Silver and Gold in Near Space!
Oct 30, 2021 11:37:28 GMT -5
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Post by 1dave on Oct 30, 2021 11:37:28 GMT -5
greekreporter.com/2021/06/07/greek-named-asteroid-psyche-has-enough-gold-to-make-us-billionaires/
The Greek-named asteroid Psyche was discovered by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis in 1852. Credit: Maxar/ASU/P.Rubin/NASA/JPL-Caltech
GreekReporter.comBusinessGreek-Named Asteroid Psyche Has Enough Gold to Make Us All Billionaires
Greek-Named Asteroid Psyche Has Enough Gold to Make Us All Billionaires
By Patricia Claus June 7, 2021
Psyche
NASA is on a mission to explore a Greek-named asteroid called 16 Psyche that contains a double-edged sword — made completely of metal, it boasts enough gold to either make every person on Earth a billionaire — or to collapse the gold market and destabilize the entire global financial world.
The heavenly body Psyche, which was discovered by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis on March 17, 1852, was named after the Greek goddess of the soul who was born a mortal but who married Eros, the god of Love.
Located between the orbits of the planets Mars and Jupiter, Psyche is no average asteroid, which are most often made of rock and/or ice for the most part, but consists of solid metal.
Psyche’s power is a double-edged sword
Grecian Delight supports Greece
Like all other figures of Greek mythology, Psyche is powerful — and may cause trouble for humanity if and when she is mined for the precious gold she is made of — because the wealth she represents could send Earthly financial markets into a tizzy.
Psyche also contains large amounts of platinum, iron and nickel, making her worth even more astronomical.
Experts have estimated that the various metals she is made of are worth an eye-popping $10,000 quadrillion.
16 Psyche
Spacecraft destined for the asteroid 16 Psyche. Credit: Maxar/ASU/P. Rubin/NASA/JPL-Caltech
And this may be too much of a good thing– as so often happens with the Greek gods as they are portrayed in Greek mythology.
If all Psyche’s riches were somehow transported back to Earth, their worth would destroy commodity prices and therefore cause the world’s economy – worth at least $75.5 trillion – to collapse as a result.
NASA describes 16 Psyche as a giant metal asteroid, about three times farther away from the Sun than is the Earth. Its average diameter is about 140 miles (226 kilometers) – about one-sixteenth the diameter of Earth’s Moon or about the distance between Los Angeles and San Diego in the US.
Psyche takes about five Earth years to complete one orbit of the Sun, but only a bit over four hours to rotate once on its axis (a Psyche “day”).
Greek-named asteroid could be remains of planet after gigantic collision
Unlike most other asteroids that are rocky or icy bodies, scientists think the M-type (metallic) asteroid is comprised mostly of metallic iron and nickel — very similar to Earth’s core.
Scientists speculate whether Psyche could actually be an exposed core of an early planet that lost its rocky outer layers due to a number of violent collisions billions of years ago.
Astronomers on Earth have studied 16 Psyche in visible and infrared wavelengths, as well as radar, which suggests she is shaped “somewhat like a potato,” according to NASA.
Psyche 16’s existence has been known for some time, but recent advancements in interplanetary research, including several successful Mars landings, have made researchers refocus on mining potential for such asteroids.
Scott Moore, the head of EuroSun Mining, told interviewers from the energy publication Oil Price that the almost unfathomable amounts of gold in the asteroid threatens to completely upend the gold industry on Earth.
“The ‘Titans of Gold’ (gold mining operators) now control hundreds of the best-producing properties around the world,” he explained to interviewers from the website.
“But the 4-5 million ounces of gold they bring to the market every year pales in comparison to the conquests available in space.”
“Discovery Mission” headed to asteroid in 2022
In the Summer of 2022, NASA plans to launch a mission to probe the asteroid and find out more about her riches. Called the “Discovery Mission,” it is scheduled to arrive at Psyche 16 nearly four years later, sometime in 2026 following a Mars gravity assist in 2023.
“It’s really the final phase, when all of the puzzle pieces are coming together and we’re getting on the rocket. This is the most intense part of everything that happens on the ground,” said Arizona State University’s Lindy Elkins-Tanton, who as principal investigator for Psyche leads the mission.
That gives us Earthlings just enough time to contemplate exactly what might happen if and when her riches are somehow exploited and taken back to our planet.
Clearly, the amounts of precious metals in an asteroid of the size of Psyche 16 could send our global economy into territory that it has never had to deal with before, as commodity prices would bottom out from the sheer abundance of the metals.
If all of the minerals on the asteroid were to be mined and added up, experts estimate the total monetary value of Psyche 16 would be in the neighborhood of $10,000 quadrillion.
Despite the great value that we have placed throughout history on precious metals such as gold and platinum, the mining would cause wreak havoc in the global economy — which as a whole is worth roughly $75.5 trillion — much less than the value of the asteroid.
NASA officials say that that the Psyche 16 expedition planned is part of a purely scientific effort. They stress that no mining will take place as part of their missions.
Incredibly, the ownership — and mining — of asteroids is completely legal, according to agreements signed in 2015. A raft of companies are already planning to cash in on the new source of precious minerals on these heavenly bodies — not just the glittering gold and platinum but also the vital commodity of iron, used in the manufacture of steel.
Mission may provide insight into planetary formation
NASA states that Psyche 16 was most likely formed after the powerful collisions of planets, which occurred routinely as our solar system was in the process of formation.
This information alone is invaluable, never mind what her minerals are worth, since “her composition could tell us how Earth’s core and the cores of the other terrestrial planets in the solar system were first formed, according to NASA scientists.
Two space mining companies – backed by major investors – geared up for a modern-day gold rush after asteroid ownership was made legal in 2015.
Deep Space Industries — which was later acquired by Bradford Space Group — initially was oriented around the exploitation of asteroid-based minerals. Later shifting its focus to satellite propulsion, it has now backed away from the controversial concept of harvesting precious minerals from space.
Mining companies back out of controversial — perhaps impractical — venture
It was initially joined by the firm Planetary Resources in the quest of asteroid mining — but it too dropped out of the running, and the company was absorbed by a blockchain company in late 2019.
The two space development companies had originally set their sights on a second asteroid, called “2011 UW158,” which is twice as large as the Tower of London and whose worth was estimated to be up to $5.7 trillion at the time.
Billionaires had at one time lined up to invest in Planetary Resources, which is now part of ConsenSys, which describes itself as a “blockchain venture production studio focused on building and scaling tools, disruptive startups, and enterprise software products powered by decentralized technology, specifically Ethereum,” according to Space News.
Ethereum is a decentralized monetary platform which is best known for its cryptocurrency called Ether, which is similar to Bitcoin.
So it appears the speculative interest in asteroid mining has abated somewhat at the present time. For now, it seems the only activity the Greek-named asteroid needs to worry about is the NASA scientific and exploratory mission.
“After over 21 months in orbit,” NASA officials state, “the spacecraft will map and study 16 Psyche’s properties using a multispectral imager, a gamma-ray and neutron spectrometer, a magnetometer, and a radio instrument (for gravity measurement). The mission’s goal is, among other things, to determine whether Psyche is indeed the core of a planet-sized object.”
The mission will be the very first such effort to investigate a world that is made of metal rather than primarily rock and ice.
Deep within rocky, terrestrial planets – including our Earth – scientists infer the presence of metallic cores, but these lie unreachable below their rock mantles and crusts.
Because scientists still cannot see or measure Earth’s core directly, the Psyche mission offers a unique window into the violent history of collisions and accretion that created terrestrial planets in our solar system.
You can keep up with the developments regarding the 16 Psyche mission by reading NASA’s blog on the effort, here.
psyche.asu.edu/category/blog/
The Greek-named asteroid Psyche was discovered by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis in 1852. Credit: Maxar/ASU/P.Rubin/NASA/JPL-Caltech
GreekReporter.comBusinessGreek-Named Asteroid Psyche Has Enough Gold to Make Us All Billionaires
Greek-Named Asteroid Psyche Has Enough Gold to Make Us All Billionaires
By Patricia Claus June 7, 2021
Psyche
NASA is on a mission to explore a Greek-named asteroid called 16 Psyche that contains a double-edged sword — made completely of metal, it boasts enough gold to either make every person on Earth a billionaire — or to collapse the gold market and destabilize the entire global financial world.
The heavenly body Psyche, which was discovered by Italian astronomer Annibale de Gasparis on March 17, 1852, was named after the Greek goddess of the soul who was born a mortal but who married Eros, the god of Love.
Located between the orbits of the planets Mars and Jupiter, Psyche is no average asteroid, which are most often made of rock and/or ice for the most part, but consists of solid metal.
Psyche’s power is a double-edged sword
Grecian Delight supports Greece
Like all other figures of Greek mythology, Psyche is powerful — and may cause trouble for humanity if and when she is mined for the precious gold she is made of — because the wealth she represents could send Earthly financial markets into a tizzy.
Psyche also contains large amounts of platinum, iron and nickel, making her worth even more astronomical.
Experts have estimated that the various metals she is made of are worth an eye-popping $10,000 quadrillion.
16 Psyche
Spacecraft destined for the asteroid 16 Psyche. Credit: Maxar/ASU/P. Rubin/NASA/JPL-Caltech
And this may be too much of a good thing– as so often happens with the Greek gods as they are portrayed in Greek mythology.
If all Psyche’s riches were somehow transported back to Earth, their worth would destroy commodity prices and therefore cause the world’s economy – worth at least $75.5 trillion – to collapse as a result.
NASA describes 16 Psyche as a giant metal asteroid, about three times farther away from the Sun than is the Earth. Its average diameter is about 140 miles (226 kilometers) – about one-sixteenth the diameter of Earth’s Moon or about the distance between Los Angeles and San Diego in the US.
Psyche takes about five Earth years to complete one orbit of the Sun, but only a bit over four hours to rotate once on its axis (a Psyche “day”).
Greek-named asteroid could be remains of planet after gigantic collision
Unlike most other asteroids that are rocky or icy bodies, scientists think the M-type (metallic) asteroid is comprised mostly of metallic iron and nickel — very similar to Earth’s core.
Scientists speculate whether Psyche could actually be an exposed core of an early planet that lost its rocky outer layers due to a number of violent collisions billions of years ago.
Astronomers on Earth have studied 16 Psyche in visible and infrared wavelengths, as well as radar, which suggests she is shaped “somewhat like a potato,” according to NASA.
Psyche 16’s existence has been known for some time, but recent advancements in interplanetary research, including several successful Mars landings, have made researchers refocus on mining potential for such asteroids.
Scott Moore, the head of EuroSun Mining, told interviewers from the energy publication Oil Price that the almost unfathomable amounts of gold in the asteroid threatens to completely upend the gold industry on Earth.
“The ‘Titans of Gold’ (gold mining operators) now control hundreds of the best-producing properties around the world,” he explained to interviewers from the website.
“But the 4-5 million ounces of gold they bring to the market every year pales in comparison to the conquests available in space.”
“Discovery Mission” headed to asteroid in 2022
In the Summer of 2022, NASA plans to launch a mission to probe the asteroid and find out more about her riches. Called the “Discovery Mission,” it is scheduled to arrive at Psyche 16 nearly four years later, sometime in 2026 following a Mars gravity assist in 2023.
“It’s really the final phase, when all of the puzzle pieces are coming together and we’re getting on the rocket. This is the most intense part of everything that happens on the ground,” said Arizona State University’s Lindy Elkins-Tanton, who as principal investigator for Psyche leads the mission.
That gives us Earthlings just enough time to contemplate exactly what might happen if and when her riches are somehow exploited and taken back to our planet.
Clearly, the amounts of precious metals in an asteroid of the size of Psyche 16 could send our global economy into territory that it has never had to deal with before, as commodity prices would bottom out from the sheer abundance of the metals.
If all of the minerals on the asteroid were to be mined and added up, experts estimate the total monetary value of Psyche 16 would be in the neighborhood of $10,000 quadrillion.
Despite the great value that we have placed throughout history on precious metals such as gold and platinum, the mining would cause wreak havoc in the global economy — which as a whole is worth roughly $75.5 trillion — much less than the value of the asteroid.
NASA officials say that that the Psyche 16 expedition planned is part of a purely scientific effort. They stress that no mining will take place as part of their missions.
Incredibly, the ownership — and mining — of asteroids is completely legal, according to agreements signed in 2015. A raft of companies are already planning to cash in on the new source of precious minerals on these heavenly bodies — not just the glittering gold and platinum but also the vital commodity of iron, used in the manufacture of steel.
Mission may provide insight into planetary formation
NASA states that Psyche 16 was most likely formed after the powerful collisions of planets, which occurred routinely as our solar system was in the process of formation.
This information alone is invaluable, never mind what her minerals are worth, since “her composition could tell us how Earth’s core and the cores of the other terrestrial planets in the solar system were first formed, according to NASA scientists.
Two space mining companies – backed by major investors – geared up for a modern-day gold rush after asteroid ownership was made legal in 2015.
Deep Space Industries — which was later acquired by Bradford Space Group — initially was oriented around the exploitation of asteroid-based minerals. Later shifting its focus to satellite propulsion, it has now backed away from the controversial concept of harvesting precious minerals from space.
Mining companies back out of controversial — perhaps impractical — venture
It was initially joined by the firm Planetary Resources in the quest of asteroid mining — but it too dropped out of the running, and the company was absorbed by a blockchain company in late 2019.
The two space development companies had originally set their sights on a second asteroid, called “2011 UW158,” which is twice as large as the Tower of London and whose worth was estimated to be up to $5.7 trillion at the time.
Billionaires had at one time lined up to invest in Planetary Resources, which is now part of ConsenSys, which describes itself as a “blockchain venture production studio focused on building and scaling tools, disruptive startups, and enterprise software products powered by decentralized technology, specifically Ethereum,” according to Space News.
Ethereum is a decentralized monetary platform which is best known for its cryptocurrency called Ether, which is similar to Bitcoin.
So it appears the speculative interest in asteroid mining has abated somewhat at the present time. For now, it seems the only activity the Greek-named asteroid needs to worry about is the NASA scientific and exploratory mission.
“After over 21 months in orbit,” NASA officials state, “the spacecraft will map and study 16 Psyche’s properties using a multispectral imager, a gamma-ray and neutron spectrometer, a magnetometer, and a radio instrument (for gravity measurement). The mission’s goal is, among other things, to determine whether Psyche is indeed the core of a planet-sized object.”
The mission will be the very first such effort to investigate a world that is made of metal rather than primarily rock and ice.
Deep within rocky, terrestrial planets – including our Earth – scientists infer the presence of metallic cores, but these lie unreachable below their rock mantles and crusts.
Because scientists still cannot see or measure Earth’s core directly, the Psyche mission offers a unique window into the violent history of collisions and accretion that created terrestrial planets in our solar system.
You can keep up with the developments regarding the 16 Psyche mission by reading NASA’s blog on the effort, here.
psyche.asu.edu/category/blog/