Would it be possible to use a pipeline from the ground and uses the vacuum of space to dispose of things that are hazardous to the environment? (Liquid waste in particular comes to mind) Essentially acting as a syphon that shoots the waste off into the universe?
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3No, no, no, no, no. I had to repeat myself because a comment has to be at least 15 characters long. – David Hammen Jun 19 '20 at 00:16
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I commend the originality of your idea. – White Prime Jun 19 '20 at 02:01
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1We are already polluting the Earth, why do you want to go ahead and pollute space? – PNS Jun 19 '20 at 04:00
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1No. See https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/69806/123208 & https://physics.stackexchange.com/q/207076/123208 & the other questions linked there. – PM 2Ring Jun 19 '20 at 05:58
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3I’m voting to close this question because it is about building a space elevator, not about astronomy – usernumber Jun 19 '20 at 08:02
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The answer: what causes air to remain on the Earth? The same causes that nothing will go into the space through such a syphon. – peterh Jun 19 '20 at 08:40
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No.
It is hard to get stuff into space. If you built a pipe that went to space, it wouldn't suck stuff up for the same reason that the atmosphere doesn't get sucked off the Earth: Gravity pulls things down. Instead you would have to pump stuff up the pipe, you would need lots of power to do this. And when it reaches the top it would just fall down, unless you make your pipe 36000km long, so that the rotation of the Earth becomes strong enough to push it away
What you have essentially built is a space elevator. There are huge engineering challenges in making a space elevator. It is honestly the very hardest way to get rid of pollution.

James K
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