Space elevator to the moon in eight years

Update: 2012-08-28 02:02 GMT
A space elevator which can take robots and humans to the surface of the Moon ‘can be built today’ as the technology already exists, a former NASA engineer has claimed.

The firm Liftport set up by Michael Laine has launched an online campaign to fund the first part of its project to build a lunar space lift, the Daily Mail reported.

The radical Liftport system would allow cheap and simple access to the lunar surface via a ‘ribbon’ cable. Eventually it is hoped a ‘space elevator’ could even take people from earth directly to the lunar surface.

It first plans to test the system on earth with a 2km high elevator.

Initially it would use a space elevator to link the moon to a space station.

The LiftPort Group wants to raise USD 8,000 on the crowd-funding web site Kickstarter for its first step – creating a floating balloon platform tethered to the ground so that a robot can climb 2 km into the sky.

‘About six months ago we had a fundamental breakthrough – a breakthrough we think will transform human civilisation – and we want you to be a part of it,’ Laine, president of the LiftPort Group of the firm’s fundraising site, said.

The breakthrough will allow the LiftPort group to build a space elevator on the moon using existing technology and a single-launch rocket solution that has ‘Sputnik-like simplicity’, Laine added.

He added that the concept could become a reality within eight years.

The ambitious goal of raising USD 3 million – a target Laine doesn’t expect to hit in the first Kickstarter – would allow the LiftPort Group to carry out a one-year feasibility study for the moon space elevator project.

The Liftport system would first send a ‘base’ spacecraft into orbit. A ‘ribbon’ elevator cable would then shoot out towards the lunar surface, containing a lander module to attach to the moon’s surface.

The lunar lander would then be drilled into the surface, forming a link between the moon and the base station.

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