I had "surface-ish" in my mind, but didn't say so.
Yup; I just wanted to make sure I'm not accidentally misleading anyone.
In computational materials physics, it is usually not easy to state the exact depth; it is much easier to say it is the region between the surface (that can be modeled pretty easily with results corresponding to real-world measurements) and the bulk (that can also be modeled easily with results corresponding to the real world) that is the interesting-but-problematic zone. For ferrochrome, it is a few hundred nanometers; if I recall correctly, on the order of 400 nm or so.
Yeah, near-surface effects and mobilities must be... interesting.
Especially so for chrome and other metals with interacting electrons in different orbitals. One way to describe those interactions is analogous to magnetic interactions.
Multiband EAM models for chromium essentially treat the 4s electron and the 3d electrons separately. In complexity, it is an interatomic potential (so not that complex, although the two bands make it technically challenging, regarding cache behaviour and such); nowhere near as some of the force field models chemists use. There is an underlying physical model, but the actual parameters are obtained by fitting to real world results. If you were a chemist, things would be even harder: water molecules, for example, are fiendish to model correctly (correctly representing its solvent properties, clathrates, and similar phenomena) in molecular dynamics.
Just critical thinking would be nice.
I'd give my left pinky if it made even a tiny, but statistically measurable increase in critical thinking among humans. Not kidding.
For example: Who you listen to, does not matter. Who you do not listen to, matters. This is because you cannot form an informed opinion on something you do not know about. So, when someone refuses to consider a message because it is from a source they dislike, they are doing so for ideological reasons, not because they are critical or sceptical. It is just reverse *argumentum ab auctoritate*. Sure, philosophers cannot agree whether argument from authority is a fallacy or valid argument; but in science, argument from authority is worthless. I trust science more than I trust philosphers opinions.
Yeah, I would expect you'd want to manage an icy asteroid with some mirrors and/or sails. It's going to evaporate, but you can control where and how much, and use that to steer it, very slowly. Some instrumentation (a small satellite swarm?) monitoring outgassing and dV would be able to manage the unpredictability.
Definitely agreed. Doing it at low thrust (trajectories several years, perhaps on the order of a decade), means the technical risks would be very small.
It's not like Earth isn't bombarded with rocks all the time. There is another Chixculub impactor out there. Considering typical human behaviour, robotic tracking won't cut it, because humans will lose interest in a few decades (รก la
"we haven't found a significantly dangerous impactor yet, so why do we spend all that money on robotic tracking? we could use it to make our nests so much more comfortable instead!"). The only long-term hope is to have
some permanent human presence in orbit, up to and including at least the asteroid belt. The further out, the likelier early detection would be, and thus more time to react to dangers. Some of the asteroids are too dark (low albedo) to be detectable from Earth orbit, too.
I think I would prefer mining the moon, safer and gives more options to do other things. You can send many smaller packets of minerals back to earth instead of one large mountain.
Very true. Especially something like "cannonballs" or elongated "pills" made mostly of volatiles, with a thickish metal shell, shot into orbit using solar-powered mass drivers. Having access to low-cost volatiles in orbit (hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen) and carbon and iron would be akin to industrial revolution in Earth orbit capabilities.
That isn't "science fiction", either. The escape velocity on the moon is about 2.4 km/s, and railguns that shoot 2 kg projectiles at 3 km/s already exist here on Earth.
(I just realized that that would work for
3He mining just as well.)