Monday, March 16, 2009

Pentagon plans blimp to spy from new heights

LINK
The giant dirigible would use radar to closely and constantly monitor activity on the ground from 65,000 feet.
By Julian E. Barnes
March 13, 2009
Reporting from Washington -- The Pentagon said Thursday that it intends to spend $400 million to develop a giant dirigible that will float 65,000 feet above the Earth for 10 years, providing unblinking and intricate radar surveillance of the vehicles, planes and even people below.

"It is absolutely revolutionary," Werner J.A. Dahm, chief scientist for the Air Force, said of the proposed unmanned airship -- describing it as a cross between a satellite and a spy plane.

The 450-foot-long craft would give the U.S. military a better understanding of an adversary's movements, habits and tactics, officials said. And the ability to constantly monitor small movements in a wide area -- the Afghanistan- Pakistan border, for example -- would dramatically improve military intelligence.

"It is constant surveillance, uninterrupted," Dahm said. "When you only have a short-time view -- whether it is a few hours or a few days -- that is not enough to put the picture together."

The project reflects a shift in Pentagon planning and spending priorities under Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, who has urged the military services to improve intelligence and surveillance operations while cutting high-tech weaponry costs.

If successful, the dirigible -- the brainchild of the Air Force and the Pentagon's research arm -- could pave the way for a fleet of spy airships, military officials said.

However, it marks the return to a form of flight that has stirred anxiety and doubt since the 1937 Hindenburg disaster. Thirty-six people were killed when that airship went up in flames in New Jersey.

The military has used less-sophisticated tethered blimps -- called aerostats -- to conduct surveillance around military bases in Iraq. But flying at 65,000 feet, the giant airship would be nearly impossible to see, beyond the range of any hand-held missile, and safe from most fighter planes.

And its range would be such that the spy craft could operate at the distant edges of any military theater, probably out of the range of surface-to-air missiles as well.

The Air Force's intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance abilities have improved dramatically in the last five years with the expansion of the Predator and other drones. Although such craft can linger over an area for a long time, they do not watch constantly.

The giant airship's military value would come from its radar system. Giant antenna would allow the military to see farther and with more detail than it can now.

"Being able to observe threats [and] understand what is happening is really the game-changing piece here," Dahm said.

The dirigible will be filled with helium and powered by an innovative system that uses solar panels to recharge hydrogen fuel cells. Military officials said those underlying technologies -- plus a very lightweight hull -- were critical to making the project work.

"The things we had to do here were not trivial; they were revolutionary," said Jan Walker, a spokeswoman for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, the Pentagon's research arm.

The Air Force has signed an agreement with DARPA to develop a demonstration dirigible by 2014. The prototype will be a third as long as the planned surveillance craft -- known as ISIS, for Integrated Sensor Is the Structure, because the radar system will be built into the structure of the ship.

While the military says the craft is closer to a blimp than a zeppelin -- which has a rigid external structure -- officials usually call the project an airship. Blimps get their shape from helium gas pressure.

The Pentagon has not yet awarded a contractor to build the prototype. Earlier work was done by Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach -- as well as Baltimore and other locations -- and by Lockheed Martin in Palmdale, Calif.; Akron, Ohio; and Denver.

julian.barnes@latimes.com

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Monday, January 26, 2009

MIT Energy Storage Discovery Could Lead to ‘Unlimited’ Solar Power

Researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) have discovered a new way of storing energy from sunlight that could lead to ‘unlimited’ solar power.

The process, loosely based on plant photosynthesis, uses solar energy to split water into hydrogen and oxygen gases. When needed, the gases can then be re-combined in a fuel cell, creating carbon-free electricity whether the sun is shining or not.

According to project leader Prof. Daniel Nocera, “This is the nirvana of what we’ve been talking about for years. Solar power has always been a limited, far-off solution. Now, we can seriously think about solar power as unlimited and soon.”

Read more here.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Scientists Find New Way to Produce Hydrogen

“The ability to produce hydrogen at room temperature is significant because it means that we did not use any heat or energy to trigger the reaction,” said Khanna. “Traditional techniques for splitting water to produce hydrogen generally require a lot of energy at the time the hydrogen is generated. But our method allows us to produce hydrogen without supplying heat, connecting to a battery, or adding electricity. Once the aluminum clusters are synthesized, they can generate hydrogen on demand without the need to store it.” Read more here.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

World Carbon Dioxide Emissions Since the year 1750


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World CO2
since 1750 (cubic feet)


Since 1750, humans have emitted over 5 trillion pounds of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Roughly half of this has ended up in the oceans where it is beginning to damage the coral reefs. The other half is still in the atmosphere and causing global warming.

Now, imagine if that carbon dioxide was separated back into carbon and oxygen- imagine if the carbon was turned back into a solid form and deposited back onto the surface of the earth- a black hail covering the surface of the earth with a ubiquitous layer of carbon dust.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Friday, January 2, 2009

When Scientists Realized they needed a carbon extraction geo-engineering solution to the problem of Climate Change

This post intercepted from Steve Connor, Independent UK. January 2, 2009.

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Levels of CO2 have continued to increase during the past decade since the Kyoto treaty was agreed and they are now rising faster than even the worst-case scenarios from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a United Nations body. In the meantime the natural absorption of CO2 by the world's forests and oceans has decreased significantly. Most of the scientists we polled agreed that the failure to curb emissions of CO2, which are increasing at a rate of 1 per cent a year, has created the need for an emergency "plan B" involving research, development and possible implementation of a worldwide geoengineering strategy.

Just over half -- 54 per cent -- of the 80 international specialists in climate science who took part in our survey agreed that the situation is now so dire that we need a backup plan that involves the artificial manipulation of the global climate to counter the effects of man-made emissions of greenhouse gases. About 35 per cent of respondents disagreed with the need for a "plan B", arguing that it would distract from the main objective of cutting CO2 emissions, with the remaining 11 per cent saying that they did not know whether a geoengineering strategy is needed or not.

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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

What are the Jellyfish?

This communication was intercepted Saturday, September 27, 2008 12:46 AM


They are these large Zepplin-like heavy-lifting semi-Buckyball lighter-than-air, stronger-than-steel, honey-combed aero-gel superstructure, cargo-blimps.

They are white like the clouds and shaped like half a marshmallow, smooth spherically curved top, like the cap of a tooth, holding within it the lighter than air, non-flammable, buoyancy gas sacks. This cargo-blimp lifting structure sits like an open umbrella on the long cylindrical carbon sieves that hang beneath this autonomous buoy. They are covered with solar cells that power the carbon sieves.

Every so often, the blimps "poop" out a carbon brick- or pelt the landscape with a black hail of carbon pelts. Huge packs of them float through our atmosphere like jelly fish in the deep ocean. But these are bio-engineered with nano-technology to "harvest" carbon dioxide gas from the atmosphere at the highest efficiency possible. They are attracted in packs to locations of intense carbon emissions, their food; they hover above cities and forest fires, volcanoes and cattle feed lots, factory smoke stacks and oil refineries. They vary from the size of a Hot Air Balloon to the size of a Football Stadium.....

They are actually free-floating autonomous self-replicating carbon extractors that look something like a cross between the giant sub-orbital Long Duration Balloon (here), but made out a more rigid superstructure from carbon aero-gels (here) and (here). So the thing would have a smokey bluish translucence, (like jellyfish), but would also have a patterned sequined exterior surface from the mini photo-voltaic solar cell panels used to power the craft.

The thing is essentially a sophisticated robot, mimicked after real-world organic adaptations, but designed to extract carbon from the atmosphere. The quantity of them in the sky is comparable to the quantity of combustion engines on earth. When storms approach they automatically inflate and rise above bad weather, then descend and continue their carbon extraction activities from the atmosphere.

This idea came to me after view an image of the earth infected with a carbon producing virus:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1XBwjQsOEeg

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Progress Dec.25

Jellyfishes purposes

main purpose: air cleaner/purifier- inhale Carbon and exhale oxygen

secondary purpose: 

GPS network
cell phone tower
homeland security
-tracking
-security cameras

Power (nutrition)

-photo voltaic cells covering the membrane (skin)

alternate (back up power)
-wind turbines
-hydroelectric  (water from ocean)

Brains:

? gears, clockwork parts
   based on/ and giving props to ancient technology
   a mix of ancient and futuristic technology
 - based on the Antikythera mechanism- 


it was a hand-wound clockwork device used by the ancient Greeks to calculate the motions of the sun, moon and planets as seen from Earth, as well as to predict solar and lunar eclipses.

-self automated
-self replicating system
-rapid prototype ( each part is grown)
-at regular intervals newer, larger parts are created for all systems from the core outward

Lifecycle:

?spores
?or eggs are created (hatched in a nest)
-like fish eggs they stay attached to the adult
larve stage
-they feed off of the adult.
-the grow in proportion to the adult diminishing.
-the adult then becomes waste product
-the adult is broken down into carbon blocks that fall away
-the carbon blocks are dense, light weight, biodegradable, small bricks

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

progress Dec. 17 2008 (thoughts)

self-replicating factories
lifecycle:
egg
pupa
larvae
adult

tunnels or tubes with a rail in the center that transports. Acts as a blood vessel. Sending raw materials in and waste materials (C02) out.

power supply: wind turbines? solar panels. solar voltaic cells.

The project released its designs and control programs under the GNU GPL. Using the help of citizens home computers to calculate the data.