The question Halley's Comet as a "Free Taxi" had an interesting thought, even though it didn't work out. I was wondering about a variation on the idea. Use a cable, as illustrated below. Could this be made anything like practical given reasonable assumptions?
The idea is
- Wait for an asteroid to fly close to Earth.
- Put a probe, long cable, and net in its path.
- When the probe has swung through a half circle, it lets go of the cable.
Thoughts
- Military planes have picked up downed pilots with a system something like this.
- An asteroid of a few tons would be small enough to grab, and large enough to throw a probe.
- It would take relatively little energy to reach an asteroid that passes near Earth, especially if you don't have to match its speed.
- The strength of the cable would be a limit on how much speed you could gain. A long cable reduces acceleration, but has more mass.
- The asteroid might be moving fast. To avoid breaking the cable, you might have to use a rocket to partially catch up.
- How would you make the net?
- In the illustration, the probe is slung in the direction the asteroid travels. This might not be an interesting direction. The probe could let go early to choose another direction. But this would reduce the final speed.
- The probe would acquire spin. You might be able to avoid that by attaching the cable to the probe with a hinge aligned with the probe's center of mass.
Late thought - Add a small rocket to the net. Accelerate the free end of the cable to match velocity with the asteroid while leaving the probe still. Now you don't smash the net, and you still haven't used all that much energy.
It still may not be a reasonable approach, but it is sounding more possible now.
