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Humans on Mars: General News about the Solar System

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Sunshine to Petrol Project Seeks Fuel from Thin Air
Posted by admin on Saturday, January 12 @ 19:03:34 SGT (1923 reads)
General News about the Solar System
Using concentrated solar energy to reverse combustion, a research team from Sandia National Laboratories is building a prototype device intended to chemically "reenergize" carbon dioxide into carbon monoxide using concentrated solar power. The carbon monoxide could then be used to make hydrogen or serve as a building block to synthesize a liquid combustible fuel, such as methanol or even gasoline, diesel and jet fuel.

Miller says that while the first step would be to capture the carbon dioxide from sources where it is concentrated, the ultimate goal would be to snatch it out of the air. A S2P system that includes atmospheric carbon dioxide capture could produce carbon-neutral liquid fuels.

The prototype device, called the Counter Rotating Ring Receiver Reactor Recuperator (CR5, for short), will break a carbon-oxygen bond in the carbon dioxide to form carbon monoxide and oxygen in two distinct steps. It is a major piece of an approach to converting carbon dioxide into fuel from sunlight.

The Sandia research team calls this approach "Sunshine to Petrol" (S2P). "Liquid Solar Fuel" is the end product — the methanol, gasoline or other liquid fuel made from water and the carbon monoxide produced using solar energy.

Sandia is a National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) laboratory.

CR5 inventor Rich Diver says the original idea for the device was to break down water into hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen could then fuel a potential hydrogen economy.

The Sandia researchers came up with the idea to use the CR5 to break down carbon dioxide, just as it would water. Over the past year they have shown proof of concept and are completing a prototype device that will use concentrated solar energy to reenergize carbon dioxide or water, the products of combustion. This will form carbon monoxide, hydrogen, and oxygen, which ultimately could be used to synthesize liquid fuels in an integrated S2P system.

Coresearchers on the project are Jim E. Miller and Nathan Siegel. Project champion is Ellen B. Stechel, manager of Sandia's Fuels and Energy Transitions Department.

Stechel says that researchers have known for a long time that theoretically it might be possible to recycle carbon dioxide, but many thought it could not be made practical, either technically or economically and therefore not much effort has been put toward the research until now.

"Not only did we think it was possible, the team has developed a prototype that they fully anticipate will successfully break down carbon dioxide in a clever and viable two-step process," she says.

Stechel notes that one driver for the invention is the need to reduce greenhouse gases.

"This invention, though probably a good 15 to 20 years away from being on the market, holds a real promise of being able to reduce carbon dioxide emissions while preserving options to keep using fuels we know and love," she says. "Recycling carbon dioxide into fuels provides an attractive alternative to burying it."
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Space Elevator comes one step closer
Posted by admin on Monday, April 30 @ 06:32:22 SGT (1340 reads)
General News about the Solar System
ALBUQUERQUE, NEW MEXICO -- Make way for the ultimate high-rise project: the space elevator. Long viewed as science fiction "imagineering", researchers are gathering momentum in their pursuit to propel this uplifting concept into actuality.  Still, the mental picture needed to grasp the elevator to space idea well, you can't be weak of mind.

Forget the roar of rocketry and those bone jarring liftoffs, the elevator would be a smooth 62,000-mile (100,000-kilometer) ride up a long cable. Payloads can shimmy up the Earth-to-space cable, experiencing no large launch forces, slowly climbing from one atmosphere to a vacuum.

Earth orbit, the Moon, Mars, Venus, the asteroids and beyond - they are routinely accessible via the space elevator. And for all its promise and grandeur, this mega-project is made practical by the tiniest of technologies - carbon nanotubes
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The next solar storm maybe due next year
Posted by admin on Sunday, April 29 @ 05:58:49 SGT (1547 reads)
General News about the Solar System Found on Fineblog | Delhi, INDIA

Indeed there is never a dull moment in the universe and this particular spectacular activity, which is all set to happen on the star of stars, the sun, is worth noticing. In the series of solar storms, which occur on sun time and again the next 11-year cycle of solar storms is likely to begin in March 2008 and will continue till 2019. These solar storms would reach their peak either in late 2011 or mid-2012. The NOAA Space Environment Center has issued these forecasts during its annual Space Weather Workshop that has just concluded in Boulder, Columbia.
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