of exploitation of lunar resources has been established 101 The objection to the treaty by the spacefaring nations is held to be the requirement that extracted resources and the technology used to that end must be shared with other nations The similar regime in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is believed to impede the development of such industries on the seabed 102 The United States the Russian Federation and the People s Republic of China PRC have neither signed acceded to nor ratified the Moon Agreement 103 Legal regimes of some countries edit Luxembourg edit In February 2016 the Government of Luxembourg said that it would attempt to jump start an industrial sector to mine asteroid resources in space by among other things creating a legal framework and regulatory incentives for companies involved in the industry 93 104 By June 2016 it announced that it would invest more than US 200 million in research technology demonstration and in the direct purchase of equity in companies relocating to Luxembourg 105 In 2017 it became the first European country to pass a law conferring to companies the ownership of any resources they extract from space and remained active in advancing space resource public policy in 2018 106 107 In 2017 Japan Portugal and the UAE entered into cooperation agreements with Luxembourg for mining operations in celestial bodies 108 In 2018 the Luxembourg Space Agency was created 109 It provides private companies and organizations working on asteroid mining with financial support 110 111 United States edit Some nations are beginning to promulgate legal regimes for extraterrestrial resource extraction For example the United States SPACE Act of 2015 facilitating private development of space resources consistent with US international treaty obligations passed the US House of Representatives in July 2015 112 113 In November 2015 it passed the United States Senate 114 On 25 November U S President Barack Obama signed the H R 2262 U S Commercial Space Launch Competitiveness Act into law 115 The law recognizes the right of U S citizens to own space resources they obtain and encourages the commercial exploration and utilization of resources from asteroids According to the article 51303 of the law 116 A United States citizen engaged in commercial recovery of an asteroid resource or a space resource under this chapter shall be entitled to any asteroid resource or space resource obtained including to possess own transport use and sell the asteroid resource or space resource obtained in accordance with applicable law including the international obligations of the United States On 6 April 2020 U S President Donald Trump signed the Executive Order on Encouraging International Support for the Recovery and Use of Space Resources According to the Order 117 118 Americans should have the right to engage in commercial exploration recovery and use of resources in outer space the US does not view space as a global commons the US opposes the Moon AgreementEnvironmental impact editA positive impact of asteroid mining has been conjectured as being an enabler of transferring industrial activities into space such as energy generation 119 A quantitative analysis of the potential environmental benefits of water and platinum mining in space has been developed where potentially large benefits could materialize depending on the ratio of material mined in space and mass launched into space 120 Research missions to asteroids and comets editProposed or cancelled edit Near Earth Asteroid Prospector concept for a small commercial spacecraft mission by the private company SpaceDev the project ran into fundraising difficulties and subsequently cancelled 121 122 123 Ongoing and planned edit Hayabusa2 ongoing JAXA asteroid sample return mission arrived at the target in 2018 returned sample in 2020 OSIRIS REx NASA asteroid sample return mission launched on September 8 2016 arrived at target 2020 124 returned sample on September 24 2023 125 Fobos Grunt 2 proposed Roskosmos sample return mission to Phobos launch in 2024 VIPER rover planned NASA mission to prospect for lunar resources in 2024 Completed edit See also List of minor planets and comets visited by spacecraft First of successful missions by country 126 Nation Flyby Orbit Landing Sample return nbsp United States ICE 1985 NEAR 1997 NEAR 2001 Stardust 2006 OSIRIS REx 2023 nbsp Japan Suisei 1986 Hayabusa 2005 Hayabusa 2005 Hayabusa 2010 Hayabusa2 2020 nbsp European Union ICE 1985 Rosetta 2014 Rosetta 2014 nbsp Soviet Union Vega 1 1986 nbsp China Chang e 2 2012 In fiction editSee also Asteroids in fiction nbsp An astronaut mining an asteroid using a hand drill in the video game Space Engineers The first mention of asteroid mining in science fiction apparently clarification needed came in Garrett P Serviss story Edison s Conquest of Mars published in the New York Evening Journal in 1898 127 unreliable source 128 non primary source needed Several science fiction video games include asteroid mining citation needed Gallery edit nbsp Illustration of proposed asteroid capture by Keck Institute for Space Studies made for Asteroid Redirect Mission nbsp Artist s concept from the 1970s of asteroid mining nbsp Artist s concept of an asteroid mining vehicle as seen in 1984 nbsp Artist s concept of an asteroid moved by a space tether nbsp 16 Psyche space elevator concept The surface gravity is less than 2 of Earth s at 0 144 m s2See also editAsteroid belt Asteroid capture Asteroid Redirect Mission Deep Space Industries Gravity train elevator In situ resource utilization Lunar resources Mining Mining the Sky Untold Riches from the Asteroids Comets and Planets Near Earth Asteroid Prospector Planetary Resources Inc TransAstra Corporation Sample return mission Space manufacturing Space based economy SpaceDev World Is Not Enough spacecraft propulsion Notes edit This is the average amount asteroids with much lower delta v exist References edit O Leary B 1977 07 22 Mining the Apollo and Amor Asteroids Science 197 4301 363 366 Bibcode 1977Sci 197 363O doi 10 1126 science 197 4301 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International Astronautical Congress 2018 Bremen Germany arXiv 1810 04749 Ridenoure Rex NEAP 15 years later The Space Review Retrieved 3 July 2018 SpaceDev Sells Ride to Asteroid nasa jpl July 20 1999 Archived from the original on January 23 2000 NEAP Encyclopedia Astronautica Archived from the original on February 26 2012 Retrieved February 11 2012 In Depth OSIRIS REx NASA Solar System Exploration Retrieved 2023 09 24 Shekhtman Lonnie September 24 2023 OSIRIS REx Spacecraft Departs for New Mission Nasa Blogs Retrieved 2023 09 24 both asteroid and comet missions are shown TechNovelGy timeline Asteroid Mining Archived March 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine Garrett P Serviss Edison s Conquest of Mars at Project Gutenberg Archived 2011 10 12 at the Wayback Machine Publications edit Space Enterprise Beyond NASA David Gump 1990 ISBN 0 275 93314 8 Mining the Sky Untold Riches from the Asteroids Comets and Planets John S Lewis 1998 ISBN 0 201 47959 1 Lee Ricky J 2012 Law and regulation of commercial mining of minerals in outer space Dordrecht Springer doi 10 1007 978 94 007 2039 8 ISBN 978 94 007 2039 8 OCLC 780068323 Viorel Badescu Asteroids prospective energy and material resources Springer Berlin 2013 ISBN 978 3 642 39243 6 Ram Jakhu et al Space Mining and Its Regulation Springer Cham 2016 ISBN 978 3 319 39245 5 Annette Froehlich Space Resource Utilization A View from an Emerging Space Faring Nation Springer Cham 2018 ISBN 978 3 319 66968 7 External links editAsteroid mining at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity Text edit The Technical and Economic Feasibility of Mining the Near Earth Asteroids M J Sonter Michael Booth The Future of Space Mining December 21 1995 The Plan to Bring an Asteroid to Earth How Asteroids can save mankind Luxembourg aims to be big player in possible asteroid mining The Guardian February 2016 Blair Brad R 2000 The Role of Near Earth Asteroids in Long Term Platinum Supply PDF Space Resources Roundtable II 1 1070 5 Bibcode 2000srrt conf 5B Archived from the original PDF on 2011 12 12 Retrieved 2016 10 08 Video edit Video Beyond Earth NEO Destinations NewSpace Conference of the Space Frontier Foundation Aug 7 2011 Video Moon Mars Asteroids Where to Go First for Resources Space manufacturing Conference of the Space Studies Institute October 2010 Video Moving An Asteroid California Institute of Technology Workshop Public Lecture Panel September 2011 Video Asteroid Mining The Market Problem and Radical Solution November 2013 Portals nbsp Astronomy nbsp Spaceflight nbsp Outer space nbsp Solar system Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Asteroid mining amp oldid 1220775582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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