In case you're wondering, the answer is "Definitely not."
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Betterige's Law at it again
I'm not watching a video to find this out. What are the advantages of building in space? I only see negatives. Like huge gargantuan negatives. I guess you technically save on land, but that's it.
The data can move around the computers easier since there's no gravity
If the entire Earth blows up, it'll be a good disaster recovery solution.
Up there the sun always shines (assuming a convenient sun synchronous orbit), so you have access to uninterrupted solar power. That's the only advantage I can think of. You're going to need a lot of solar panels though, and even more radiators to radiate all the heat away. And a number of other disadvantages.
Iβm not sure how thatβs even an advantage, unless there is some scenario where you want the data center to continue after the end of civilization. Providing reliable power on Earth already has known solutions and much much cheaper
I suppose you want some sort of caching proxies to make the internet somewhat useable from any bases farther out than low orbit but even then it would be much cheaper and easier to host them at those bases.
Considering some data centers basically need a power plant to run, the amount of solar panels needed would be insane. Plus, unless you keep the data center between the planet and the sun, you still have shade.
The way I understand is that they would use a sun-synchronous orbit, more specifically a dawn/dusk orbit, which places the satellite over the terminator between day and night meaning it always directly sees the sun. But yes, it would need an insane number of solar panels. What's more, data centers don't just need power, they also need cooling. So there would also need to be an insane amount of radiators (in space it's very hard to get rid of heat).
All in all the only advantage I can see is not much of an advantage, if at all, especially compared to all the drawbacks.
So we need to reboot a server / swap a drive. Who's on call?
Cooling? Just open a door.
Getting rid of heat in space is actually a serious challenge. You can only radiate it away, since there is no gas to allow convection.
This always makes me wonder: When they say space is a frozen vacuum, it wouldn't actually feel nearly as cold as it is, right? Because there's no matter to actually take that heat away from you.
The big issue is the pressure, and you'd balloon up like a blob fish out of its depth. But would it feel cold for the few instants you'd have?
The first thing to happen is that any liquids (saliva, tears, blood) will start to boil in the very low pressure, but your body won't explode like in some films. This boiling will pull heat from your body causing your nose and mouth to nearly freeze.
Another film trope is that you freeze over, but you'll often overheat first since you can't radiate your heat away quickly enough (depending on if you're in sunlight or not).
I think Mr Musk lost a good opportunity to find out by sending a dummy instead.
Yeah but he didnβt want to be gone from spewing bullshit on twitter that long.
Anything within a sealed loop such as blood or brain fluid shouldn't be boiling. Your body is pretty good at keeping that stuff inside as long as you don't have any major cuts or something. That said, I don't think even a minor cut suffered in the vacuum could clot or scab without oxygen.
All of the air in any of your orifices would rapidly get sucked out (including from one's butt), and pretty much any liquids exposed to the resulting vacuum would boil. Negative pressure within the body means more room-temp boiling liquids, which then creates more air to get sucked out! It's a feedback loop!
A space-exposed corpse would likely end up quite dehydrated for the above reason.
no one says space is a βfrozenβ vacuum except movies.
Sorry, that embellishment (?) was probably mine; I guess I meant to say "really cold". And it is really cold, but it's also a very good insulator.
Actually, thinking about it, it really is freezing, isn't it? If you took some liquid water and just let it out into space, wouldn't it eventually freeze? It'd just take a really long time.
Matter not sunlit in space really is cold (and sunlit matter is baking hot, btw). It's just there is so little matter in space (vacuum and all) that getting rid of heat via conduction is virtually impossible, meaning it's insulated. So technically space is cold, also hot, and also damn well insulated.
Water not exposed to sunlight could get as low as - 260C (close to absolute zero) by radiating away all it's heat... eventually. Meanwhile water exposed to our sun in Earth orbit would be at around boiling temps, like 100-140C. Just check the Moon surface temperature readings.
TIL
wouldnβt do anything. youβre basically in a giant thermos, insulated by vacuum on all sides.
Too advanced for me. I was just thinking it would get cold but obviously too cold.
the opposite. if you put hot coffee in a thermos, it stays hot for a long time because a vacuum is the best insulation there is.
How to destroy space datacenter any% speedrrun
Earth's gravity well is hard to overcome. The best solution for any kind of space construction is to mine asteroids. Not much development there.
Companies like this make me wish I had the gall to sell snake oil to venture capitalists.
What a classic recipe. It's a YC company with a McKinsey CEO.
The only relevant factors I can think of are jurisdictional. You don't risk having your servers stolen by jackbooted government agents when your servers are safely beyond their physical reach.