This is Mission XXX Impossiblea new one: An architecture firm has released speculative plans to build a tower suspended from an asteroid that would hang down to Earth.
Yes, you read that correctly.
This building -- named the Analemma tower -- would be the tallest in the world, according to Clouds Architecture Office.
SEE ALSO: Big Asteroid's Chances of Hitting Earth in 2040 Overblown, NASA SaysThe name of the tower refers to the figure-eight pattern the sun would make if you tracked it at the same time of day from the same place, every day for one year.
"By placing a large asteroid into orbit over earth, a high strength cable can be lowered towards the surface of earth from which a super tall tower can be suspended," Clouds AO said in a statement about the project.
"... If the recent boom in residential towers proves that sales price per square foot rises with floor elevation, then Analemma Tower will command record prices, justifying its high cost of construction," the firm added.
There are some important caveats that would come with this building, however. For example, it wouldn't be stationary. During the course of 24 hours, the building would travel in a figure-eight pattern that would bring it above New York City and other locations farther south. Its path would be the same every day, according to the firm.
The building itself would be a pretty stunning thing to behold if it ever comes to fruition.
Of course this whole design is speculative, and there's no guarantee anything will ever come of it. There are some serious hurdles to overcome in the building of this tower.
First of all, scientists still don't know exactly how to tow an asteroid into orbit around Earth, and it doesn't look like we're going to find out anytime soon. The Trump administration recently put forward a budget that, if enacted, would end the development of NASA's asteroid redirect mission designed to bring an asteroid into orbit around the moon.
The people behind the Analemma project cite the European Space Agency's Rosetta spacecraft as an example of a successful landing on a comet, but they fail to mention that the Philae lander actually ended up in a totally unexpected part of the comet and stopped transmitting data far earlier than expected.
Also, just think about what it would be like to literally be inside of a thunderstorm. Yes, that sounds pretty awesome, but it could also be incredibly dangerous, and in all likelihood, that's what you would be facing at some point in your life in Earth's atmosphere.
Not to mention the fact that we have no idea if it's even feasible to suspend a tower from an asteroid by a cable at all. (At least one architect who spoke to NBC Newsthinks that the whole idea is probably borderline impossible.)
But just on a personal note, assuming it isn't some kind of elaborate April Fools' Day joke, this whole thing is a little bit too Elysium-like for my taste.
In that movie, only the wealthiest people can leave Earth to live aboard a space station as the poorer people on the overpopulated planet have to make do with what they can scrounge together.
The cost of building Analemma would be so prohibitive that even if it were to become a reality, the price of any unit in the building -- or even the price of a flight to it -- would likely be unattainable for anyone but the most wealthy among us. Plus, its physical distance from the Earth's surface would physically separate its residents from our planet.
And yeah, I've seen how that movie ends. Not interested.
'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 26, 2023The Morning News Roundup for September 2, 2014Cover Art by Sadie SteinFreak CityOneiric Architecture and Opium by Chantal McStayBest Fire TV deals: Save up to 51% off Fire TV sticks and moreMars spacecraft takes new images of biggest volcano in solar systemFor the 1 Train Dead'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 27, 2023'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 27, 2023What We See When We ReadLes Combats ModernesHow literary fiction is grappling with modern techBest Fire TV deals: Save up to 51% off Fire TV sticks and more'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 26, 2023Where Are Hegel and Virginia Woolf Now?'Did it hurt' memes are hilarious, painful, and taking over the internetHow to use Tinder's new Explore featureThe Morning News Roundup for Monday, August 25, 2014Best wireless headphones deal: Get Bose headphones for $279 Emmys 2024: Kieran Culkin reacts perfectly to Pedro Pascal's speech burn A Great Storyteller Loses His Memory by Rodrigo García On the Faces of Strangers: Michaël Borremans’s Pandemic Portrait by John Vincler The Review’s Review: Magma, Memphis, and the Middle Ages by The Paris Review Substack adds 'report' button to app amid moderation controversies & Other Stories by Eloghosa Osunde Best AirPods deal: Save 20% on Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen) Sturgeon Moon by Nina MacLaughlin Redux: Knowing It Would End by The Paris Review Poetry Is Doing Great: An Interview with Kaveh Akbar by Craig Morgan Teicher A Literature on the Brink of Dawn by Richard Zenith In the Gaps: An Interview with Keith Ridgway by Christopher Notarnicola Does Technology Have a Soul? by Meghan O’Gieblyn The Momentum of Living: An Interview with Clare Sestanovich by Elinor Hitt Redux: Fireworks Out of Nowhere by The Paris Review What Our Contributors Are Reading This Spring by The Paris Review Redux: Not an After Tesla Model Y owner adds DIY solar roof to his car Save 30% sitewide at Solawave: Get the skincare wand, the Bye Acne device, and more Is Ayo Edebiri Irish? A guide to the internet's best joke.
2.831s , 10134.078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Mission XXX Impossible】,Warmth Information Network