Rocket launches may dominate headlines, but the true bottleneck in space exploration lies not in reaching low Earth orbit (LEO), but in venturing beyond it. From LEO to the Moon or Mars, spacecraft still require costly kick stages or oversized boosters. A decades-old idea known as the skyhook could change that equation.
A skyhook is a rotating orbital tether: essentially, a long, strong cable that swings a spacecraft from one orbit to another, much like a sling. Unlike the space elevator concept, a skyhook looks much more buildable with current technology. By lowering the cost of Earth/Moon & interplanetary transport, skyhooks and related tether technologies could help make space travel beyond LEO economically feasible. The linked interview with Marcus Landgraf, from ESA, connects this to breaking resource limitations and enabling prosperity through space expansion.
How Close Are We To Building A Practical Skyhook? Youtube Interview with Dr. Marcus Landgraf, ESA Human and Robotic Exploration Programme)
Isn't 'skyhook' a concept used in one of the Batman movies, based on an old military concept? He releases a ballon on a tether which gets snagged amd reeled in by a passing aircraft to extract him from a dangerous area.
/edit: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fulton_surface-to-air_recovery_system
Fun fact this tech was used to snatch gliders carrying plane crash victims and paratroopers and one very drunk journalist out of the Papua New Guinea jungle during WW2.
I learned about this from MGS5 and initially thought it was just some fever dream Kojima thought of. Turns out, it was a fever dream some American army engineer came up with and actually exists.
now imagine that but instead of lifting batman into the sky it lifts him into space ...
https://youtu.be/TlpFzn_Y-F0