Japan Plans a Moonbase by 2030
Aglassis writes "The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) announced at a conference that they are planning to build a Moonbase by 2030. Since JAXA doesn't currently have a 100 ton-class heavy lift rocket or a human transportation system perhaps now is a good time for JAXA to join in with NASA on the Project Constellation rocket program."
that the US faked the moon landings! :)
You go, Japan. Someone's gotta do it, and ever since we rejected science for religion, all your base are no longer belong to US.
NASA's astronauts haven't done anything interesting or useful for decades.
All the action in the US space program is with the unmanned probes.
Perhaps Japan will put some excitement back into manned spaceflight.
Cliff Claven
K.E.G. Party Chairman
Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
You don't need a 100 ton rocket to go to the moon and NASA has already stated that the Constellation is an US-only project. What Japan will probably do is joining Europe and Russia on the ACTS (Advanced Crew Transportation System), that will be launched using existing Ariane 5 or similar rockets (20-25 ton to LEO, depending on the orbit inclination).
There's a hidden treasure in Python 3.x: __prepare__()
China can't conquer anything without defeating both the US and Russia first. And even if they could, Japan wouldn't be a sensible target - too difficult to convince of cooperation, and too useful in its current state as a market. Mongolia, Nepal and India with their traditional Maoist opposition groups would be the obvious targets if China was aggressive. But it isn't.
blow your mind already
1962 - "We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard."
2006 - "Its too hard and too expensive."
Once you realize that every paragraph of your post is handwaving nonsense - you'll understand why.
Not to sound like a troll, but if this is the attitude at NASA, I'll be surprised if you manage to launch the next space shuttle. If you said something like that in the sixties, you'd have probably been fired.
They sent men to the moon in the sixties. It should be a matter of simplicity to do it today. The space shuttle is so big it can practically carry a moon landing system into orbit for assembly in one or two missions. Robotics has progressed to an extent where a radio controlled assembly of a base is feasable. Fluid dynamics and mathematical modelling have all advanced so far in the last ten years alone that it's now possible for an undergraduate student to model scenarios and design components on his desktop PC. Materials science has come far enough that spacecraft can be built better, stronger, faster and cheaper that in the sixties.
If your attitude is indicative of the general atmosphere at NASA then there is no american space program. You badly need better management.
May the Maths Be with you!
You do realize that the SDF has one of the world's highest annual military budgets, right?
Dear Diary...today I was pompous and my sister was crazy.