
http://cygo.com/space-station/asteroid-station/
NASA scientists want to lasso an asteroid the size of two double-decker buses and turn it into a space station orbiting the moon.
At over $2 billion, the mission could help open up space for private entrepreneurs. NASA says it has the technology to track, capture and relocate a 500 ton asteroid.
It could be used as a space base for astronauts on their way to Mars.
In April, scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and their neighbors at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, northeast of L.A., produced their feasibility study for the mission.
They would launch an asteroid capture capsule on an Atlas-V rocket, aiming it at the one of five candidate asteroids they identify between the Earth and the moon each year. The solar-powered capsule would close in on the asteroid and snare it with a 16-metre diameter bag.
The Caltech scientists suggested it could be steered into a permanent orbit above the moon.
The bag would close around the rock using draw strings.
NASA wants to use the new station as a laboratory for experiments for the Orion as well as a possible staging post for astronauts en route to Mars after 2025.
NASA has a list of rocks it wants to probe, including Ceres and Pluto.

Same news, but a much better article.
Brooks

if really implemented this can change entirely the startegies for space development. At last they are utilizing existing resources with affordable and feasible missions , that will represent important steps in enabling technologies for more ambitious plans.
A: spacesettlers@yahoogroups.com
Inviato: Marted 1 Gennaio 2013 15:51
Oggetto: [spacesettlers] NASA wants to turn a small asteroid into a space station
http://cygo.com/space-station/asteroid-station/
NASA scientists want to lasso an asteroid the size of two double-decker buses and turn it into a space station orbiting the moon. If approved, the mission could help open up space for private entrepreneurs who have already expressed their intention to search for mineral wealth in asteroids. Pictured is an artist's concept of the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft taking a sample from asteroid 1999 RQ36. RQ36, a chunk of rock and dust about 1,900 feet in diameter could tell us how the solar system was born
NASA scientists want to lasso an asteroid the size of two double-decker buses and turn it into a space station orbiting the moon.
At over $2 billion, the mission could help open up space for private entrepreneurs. NASA says it has the technology to track, capture and relocate a 500 ton asteroid.
It could be used as a space base for astronauts on their way to Mars.
In April, scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and their neighbors at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, northeast of L.A., produced their feasibility study for the mission.
They would launch an asteroid capture capsule on an Atlas-V rocket, aiming it at the one of five candidate asteroids they identify between the Earth and the moon each year. The solar-powered capsule would close in on the asteroid and snare it with a 16-metre diameter bag.
The Caltech scientists suggested it could be steered into a permanent orbit above the moon.
The bag would close around the rock using draw strings.
NASA wants to use the new station as a laboratory for experiments for the Orion as well as a possible staging post for astronauts en route to Mars after 2025.
NASA has a list of rocks it wants to probe, including Ceres and Pluto.

--- In spacesettlers, giorgio gaviraghi wrote:
> for space development. At last they are utilizing existing
> resources with affordable and feasible missions , that will
> represent important steps in enabling technologies for more
> ambitious plans.
I would love to see this happen. But I've seen enough dashed plans that I'm not holding my breath.

Yeah, but to even have such a potentially game changingon idea on the table is very awesome. Wish there was a way to support it. Maybe a whitehousr..gov petition?
Brooks

"...a gravitationally neutral spot..." sounds like a Lagrange point. I wonder which one?
Mike Combs
From: spacesettlers@yahoogroups.com [mailto:spacesettlers@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of brooksn
Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2013 9:07 AM
To: spacesettlers@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [spacesettlers] NASA wants to turn a small asteroid into a space station, better article
Same news, but a much better article.
Brooks
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2252489/Nasa-plans-lasso-asteroid-size-double-decker-buses-turn-space-station-orbit-moon.html

The original article about NASA wanting to put a station in cis-lunar space, before any mention of using an asteroid, mentioned they wanted to use L5 or put it in lunar orbit. Now it sounds like L5
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2013 9:06 AM
To: spacesettlers@yahoogroups.com
Subject: RE: [spacesettlers] NASA wants to turn a small asteroid into a space station, better article
"...a gravitationally neutral spot..." sounds like a Lagrange point. I wonder which one?
Regards,
Mike Combs
From: mailto:spacesettlers%40yahoogroups.com [mailto:mailto:spacesettlers%40yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of brooksn
Sent: Tuesday, January 01, 2013 9:07 AM
To: mailto:spacesettlers%40yahoogroups.com
Subject: [spacesettlers] NASA wants to turn a small asteroid into a space station, better article
Same news, but a much better article.
Brooks
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2252489/Nasa-plans-lasso-asteroid-size-double-decker-buses-turn-space-station-orbit-moon.html

On Jan 7, 2013, at 3:07 PM, Victor Smith wrote:
>
No. This is from the Keck study on asteroid retrieval. They propose putting a 500 ton NEO in lunar orbit using 10 tons of Xenon fuel. See http://space.alglobus.net/papers/AIAA2012AsteroidAstronauts.pdf which references the JPL study (at http://kiss.caltech.edu/study/asteroid/asteroid_final_report.pdf) This idea started with Marco Tantardini's 2010 presentation (see http://space.alglobus.net/AMG/SisyphusVictoriousMarcoTantardini2010.pdf)

I'd be willing to sign it.