metcarfre wrote:The title of this thread has two fewer exclamation marks than it should.
I thought of it along the lines of; <something> in spaaaaaaaace!!!! but decided not to go for it
metcarfre wrote:The title of this thread has two fewer exclamation marks than it should.
Smeghead wrote:Master Gunner wrote:Saturn would probably be the best bet, actually. The sun has obvious complications, and Jupiter's gravity well makes it much less cost-efficient than Saturn. Neptune and Uranus would of course likely be easier to mine from than Saturn, but the distance to them can cause problems of its own.
Isn't there liquid helium occuring naturally on one of the gas giant's moons? I know there are some of them with liquid gases in abundace, but I don't remember if helium was one of them
Master Gunner wrote:Titan has lakes of liquid methane, and Europa is thought to have liquid water under the surface ice. As far as I can recall, the rest are all rock and ice.
Lord Chrusher wrote:Due to helium's low boiling point I doubt that there anywhere were helium is liquid.
This is cool and it just might work.
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Lyinginbedmon wrote:Lord Chrusher wrote:Due to helium's low boiling point I doubt that there anywhere were helium is liquid.
This is cool and it just might work.
Anywhere near a star at least, certainly not within the goldilocks zone.
Between Mimas, Tethys, Enceladus, and Rhea, I think the Saturnian system is a great site for water mining if we're looking to source it outside of Earth.
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