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Jerry Stuckle wrote in
: Actually, high temperature superconductors have been found at temperatures as high as -135C. And in the shade, space is very cold, even at Earth's distance from the sun, shaded items are very cold. Even the moon, which will hold some heat, cools to -233C at night time. I wonder if the ISS might be a place capable of doing tests like these. Parts of that must be in constant shade, so maybe some test of a space-based superconducting antenna is feasible. (I'm not ignoring what Jim said about having space to build a big, normal antenna, it's just interesting that there might be scope now to try this just to see what can be done with it. Also, given the cost of sendign heavy stuff out there, it might be viable anyway if it saves the need to do that so often). I think the odds of this happening between now and the end of the solar system are pretty slim. If a small wire could so easily be hit by a micrometeorite, our satellites, space stations, rockets, etc., all much bigger, would be in deep doo-doo. Ok. ![]() probably. Would a swarm of partcles redirected from sun via some magnetic field, passing the antenna wire, be enough to heat it to the point of supercondcuting failure? I have no idea about this, it just seems that there might be a lot of energy, even if thinly distributed.. |
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