Friendly Star Trek Discussions Fri Nov 22, 2024 4:12 pm  
  SearchSearch   FAQFAQ   Log inLog in   
Sending Garbage To The Sun Would Kill Us
View: previous topic :: next topic

stv-archives.com Forum Index -> Star Trek Tech This topic is locked: you cannot edit posts or make replies.   This forum is locked: you cannot post, reply to, or edit topics.
Author Message
Ensign Harry Kim ()
Lieutenant


Joined: 30 Nov 2001
Posts: 154

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 12:29 am    Sending Garbage To The Sun Would Kill Us

I have been doing some work over the last week on the idea of sending our garbage to the sun, to have it burnt up, and I found that within 82 years, the earth would not be able to provide any more raw materials, but I was wondering if anyone would know the effects it would have on the sun itself? Would the extra energy create larger solar flares, or would it have the possibility of blocking out the suns rays from reaching earh? Any thoughts greatly appreciated.

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
T. Dean
Captain


Joined: 16 Dec 2003
Posts: 715
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 12:39 am    

Personally, I don't think it's a good idea. Plus, what would we send the garbarge inside of and how exactly would we go about doing it?


-------signature-------



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
EnsignParis
Lieutenant Commander


Joined: 07 Sep 2001
Posts: 257

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 2:09 am    

The problem of available resources...I can't help you with that.

But...I could make a pretty logical guess that if we were to send garbage to the sun, that it would do absolutely jack *beep*. The sun is I believe 99.9% of our solar system's mass, the planets by themselves are almost nothing, even if we took the entire earth and hurled it at the sun, it would most likely just engulf it and keep on burning without the slightest (well, maybe an incredibly small amount) bit of change.

If we're just throwing a few pounds of garbage at it, it's not going to do anything (not that I've tried or done any research on the topic, but this is my best guess).


Last edited by EnsignParis on Mon Feb 02, 2004 2:41 pm; edited 1 time in total


View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
PrankishSmart
Rear Admiral


Joined: 29 Apr 2002
Posts: 4779
Location: Hobart, Australia.

PostSun Feb 01, 2004 6:22 am    

Hmm, yeah. It costs something like $10,000 a pound, half kilo to send stuff into space. It's not really viable. I can't imagine any damage to the sun if we could do it.

View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
borgslayer
Rear Admiral


Joined: 27 Aug 2003
Posts: 2646
Location: Las Vegas

PostMon Feb 02, 2004 12:24 am    

Why the sun? just dump it in mercury since there is nothing on the planet but meteor craters.

View user's profile Send private message Visit poster's website AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
Mulder
Rear Admiral


Joined: 27 Dec 2001
Posts: 2520
Location: Netherlands

PostMon Feb 02, 2004 6:21 am    

I think that we shouldn't dump our waste in space at all

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website Yahoo Messenger MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
Captain Skyline
Vice Admiral


Joined: 09 Aug 2001
Posts: 6646
Location: UK

PostMon Feb 02, 2004 11:57 am    

well if ur sending garbage toward the sun wouldnt it eventually decintigrate before it even reached it?. (?)

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
T. Dean
Captain


Joined: 16 Dec 2003
Posts: 715
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostMon Feb 02, 2004 1:00 pm    

^That is a very good question. I think it would burn up before reaching it, I mean, what are the sun's temperatures??


-------signature-------



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
EnsignParis
Lieutenant Commander


Joined: 07 Sep 2001
Posts: 257

PostMon Feb 02, 2004 2:38 pm    

Yes, it would burn up before hitting the sun. The surface of the photosphere (the surface of the sun) is only about 5000-6000 degrees celcius. However, the corona, which extends millions of miles out into space, can be exponentially hotter than the photosphere, ranging in millions of degrees at some points.

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
Kyle Reese
Cadet Gunnery Sergeant


Joined: 21 Apr 2003
Posts: 5672
Location: The United States of America

PostWed Feb 04, 2004 12:40 am    

We should really just recycle garbage, but you know I have thought about what it would be like to send that stuff to the sun. But um, wouldn't it be easier to just dump it into space? I mean there's an infinite amount of space out there... right? Or just send it to the moon and bury it there. Yep I'm weird.

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
Tsuki no Hikari
Ensign, Junior Grade


Joined: 12 Feb 2002
Posts: 41

PostWed Feb 04, 2004 7:32 pm    

When you dump it into space, you do exactly what we have with the area around Earth. We'll be littering space with tons of objects that can become deadly projectiles if it hits something we send out. Sending trash into the sun would only become easy and cheap if we ever developed an geostationary tether that would lift the trash into orbit before sending it toward the sun.

View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
PrankishSmart
Rear Admiral


Joined: 29 Apr 2002
Posts: 4779
Location: Hobart, Australia.

PostWed Feb 04, 2004 9:00 pm    

Kyle Reese wrote:
We should really just recycle garbage, but you know I have thought about what it would be like to send that stuff to the sun. But um, wouldn't it be easier to just dump it into space? I mean there's an infinite amount of space out there... right? Or just send it to the moon and bury it there. Yep I'm weird.


Thing is, not everything is recycleable. We can't really recycle things like nuclear waste.


View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
T. Dean
Captain


Joined: 16 Dec 2003
Posts: 715
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostFri Feb 06, 2004 9:13 am    

Tsuki no Hikari wrote:
When you dump it into space, you do exactly what we have with the area around Earth.


Not really, like Kyle said, there is an infinite amount of space. Even if we did send our garbage to space, we would never come close to polluting it. Garbage in space would be like dust in the air.



-------signature-------



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
The Delta Flyer
Commodore


Joined: 08 Apr 2002
Posts: 2163
Location: East Yorkshire

PostFri Feb 06, 2004 12:02 pm    

I read that in so many billion years time, the Earth will go into the Sun anyway...a little fizzle I guess.

Still, I guess that's not gonna be our problem


View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
webtaz99
Commodore


Joined: 13 Nov 2003
Posts: 1229
Location: The Other Side

PostFri Feb 06, 2004 6:03 pm    Waste

Sending our "waste" into space or the Sun would be an incredible waste of materials and energy.

Because of "profitability", we don't use available and emerging technology to deal with waste. If mankind would apply technology to waste management (instead of focusing on "profits"), everything currently considered "waste" could be recycled (or converted into useful materials).

Just a few examples:

NASA has found a way to accelerate the half-life of radioactive waste hundreds or even thousands of times, in order to covert it to stable or less harmful isotopes.

Bacteria have been discovered which actually absorb and concentrate plutonium from their environment.

Someone has patented a process which recyles the four most common plastics into 99.7% pure "virgin" material in one process (the plastics do not have to be sorted from one another).

These and many more technologies are lying dormant; even though they could easily be break-even, they wouldn't generate the large profit margins investors expect.


View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
Captain.Dan
Vice Admiral


Joined: 21 Apr 2002
Posts: 5696

PostSat Feb 07, 2004 3:44 pm    

tpegram7 wrote:
Tsuki no Hikari wrote:
When you dump it into space, you do exactly what we have with the area around Earth.


Not really, like Kyle said, there is an infinite amount of space. Even if we did send our garbage to space, we would never come close to polluting it. Garbage in space would be like dust in the air.


scientists now believe that space is finite and if you went in one dirction and didn't stop you'd eventually find your self back were you began


View user's profile Send private message MSN Messenger 
Reply with quote Back to top
Tiberius
Lieutenant


Joined: 03 Feb 2004
Posts: 140

PostWed Feb 11, 2004 8:31 pm    

EnsignParis wrote:
Yes, it would burn up before hitting the sun. The surface of the photosphere (the surface of the sun) is only about 5000-6000 degrees celcius. However, the corona, which extends millions of miles out into space, can be exponentially hotter than the photosphere, ranging in millions of degrees at some points.


This is quite true. The corona does have a higher temperature. However, the higher temperature wouldn't neccessarily burn up the garbage, and for one good reason. The sun has an atmosphere, just like the Earth does, and the corona is the outer psrt of the sun's atmosphere. However, like the outer parts of Earth's atmospher, the Corona is vary rarified. The atoms in it are spaced very far apart. So while the temperature is very high, the actual heat is quite low.

It's a bit like how you can put your hand into a 200 degree oven and not get burnt, but you'll get badly scalded if you dip a finger into a cup of boiling water. Because the material inside the oven (air) isn't very dense, it doesn't transmit heat well, while the material inside the cup (water), being much denser, transmits the heat much better.


View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
IntrepedII
Captain


Joined: 21 Jun 2002
Posts: 1476
Location: Belgium

PostThu Feb 12, 2004 8:34 pm    

^aah so that why we dont get burned when were in an 85�C sauna


-------signature-------


Im a Jedi, SO DONT PISS ME OFF!!

View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
Los
Commodore


Joined: 07 Jun 2002
Posts: 1336
Location: Oklahoma fa sho!

PostFri Feb 13, 2004 3:20 pm    

Quote:
NASA has found a way to accelerate the half-life of radioactive waste hundreds or even thousands of times, in order to covert it to stable or less harmful isotopes.

Bacteria have been discovered which actually absorb and concentrate plutonium from their environment.

Someone has patented a process which recyles the four most common plastics into 99.7% pure "virgin" material in one process (the plastics do not have to be sorted from one another).

These and many more technologies are lying dormant; even though they could easily be break-even, they wouldn't generate the large profit margins investors expect.


Link or BS.


View user's profile Send private message AIM Address Yahoo Messenger  
Reply with quote Back to top
T. Dean
Captain


Joined: 16 Dec 2003
Posts: 715
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostFri Feb 13, 2004 3:26 pm    

^That is very interesting. You see, there in lies the problem ... money. If our culture were like that of Star Fleet (operates without the use of money) we could advance alot faster and develop new ideas a lot quicker.


-------signature-------



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
imzadi76
Commander


Joined: 15 Jan 2004
Posts: 367
Location: Pittsburgh - PA - USA - Earth - Sector001 - Alpha Quadrant

PostSat Feb 14, 2004 1:04 am    

We need to build some starships so we can go and leave the garbage here.




-------signature-------

Live long and prosper

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
EnsignParis
Lieutenant Commander


Joined: 07 Sep 2001
Posts: 257

PostSat Feb 14, 2004 3:40 am    

tpegram7 wrote:
^That is very interesting. You see, there in lies the problem ... money. If our culture were like that of Star Fleet (operates without the use of money) we could advance alot faster and develop new ideas a lot quicker.

Yes, but that won't be happening on a large scale anywhere on Earth in the near future.


View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail AIM Address  
Reply with quote Back to top
IntrepedII
Captain


Joined: 21 Jun 2002
Posts: 1476
Location: Belgium

PostSun Feb 15, 2004 11:25 am    

perhaps we can use our garbage to power our warp engines ...


-------signature-------


Im a Jedi, SO DONT PISS ME OFF!!

View user's profile Send private message  
Reply with quote Back to top
T. Dean
Captain


Joined: 16 Dec 2003
Posts: 715
Location: Winston-Salem, North Carolina

PostSun Feb 15, 2004 11:52 am    

EnsignParis wrote:
tpegram7 wrote:
^That is very interesting. You see, there in lies the problem ... money. If our culture were like that of Star Fleet (operates without the use of money) we could advance alot faster and develop new ideas a lot quicker.

Yes, but that won't be happening on a large scale anywhere on Earth in the near future.


Because of human ignorance.



-------signature-------



View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
imzadi76
Commander


Joined: 15 Jan 2004
Posts: 367
Location: Pittsburgh - PA - USA - Earth - Sector001 - Alpha Quadrant

PostMon Feb 16, 2004 2:16 am    

If we sent our garbage to the sun we would also be sending a large amount of Earth's water with it. Over time that could be disasterous. Garbage created here should be processed here.


-------signature-------

Live long and prosper

View user's profile Send private message Send e-mail Visit poster's website  
Reply with quote Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Goto Page 1, 2  Next
This topic is locked: you cannot edit posts or make replies.   This forum is locked: you cannot post, reply to, or edit topics.



Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
Star Trek �, in all its various forms, are trademarks & copyrights of Paramount Pictures
This site has no official connection with Star Trek or Paramount Pictures
Site content/Site design elements owned by Morphy and is meant to only be an archive/Tribute to STV.com