Right now, NASA can only bring back small pieces of space rock. But Project RAMA (Reconstituting Asteroids into Mechanical Automata) hopes to establish the concept feasibility of using analog computers and mechanisms – along with 3D printing – to convert asteroids into huge mechanical spacecraft, which could carry large amounts of raw asteroid material. This could be the impetus for the off-Earth mining that will be necessary if humanity wants to survive and thrive among the stars.
Artist’s illustration of an asteroid that has been turned into a giant mechanical spacecraft, which could fly itself to a mining outpost. [Image: Made In Space]
While we don’t currently have the ability or the technology to 3D print something like a digital guidance computer with materials found on an asteroid, Made In Space realized that one doesn’t have to rely on digital electronics if a huge amount of raw material, with no constraints on mass or volume, is available instead.
“At the end of the day, the thing that we want the asteroid to be is technology that has existed for a long time,” said Made In Space Co-Founder and CTO Jason Dunn. “The question is, ‘Can we convert an asteroid into that technology at some point in the future?’ We think the answer is yes.”
Two years ago, NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, which encourages development of space-exploration technologies, awarded Made In Space a $100,000 Phase 1 grant for nine months of initial feasibility studies. During this phase, the company focused on how the seed craft would have to work, defining its requirements, and building a technological roadmap. If the company chooses, it can also apply for a two-year, $500,000 Phase 2 award for continuing concept development. In the meantime, Made In Space is counting on NASA to push forward in-situ resource utilization (ISRU) – the art of living off the land, which is necessary for astronauts who could someday live on planetary outposts.
Required capabilities of the RAMA craft, arranged in approximate order of mass requirements, showing the source of the materials used to provide each capability as assumed for the rest of this study.
These asteroid ships will probably not look much like traditional spaceships, with their electronic circuitry and rocket engines, but instead would use analog computers and a catapult type of propulsion system that will launch asteroid material in a controlled way. By using mass drivers to shoot chunks of itself in one direction, an asteroid could potentially accelerate itself in the opposite direction. While this method is only about 10% as efficient as a chemical rocket engine, the propellant is free.
3D printing could be used to make some of the asteroid spacecraft parts, like flywheel gyros for guidance and stabilization, tanks for storing volatile materials, and solar concentrators to generate mechanical power through the release of pressure to open the tanks.
While Project RAMA is still moving forward, Dunn acknowledges that its completion is still way in the future…and that eventually, it could even have applications on Earth.
Dunn explained, “The anticipation is that the RAMA architecture is a long time line, and when it becomes capable is about the same time that people really need the resources.
“You could build infrastructure in remote locations somewhat autonomously, and convert resources into useful devices and mechanical machines. This actually could solve some pretty big problems on Earth, from housing to construction of things that make people’s lives better.”
Diagram of an asteroid that has been converted into a mechanical spacecraft by a robotic “Seed Craft.” [Image: Zoe Brinkley]
“One of the big questions is, how do you take today’s most intricate machines and make them replicate themselves? That seems really hard: how do you replicate electronics and processing units and so on,” Dunn said. “And that’s when we had this concept that there are types of machines that could potentially be easy to self-replicate, and those would be very basic, analog type devices. The problem is if you have a small mechanical machine, it’s not very useful. But what if the machine itself was the size of an asteroid? What could you do with a mechanical machine that large?”
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