Headlines:
A second mission would land on the asteroid and test for platinum and other elements - the first mining expeditions could then follow.
A privately-built spacecraft has embarked on an unprecedented deep space mission to scout out an asteroid's potential for mining.
The probe, called Odin, was launched on a SpaceX rocket alongside a robotic moon lander that will drill for water and a lunar orbiter that will map water resources with an instrument built by the University of Oxford.
The asteroid mission is a high-risk venture that heralds a new dawn of commercial exploitation of our celestial neighbours.
Odin is destined for asteroid 2022 OB5 that's believed to be rich in platinum and similar metals, which are critical for electronic, medical and green technology.
Matt Gialich, engineer and co-founder of startup AstroForge, told Sky News that mining the metals on Earth costs $900 an ounce (⁘25,000 per kg).
"The problem is that on Earth we have mined all of the good sources of platinum group metals," he said.
"Everything we're looking at now is thousands of meters under the Earth. It's actually very, very difficult to mine.
"But we know this exists in space . We know it's readily available. For our mission, instead of going down, we want to go up."
No comments:
Post a Comment