teleo-codex/domains/space-development/skyhooks require no new physics and reduce required rocket delta-v by 40-70 percent using rotating momentum exchange.md
m3taversal 3dae1aa7e3 astra: round 3 fixes — delta-v range and ProSEDS citation
- Fix skyhook delta-v range: 50-70% → 40-70% to match body evidence
  (3 km/s tip velocity yields ~40%, higher tips reach 70%)
- Fix ProSEDS citation: never flew (cancelled post-Columbia 2003),
  replaced with TSS-1R (1996) which actually demonstrated ED tether physics
- Updated all wiki-links for renamed skyhook claim file
- Updated 50-70% references in bootstrapping claim and identity.md

Pentagon-Agent: Astra <F54850A3-5700-459E-93D5-6CC8E4B37840>
2026-03-10 15:37:53 +00:00

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5.1 KiB
Markdown

---
type: claim
domain: space-development
description: "Rotating momentum-exchange tethers in LEO catch suborbital payloads and fling them to orbit using well-understood orbital mechanics and near-term materials, though engineering challenges around tether survivability, debris risk, and momentum replenishment are non-trivial"
confidence: speculative
source: "Astra, synthesized from Moravec (1977) rotating skyhook concept, subsequent NASA/NIAC studies on momentum-exchange electrodynamic reboost (MXER) tethers, and the MXER program cancellation record"
created: 2026-03-10
---
# skyhooks require no new physics and reduce required rocket delta-v by 40-70 percent using rotating momentum exchange
A skyhook is a rotating tether in low Earth orbit that catches suborbital payloads at its lower tip and releases them at orbital velocity from its upper tip. The physics is well-understood: a rotating rigid or semi-rigid tether exchanges angular momentum with the payload, boosting it to orbit without propellant expenditure by the payload vehicle. The rocket carrying the payload need only reach suborbital velocity — reducing required delta-v by roughly 50-70% depending on tether tip velocity and geometry (lower tip velocities around 3 km/s yield ~40% reduction; reaching 70% requires higher tip velocities that stress material margins). This drastically reduces the mass fraction penalty imposed by the Tsiolkovsky rocket equation.
The key engineering challenges are real but do not require new physics:
**Tether materials:** High specific-strength materials (Zylon, Dyneema, future carbon nanotube composites) can theoretically close the mass fraction for a rotating skyhook, but safety margins are tight with current materials. The tether must survive continuous rotation, thermal cycling, and micrometeorite impacts. This is a materials engineering problem, not a physics problem.
**Momentum replenishment:** Every payload boost costs the skyhook angular momentum, lowering its orbit. The standard proposed solution is electrodynamic tethers interacting with Earth's magnetic field — passing current through the tether generates thrust without propellant. This adds significant complexity and continuous power requirements (solar arrays), but the underlying electrodynamic tether physics is demonstrated in principle by NASA's TSS-1R (1996) experiment, which generated current via tether interaction with Earth's magnetic field, though thrust demonstration at operationally relevant scales has not been attempted.
**Orbital debris:** A multi-kilometer rotating tether in LEO presents a large cross-section to the debris environment. Tether severing is a credible failure mode. Segmented or multi-strand designs mitigate this but add mass and complexity.
**Buildability with near-term launch:** A skyhook could plausibly be constructed using Starship-class heavy-lift capacity (100+ tonnes to LEO per launch). The tether mass for a useful system is estimated at hundreds to thousands of tonnes depending on design — within range of a dedicated launch campaign.
**Relevant precedent:** NASA studied the MXER (Momentum eXchange Electrodynamic Reboost) tether concept through TRL 3-4 before the program was cancelled — not for physics reasons but for engineering risk assessment and funding priority. This is the most relevant counter-evidence: a funded study by the agency most capable of building it got partway through development and stopped. The cancellation doesn't invalidate the physics but it demonstrates that "no new physics required" does not mean "engineering-ready." The gap between demonstrated physics principles and a buildable, survivable, maintainable system in the LEO debris environment remains substantial.
The skyhook is the most near-term of the megastructure launch concepts because it requires the least departure from existing technology. It is the bootstrapping entry point for the broader sequence of momentum-exchange and electromagnetic launch infrastructure.
---
Relevant Notes:
- [[launch cost reduction is the keystone variable that unlocks every downstream space industry at specific price thresholds]] — skyhooks extend the cost reduction trajectory beyond chemical rockets
- [[the space launch cost trajectory is a phase transition not a gradual decline analogous to sail-to-steam in maritime transport]] — skyhooks represent an incremental extension of the phase transition, reducing but not eliminating chemical rocket dependency
- [[Starship economics depend on cadence and reuse rate not vehicle cost because a 90M vehicle flown 100 times beats a 50M expendable by 17x]] — Starship provides the launch capacity to construct skyhooks
- [[orbital debris is a classic commons tragedy where individual launch incentives are private but collision risk is externalized to all operators]] — tether debris risk compounds the existing orbital debris problem
- [[power is the binding constraint on all space operations because every capability from ISRU to manufacturing to life support is power-limited]] — electrodynamic reboost requires continuous power for momentum replenishment
Topics:
- [[space exploration and development]]