When it comes to Moon materials, best to do your mining
and processing on the Moon (excepting where you'd like a gravity-'free' environment for consistency of product, although the lack of convection/stratification can be an engineering challenge as well in refining) then Mass-Drive finished girders/etc into space, rather than launching ore for space-separation (definitely needing centrifuge technology at varioys stages of separation).
But it'll be a process needing some thought, once we have a better idea of
what can be mined and processed from there and other places.
BTW: Just listened to two comedy radio shows about space. The first is intentional (a repeat, heard it before several times) called
Helen Keene's It Is Rocket Science. Short, snappy and scientific if slightly satirical. If you're geoblocked from listening, outside the UK, I'm sure you've got enough information to find something that
isn't, as well as anyone who wants to find the other series(/seasons) before this one. A quarter of an hour probably isn't too long to get an idea before tracking down other episodes and 'series'.
Then, this morning, there was
In Our Time, on the Kuiper Belt. Not any
actual comedy, the basic conceit of the series (in both senses of the word) is that cultural-all-rounder Melvin Bragg (much parodied, for many decades) gets some experts in a scientific, historical, philosophical and/or other field and he tries to shepherd them (obviously with not-always-accurate notes he makes during a preparatory discussion, off-air) into explaining the topic-of-the-week in an everyman-level of understanding (at least as its grounding, then stretching things so that the complexities of Fermat or Solipsism or the life of some obscure Egyptian Monarch are at least touched upon), all in 45 minutes of apparently live-and-uncut discussion (30 minutes in the edited down evening repeat.
So, today the subject was, as indicated, The Kuiper Belt. And the experts were decent and proven stalwarts of broadcasting (sometimes there's an expert on Mediæval History who definitely knows his stuff but has a hard to ignore verbal tick/radio-shyness/tendency to punctuate his speech by a fidgety tapping that gets picked up on the mike). And it went
well. But the experts did miss a few better answers to "so why are the KBOs going so slow?" (Bragg, more of an Arts person, thinking this was important, the experts obviously thinking it was just self-obvious) and got dragged into telling us of F=Gm
1m
2/r² when they could really have just said that if they were going significantly faster they just
wouldn't be in the Belt for long! (Also related, about stability of orbit, not that these things were stable, just that they are stable enough to still be there...)
And then there was the "temperature at the Belt" (presumably its objects, not the space, although it's sort of arguable that it's the same). They knew their figures but got tied up about units. "About minus 220 Kelvin,"/"minus 600 Celsius"/"No, wait, that's wrong, umm..."
Anyway, there's a whole set of
podcast categories for this programme, probably available worldwide, and here are the direct
low and
high quality versions of this episode, if you feel like a listen yourself after my 'recomendation'. More of an acquired taste, I think, but you may end up learning more about Nietzsche or gin or penicillin (not necessarily in that order!) if you wander through some other of the many (just exceeded 750!) prior episodes.