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The Dusty Concern for the Mission to Mars

eldavojohn writes "Astronauts sent to the red planet may find much of their job involving the task of dusting off their equipment and suits. The president says we're going there but the dusty planet has some obstacles and uncertainties for engineers because we don't have a sample of Martian dust. Is it toxic? Will it conduct electricity and short circuits? Will astronauts suffer from the triboelectric effect? How large is the average grain? Will humans be allergic to it? Will sinuses jeopardize a mission? Will a dust storm stop a take off and return flight? So many uncertainties from something as simple as dust but one thing is clear — we need samples!"

174 comments

  1. We'll never know. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We'll never know. Let's throw up our hands in awe at the ineffable planet Mars.

    1. Re:We'll never know. by GizmoToy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I don't get it either. Yes, having a sample is important. Draw up and execute a mission that retrieves a sample prior to sending a group of astronauts up to something we don't know enough about.

    2. Re:We'll never know. by cupofjoe · · Score: 4, Informative

      Technically, the Mars Sample Return http://mars.jpl.nasa.gov/technology/samplereturn/i ndex.html is a precursor mission (i.e., before manned landings) that's been "on the books", so to speak, for a while. It's a developmental mission model, having been bounced back-and-forth between front and back burners for a while, now, but the technology is all there. It's very expensive, as you can imagine, so that's part of the reason why it's not "ready" yet. Other reasons have to do with local infrastructure - we'd like to have a handle on good surface communications on Mars - and the fact that the science community can't really decide on a reasonable surface target. That's being helped by MER, and will really get a
      good kick in the pants by the Mars Science Laboratory (MSL), which will be launching in 2009.

      Of course, the public have very varied opinions about this...for example,when you Google "Mars Sample Return" you still get http://www.icamsr.org/ as your first hit. Sheesh.

      Uphill battle, maybe.

      --joe.

    3. Re:We'll never know. by sleigher · · Score: 1

      Please correct me if I am wrong.... Don't we have working rovers on Mars, so we have a general idea if the dust is gonna hurt electronics.....right?

      --
      All points of time and space are connected.
    4. Re:We'll never know. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was my initial reaction too, but the electronics in the rovers are probably insulated from the outside atmosphere.

    5. Re:We'll never know. by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Informative

      From the parents link:NASA is seeking public opinion on ways to detect possible biohazards from Mars samples returned to the Earth.

      Wouldn't any biohazard, bacteria or virius, culture fairly easily in a petri dish? If it could survive and breed in us, it could survive and breed in a lab. It's not like we don't already have experience with weaponized viriuses, what's another few grams of potential mass extinction added to the collection?

      And for every who thinks we stopped biological weapons research in 1972, look at this: http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,821306 ,00.html

      --
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    6. Re:We'll never know. by Alyred · · Score: 1

      Wow. The ICAMSR site's front page is so riddled with spelling errors that it's hard to take them seriously in any case.

    7. Re:We'll never know. by cnettel · · Score: 3, Informative
      Unfortunately, this is totally wrong. PCR detection studies (just try to copy all DNA found and then sequence it) finds lots of sequences from non-cultured organisms no matter where we try to do it, in the human colon, in soil, in ocean water. This could mean that they are rather slow-growing or some other aspects that would make them more benign, but the overall argument against the invasion from Mars is the simple observation that life on Earth has been going on for a long time in very hostile combinations. The chance that foreign life would somehow know a "backdoor" by chance seems remote.

      (In that case, I would be more concerned about the effects on us when opening access to closed underground lakes on Earth, but those are still also far more susceptible to being destroyed by "our" biological environment, not the other way round.)

  2. New movie title by jimbobborg · · Score: 1

    "Earth Needs Dust!" as opposed to "Mars Needs Women!"

    On another note, don't any of the rovers there have the ability to measure this kind of thing? That would sort of make sense.

    1. Re:New movie title by iamlucky13 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Nope...the Mars Exploration Rovers' microscopic imagers can't resolve finely enough to measure grain size or geometry, and they have no way of measuring electrical properties. The Mars Surface Laboratory, to launch in 2009, will have slightly better resolution, but still not grain sized. In fact, I think in order to get a good idea what they finest grains look like, nothing short of an electron microscope will do. The rovers focus on geology and chemical composition, but not as much on things like dust geometry and electrical properties.

      Regardless of whether or not its feasible to equip a lander to determine these properties itself, NASA and other groups would really like to get their hands directly on some Martian surface material, so a robotic sample return mission will very likely happen in the next 10-20 years regardless of whether plans move forward for manned exploration.

    2. Re:New movie title by IgLou · · Score: 1

      I was thinking the same thing! So I tagged the story earthneedsdust.

      Thinking about your comment on the rovers, will this mean folks will say "They can put a man on the moon but they can't get dust of Mars!"

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    3. Re:New movie title by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      I'll tell you what.
      Make a manned mission (a reasonable one, say a couple years for flight to and fro, and a year on the planet) and I'll go find out if it's toxic, has electrical properties, etc.
      It's a gamble I would take in exchange for the experience.
      -nB

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  3. The real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What humans there can accomplish what robots can't. Garry Kasparov opinion doesn't count.

    1. Re:The real question is by Tackhead · · Score: 5, Insightful
      > What humans there can accomplish what robots can't.

      "Dig a 1-foot deep hole in 30 seconds, as opposed to 30 years."
      "Walk further than 100m per day"
      "Walk into the bowl of a crater, poke around for interesting rocks, and carry the interesting rocks out."
      "Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions."

      No disrespect intended to our robot overlords; they've done wonderful work over the past few decades, but sometimes the right tool for a job is pickaxe powered by 200 pounds of meat.

    2. Re:The real question is by jimbug · · Score: 1

      Play golf.

      --
      Bite my shiny metal ass.
    3. Re:The real question is by ehiris · · Score: 1

      One thing that is worth mentioning is that it takes half an hour for the light to travel from Mars which means the robot operators have to wait a long time to make any intelligent feedback-based move.

      Imagine turning your head right and not seeing what's there for at least half an hour.

    4. Re:The real question is by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1

      So send better robots, and put some humans into Mars orbit to control them. Still no direct need to put people on the ground.

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      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    5. Re:The real question is by Deadstick · · Score: 2, Insightful
      and put some humans into Mars orbit

      And, ummm, this would be a lot simpler and cheaper than having the humans continue the remaining 0.001 percent of the way?

      rj

    6. Re:The real question is by wall0159 · · Score: 1

      "this would be a lot simpler and cheaper than having the humans continue the remaining 0.001 percent of the way?"

      Nah - just send 'em one-way... heaps cheaper!

    7. Re:The real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sigh...

      Walk further than 100m per day The current rovers can travel 100m in 30 minutes.
      An autonomous robot would also not be limited by interplanetary transmission delay.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanley_(vehicle)

      Dig a 1-foot deep hole in 30 seconds, as opposed to 30 years. Obviously nothing more powerful than the current rovers can ever be designed and sent to Mars. Mechanical engineering peaked in the 1990's and has seen a steady decline. //sarcasm

      Meanwhile robots can operate on the surface for years. The projected manned surface duration is 11 days.

      Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions. No sensors can be developed that are more sensitive than the human eye. Time to replace Hubble with an old man in a rocking chair. //sarcasm

      Walk into the bowl of a crater, poke around for interesting rocks, and carry the interesting rocks out Without wasting thousands of kg to carry food, water, oxygen, beds, toilets, CO2 scrubbers, comfortable room temperature and flesh bags, an unmanned flight could return with an additional 1,000kg+ of Martian samples.
    8. Re:The real question is by NewsWatcher · · Score: 1
      "it takes half an hour for the light to travel from Mars "


      I don't think this is right. When Mars was in opposition to earth, it was just three light minutes away. I think now it is about 10 or 11 light minutes distant.

      --
      If the pattern goes 9am, 10am, 11am, why isn't noon 12am?
    9. Re:The real question is by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Meanwhile robots can operate on the surface for years. The projected manned surface duration is 11 days.

      That's pretty much bullshit then. The Mars Direct plan calls for a 1 year manned surface mission, waiting for the Earth and Mars to move into prime position until they return. Although maybe an initial manned mission would last for 11 days, that would be, at best, practice for the real manned missions.

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    10. Re:The real question is by jaymzter · · Score: 1

      I don't know about you, but I'd like to join the 36 million mile high club! Let's see a Hookerbot beat that!

      --
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    11. Re:The real question is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Earth is 8 light minutes to the sun, mars is 14. If they were almost directly opposite each other in orbit, that'd be 22 light minutes, close enough to a half hour I guess.

    12. Re:The real question is by njchick · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. In terms of delta-v, it's much much more than 0.001 percent of the way. Not to mention the requirement to launch a man-rated rocket from a planet with no ground support staff and several light-minutes away from Earth.

    13. Re:The real question is by benevixit · · Score: 1

      "Walk into the bowl of a crater, poke around for interesting rocks, and carry the interesting rocks out."
      "Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions."
      There's been a lot of work on this in the past few years, and researchers have made some significant progress. The upgraded Mars Rovers can already understand enough about their environment to recognize interesting atmospheric phenomena and collect extra data. Tests have demonstrated the ability to identify rocks, approach them, and deploy sensors. And automatic geology analysis (e.g. 'finding the interesting rock') isn't too far off either. In any case, I wouldn't bet against improved AI for mission planning on decade scales.
    14. Re:The real question is by f97tosc · · Score: 1

      This comparison is unfair because sending a human there is many orders of magnitude more expesive than sending a robot. So the question is rather, would we learn more from a hundred different robotic missions or one manned one? I think scientifically it is quite clear that sending humans to space gives you less bang for the buck than sedning robots. Arguably sending people can be justified on other grounds though.

    15. Re:The real question is by Karthikkito · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yep -- 3 to 20 minutes one way, meaning you don't see the results of your command until 6 to 40 minutes later.

    16. Re:The real question is by Kaki+Nix+Sain · · Score: 1

      So put some people in Mars orbit and send nice robots down to do the ground-work. Still cheaper than sending the people down, and you get the "human in the quick loop" advantage.

      --

      (C) Kaki Sain, 2011. By reading this, you have illegally copied my property to your brain.

    17. Re:The real question is by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      No, the real question is why does anyone think space exploration should be a duty of the federal government.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    18. Re:The real question is by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      How about the delta-mv required to launch humans plus their life-support system from Earth orbit to Mars orbit and back?

      rj

    19. Re:The real question is by Shihar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Dig a 1-foot deep hole in 30 seconds, as opposed to 30 years."
      "Walk further than 100m per day"
      "Walk into the bowl of a crater, poke around for interesting rocks, and carry the interesting rocks out."
      "Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions." With the amount of money we would need to blow to get a handful of humans there (much less getting them back), we could EASILY build a robot to do each and every single one of those things. You could send a massive unmanned nuclear powered Mars lab complete with every single piece of analytical equipment you could wish for and a dozen rovers that range from toy car size to frigging backhoe. Not only could you dig a hole 1 foot deep, you could excavate a trench 10 feet deep, grab a sample, and throw it under a SEM.

      The logistics of sending a human to Mars are silly. The rewards are pittance compared to what you could get for a fraction of the price with unmanned equipment. Sending humans to Mars is silly when we can barely crawl out of our own gravity well as it is. If NASA wants to do something productive, they could directly take on the problem of making space travel cheap so that everyone can do it, not a dozen humans per year. Forget screwing around the edges, NASA should dump the manned space program and pour all of its money into only three things; earth science, astronomy, and making space access as cheap as humanly possible.

      As spiffy as the moon landing was, its only real practical value was to show the Soviet Union how big and meaty an American cock could get and how long the Americans could piss with it. Pissing contests are generally silly, but a pissing contest with yourself is just stupid... which is what the Mars mission is.

      Take the money we are going to blow on Mars, and start working on a way to get humans into space so that there are actual commercial applications. If we could get the cost of sending a human into orbit down to say a million dollars or so, you could start seeing some real commercial applications and humans living in space full time.
    20. Re:The real question is by KudyardRipling · · Score: 1

      Would an asteroid impact affect interstate commerce and/or foreign relations?

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    21. Re:The real question is by njchick · · Score: 1
    22. Re:The real question is by Deadstick · · Score: 1
      Yes, that gives the delta-v required. But you as the system designer have to provide for delta-mv, the change in momentum delivered by the propulsion system. The amount of propulsion you need is directly proportional to the mass of the spacecraft. Big ship, big rocket. And if you want to put humans in Mars orbit, you have to keep them alive for several YEARS in something you launch from Earth (or at least from Earth orbit) -- which means a BIG ship. That will take so much propulsion, the amount required to move a landing craft down and up isn't going to make much of a difference.

      rj

    23. Re:The real question is by njchick · · Score: 1

      Anyway, I cannot agree with the statement that landing people on another planet with little air and then launching them on a rocket with no ground support is "simpler and cheaper" than leaving them in orbit and skipping the landing and the take-off.

    24. Re:The real question is by Deadstick · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't agree with that either, and that's why I didn't say it. RTFP, and focus on the words **** A LOT ****. The costs of getting the humans to Mars orbit and back are orders of magnitude bigger than the costs of landing them.

      rj

    25. Re:The real question is by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      It never has before in the entire history of the United States. You're just grasping at straws as to why the government should waste a zillion dollars so some idiot can say "beep... beep... - I'm a spaceman!"

      --
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  4. Obvious solution by niceone · · Score: 0, Troll

    We just had the Surgeon General's story - so the obvious solution: just ban people from talking about the dust.

  5. Why?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do we need samples? We didn't need Moon dust samples to land there the first time round?

    1. Re:Why?? by slew · · Score: 4, Informative

      Apparently, there were many, many unanticipated problems with lunar "dust".

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6460089. stm
      http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap980327.html
      http://dailybeacon.utk.edu/showarticle.php?article id=51367

      As expected, enginerds never seem to want to underestimate a problem especially when they've heard of a similar problem before...

    2. Re:Why?? by mabinogi · · Score: 1

      "Didn't have" is certainly not the same thing as "Didn't need"

      --
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  6. Not as big a problem as Luna... by cupofjoe · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, there's some body of work that describes a larger problem for Lunar explorers, although the Martian problem isn't anything to sneeze at, either. Pun intended.

    As TFA points out, the lack of weathering processes on Luna leaves the dust/regolith mainly as sharp-edged grains, which actually gives them incredible abrasive power. This poses an enormous problem for mechanical assemblies that have any wear surfaces. The Apollo astronauts, IIRC, went through a couple pairs of suit gloves each simply from the wear of the dust on their metallic glove locking rings.

    Martian dust might have a similar range of effects, but I hadn't heard of the "toxic dust" issue, yet; that's the interesting bit. Silicosis of the lungs and related disorders, yes; toxicity, no. Yikes.

    Toxic dust makes me think of the blended iPhone. "Don't breathe this." Sorry, that's another article...

    -joe.

    1. Re:Not as big a problem as Luna... by WhatHappenedToTanith · · Score: 2

      The real question which everyone is missing is what does it smell like? Everyone knows moondust smells of Gunpowder so does martian dust smell of some other medieval technology (perhaps mead?)

    2. Re:Not as big a problem as Luna... by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      However, if they were able to go to the moon in 1969 and deal with the dust there, where AFAIK they didn't have a sample of lunar dust either, then I think that in 2007 we should have no problem dealing with Martian dust. I find it kind of amazing that we went to the moon so long ago, and yet we are still having people say that the next time we will go to the moon will be 2020, when the first time we went to the moon was 8 years after the first person landed on the moon.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    3. Re:Not as big a problem as Luna... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      However, if they were able to go to the moon in 1969 and deal with the dust there, where AFAIK they didn't have a sample of lunar dust either, then I think that in 2007 we should have no problem dealing with Martian dust. I wouldn't be so sure.

      Remember that our first dealing with lunar dust was July 20th, 1969, where astronauts spent a whopping 2 and a half hours outside and something like 22 hours total on the lunar surface. So, to use a fun example, if Martian dust is as abrasive as lunar dust and it's blowing around, this might just have an affect on astronaut spacesuits and such. Considering the expense of going to Mars, yes, I do expect the first mission to spend more than 2 hours outside and 22 hours on the surface. Which means we should check out as many potential issues as possible that would affect their ability to stay there.

      I'd rather not spend all that money on a mission and discover that Martian dust storms have screwed up the airlock and they can't go outside anymore after 3 weeks.

      Not that I think it's likely, but it's worth checking out.
    4. Re:Not as big a problem as Luna... by HTTP+Error+403+403.9 · · Score: 1

      The real question which everyone is missing is what does it smell like? Everyone knows moondust smells of Gunpowder [nasa.gov] so does martian dust smell of some other medieval technology (perhaps mead?)
      I am guessing Mars smells like Slim Whitman.
      --
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    5. Re:Not as big a problem as Luna... by lessermilton · · Score: 1

      With 64kb of RAM...

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  7. Just Fine by GroundBounce · · Score: 1

    The surface of Mars looks just fine in every movie I've seen, so it shouldn't be a big problem. Obviously these engineers haven't been paying attention.

  8. Oh for crissakes! by erroneus · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Just put together another pair of Mars Rovers and update them to answer those questions and to survive better than the ones down there now. The two rovers on Mars now have been ridiculously successful and have outlived their expected lives tremendously. So not only should we send improved rovers, we should send tools, equipment and supplies there too. Perhaps some rovers capable of assembling structures to house the eventual human guests. I think there's little doubt we can do it. So why aren't we? (yeah I know, money... the question is rhetorical... I wish I could join NASA...)

    1. Re:Oh for crissakes! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      The two rovers on Mars now have been ridiculously successful and have outlived their expected lives tremendously. They were expected to fail within months because of dust.
      They didn't, but apparently that's not enough for people to see that dust isn't that big of a deal. Meh.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Oh for crissakes! by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Just put together another pair of Mars Rovers and update them to answer those questions and to survive better than the ones down there now.

      Ah, if it were only that easy.
       
      The problem is, answering those questions means a fairly heavy (as such things go) automated laboratory in place of the fairly light (as such things go) robotic arm and sensors... Which means the existing airbag design (which has already been stretched beyond it's limits) will have to stretched yet further - or replaced entirely. Such an update will require much more power than the arm - but the existing rover chassis can't support more solar cells. Back to the drawing board to supersize the chassis, _and_ increase the size of the airbags.... (Even more than in the last round where they were upsized for the additional weight...)
       
       

      I think there's little doubt we can do it. So why aren't we?

      One could say that amount of doubt if directly proportional to the amount of knowledge of the problem domain.
    3. Re:Oh for crissakes! by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And then suffer a historically 50/50 chance of losing it somewhere between launch and landing. Everyone seems to forget that Mars is a space probe graveyard.

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    4. Re:Oh for crissakes! by Karthikkito · · Score: 1

      Well, they were supposed to fail because of dust...covering the solar panels. However, the Martian winds keep the solar panels relatively clear, so...

  9. Another as of yet unanswered question by bobdotorg · · Score: 5, Funny

    Another as of yet unanswered question about Martian rock:

    Will it blend?

    (Sorry, but I just discovered the videos today, so my view of the universe if somewhat blendocentric)

    --
    __ Someday, but not this morning, I'll finally learn to use the preview button.
    1. Re:Another as of yet unanswered question by pragma_x · · Score: 1

      Actually, this is kind of a good point. The RAT (Rock Abrasion Tool) on one of the Mars rovers wore out some time ago. Maybe NASA should contract the BlendTec guys to design a better one.

  10. (queue organ music...) by iknownuttin · · Score: 0

    Is it toxic? Will it conduct electricity and short circuits? Will astronauts suffer from the triboelectric effect? How large is the average grain? Will humans be allergic to it? Will sinuses jeopardize a mission? Will a dust storm stop a take off and return flight?

    [announcer] Tune in next week to find out!

    [queue]TAMPAX commercial.

    And cut!

    --
    I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
  11. Just a sec' here... by Penguinisto · · Score: 2, Insightful
    While we don't have any vials handy full of Martian dust, can't at least some of this be within the parameters of Spirit and Opportunity? They have the cameras, (IIRC) rudimentary chemical analysis equipment, and likely enough instrumentation to get us at least some of the data we need as per size, quantity... the rest can be extrapolated fairly easily, save for the biological potentials (at least in that the question "are there germs in there?" probably won't be answered immediately...)

    IIRC, the Mars rovers were originally (at least in concept, before budgetary reality set in) designed to drag back a sample or two. Why not build a mission that, you know, does what the original plans intended them to do in that regard? If nothing else, get up something with better instrumentation; Viking 1 and 2 were supposed to have the tools to answer nearly all of the questions, though they had been found to be flawed in many respects and hampered by things which today's tech has a better chance of overcoming.

    Dunno... just sounds too easy to dismiss in light of all the ungodly extrapolation that we are capable of from mere astronomy, let alone what we can bring to bear with instruments on the ground there right now.

    /P

    --
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    1. Re:Just a sec' here... by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      Why not build a mission that, you know, does what the original plans intended them to do in that regard? Money. such a mission is more expensive and complex thus failure would not only be more likely but also more costly. The original sample return mission got canned after the Mars Climate Orbiter and Mars Polar Lander failures. There is a new sample return mission planned but it likely won't launch before the late 2010s. Also the Russians are planning a mission to get soil from Phobos.
  12. dead skin by dwater · · Score: 3, Funny

    I thought it was well known that the majority of dust was made up from dead skin....

    --
    Max.
  13. Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can we stop pretending we're going to send astronauts to Mars? There's is no way we're going to spend the enormous amount of money required to do it, and we don't even know if the astronauts can survive the radiation exposure on the trip.

    Besides the fact that it won't be done by any government in the next 30 years, it *shouldn't* be done. I've harped on this before, but it's still true: we could send 1,000 probes similar to the Mars Lander for the price it takes to do a P.R. stunt like sending humans to Mars. Yeah, it's romantic, but if the goal is science, then it's a total waste.

    I like space. I'm a supporter of space. But I think humans should go on the back burner until space exploration is much, much, much more of a mature technology. We don't even have casual trips to orbit, much less the moon, much less significant space stations, and much, much less Mars.

    Let's be rational about space exploration and let an army of robots do the work, instead of a few fragile, expensive humans.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    1. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Zeebs · · Score: 1

      Whats the point of learning anything about it if you don't intend to go there. If we're so afraid to risk a few of our best that are fully aware of the risk involved why are we bothering with sending any probes at all. The money in that case could be better utilized with a primary focus on bettering human life on earth. Why bother with a big rock that will always be very far away from us at all.

      Also before anyone starts with the arguement about the tertiary earthside benefits of developing and sending the probes and rovers consider the potential benefits derived from learning to live in self contained spaces for long periods of time for humanity on earth.

      --

      Happy Noodle Boy says "F###ing doughnut! Mock me? You fried cyclops!!"
    2. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by flydude18 · · Score: 1

      We'll never get there if we keep putting it off until "technology is better than it is now." Trips to orbit, the moon, and space stations will never be casual if we don't push the technology that exists now.

    3. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the grandparent's point was not that we should never go to Mars but rather that we should focus on what the next sensible step to get there is. I won't pretend to be an expert on the subject but I don't think it is unreasonable to ask if our first human mission would be far more effective and successful if we send a number of robotic missions first.

      I know its romantic to talk about human missions to Mars but maybe we should ask "what is the best way to explore Mars" rather than "how fast can we put some footprints over there"? For example; maybe a Moon base isn't actually a good "stepping stone" to get there.

    4. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by FleaPlus · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's romantic, but if the goal is science, then it's a total waste.

      The goal isn't science. The goal is to set the stage for eventual interplanetary colonization.

      Science is great, but not everything having to do with space is science (slashdot's classification of everything space-related under "Science" to the contrary).

    5. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      Whats the point of learning anything about it if you don't intend to go there.

      It's called "science." Just because we don't intend to go to other galaxies doesn't mean we don't study them. Anyway, we might go to Mars someday, but at this point in our technological development, it's a complete waste of time. There's nothing we can get from astronauts that we can't get from a whole slew of probes.

      ...consider the potential benefits derived from learning to live in self contained spaces for long periods of time for humanity on earth.

      This has always been a silly argument. We already have tons of data, spread over centuries about this. Sailing ships and (more recently) submarines. Heck, look at prisons if you want more data.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    6. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here, here!

      On top of which, you have "scientists" going around on the lecture circuit talking about terraforming Mars and giving it an atmosphere. Deliberately ignoring the FACT that Mars can never sustain an atmosphere because it doesn't have an Earth-like magnetosphere to prevent solar winds from ripping any atmosphere off into space.

      Personally, I don't think humans should be spending money flying off into space until they first learn how to solve more important problems here on Earth. Such as putting an end to wars, greed, poverty, better education and health care for everyone, etc.

      This pie-in-the-sky mentality of Captain Kirk wannabes makes me want to puke!

    7. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by onion_joe · · Score: 1

      Chicken.

      --
      sig sig sig siggy sig
    8. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by DerekLyons · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've harped on this before, but it's still true: we could send 1,000 probes similar to the Mars Lander for the price it takes to do a P.R. stunt like sending humans to Mars.

      That's kinda like substituting 1000 Ford Escorts for a Caterpillar D11. You'll have a lot more metal laying about - but you won't get as much done.
       
       

      I like space. I'm a supporter of space. But I think humans should go on the back burner until space exploration is much, much, much more of a mature technology.

      That's a self defeating argument - as the technology won't mature unless you send people in the first place.
    9. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Anti_Climax · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If we actually buckled down and started the project, we could do it for about 3Bn a year for about a decade, using current tech. As far away as mars is, it's actually much easier to have a sustainable hands off mission when that little bit of atmosphere is present, as compared to the moon or ISS. While we could have 200 of the "Better, faster, cheaper" probes sent to mars for the same amount, having 4 or 5 people there that can actually cover more than 100 meters of ground in a day or seek out interesting geological features without waiting for someone else to suggest it, can translate into a lot more useful science being done. Beyond that, if the Mars Direct approach is used, we won't have to stop working if there's a dust storm blocking 99% of the sunlight.

      You do make good points, but there are some things that are cheaper and easier to do using fragile expensive humans.

      --
      Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
    10. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Keep harping, because human will go to Mars, and the Human race will be better for it.

      We like to make goals, and be triumphant. When you look at human nature,Mars is the next logical choice to send people.

      Yes, robots will play a role. In preparation, aid, and to continue to do things after we leave. We will go, just so we can push out are chests, point to a bright point in the sky and say "We conquered the obstacles to get there, sent people and got them home."

      That is why we dominate, and that is why man is superior to all other animals.
      We could get there in less then 20 years if the program was backed. The spin off technolgies would more then pay for this project.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1

      That's kinda like substituting 1000 Ford Escorts for a Caterpillar D11. You'll have a lot more metal laying about - but you won't get as much done.

      Give me a 1,000 Ford Escorts with a scoop bolted on the front, and you can have your Caterpillar D11. Sure, the Escort may not be as powerful or as efficient, but I suspect 1,000 of them pushing dirt around would give me a big advantage.

      You know, thinking about it, this is almost the John Henry legend all over again. We have to send a human because a machine "can't" replace them.

      That's a self defeating argument - as the technology won't mature unless you send people in the first place.

      Space technology is improving all the time. But it foolish to shoot for Mars when we can't even put humans in orbit economically. Why don't at least solve that problem first? And maybe see about creating a few space hotels, to figure out in-space construction? All of these technologies are stepping stones to Mars missions.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    12. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by sleigher · · Score: 1

      Are we in such a rush to attempt to terraform another planet because we are too busy to recognize that we are destroying the one we're on with our policies? I agree that before we ever try to go to mars there really shouldn't be genocide in Darfur, or people begging me for food/money in American cities.

      --
      All points of time and space are connected.
    13. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by ceejayoz · · Score: 1

      Deliberately ignoring the FACT that Mars can never sustain an atmosphere because it doesn't have an Earth-like magnetosphere to prevent solar winds from ripping any atmosphere off into space.

      Um, Mars has an atmosphere. That's how they get dust storms and clouds and the like.

    14. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by T-Bone-T · · Score: 1

      If we aren't going to go, why study it? Why even think about it at all? Since science doesn't matter any more, why don't we just throw rocks at each other?

    15. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 1

      As I understand it, Mars has an atmosphere but it is slowly being ripped away by solar winds. It may be gone in another, oh, 50,000 years or so.

      Of course, it's sort of a silly argument. If we have the capability of giving Mars an atmosphere, we probably have the ability to replace chunks torn off by solar winds.

    16. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by AdmiralLawman · · Score: 1

      We are trying to do that right now. Give us 5 years or so and that space hotel of yours should be in orbit. As well as more economical space access and the like.

    17. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by camperdave · · Score: 1

      Those arguments are pointless. People are poor because they either do not want to work, or do not have the capacity to handle money. If you were to cancel everyone's debt and then take the world's wealth and divide it evenly among the world's population, within a year you'd have starving people and beggars again. Some people are great at finances and some are lousy. It's like music. Some people are virtuosos, and some are tone deaf. Similarly some people are kind, and some are cruel. Why should we halt our push for Mars just because a group of cruel people did some really nasty things to another group of people?

      Another thing, why is space exploration is always the first on people's wasteful spending radar? Throttle back the US military by a percent or two and you could probably feed all the American homeless AND do the space exploration. How about eliminating farm subsidies? There are lots of far more wasteful things and poor policy decisions than planning a trip to Mars.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    18. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by clem.dickey · · Score: 1
      Can we stop pretending we're going to send astronauts to Mars

      Have a look at these plans from 1969.

      Moments before Apollo 11 's booster lifted off from Cape Kennedy last July, Spiro Agnew declared that the nation's next major space goal should be a manned landing on Mars by the end of the century.
      In a later refinement explained in the article, the least ambitious (cheapest) plan the manned Mars landing at 1990. I figure we probably had a manned mission to Mars fifteen or twenty years ago, but no one remembers it.
    19. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by sleigher · · Score: 1

      I do agree that we should be exploring space. I just think there are some really big problems that could be fixed before we try to inhabit another planet. Carl Sagan said it best..... Something to the like of we will not be able to explore space until no one on the planet is hungry. I am sure I just totally screwed up what he said but it was similar to that. I tend to agree with him. I think we all need to work together as a people and until we get past wealth and profit that can never happen. I guess I am commie. Or maybe I watched way too much Star Trek.

      --
      All points of time and space are connected.
    20. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by camperdave · · Score: 1

      We have lots of time. It will be centuries before we have an offworld self sustaining colony, even if launch costs were zero. We can't even do a self sustaining environment here on Earth where we've got the resources, let alone out in space where we have no support infrastructure.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    21. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by mpaque · · Score: 1

      Can we stop pretending we're going to send astronauts to Mars?

      Of course. Think of all the urgent projects we need to fund here, like bridges to nowhere in Alaska, or touring polka groups to entertain the few troops remaining on their bases in the South, or replacing all that spent ammunition and broken military hardware, or invading Iran.

      Stop wasting money in space, and lets get on with our proper business of wasting money here on Earth while killing each other off. It's our real purpose in life, after all.

    22. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Agripa · · Score: 1

      If you were plowing a field, which would you rather use: Two strong oxen or 1024 chickens? - Seymour Cray

    23. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Shadowlore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      you hate it so much you have to make assertions that are false? For example:
      Can we stop pretending we're going to send astronauts to Mars? There's is no way we're going to spend the enormous amount of money required to do it, and we don't even know if the astronauts can survive the radiation exposure on the trip.

      Please. We know the risks, and they are not lethal. Maybe you don't know, but to say "we" don't is absolute BS. The radiation in space is called Cosmic Radiation, and about half of the radiation experienced in an average human's lifetime is CR. So we are pretty familiar with it. So then it falls to how much? How much radiation will you experience flying to Mars?

      Suprisingly not as much as you think. Transatlantic trips by airline pilots and crew will get exposed over a 25 year career with more than half of the radiation you'd get spending a year in between Mars and Earth as well as a year and a half on Mars. But that only affects lifelong factors. You seem to be talking about surviving the trip TO Mars. Seems you need some education on radiation.

      Radiation sickness is the immediate result of a very high dose of radiation. That threshold varies in small percentages from person to person, but it is approximately 75 rem. In a conjunction trajectory mission the worst solar flare (that wouldn't kill the people who are still on Earth) would provide a dosage of 5 rem. The whole round trip, some 30 months away from the cradle,would expose you to about 50 rem. If you condensed ALL of the CR radiation you would be exposed to into a single big burst it is unlikely to make you sick, let alone kill you. The trip out there would expose you to approximately 19 rem. Over 6 months

      You would have greater risk of lifelong effects from radiation by staying home, laying on the beach w/o sunscreen and soaking up that radiation.

      Besides the fact that it won't be done by any government in the next 30 years,

      While I hope that's the case, I wouldn't put it past China.

      I've harped on this before, but it's still true: we could send 1,000 probes similar to the Mars Lander for the price it takes to do a P.R. stunt like sending humans to Mars. Yeah, it's romantic, but if the goal is science, then it's a total waste.

      And I've illustrated with facts and reality that if your goal is to do actual science you need something capable of doing actual science on Mars. Robots don't do science. They gather data. Is the battlefield robot scouting over the enemy territory doing science? No, it's doing exactly what Spirit and Opportunity do: gather data. That aside, which gathers more data per trip, humans or rovers.

      Look at how much ground the rovers have covered. Look at the data points they've gathered. A team of 4-6 humans on the planet would gather orders of magnitude more data, would conduct actual science (you know: hypothesize, experiment, analyze, refine hypothesize...) than ten times as many rovers, and do it in far shorter time. As of a couple weeks ago, Spirit has traveled about 7km. If you took one Manned Lunar Lander to Mars, you'd have the ability to cover 10km out from your basecamp (20km round trip). That's using 30 year old battery technology.

      Using modern technology, and using a either combination of solar and in situ produced liquid fuel, or either alone, a modern Mars rover would have more than ten to twenty times the range of the Lunar rovers. It is neither trivial nor incredibly hard/impossible for us to build and deploy a lightweight, energy flush, rover capable of supporting a 2-3 man crew traveling on the surface of Mars for up to and over more than 500km from base camp.

      Yet Spirit has traveled just over 7k in what, three and half years is it? How many Spirit missions would it take to cover that kind of distance, or how long for a single Spirit? Isn't it's daily record something like 770 feet? Let's double that. Let us say that the rover could cover 250 meters per day. Well if a manned rover can take it easy and cover 20km per d

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    24. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      That's kinda like substituting 1000 Ford Escorts for a Caterpillar D11. You'll have a lot more metal laying about - but you won't get as much done.

      Give me a 1,000 Ford Escorts with a scoop bolted on the front, and you can have your Caterpillar D11. Sure, the Escort may not be as powerful or as efficient, but I suspect 1,000 of them pushing dirt around would give me a big advantage.

      If merely pushing dirt around was all a D11 did, you'd have a point.
       
       

      You know, thinking about it, this is almost the John Henry legend all over again. We have to send a human because a machine "can't" replace them.

      Let's put it this way... What the two rovers have accomplished in three years? Could be accomplished by two trained field geologists in two *weeks*.
       
       

      Space technology is improving all the time. But it foolish to shoot for Mars when we can't even put humans in orbit economically. Why don't at least solve that problem first?

      Why for heaven's sake. On problem has nothing to do with another.
       
       

      And maybe see about creating a few space hotels, to figure out in-space construction?

      Again, why? Construction in space is simply a matter of attaching modules to each other - not all that difficult.
    25. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      The goal isn't science. The goal is to set the stage for eventual interplanetary colonization. If the goal is interplanetary colonization, this is a massive waste of funds. The problem with colonization is NOT the challenges of living on the planet. That is secondary to challenge number one... it is WAY the fuck too expensive to toss stuff out of this gravity well. There are plenty of brave and crazy explorers and pioneers in this world. The reason why half of the US is piled up on the west coast is because there are plenty of people desperate to move forward and that damn sea got in their way. Throw a few launch pads in California and tossed anyone at Mars who wanted to go, and you could probably drop the population of the US by a noticeable amount. The challenges of colonization will be solved by meat shields willing to throw their lives into that work. The problem is that they can't get there.

      If NASA wants to do something productive, it could scrap this silly Mars mission and work full time on making space access cheap. Make it so that humans can get out of this gravity well without having to expend the resources of an entire civilization, and the details of how to live in a vacuum on a frozen dust ball will solve themselves.
    26. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      Let's put it this way... What the two rovers have accomplished in three years? Could be accomplished by two trained field geologists in two *weeks*. No doubt, but for the cost it takes to get two trained field geologist there (alive) and keep them breathing for those two weeks (much less get them back alive) you could have dropped a few hundred (or thousand?) Mars rovers on the planet. You could have made a massive kick ass, nuclear powered lab with dozen different robots as big as soccer mom's SUV with all the equipment you could ever dream of.

      Moving humans is hard and expensive. We eat, we breath air, we need to move around, and our muscles tend to turn into mush after a few months in space. Drop humans out of the equation and you can toss a nice compact probe devoid of all the irritations that it takes to keep a human alive. If science is the goal, robots are by far the most cost effective way of doing it. If colonization is the goal, then this missions is even more of a waste. If colonization is the goal NASA should be working on figuring out how in the hell you get a human out of this gravity well for less than the millions of dollars it costs now. This Mars mission is a pissing contests. We are not even playing against an opponent like we did in the moon race. We are having a pissing contest with ourselves... and that is as stupid as it sounds.
    27. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by eyewhin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You have obviously never heard of the Genesis Rock. During the Apollo 15 mission, a rock was picked up by astronaut Scott, which he, by seeing it, felt that it was something special. It turned out that it was a very special rock. The point is, while robots are good at collecting samples and analyzing information, human beings are way ahead in the area of reasoning, an important trait when visiting unknown places.

    28. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by zerocool^ · · Score: 1



      Um, Mars has an atmosphere. That's how they get dust storms and clouds and the like.


      Technically, yes. Mars has an "Atmosphere". It's less than 1/100th as dense as our atmosphere, though. When people say "mars is too carbon-dioxide rich", they're slinging around numbers like mars' atmosphere is 99% ubreathable, or whatever, without mentioning that even if it were the same percentages of gasses as earth, there isn't enough of the damn stuff to breathe.

      Solar Winds are supposedly to blame.

      However, one thing Mars does have is gravity (it's a planet afterall). Getting someone *to* mars isn't that hard. But, compare it to the Apollo missions - to get off the moon, they needed a small rocket in the bottom of the LEM. To get off of earth with all that weight, they needed the Saturn V, which even to this day is the most powerful mechanical device ever built by mankind.

      How the hell they plan on getting something roughly the size of a Saturn V *to* mars, in addition to all the equipment needed to set it upright, balance it for take off, get people into the top of it, light it, and get back to earth... is beyond me.

      ~Wx

      --
      sig?
    29. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Kopretinka · · Score: 1

      I think humans should go on the back burner until space exploration is much, much, much more of a mature technology. We don't even have casual trips to orbit, much less the moon, much less significant space stations, and much, much less Mars.

      I beg to differ.

      Let's instead make it easy for cheap, expendable humans (aka adventurers, explorers, treasure hunters) to go out there; they will then pave the road for the rest of us quicker than a thousand probes.

      --
      Yesterday was the time to do it right. Are we having a REVOLUTION yet?
    30. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by TheOrquithVagrant · · Score: 1

      Launching from Mars is more comparable to launching from the Moon than launching from the earth. Martian gravity is only little over twice that of the Moon's. Moreover, Mars has plenty of raw materials available for in-situ fuel production, meaning you won't need to bring the fuel for your return trip with you there.
      Really, there are plenty of material available about how a manned Mars mission or a robotic sample return mission will be done. If you can read and have internet access, which you obviously do, it shouldn't be "beyond you".

    31. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by Mr.+McGibby · · Score: 1

      but if the goal is science

      The goal isn't always science.

      --
      Mad Software: Rantings on Developing So
    32. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by BranMan · · Score: 1

      I'd rather see a manned mision as well, but many of the limits of the current Mars rovers can be overcome. The current ones are autonomous and self-reliant. Do they need to be? Why not send a rover 'base' a large chunk of the payload for the Mars mission that sits in one place as a fuel depot, high powered transmitter, place for more sophistocated (read heavier) instruments, etc.?

      The rovers could refuel at the base, go out and explore, and come back. With a liquid fuel and a real engine rather than what can be powered from a few measly solar cells, you could do a lot more and travel a lot further (and faster). Even bring back samples for more detailed analysis at the base.

      With a manned mission you'd be moving a lot of mass to Mars. What could you do with the same mass and robots? Bears thinking about.

    33. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by trytoguess · · Score: 1

      ...Grandparent mentions milestones we should overcome before attempting human mars landings.

      "We don't even have casual trips to orbit, much less the moon, much less significant space stations, and much, much less Mars."

      He's definetly not advocating doing nothing, just focusing on the stepping stones first and I agree.

    34. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      If any of those things, other than space stations, were stepping stones... You (and he) would have a point.

    35. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by trytoguess · · Score: 1

      You don't think being able to send materials into orbit easily, and knowledge of how to build and maintain things on hostile surfaces isn't stepping stones?

    36. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      We can easily send materials into orbit. (Which is different from the casual trips mentioned by the OP.)
       
      Knowing how to build and maintain things on the Lunar surface is just infitesimally this side of useless - the Lunar enviroment being so radically different from the Martian one. Antartica (or Devon Island) is much, much closer. (And we've built intensively on one and have ongoing research at the other.) Even so, we won't be building for a long time, we'll be landing (like the Apollo LM's), but again the Lunar experience isn't much help here either because of the vast differences in environment and operations.
       
      A space station is relevant because any Mars mission for the foreseeable future will spent most of it's time either in orbit (around Earth or Mars) or cruising between them.

    37. Re:Hate to be a killjoy, but... by trytoguess · · Score: 1

      Eh, maybe I should've said resources instead since that could've included humans. Still, how is it easy (cheap and w/o hassle) to send stuff into orbit?

      Antarctica, or Devon Island may be closer, but I wouldn't want to fund a Martian presence unless I knew we had experience with creating building in surfaces that are equal to, or worse than Mars in some way. Not to mention it'll give practical experience surviving on a planet(oid) with limited resources, can only help if a space station starts to have issues, etc.

  14. Martian dust is just.... by rimcrazy · · Score: 3, Funny

    A liberal guise to stop the Republican agenda. Just like those nasty Surgeon Generals and all of their "Real Science"

    --
    "TV, a medium as it is neither rare nor well done." Ernie Kovacs
  15. Warning: Time Loop Detected!!! by sconeu · · Score: 1

    when the first time we went to the moon was 8 years after the first person landed on the moon.

    I suspect you mean 8 years after the first person journeyed into space.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    1. Re:Warning: Time Loop Detected!!! by Farmer+Tim · · Score: 1

      >> when the first time we went to the moon was 8 years after the first person landed on the moon.

      > I suspect you mean 8 years after the first person journeyed into space.

      By "we" he meant the US. It's a well known fact in UFO-spotting circles that alien abductees had been taken to the moon, other planets and even other solar systems well before 1969.

      For more details on this and other suppressed facts contact your nearest UFO expert; just look under "insane asylum" in the phone book.

      --
      Blank until /. makes another boneheaded UI decision.
  16. Sex, anyone? by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I wonder when the issue of sex in space will be taken seriously, and studies undertaken in that area. American may like to avoid the subject, but to most Europeans both Western and Eastern, its a well known reality. If we're going to take long missions to places like Mars, sex better be understood to be something that's going to happen. And I'm not talking about solitary masturbation...

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:Sex, anyone? by kryten_nl · · Score: 1

      Please, after 6+ months without sex, you can be damned sure that the male astronauts will find a way. Hell, I can think of 6 right now, ... 7 ... 8 ... Ok, back on track: ( ... 9 ... ) There is always the possibility of (... 10 ...)

      Screw this, I'm of to draw diagrams for the rest of the evening. Maybe I'll make a nice presentation, and if my gf is up for it: beta testing.

      Btw. does anyone know any swimming pools where we could get some privacy, some Barry White playing on underwater speakers, and some scuba gear?

      --
      For the perfect anti-Unix, write an OS that thinks it knows what you're doing better than you do and let it be wrong.
    2. Re:Sex, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and some scuba gear?

      Crotch-less scuba gear? From Victoria's Secret?

    3. Re:Sex, anyone? by Creedo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Crotchless? A tank with a regulator, a backpack and some straps. If you can't work around that, you have bigger problems....

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    4. Re:Sex, anyone? by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      Why don't you try getting sex on Earth first?

    5. Re:Sex, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure you have the experience to make such a comment? Masturbating virgins like you should generally keep quite with the sex advice.

    6. Re:Sex, anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "..And I'm not talking about solitary masturbation..."

      I think we have discovered the area where slashdot readers can make a positive and expert contribution to NASA's exploration research. Who else can expound on how humans can survive for long periods of time with nothing except self-administered sex?

      I propose we start an Institute and Working Group immediately. I expect no shortage of volunteers from our loyal readership - our motto will be:

      Virginam ad Astram!

  17. Obligatory by glwtta · · Score: 1

    "Hey, it's that 'the barbecue's over' sound again!"

    --
    sic transit gloria mundi
  18. What makes the dust rise? by pln2bz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    NASA would be wise to also carefully contemplate what is inducing the dust to rise to form dust storms in the first place. They already have access to THEMIS images from the Mars Odyssey Mission that suggest that there is filamentation of Martian dust storms at both the leading and trailing edges. For a sample image (there are others too), go to:

    http://themis.asu.edu/zoom-20060512a

    Furthermore, we also know that Martian dust devils can contain lightning bolts at their cores:

    http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2005/14jul_dust devils.htm

    In addition to that, we also know that firsthand accounts from people who have seen the inside of a tornado and lived to tell about it indicate that tornadoes here on Earth tend to shimmer like a fluorescent light from the inside. This is typically obstructed from the outside by dust. There's a brief mention here. I'm sure there are other sources for this information:

    http://library.thinkquest.org/C003603/english/torn adoes/insidetheeye.shtml

    This could indicate that tornadoes and Martian dust devils are actually both electrical plasmas, and that the electrical activity is inducing the vortex -- not the other way around.

    It is possible that vortexes are the natural result of the right-hand rule within electrodynamics. Peter Thomson's Charge Sheath Vortex site is an excellent tutorial on how this may be so:

    http://www.peter-thomson.co.uk/tornado/fusion/Char ge_sheath_vortex_basics_for_tornado.html

    He demonstrates his point at the end by creating a miniature vortex using electricity in a petri dish.

    My point here is that NASA should seriously consider that the Martian dust is molecularly bipolar and is responding to solar and other electrical plasmas that are affecting the Martian planet. The evidence from both Mars and Earth suggests that it is a possibility.

    We already know for a fact that upper atmosphere lightning exists. The weather scientists told us that this was not possible, and they were proven to be wrong. It's now easy to find pictures of upper-atmosphere sprites on the web. Try these:

    http://usjma.jp/~sprite/sprite2005.11pic.html

    http://www.usjma.jp/~kaminari/Sprite%202006/S%2020 06%20%203/sprite2006.3.13.html

    http://www.usjma.jp/~kaminari/Gallery/Gallery%20SP RITE/galleryhome.html

    http://www.usjma.jp/~kaminari/Gallery/Gallery%20SP RITE/Carrot/gscar01.html

    So, why isn't it possible that they could also be wrong about current theories about tornadoes? And why in the world are those dust storms filamentary? When we see enigmatic features on Mars, we should create future missions to follow that data. As of recently, NASA has been exclusively following their script instead of the anomalies. We need to be doing both.

    --
    "A man cannot begin to learn that which he thinks he already knows." --Epictetus, 1st Century A.D.
  19. Getting off the rock (again) by the_kanzure · · Score: 1

    My posted content re: gettting off of this third rock, and do not neglect the one reply to the post either. Also, for the experimentalists out there I have some collected bookmarks re: aerospace, DIY jet engines, etc..

  20. What is the real problem?! by Seismologist · · Score: 1

    People, please review the pertinent Mission to Mars video manual for all of the Martian conditions that can be expected. This work has already been done. Oh, and watch out for the nematodes.

    --
    ~ In Trust, We Trust ~
  21. Why do we want to send Humans? by tgatliff · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Certainly we should build space crafts that leave open the option for possible human "passengers", but, in my opinion, our focus should be on building capable and independent robots to do our dirty work for us. The current "boots on the ground" at Mars are great examples. In fact, we are in desperate need right now of moving to true computer intelligence instead of our current programmable logic.

    A level of a 4 year old would actually be sufficient for most applications. Not only is this type of technology useful on world exploration, but it would revolutionize our world. One small example is that burglarly and building fires would become a thing of the past if we had a truely intelligent computer systems monitoring and managing buildings.

    1. Re:Why do we want to send Humans? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      A level of a 4 year old would actually be sufficient for most applications.

      And a mere couple of wrap drives shall do the job to get astronauts there. Even better! We should develop quantum telepotation, send a teleportation gate to Mars, and astronauts could just teleport there for missions of a few hours and teleport back to Earth. Or we could send people in a good old spaceship, and the astronauts would be frozen during the trip and unfrozen once they get there. Oh I know I know! To get there faster, we could create a black hole, put it in orbit around the Earth, and use its gravitional assistance to get to Mars at nearly the speed of light, and to stop the spaceship we'd make a kind of giant baseball glove in orbit around Mars to catch to ship and slow it down. Or even better! We send there a robot, we invent a way to communicate faster than the speed of light and someone on earth could directly control the robot! Or also, we could just invent a time travelling machine, go back to a time when Mars and Earth were much closer, go to Mars, *voice starts to fade away* and once there one of the astronauts' martian great^8,494,654,396 grandmother falls in love with her great^8,494,654,396 grandson and once they come back on Earth in present day the Earth is dominated by apes....

      --
      You just got troll'd!
  22. Live there. by WindBourne · · Score: 1

    In addition, it will allow the survival of our species. Quick point on this, is where are the dinosaurs? Personally, I would like to think that my descendants will not end up being oil for a new species.

    With that said, the questions that I see here remind of what I heard as a child. ppl, including scientists, were worried that the lunar lander would sink into 10 foot of dust. They thought that they would come back with new monsters. All in all, before the first HUMAN trip to mars occurs, we will send a mission there. In fact, I am guessing that the armadillo or one of the other new space craft will go there and send back a number of samples. These issues that are being explored, are just that; being explored. The idea that we can only send robots there has to rate as one of the worst ideas that there are. The reason why we send robots now, is because sending humans is still too expensive. But the costs are coming down. Our infrastructure is being built. We will be on mars in my lifetime, barring a nuclear war or a massive disease. In fact, the more that I think about it, those may spur us to get there.

    --
    I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    1. Re:Live there. by Shihar · · Score: 1

      In addition, it will allow the survival of our species. Quick point on this, is where are the dinosaurs? Personally, I would like to think that my descendants will not end up being oil for a new species.

      Fleeing to Mars as a way to save humanity easily rates right up there as one of the worst but most often cited ideas to go to Mars.

      There are only two types of events that could wipe out human life. You could have some some sort life killer event that just effects earth (comets, asteroids, nuclear war, whatever), or an even that effects the entire solar system (a super nova going off too close). For the later, living on mars will be of no help. For the former, living on Mars is a silly, expensive, and utterly unfeasible way of dealing with the event.

      Let's say that the crisis is that a massive dino killing asteroid is going to hit earth. We could either send a few hundred humans to the cold lifeless vacuum that is Mars and wish them the best, OR we could simply build massive undersea colonies and save a few million. An undersea colony is by far a vastly superior way of preserving humanity. An undersea colony far cheaper, take far less equipment, has access to all of humanity for its resources, has breathable air right above its head, and all the water you could wish for. Mars has a big cold vacuum... and when you get sick of sitting in a hollowed out tube, an undersea colonist and merrily leave and go take a hike in a forest. A Mars colonist on the other hand is shit out of luck and better have access to a good head shrink.

      We don't need a Mars colony for humanities survival. If we need a Mars colony, it is because there is some commercial application and enough money there to entice a few crazy people to go brave a barren vacuum wasteland. If NASA wants to do anything to preserve humanity, it should be setting up undersea colonies. If NASA wants to get people on to Mars for shits and giggles, it would be doing a hell of a lot more product if NASA spent its time finding cheaper ways into space, rather then blowing money on multi-billion dollar shuttles and rockets that cost tens of millions of dollars to get a single human into space.

    2. Re:Live there. by zero_offset · · Score: 1

      It's funny you'd bring up the undersea colony angle. Just the other day my wife was watching that SciFi channel movie "Aftermath" or whatever they called it -- the pseudo-documentary showing the after-effects of a large asteroid impact.

      I pointed out to her that an undersea colony with artificial sunlight would avoid virtually all of the problems described in the movie. Granted, it assumes learning how to do things we don't do now, primarily undersea farming, and that the colony was large enough to make an important difference, and that it [or multiple colonies] were built in places that wouldn't be destroyed by the shockwaves and other large-scale physical effects -- but generally speaking it seems to be the only real near-term solution to basic survival in such extreme circumstances.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

  23. Need dust samples. by Pinkfud · · Score: 2, Funny

    Oh, all right. I'll go up there and get some damned samples. I had other things to do, but since this seems to be such a big deal to you....

    --
    The world is my oyster. That's why it's always in a stew.
    1. Re:Need dust samples. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      While your out, could you pick me up a slurpie?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  24. Re:No Humans needed by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    There's really no reason whatsoever to send humans to Mars until we're ready to plop down a permanent colony.

    Except to gain experience making piloted landings on Mars, to gain experience sending crews through the radioactivity-laden wastelands of interstellar space, to gain experience walking on Mars, to gain experience sustaining human life on Mars, to gain experience working with the Martian environment...there's a lot of complex shit involved with putting human beings on Mars, and you don't want to be doing it all the first time when you land the first colony ship. Sending a permanent colony without any experience sending human life to Mars is an incredibly reckless endangerment of human life. There are risks involved with sending people to Mars, such that the first humans to die in space will undoubtedly die, either en route to, on, or on the way back from Mars. The purpose of sending manned missions prior to permanent settlement is so that those risks can be better known and mitigated, providing greater safety to the eventual colonists. Better to risk it on a volunteer group of four than on a colony ship of 12-50 (or more).

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  25. I have their answers and a solution. by Lumpy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, yes, yes,yes,yes, and yes.
    Everything you fear is true, plan for it.

    solution, give the astronauts a pair of leaf blowers to blow each other off before heading back in the habitat, that would reduce dust ingress into the habitat significantly, make all suits banished to the entry room, force a shower in recycled water before entering station.

    They got any hard problems? because industrial complexes have dealt with these problems already for decades.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:I have their answers and a solution. by wildsurf · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Better solution: Build the habitat 10 meters undergound, pressurized to 1 atmosphere, with a long U-shaped tunnel filled with water, connecting the floor of the habitat to the planet's surface! (Think of the moon pool in The Abyss.) The astronauts can then SWIM back and forth between the surface and the habitat, eliminating the need for a complicated airlock, and ameliorating the dust concerns; it's much easier to get dust off in water than in air. (You'd obviously need to cover and insulate the surface exit when not in use, to prevent the water from freezing/sublimating, but that should be trivial.)

      --
      Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.
    2. Re:I have their answers and a solution. by wildsurf · · Score: 1

      Slight correction: due to the lower Martian gravity, the habitat would have to be about 30 meters underground to equalize one atmosphere of pressure. (Or one could use lower total pressure with a higher relative percentage of oxygen.)

      --
      Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.
    3. Re:I have their answers and a solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      solution, give the astronauts a pair of leaf blowers The only problem with that is you need a few AU of extension cord.
  26. Dust is the least of the problems by kahei · · Score: 4, Insightful


    There are several much more significant challenges than dust:

    * The lack of any kind of spaceship capable of making the return trip
    * The lack of any kind of system for keeping the crew alive in space for that long
    * The lack of any serious programme to develop the above
    * The lack of the money such a programme would require
    * The lack of the political will to address any of the points above
    * The lack of public interest in any of the points above *this* point

    Overall, I think it's probably not a good idea to burn Earth yet.

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
    1. Re:Dust is the least of the problems by Shadowlore · · Score: 1

      Ahh slashdot, where the ignorant can make claims that are false, and have been false for at least a couple decades. What is this, pop-news?

      "The lack of any kind of spaceship capable of making the return trip...the lack of any kind of system for keeping the crew alive in space for that long"

      Yeah, because we can build submarines that operate for 6+ months at a time deep under the sea but not a tin can that can keep people alive in space for that time. You seem to not know about the many humans who have lived in space for well over six months. A Conjunction Trajectory mission puts you in space for no more than 6 months. The ISS, for all it's spectacular failure and incredible appetite for money, and Mir, have proven that we can make craft to keep humans alive for mor than a year in the vacuum of space.

      The lack of any serious programme to develop the above

      Irrelevant. We don't have a serious program for most things that we've done or develop. It's also incorrect. It's not government funded and we don't waste -er I mean spend massive amounts of money on advertising, but it is under research and development. By people who have a clue.

      The lack of the money such a programme would require

      No, the money exists. The resources exist. Just as we have more than enough food to supply food to every person on the planet, and they'd eat quite well, we hav emore than enough. It's a matter of where it goes and how it is used.

      The lack of the political will to address any of the points above

      Don't need political will. Besides, I think this one is also false. I bet China has it.

      The lack of public interest in any of the points above *this* point

      Actually the interest is quite large. But again, we're not spending billions or millions in advertising.

      --
      My Suburban burns less gasoline than your Prius.
    2. Re:Dust is the least of the problems by Hairy1 · · Score: 1

      In the book "The Case for Mars" the case is made for a return trip being made directly from earth. The premise is that we can use a rocket much like the original Saturn. The principle would be to deliver a return ship on he surface of Mars first and have it refuel itself using the carbon dioxide present on mars along with a small nuclear generator - or possibly solar panels for those worried about nuclear generators in space. Once the first mission is a success and there is a viable return spacecraft sitting on mars you can send the humans.

      We definitely have the technology to build a spacecraft. We have the technology to live in space for the length required, and have done so in earth orbit. The amount of money is in order of US$50 billion, which compared to the hundreds of billions spent on Iraq is good value for money. Hopefully a change of government in the US will see a more positive, progressive administration that is concerned more about developing technology and exploration than military actions.

    3. Re:Dust is the least of the problems by jschrod · · Score: 1
      The big problem for human survival on interplanetary missions is radiation, not vacuum. With our current technology, all astronauts will die when they are sent to Mars, due to lethal radiation where no practical design exists how we can shield it effectively. The current proposals ($n$ meter water, very thick metal shields) are all not feasible.

      And, contrary to your opinion, neither any submarine experience, nor ISS or Mir did contribute anything for the solution of that problem. The GP seems to know more about these issues than you; if you can think only of vacuum as the problem to solve.

      --

      Joachim

      People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

    4. Re:Dust is the least of the problems by LeadSongDog · · Score: 1

      Please explain why putting the water tank between the cabin and the sun is 'not feasible'. ========== By their fruits shall ye know them.

      --
      Oh, I'm sorry sir, I thought you were referring to me, Mr. Wensleydale.
    5. Re:Dust is the least of the problems by jschrod · · Score: 1
      To have an effect, the water barrier must be several meters thick. We don't know how to build such a ship, and we don't know how to accelerate it if we could build it. You just have too look at the effort that is needed to attach a small new module to the ISS to see our current state of technology. It is way beyond anything that is needed for this requirement.

      Loads has been published about the radiation problem of interplanetary missions; I recommend a Google search.

      --

      Joachim

      People don't write Manifestos any more -- what's going on in this world? [Frank Zappa]

  27. Lung related concerns by BigBadBus · · Score: 2, Funny

    Won't there be similar lung related illness like asbestosis on Earth caused by all that dust?

    1. Re:Lung related concerns by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There is a well know problem with some volcanos that produce a lot of very fine ashes. They do not kill many people during the erruption, but many of the people who breathed or swallowed some ashes will suffer from various organs or bones diseases. They are usually very painful ,untreatable and often lethal within years, compared to decades for asbestos (that stays in the lungs).

      So 1- it is worse than asbestos and 2- Since Mars has volacanos and the martian dust is known to also be very fine, there is a real risk they will have similar nasty effects on exposed humans.

  28. the big question by Simon+Garlick · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Will it blend?

    Actually, given that everything blended comes out as toxic dust... what happens if you put toxic dust INTO the blender?

    1. Re:the big question by cracks_wise · · Score: 2, Funny

      How do you think they make iPhones?

  29. 200 pounds of meat by mangu · · Score: 1
    sometimes the right tool for a job is pickaxe powered by 200 pounds of meat.


    Yes, on Earth. On Mars, 200 pounds of meat need 20000 pounds of support equipment. Humans breathe air, eat food, take dumps of shit. Robots recharge their batteries from sunlight, and that's it.


    What we really need for exploring Mars is better artificial intelligence. Instead of sending 200 tons of support equipment, why not send a 20 ton computer able to, as you say, "Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions."?

    1. Re:200 pounds of meat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      > What we really need for exploring Mars is better artificial intelligence. Instead of sending 200 tons of support equipment, why not send a 20 ton computer able to, as you say, "Immediately discern between 'interesting' and 'uninteresting' rocks without having to wait 24 hours to ask for new instructions."?

      The human's 200 pounds of meat is mainly a life support system for the 3 pounds of jello. The fact that the human's arm can wield the pickaxe is just a happy accident. But even 20,000 tonnes of computers can't replace 20,000 pounds of life support equipment for a 200-pound meatwad and the 3-pound CPU it carries. (It'd be one hell of an interesting earth-based grid computing project, wouldn't it?) I'm all for AI research, but why wait? Why not go with what's definitely the best CPU in the solar system, and what's almost certainly the best CPU within 100 (or even 1000) light-years of here?

      Of course, if you can ship 20,000 pounds of cargo to Mars (or 20,000 tonnes), you're still better off making 100 (or 100,000) copies of the early-90s Sojourner rover and carpet-bombing the place with probes.

  30. That's a great idea by Reality+Master+201 · · Score: 4, Funny

    That's a wonderful idea. Someone should just go tell the computer scientists and engineers to get their thumbs out of their asses and invent us some artificial intelligence, since obviously all they do now is sit around playing D & D and doing bong hits.

    The sheer vision - it borders on godlike.

    1. Re:That's a great idea by tgatliff · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, thats just you buddy with the thumb up your ass playing D&D while doing bong hits... :-)

  31. Sample Return Mission by Garrett+Fox · · Score: 1

    According to Robert Zubrin's proposal for Mars exploration, which NASA's seems loosely based on, a Mars Sample Return Mission would be an important precursor to the manned mission. The reason for that would be not so much to make the geologists dance for joy, as to demonstrate the "in situ propellant production" (ISPP) technology that will generate most of the return fuel's mass from the Martian atmosphere, greatly increasing the mission's efficiency. And, of course, to demonstrate getting a spaceship back from Mars. If the dust is a concern, that's another good reason to do that mission. Bring the stuff back so we can look at it!

    --
    Revive the Constitution.
  32. No Buck Rogers -- No Bucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The way NASA sells the scientific unmanned missions is by saying that we need to study Mars in preparation for a manned journey. This is the main reason why we have been sending so many landers and orbiters to Mars lately, as opposed to Venus, Mercury, Jovian system, etc.

    Cut out the human mission, and you won't get 1,000 probes. You'll get maybe half a dozen before Congress decides that we've learned all that's really worth knowing.

  33. radiation by potatoeater · · Score: 0

    I thought (correct me if I'm wrong) that the greatest issue was actually getting the astronauts to mars alive and without cancer. Currently there is no shielding technology that is light enough or even proven. I believe the current best radiation shielding available comes from lead.

  34. Jesus Christ, Just Go There by tjstork · · Score: 1

    Mars is a 4 billion year old desert, and they are worried that it might be dusty.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Jesus Christ, Just Go There by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      i just watched a movie call idiocracy, it's filled people people like you.

      firstly the dust on mar is going to be vastly different to here on earth. no weather or geo activity is going to mean it'll be rough and cut up your lungs if you breath it in meaning you can't let any into the breathing space. we also need to know things like it's ph and other chemical properties to make sure it won't eat through life support equipment.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:Jesus Christ, Just Go There by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i just watched a movie call idiocracy, it's filled people people like you.

      firstly the dust on mar is going to be vastly different to here on earth. no weather or geo activity is going to mean it'll be rough and cut up your lungs if you breath it in meaning you can't let any into the breathing space.


        You're also "people like him." Leaving out that you have yet to master capitalization, or any punctuation past the comma, you're actually saying there's no weather on mars? Ever hear of martian dust storms?
        That dust isn't just sitting there like the lunar regolith, it's being stirred and ground up continually.

  35. Umm, launching probes? by wasted · · Score: 1

    what would be cheaper, designing and launching 10 probes, or just saving cash and designing and launching a single manned mission?
    For cost efficiency, one could launch all ten surface probes and one mother-probe on one or two launches. The mother probe stays in orbit while the surface probes collect soil from their assigned areas. After collecting samples, the surface probes launch back into orbit, transfer the soil samples to the mother ship, and then enter a decaying orbit. Mothership brings ten (or likely less) soil samples back. I'm not a rocket scientist or spacecraft engineer, but I think that particular scenario would be cheaper than sending even one human.

    On the other hand, I believe we do need to get humans to Mars as a step toward further space exploration, so that human would get sent, anyway, and thus no real cost saving exist (outside of safety issues) by sending probes. The astronaut(s) would probably feel a lot better if he/she knew what the soil was like, first, though.
  36. what about the moon? by timmarhy · · Score: 1

    wouldn't the same principles we learnt on the moon apply? sure we need a mission to collect samples purely so we have a test run of getting there and back again. but come on people, most of these questions have been answered in our moon missions.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    1. Re:what about the moon? by aadvancedGIR · · Score: 1

      Absolutely.

      Answer 1: a two weeks moon mission was dangerous, very expensive, most Appolo astronauts suffer from glaucoma due to the radiations and we are currently unable to schedulle another one withing the next 5 years.

  37. Learn from the best. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "aliens" that abducted my were simply robots made to look like humans. Unfortunately, you have to be hotter than this if you want anywhere near my "escape hatch".

    If robots are good enough for our robotic overlords, they're good enough for us.

  38. I'd like us to go to mars, but by sentientbrendan · · Score: 1

    just because the president made some handwaving in the direction of mars doesn't mean it's going to happen... He doesn't actually have any authority to do such a thing, no matter what he says.

    That said, I think that we should be looking into manned space travel, because ultimately we are going to want to send *people* into space. Learning stuff about the geology of mars is nice, but speaking long term the real value of space exploration is that we're going to have people living out there someday.

  39. Re:No Humans needed by WalksOnDirt · · Score: 3, Funny

    sending crews through the radioactivity-laden wastelands of interstellar space...
    You must be planning on the scenic route. Most proposed Mars missions only go through interplanetary space.
    --
    a,e,i,o,u and sometimes w and y (at be if of up cwm by)
  40. Oh, for chuff's sake by ajs318 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For chuff's sake, just run a kamikaze mission. Don't even bother about getting the astronauts back. Enough lives are being wasted pointlessly in Iraq and Afghanistan. If a few astronauts give their lives collecting important data which can be sent back to Earth and used to plan a safer mission in future, well, that counts as much more pointful than getting blown to bits in a war there is no hope of winning.

    --
    Je fume. Tu fumes. Nous fûmes!
    1. Re:Oh, for chuff's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I volunteer you for this most important mission.

    2. Re:Oh, for chuff's sake by sjaskow · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'd be glad to volunteer. Sure, my family would miss me, but they could also say "he's one of the first people to have visited another planet" for the next 1000 years or so.

  41. Re:No Humans needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You fail to understand. Robotic missions, if properly designed, can tell us pretty much everything we need to know about these concerns before we ever send humans anywhere near Mars.

  42. Currently needless worry... by KlausBreuer · · Score: 1

    ...because we won't go to Mars.

    "The president says we're going there". Sure he is. He's also saying lots of other things.
    He is not, however, financing NASA for this. Yes, they're cutting all kinds of other projects to scrape the money together. But it won't work, simply because they need true support From Above to do so instead of just some babbling.

    I cannot believe that many people think we're really going to Mars any time soon. Sure, we should. Yes, we'd learn lots (always important!). Yes, obviously it's dangerous - part of an astronauts job. Yes, it's something new and fascinating.

    However, the only thing which certainly will happen is that some of the Bush friends will earn a heck of a lot of money off NASA. And that'll be it.

    --
    Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
    1. Re:Currently needless worry... by YrWrstNtmr · · Score: 1

      ...because we won't go to Mars.
      "The president says we're going there". Sure he is. He's also saying lots of other things.
      He is not, however, financing NASA for this. Yes, they're cutting all kinds of other projects to scrape the money together. But it won't work, simply because they need true support From Above to do so instead of just some babbling.


      Bush is gone in 18 months. Will you be as quick to blame the next president when he or she also doesn't fund it enough? Or even chops the concept altogether?

  43. Horse shit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If NASA and various other government funded institutions didn't have a lot of made-up problems to solve, getting to Mars might be far less exciting to say the least. Rest assured that whenever we do go to Mars everything will be overengineered to the Nth degree and the data we bring back will be only a little better than what the rovers collected.

  44. Re:No Humans needed by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    No, they really can't. We're going to have to gain real human experience in these matters, and that's something you can't replicate by gathering data with robots.

    --
    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  45. Yeah? by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    Then why hasn't it been done? Why did we send mostly useless rovers to Mars? Oh and how much did they cost?

    I think you are giving our engineers and our government to much credit.

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
    1. Re:Yeah? by Shihar · · Score: 1

      It hasn't been done because it is expensive. It is pittance compared to a Mars mission, but it is expensive compared to tossing a few disposable rovers at the planet. The twin rovers cost 800 million. Congress spent 12 billion just to START to think about Mars exploration. That is 12 billion already down the hole before we have anything that can reach the moon, much less get a crew to Mars safely and back.

      Even if sending humans was actually a cost effective way to do science (it isn't), it still would not be worth while. There are plenty of other science projects that could use a few hundred billion dollars and would return a whole hell of a lot more then some fun facts about Mars geology.

      If NASA wants to do something productive, it can scrap all manned space flight and focuses exclusively on R&D and venture funding to drag the cost of space flight down. Drop the cost of space flight low enough, and hordes of explorers and pioneers will take to the stars without any prompting. That would be a whole hell of a lot more productive then dumping the resources of an entire civilization into show just how big the American cock is, and how we are so damn rich that we can afford to blow a few hundred billion dollars to send a handful of humans to go do Martian geology.

  46. What about Andromeda? by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 1

    When the bomb goes off there'll be a thousand mutations! Andromeda will spread everywhere! They'll never be rid of it!

  47. Not about money... by bjk002 · · Score: 1

    It hasn't been done because it is expensive.

    I do not agree. We sent the rovers to Mars. What exactly did we learn from that mission that had any REAL value? Oooh, they have rocks on Mars Whoopee! The cost to throw on a microscope on one of them and get some much more useful information would have been nominal at that point. The reason they didn't do it was either incompetence or ignorance.

    Incompetence/ignorance on the part of the engineers for not including it in the design/budget request OR incompetence/ignorance on the part of Congress for not seeing the value and properly funding it OR incompetence/ignorance on the part of the Scientific Community for not standing up and being heard and renouncing stupid investments.

    I just think you give engineers too much credit stating:

    "You could send a massive unmanned nuclear powered Mars lab complete with every single piece of analytical equipment you could wish for and a dozen rovers that range from toy car size to frigging backhoe."

    From what I have seen from NASA they lack the ability to CONSISTENTLY deliver anything anywhere, given any amount of funding.

    We've had over 30 years, where are we? Why aren't they delivering what was promised? My argument is simple. They (Congress, NASA, and yes, even the scientific community) are to blame. These people are supposed to be the "Best and Brightest" we have to offer. And yet I, and I am sure many who read this, have very real doubts of their ability to get anything like this done at all, let alone done right.

    Blame it on whatever you would like, the bottom line is it AIN'T gettin' done. See I'm not arguing with you, I'm arguing WITH YOU. Where we differ is in our solution to the problem. You say don't send people, send robots. I say don't send anything, cause you're all to damned corrupt/incompetent/ignorant to get it done anyway. Give me the money, I'll find a much better use for it than pissing it away.

    --
    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  48. We will know. by ahecht · · Score: 1

    Actually, there is an instrument specifically designed to study Martian dust aboard the Pheonix Mars lander that is launching next month and will arrive on mars next June.

    The MECA (Microscopy, Electrochemistry, and Conductivity Analyzer) instrument actually began life as the Mars Environmental Compatibility Assessment. It was initially sponsored by NASA's Human Exploration and Development of Space initiative, and was designed to determine what risks Martian dust would pose to astronauts. It will look at the size, shape, and composition of the dust using both optical an atomic force microscopes, study the reactivity of the dust using a series of wet chemistry cells, measure the thermal and electrical conductivity of the dust, and look at how the dust sticks to a wide range of materials.

    It may not be sample return, but it's a pretty in-depth study of the Martian dust. Given that it is launching in less than a month, I'm surprised it was omitted from the article.

  49. I'm guessing its more like... by bjk002 · · Score: 1
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    Opinion:=TMyOpinion.Create(Me);
  50. Hey! I'm a transformer, you insensitive clod! by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

    We don't call it a "space probe graveyard" we call it a sparing ring for robot boxers and their earth-created punching ba... I mean sparing partners.

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    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    1. Re:Hey! I'm a transformer, you insensitive clod! by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

      Actually, I don't think you spared any of our space probes.

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      In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199
  51. Re:No Humans needed by The+One+and+Only · · Score: 1

    I thought "interplanetary", but I evidently stopped thinking it halfway through "inter" and wrote the first word that came to mind. I'm strange that way.

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    In Repressive Burma, it's not just your connection that dies. slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=314547&cid=20819199