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Russia Has Sights Set On Manned Moon Landing By 2030

New submitter techfun89 writes "Russia plans on sending cosmonauts to the moon as well as unmanned spacecraft to Mars, Jupiter and Venus by 2030. Considering the recent launch failures in Russia, these plans seem very ambitious. From the article: 'These ambitious spaceflight goals are laid out in a strategy document drawn up recently by Russia's Federal Space Agency (known as Roscosmos), the Russian newspaper Kommersant reported Tuesday (March 13). And there's more. Roscosmos wants a new rocket called Angara to become the nation's workhorse launch vehicle by 2020, replacing the venerable Soyuz and Proton rockets that have been carrying the load since the 1960s.'"

8 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. Good idea! by multiben · · Score: 5, Funny

    It will be good to finally get back to the moon. Can't wait to find out in what ways it's changed since the last time we visited.

    1. Re:Good idea! by symbolset · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It wasn't really all the cold war, you know. Sure, the Toynbee Tile "footballs in space" thing had something to do with it. But it had as much to do with Kennedy's skill as an orator and a desire to build some unifying non-military national mission so we could lay off the killing foreigners thing for a while. Usually for these things I cite the text of the speech, but today I find the recording of Kennedy at Rice University is up on Youtube now.

      12:15 he anticipates the home PC.

      I watched it again just now. Damn, but it's dusty in here.

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    2. Re:Good idea! by khallow · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They didn't have the remotely-manned tech we do now or robots in quantity would have preceded men.

      Robots did. There were 21 such robotic missions prior to the first manned mission. Apollo 12 landed near (about 360 meters away) one of those robotic missions, Surveyor 3.

      If there is, at the moment, anything a man can perform which a robot cannot, that argues for improved robots rather than sending expensive tourists.

      There is plenty. Perhaps you ought to watch some Apollo footage sometime to see it. The thing to remember here is that humans are currently the best robots out there for a number of important tasks (such as making decisions, land-based surveying and prospecting, land-based sample collection, etc). Humans have overhead such as supplies and need for radiation protection, but that boils down to mass and power needs just like any robotic payload.

      We need improved robot tech for all the dull/dirty/dangerous jobs on Earth, and as we are moving to "lights out manufacturing" in advanced industries so we should seek to automate everything else over time.

      The problem here is that this approach gets in the way of us doing cool things. Suppose I develop a new industrial process, but the prototype requires considerable human intervention (precisely because a human developed it with limited resources). I don't have the capital for this "lights out" stuff or to make sure that my workers and I are sufficiently out of harms way to fulfill whatever safety levels you're attempting to achieve here.

      I have a better idea. Let's not waste time or effort making the world ridiculously safe.

    3. Re:Good idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      They didn't have the remotely-manned tech we do now or robots in quantity would have preceded men.

      You should seriously read something about the space race and the moon landing.

      Robots in quantity did preceed men, but history classes in the U.S. tends to focus on the manned mission since Soviet was first with all other important milestones in the space race incuding unmanned missions to the moon.

      Luna 9 and Luna 13 were the two unmanned Soviet probes that successfully landed on the moon before the American manned landing. The U.S. had some unmanned missions before the manned one but none of them managed to land.
      Luna 16 landed and brought home moon soil, Luna 17 was a Soviet rover that traveled over 10km on the moon.
      Luna 21, Luna 23 and Luna 24 were other successful Soviet missions. (More automated moon traveling and soil gathering.)

  2. I think they have this wrong... by idbeholda · · Score: 5, Funny

    The manned moon has its sights on landing in Russia by 2030.

  3. Not a chance by melted · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's not a coincidence that newer Russian designs don't work. The "old guard" has retired. The new — immgirated. Just the other day international rankings came out for higher education. Not a single Russian school is on the list. That's what happens when you don't even pay starvation wages to your professors. Sooner or later they throw in the towel. It's a miracle things held together this long.

    Given the scarcity of talented engineers, and the pitiful salaries Roscosmos pays to its staff, I'm kind of wondering how they expect to pull this off. They couldn't even do it when they had some of the best schools in the world (which regularly minted Nobel laureates), during the Soviet times, with essentially unlimited budget and manpower. Nowadays they can only build 20 year old rockets, and make minor improvements here and there. Put simply, after neglecting higher education for about a decade and a half, they've pissed away their technical capability to do anything they haven't already done before.

  4. Re:Wow! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    except that they will actually go; as opposed to faking some film in the desert

  5. Re:Wow! by Megane · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If they hurry, they can get there before China.

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