NASA Set To Launch Solar NanoSail Into Space
An anonymous reader writes "Earlier this year the Japanese space agency successfully deployed and used a solar sail to propel its spacecraft Ikaros, and now NASA announced plans this week for its own solar sail mission. This fall it will launch the NanoSail-D into orbit 400 miles up with a Minotaur IV rocket. Once deployed, it will orbit for 17 weeks, proving the technology and allowing astronomers to snap lots of photos."
Is this all we are now, just "snapping lots of photos"?
Nanosail D was originally to launch on one of the ill-fated Falcon 1 test flights, at which time it would have indeed been proving the technology. But now that JAXA have not only proved the technology, but applied it to interplanetary travel, it seems a bit moot.
If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
Isn't that why NASA was founded? To be America's 'me-too' reply to Sputnik.