If you enjoy science fiction, then you know that the thought of  colonizing the moon makes for some incredibly imaginative stories. But  there is a good possibility that lunar cities will become a reality  during the 21st century! Colonizing Mars is another option as well. 
Right now, one of the biggest problems with the idea of a moon colony is the question of building supplies.  There is no Home Depot on the moon, so the building supplies have to  come from somewhere. The only place to get the supplies right now is the  Earth, with  the space shuttle acting as a truck. Using the space shuttle in this way  is something like using FedEx to get all of the materials for building a  house to a construction site -- It's incredibly expensive and not very  efficient!  
Asteroids may be a much better place to get the  supplies. Early evidence suggests that there are trillions of dollars'  worth of minerals and metals buried in asteroids that come close to the  Earth. Asteroids are so close that many scientists think an asteroid  mining mission is easily feasible. Several international organizations  are developing plans for going up to get these natural space resources.
Strip-mining equipment extracts iron and other raw  materials from an asteroid. In the foreground, a mining cart transports  the materials to a processing plant.
 Scientists think asteroids are leftover material from the early  formation of the solar system or debris from the destruction of a  planet. There are tens of thousands of asteroids circling the sun. Most are grouped inside the asteroid belt, between the orbits  of Mars  and Jupiter. Some asteroids that stray from this orbit, though, flying  close to Earth on occasion -- you've probably heard about the  possibility of these asteroids smashing into Earth in the future, as in  the movie "Armageddon." 
Most asteroids fit into three basic categories: 
- C-type - More than 75 percent of known asteroids fit into thins category. The composition of C-type asteroids is similar to that of the sun without the hydrogen, helium and other volatiles.
 - S-type - About 17 percent of asteroids are this type. These contain deposits of nickel, iron and magnesium.
 - M-type - A small number of asteroids are this type, and they contain nickel and iron.
 
Even without a manned mission to do a full-scale study of an  asteroid, scientists know a lot about what asteroids contain.  Astronomers use telescopic spectroscopy, which analyzes light reflected  from the asteroid's surface, to find out what might be there. In  addition to iron, nickel and magnesium, scientists think water, oxygen,  gold and platinum also exist on some asteroids. 
Water interests space explorers most because it could help keep a space  colony alive. Without water, there is really no way to move forward with  human exploration of space. Water could also be broken down into  hydrogen and oxygen to form rocket engine  propellant. The metal ore on the asteroids could be mined and used for  building spacecraft and other structures for a space colony. 
Corporations that might not be interested in exploring space for the  adventure and science could be interested in the treasures that a space  mining operation could send back to Earth. One NASA  report estimates that the mineral wealth of the asteroids in the  asteroid belt might exceed $100 billion for each of the six billion  people on Earth. John S. Lewis, author of the space mining book Mining the Sky,  has said that an asteroid with a diameter of one kilometer would have a  mass of about two billion tons. There are perhaps one million asteroids  of this size in the solar system. One of these asteroids, according to  Lewis, would contain 30 million tons of nickel, 1.5 million tons of  metal cobalt and 7,500 tons of platinum. The platinum alone would have a  value of more than $150 billion! 
Asteroids have amazing potential for industry. But what will it take to  land on an asteroid, find these valuable materials, extract them and  process them? In the next section, you will find out how asteroid mining  operations might supply the Earth and its colonies on other planets  with a plenitude of materials. 
Asteroid Extraction and Processing
The drive to set up a mining operation on an asteroid is a matter of  simple economics. While building an asteroid mine will cost billions of  dollars, it will be far cheaper than carrying supplies from Earth to the  moon or Mars. 
Spacecraft would have to carry food and supplies for the mining crew and  the equipment for the mine. Newly developed spacecraft should make  landing on an asteroid possible. After all, we have already landed on  the moon, and some asteroids pass by closer than the moon. A spacecraft  going to an asteroid would need less rocket power and fuel than one going to the moon. 
One problem will be how to keep the asteroid from rotating while it's  being mined. Some experts suggest attaching rockets to the asteroid to  take the spin out of it. But once miners land on the asteroid, just how  do they plan to dig on it, process the materials extracted and transport  it to a space colony or to Earth? 
No one knows for sure what the first asteroid mine will look like, but here are some good assumptions: 
- The machinery will likely be solar powered, to reduce the need for fuel that would have to be hauled to the asteroid by spacecraft.
 - The equipment will also have to be lightweight to transport it to the asteroid.
 - Some experts, including Lewis, have favored using robotic equipment to limit the personnel needed to carry out the mining project. This would reduce the amount of supplies, like food, required for a manned mission.
 - Miners on asteroids would use techniques similar to those used on Earth. The most likely method would be to scrape desired material off the asteroid, and tunnel into veins of specific substances. Scraping, or strip mining, will pull out valuable ore that will float off the asteroid.
 - Because much of the ore will fly off, a large canopy might be used to collect it.
 - Asteroids have nearly no gravity, so the mining equipment, and the astronaut-miners who operate it, will have to use grapples to anchor themselves to the ground. However, the lack of gravity is an advantage in moving mined material around without having to use much power.
 - Once a load of material is ready to be sent to either Earth or a space colony, rocket fuel for a ferrying spacecraft could be produced by breaking down water from the asteroid into hydrogen and oxygen.
 - After an asteroid's minerals and resources have been exhausted by the mining project, the equipment can then be transported to the next asteroid.
 
Because of the lack of gravity and atmosphere, ferrying the newly mined  materials to the moon will be easy. Once there, they can be refined and  formed into structures!  
 by "environment clean generations"



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