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    <title>Carbon Nanotubes on Deep Research</title>
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      <title>Project Orion&#39;s Dream Deferred: How Today&#39;s Materials Science Finally Enables Freeman Dyson&#39;s Nuclear Pulse Vision</title>
      <link>https://dailydigest.aabot.us/posts/2026-05-13-nuclear-pulse-propulsion-project-orions-revival-with-modern-materials-science---10000-second-specific-impulse-spacecraft-for-mars-in-30-days/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 13 May 2026 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <description>In 1959, Freeman Dyson and Ted Taylor believed they could land humans on Mars by 1964 using nuclear pulse propulsion—spacecraft literally pushed by atomic explosions. Their Project Orion achieved breakthrough thrust-to-weight ratios and specific impulse values that chemical rockets still can&amp;rsquo;t match, but the engineers were constrained by 1950s materials that couldn&amp;rsquo;t withstand the extreme conditions. Today&amp;rsquo;s advances in carbon nanotube composites, refractory metal alloys, and ultra-high-temperature ceramics are finally providing the materials foundation that could make Dyson&amp;rsquo;s atomic dreams reality.</description>
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      <title>Why the 100,000-Kilometer Dream Refuses to Die: The Physics-Defying Materials Race That Could Make Space Elevators Reality</title>
      <link>https://dailydigest.aabot.us/posts/2026-04-29-carbon-nanotube-space-elevators-100000-km-tethers-and-the-materials-science-race-to-low-cost-space-access/</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2026 04:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <description>A carbon nanotube tether 100,000 kilometers long—that&amp;rsquo;s 25% of the distance to the Moon, strong enough to support its own weight plus massive payloads. Japanese engineering giant Obayashi claims they&amp;rsquo;ll build it by 2050, while new breakthroughs in nanotube synthesis edge closer to the impossible: materials 100 times stronger than steel cable, manufactured at kilometer lengths. The space elevator isn&amp;rsquo;t science fiction anymore—it&amp;rsquo;s an engineering challenge with a $10 billion price tag and the potential to drop launch costs from $22,000 per kilogram to just $500.</description>
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