Message from @DanielKO
Discord ID: 426672970857971723
Let's assume it's either of pure gold or platinum, we'll figure out which later. How many kg we talking here?
probably thousands or millions of tons
Then we've a simple solution. Rather than a full on sale of it, they have to sell in intervals, only so much at a time.
At the highest end, we have asteroids in the 10^15 tons range.
That way instead of them just crashing the price because now there's an oversupply, there's a level of control to the price. This is all assuming they even sell it to begin with.
@dko you can't bring back a moon sized asteirod
because tbh I wouldn't put it past someone like elon to just make a space museum and put it in there
I know, the point is, they can be fucking huge.
I mean I'm assuming for the sake of logistics we aren't talking about actually hauling it back to earth
You bring however much you can haul.
I figured we're talking about them having legal ownership and hiring a mining company to take pieces of it off to haul back
He just keeps pumping them out every 5 minutes a new tweet...
The trick is to find asteroids that are remnants of protoplanets that underwent differentiation.
So dense elements are separated from lighter elements.
Instead of having to separate dirt and rock from what you really want, it's mostly pure already, thanks to gravity.
I figured we were talking about it being pure from the start, for the sake of argument
>Their latest figure for all the gold in the world is 171,300 tonnes
Looks like it isn't hard to go above that figure, in terms of asteroid mass.
Anyway, what I was pondering was, what would be the economical and political implications of bringing such an abundant amount of rare material from space, down to Earth.
Is there anyone here who keeps up with how the tech for virtual reality is going? I've been interested in it because I want to see how far it goes (because I want better vr for the vidya games), but I haven't kept up with it lately.
Oh, easy answer. If it lands anywhere other than china, it's going to be bought from that country by china.
Even if the country can't transport it and so china just buys the land it's on
Imagine the USA, and other countries, deem it a threat to the global economy.
They wouldn't do that. The worst they'd do is decide we can only mine out so much of it at a time, to keep the prices stable.
Imagine if Russia tows the asteroid to Earth.
They wouldn't get to. The US would probably shoot it out of orbit if Russia was getting it, and then claim it was a terrorist attack by Iraq.
Naturally it'd work because ISIS would fucking *love* to claim they can bomb space.
uh
It's a bit related to the idea of a "duplicator/synthesizer" like the ones in Star Trek TNG. Could such a wonder even be introduced into our civilization?
Aren't we already going down a road something like that with 3D printing?
Sudden abundance when there are plenty of parties that benefit from the scarcity.
Yeah, but 3D printing is very limited.
We can't print molecules, we can't synthesize atoms.
And it expands the more and more the tech is developed.
We wouldn't get there like, tomorrow, it'd be over a course of years, possibly even decades.
Even if the tech existed tomorrow, people would be careful to make it a gradual shift.
At some point we would need to be able to control the precise arrangement of atoms.
We must secure the existence of our race and a future for passable traps
Metallurgy would be obsolete.
So would meat