U.S. House Wants 'Sustained Human Presence On the Moon and the Surface of Mars'
MarkWhittington writes "Politico reports in a June 18, 2013 story that House Republicans have added a Mars base to its demands for a lunar base in the draft 2013 NASA Authorization bill. Both the Bush-era Constellation program and President Obama space plan envisioned eventual human expeditions to Mars. But if Politico is correct, the new bill will be the first time an official piece of legislation will call for permanent habitation of the Red Planet. The actual legislative language states, 'The [NASA] Administrator shall establish a program to develop a sustained human presence on the Moon and the surface of Mars.'"
The moon, Mars, deep space... just get them off this planet and out of our hair ASAP.
I don't suppose the house is planning to actually pay for the enormous expense of putting a permanent human colony on a different planet? They just want NASA to stop everything else that they're doing and start making manned Mars rockets? Is it any wonder NASA struggles with long term projects, with Congress meddling every year with crazy ideas and budget uncertainty?
I read the internet for the articles.
In other words, "Yeah, this sounds good and makes us look like we want to excel, but we're not comitting to it financially or temporally so that we can move the goalposts whenever and however we like."
...this is it. We've got drones on Mars already. They just don't fly yet.
"Get your ass to Mars!"
Let's send the house (and senate) to live on the surface of the moon then and they'll finally have nothing left to distract them from doing their darn jobs! Then maybe something will get done in congress. Plus, Moon Congress sounds awesome.
Any astronaut would be crazy to do this. Congress would be just one internal squabble away from defunding the stream of resupply ships.
Like...
Encouraging children to get into STEM Degrees. The moon landing back in the 1960's but a large boom into these careers. Although a small portion of them will be working on the space missions. The interest in these things as a kid will make them far more interested in the topics. Getting kids interested in Science Technology Engineering and Math, will help them get off their butts go to college and get in less serious trouble.
Our Environment. Sure launching a rocket into space take huge amounts of carbon. But to figure out how to get people to survive and thrive on the Moon and Mars (extremely harsh conditions, and little energy sources) will create technology that we can use here on earth. Hey that solar panel on the moon can keep a small city running with a half a month of darkness, means on earth we could at least get it to run half a small city. Plus it will need to be small and light to get there. Extracting Drinking water out of the brimy pools on mars, would help us get drinking water out of our oceans and deserts.
Agriculture, these people will need to be self sufficient, in a bubble, imagine what we could do with these ideas on earth.
Health Care. The people in colonies on the Moon and Mars can get sick, we will need to find new procedures to fix these problems. They can be transferred back to earth as a cheaper solution to many problems.
Those are just a few.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
1. insist the US Postal Service implement pension funding 75 years into the future with no known revenue source to do so, as we cannot directly defund it. pretend companies like UPS and FedEx actually want to deliver bulk mail in place of the postal service but are in fact incumbered by its existence.
2. insist NASA pursue permanent manned installations on the moon and mars despite the fact its orders of magnitude more expensive than current unmanned operations. pretend companies like SpaceX are somehow encumbered by the existence of NASA.
Good people go to bed earlier.
I want to see mankind spread out into the solar system, and ideally I'd like to see the USA at the head of it all. So I'm not unsympathetic toward the idea.
But I really want to see the space program get done correctly. So far, every trip to the moon has been via a single-use rocket, completely used up for the one trip. It made sense when we were trying to win a race, but it also meant we hadn't built out the infrastructure.
The right way to do things: build a truly reusable space vehicle, often called a "space pickup truck". Proposed heavy lift vehicles are more like a "space moving van", and they will have their uses, but what we need more than anything else is a spacecraft that can fly and fly and fly some more with minimal maintenance.
We want a craft that can fly to orbit, return, and then go again tomorrow. It might need some maintenance overnight but it should be as little as possible. The space shuttle needed man-centuries of work between flights... we can do far better than that.
Single-stage would be ideal, but two-stage might be easier to get going... just make sure both stages are reusable and don't need too much maintenance. Cargo capacity need not be huge... it would be cheaper to fly things up in multiple small loads on a truly reusable craft, than to build, launch, and use up a single heavy-lift vehicle.
Once we have the "space pickup truck" we need to build a transportation hub in Earth orbit. It would have emergency Earth return vehicles docked, would have lots of supplies (fuel, water, oxygen, food, etc.) and would have staff on board all the time.
Once you have all the above? The moon becomes trivial. Build a "moon shuttle" that could be basically a couple of fuel tanks and engines bolted to a frame, with some sort of shielded crew compartment and a lunar lander docked to it. It need not be pretty and it need not be tough because it will never land anywhere.
Ideally, also we should build a "space cannon" system that can shoot things into space. This would be the cheapest way to send up inert things like oxygen and fuel, or even dried food and tough electronics. And humans living in space will need serious radiation shielding... the cannon could possibly send up lots of shielding mass.
Imagine how expensive it would be to deliver cargo from America to Australia if we had to do it by building a single-use cargo missile. With modern aircraft the dominating factor is fuel costs. If we could get space travel costs down to chiefly the cost of fuel that would be a massive reduction in costs.
lf(1): it's like ls(1) but sorts filenames by extension, tersely
You're currently modded flaimbait but my first thought was let's do it now. Load up all politicians, attorneys, and used car salesmen and launch em!
"A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
You know guys, if you want these things you're probably going to have to stop slashing NASA's fucking budget every year.
By US House, they mean TEXAS. This is just PORK for Houston and its rocket-to-nowhere--The Space Launch System (SLS). SLS has no mission, but it means money to Houston and therefor they dreamed up this ridiculous objective, And Houston will do anything to get the money, including poaching from the highly-successful unmanned mission from JPL such as Opportunity and Curiosity.
http://science.house.gov/hearing/subcommittee-space-hearing-nasa-authorization-act-2013
When Thomas Young was asked when NASA could get to Mars on their current budget, his response was "Never."
Just don't drink the glacier water...
http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2013/06/18/nasa_funding_asteroid_mission_education_and_climate_change.html
Seems like Mars is ok but not asteroids or climate science.
....... Thus ends my attempt at wit or whatever
It makes great electoral sense for them. A place where communications are so stretched that everybody is literally years behind the times would make for perfect Republican voters.
The only political goal NASA ever achieved was the Apollo project. Every other piece of political grandstanding is just noise in the background to the scientists and engineers on the ground who are trying to advance the state of the art. The only projects that NASA ever finishes these days are either small enough to fly under the radar (pun intended) or involve international agreements which if we break them would make us look bad to our allies. The unmanned Mars program and many climatological satellites are examples of the first, and the International Space Station and James Webb Space Telescope are prime examples of the second. But arms trafficking regulations and "national pride" prevent us from collaborating internationally on any new manned launch vehicles or habitats, so those projects inevitably get cancelled when every new batch of congresscritters try to put their names on something.
The only way for NASA to finish a big manned project is to contract it out to companies with capital to keep development going between political catfights, or somehow block the legislature from changing its priorities or funding levels more frequently than every 5 or 10 years. Or cut the politically-motivated crap entirely and just give more money to research and development projects so that maybe by the time humanity comes up with some real priorities, we'll know how to build a friggin' warp drive.
Tell them there's oil on Mars and they'll be taking the funds from the army instead of NASA.
After all, there's always funds for the army, even when there's no funds to take care of things back home.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
The technologies we develop to live in space have consistently made life better here on "Spaceship Earth". But using the space program as a legislative distraction and throwing a few billion dollars at it here and there with no real results certainly doesn't do anyone any good.
Odd timing of this, it follows a stream of wacky distractions coming out of Washington since a whole bunch of skeletons spilled out of the closet in the last few months...
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
sustained human presence
When they cannot even sustain people in their own country properly...
Yeah, we all know how it's going to turn out.
Get free satoshi (Bitcoin) and Dogecoins
Anonymous, you will NEVER solve the problems you are indirectly referring to. Poverty, war, crime, environmental pollution: those are inevitable byproducts of existence itself. Not to mention that you fail to take into account the greatest random factor of them all: human stupidity. Stopping our march to space and spending money to solve problems here at home is the most futile fallacial notion ever; because you will waste more money trying to correct for human stupidity and the inevitable results of existential chaos than you ever would in building capability to get into deep space. Those problems will never be solved--but putting permanent encampments of humans on the Moon and beyond CAN.
Here's to hot beer, cold women, and Glaswegian kisses for all.
I think these House Republicans are a bunch of doomsday preppers who think that by getting to another planet/moon everything will be rosy for the human race. What they don't understand (because of their lack of science background) is that it's a lot easier to live in SPACE than on a body with a gravity well. We should be building ships to go to the asteroid belt and/or Jupiter and Saturn not wasting our time on cold dead planets/moons. Let's go somewhere interesting and easy not hard.
And I want an ice cream. Doesn't mean it's going to happen any time soon. I suppose it's possible I'll see men on the moon in my lifetime, but I sort of doubt they'll be flying a US flag. Probably Chinese if I had to guess. And I don't think anyone will ever be going to Mars. Or if we do, it'll cost an obscene amount of money, probably fail on the first attempt, people will die and the public will lose their desire to see it happen. Depressing really.
I want a pony.
The difference is, one of us has the power to make it happen.
Hint: It isn't the House.
Thomas Young is going to be looking for a new job REAL soon. He needs to get with the program. Honesty has no place in political hearings.
China does not recognize the treaties against the ownership of celestial objects and Republicans being Republicans want to squat on the two best pieces. This is as dumb of an idea as you can come up with for human exploration, but at least it's getting space programs some money. Problem is Politicians aren't rocket scientists and have no concept of the work and technology precursors needed for them to claim their pretty marbles. Asteroids and Comets... building material, water and all the precious metals you could ever want. So of course US wants to avoid asteroids. First asteroid you lasso with gold on it and watch all the rich folks wail and howl and scream when their gold value drops to 19th century levels. China has been mandating their rocket scientists read western Science Fiction for ideas and concepts we take for granted. But they don't even have to bother because Science Fiction is huge China now and is fueling a whole new generation of Science Fiction authors. US better watch out.
Sending someone to Mars is a complete waste of money in the short term. As is finding water or even signs of life on that planet.
And before you jump down my throat about bullshit such as Space R&D leads to beneficial offshoot technology, realize that we do not need to spend $100 Billion dollars to send someone to Mars with the offshoot of having a better memory foam for our mattresses, new flavor of Tang, or a more grippy version of Velcro.
We have real problems on Earth. We have an energy crisis. We are running out of fossil fuel and demand more electrical energy year over year. One could argue that sending someone to Mars could lead to a solution to Earth's energy crisis. However NASA could easily spend billions on R&D for energy for a space mission and find out the best solution is to tack a nuclear reactor to the end of the spaceship because you can just eject the spent core's into the void of space. A solution like this will not benefit Earth at all.
Instead, having a mandate to solve our energy crisis on Earth first, by finding real alternatives to using fossil fuel for energy and making technology use energy more efficiently, would lead to trivial solutions to generate and conserve energy on a mission to Mars. That is, NASA could operate on a cheaper budget and spend less time finding solutions for a Mars mission when we have real solutions to Earth problems.
Space R&D is limited in scope and we can only hope for there to be offshoot technology that could benefit Earth. NASA is not going to design solutions with a dual purpose, to work on Mars and provide solutions to Earth. Why create a limitation on R&D when it won't move the Mars mandate further, faster.
The problem, or course, is that a US presidency only lasts at most 8 years and its hard to hand over an easier Mars solution to the next president.
It's simply irresponsible to waste billions on Space R&D when we have significant economic, energy and climate issues on Earth. Three days after people see someone landing on Mars on YouTube nobody will give a shit and we will be stuck with the same problems on Earth, now just with even more repressive tax debt.
Fix Earth first, then lets see the planets and the stars. Why not have mandate to sustain life on this Planet?!
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Since the planet does not have a strong magnetic field, the surface is lethal.
As has been discussed elsewhere, at the time of arrival on Mars a person would already have received a lifetime's radiation dose.
"Our Environment. Sure launching a rocket into space take huge amounts of carbon."
So what takes a large amount of carbon?
Burning liquid oxygen and hydrogen?
Manufacturing the liquid oxygen and hydrogen?
Manufacturing the aluminum?
Perhaps it takes a lot of *energy*, but I don't know where a huge amount of carbon is involved. Help me out.
Load up all politicians, attorneys, and used car salesmen and launch em!
I know politicians and attorneys are not popular groups of people, but not even they deserve that kind of hell. You can launch the politicians and attorneys to mars if you want, but lets send the used car salesmen to the sun.
But where would you find a big enough rocket???
Cheap rocketry uses liquid kerosene. Lots of carbon.
Liquid hydrogen is reserved for the crazily expensive NASA boondoggle known as the Space Shuttle. 'cause what you want in a "space truck" is the world's most exotic and difficult to handle fuel....
...to the moon and Mars.
The government is looking into out-of-this-world control!
U.S. Public wants 'Unsustained Congressional Presence On the Moon and the Surface of Mars' where they belong... unless you believe in hell, in which case they'll be going there eventually for a lot less money.
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
Now just hold on there... I might need a used car some day.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
More feel good propaganda. Just like the Bush's Constellation program, and Obam's goal to reach Mars. it's all a bunch of crap to win favor in the public. The fact is, there is now way with the current budget and the current policy of scrapping our space program, that ANY of that will happen.
The fastest way to get a human on Mars is to launch from Earth.
The fastest way to get a sustainable human presence on Mars is to build a base on the Moon, and use its raw materials for shielding, fuel, etc., and only getting the hi-tech & wet-ware from Earth. Why lift a lot of mass off the Earth when it is is a lot cheaper to do so from the Moon, in the medium to longer term?
It is only cheaper from Earth for a one-off mission, or at most a small number of Mars missions.
For sustainable transport between the Earth and the Moon, you want at least 5 structures, 4 of which would be easy to reuse - in order to minimise cost:
(1) Earth-LEO shuttle - the most difficult to reuse
(2) LEO station - for transfer of men & material
(3) LEO-LMO shuttle
(4) LMO station - for transfer of men & material
(5) Moon-LMO shuttle
LEO: Low Earth Orbit
LMO: Low Moon Orbit
Similar reasoning applies to Moon-Mars transport, as there is no point in landing a craft capable of going between the Moon & Mars on the surface of Mars, or the Moon for that matter - though the Mars landing is the most technically challenging.
and I want a pony.
a unicorn pony.
a well-hung unicorn pony.
Until these nimrods in congress actually come up with the funding for this, and given their history of cancellations, up front, this is just useless wheel-spinning that might fund a few shoestring studies that go nowhere. We'd get to Mars sooner if we put the project on Kickstarter than waiting for congress to fund it.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
This is the natural consequence of the recent finding that there was running water on Mars, which gives a strong clue that there's still lots of it around. Anybody who reads sci-fi knows that water is like the oil of the solar system, so it's only natural that the USG will want to occupy the land.
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
Don't forget the telephone sanitizers.
DRM: Terminator crops for your mind!
My bad. According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturn_V#S-IC_first_stage the first stage uses RP-1 (aka kerosene) and LOX. I thought it used liquid hydrogen.
As for most exotic and difficult to handle fuel, I think that would include liquid fluorine (FLOX) or nitrogen tetroxide.
Enough hot air to heat up and terraform the planet
Adopted a slightly more realistic climate change position.
Encouraging children to get into STEM Degrees.
The best way to encourage children to get STEM degrees is to create high paying STEM jobs. Pay scientists and engineers what we pay CEOs and sports stars, and you'll start to see the culture change.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Actually, we would gain more out of doing a base on Antarctica, then you would on the moon. That does not mean that we can NOT do a base on the moon, but we gain nothing extra.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
I find it odd the legislation would specify the "surface of Mars"... I guess they want to keep us away from that alien reactor.
All of these ppl are going for pork. Look at this:
Republican Members
Steven Palazzo, MS, Chairman
Ralph M. Hall (R-Texas)
Dana Rohrabacher (R-California)
Frank D. Lucas (R-Oklahoma)
Michael McCaul (R-Texas)
Mo Brooks (R-Alabama)
Larry Bucshon (R-Indiana)
Steve Stockman (R-Texas)
Bill Posey (R-Florida)
David Schweikert (R-Arizona)
Jim Bridenstine (R-Oklahoma)
Chris Stewart (R-Utah)
Democrat Members
Donna F. Edwards, MD, Ranking Member
Suzanne Bonamici (D-Oregon)
Dan Maffei (D-New York)
Joe Kennedy III (D-Massachusetts)
Derek Kilmer (D-Washington)
Ami Bera (D-California)
Marc Veasey (D-Texas)
Julia Brownley (D-California)
Frederica Wilson (D-Florida)
The ONLY one on this group who is NOT trash is Rohrabacher. The rest are seekers of pork.
If a one of them REALLY wanted to go to the mars and/or the moon, they would be allocating money for setting up a base in Antarctica using BA's BA-330 and/or ILC Dover's equipment as well as pushing private space. But, do they? Nope.
In addition, they would kill the SLS and instead push a COTS-SHLV for 2 SHLVs. Do they? Nope.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
That the US House wants a sustained lack of focus regarding humans in space. I mean, ffs we went to the moon 9 times in the 60's/70's and have done jack shit in terms of human exploration since. Now they wanna ramp things up again with a divisive goal?
Neil Armstrong had the right idea that we needed to keep going to the moon in order to practise space flight and iron out *all* the bugs, but no, the US had to cancel Apollo and lose a lot of the info gained during that epic program. Now they want to start it up again, pretty much from scratch? I expect we'll lose a few more astronauts because of this.
http://xkcd.com/1007/
The biggest joke ever, they hardly know what is actually sustainable on earth.
Je me souviens.
Encouraging children to get into STEM Degrees.
Is there a reason we need more people to have these degrees? Then encourage them to take the degree for those reasons. It's not as if the science we already need to do and the engineering we already need to do is not a challenge.
The moon landing back in the 1960's but a large boom into these careers. Although a small portion of them will be working on the space missions. The interest in these things as a kid will make them far more interested in the topics.
And after the boom came a bust. One of the big negatives of the apollo mythos is the intertwining of space exploration with sending bags of meat into space. The role of the bags of meat, is, as you say, to give the venture a human face - it's soap opera and (accesible) human drama.
But maybe the science is worth doing for it's own sake. Maybe the BIG achievements of NASA - Cassini, Voyager, the hugely successful Mars rovers - maybe these are the things we should celebrate, because these are science for the sake of science. If we are not getting kids excited about actual science then we are doing it wrong. Science is exciting.
But to figure out how to get people to survive and thrive on the Moon and Mars (extremely harsh conditions, and little energy sources) will create technology that we can use here on earth. Hey that solar panel on the moon can keep a small city running with a half a month of darkness, means on earth we could at least get it to run half a small city. Plus it will need to be small and light to get there. Extracting Drinking water out of the brimy pools on mars, would help us get drinking water out of our oceans and deserts.
We already know why we need those technologies. And we already know how to live sustainably on earth. If we are not motivated by the needs of 7 billion people and all their descendants, if we are not motivated by the need to preserve the biodiversity of the earth, then the needs of 7 people in a tin can will not motivate us. Solar panels can already power a small city on earth - we just don't want to reach into our pockets and build. We already know how to extract drinkable water from non-potable sources - we just don't care enough about the people without water to do anything about their needs.
Capital idea.
As long as we also send you to Venus.
What is is like at Antartica? COLD. Runs from -89C to -5C. Lots of high speed winds with cold temps with snow/ice that eats at material. Days that are 24 hours long. Seasons. Sun is missing in the winter. Shortage of water (though it can be picked up locally). Shortage of resources. If they really want to do well, they should bury down into the snow.
And what is it like on Mars? COLD. The mean on Mars runs from -87C to -5C. Lots of high speed winds, with cold temps with dust in it, that eats at material. Days that are ~24 hours long. seasons are similar, though 2x as long. Sun is missing in the winter. Shortage of water (though it can be picked up in various amounts). Plenty of local resources. If they want to do well, they should bury down into the frozen ground.
If this can survive at the Antarctica, then it can not survive mars. Something that works on the moon, MAY or MAY NOT work on mars. The ONLY thing that the moon has for testing purpose is life support, and that is available on the ISS.
OTOH, The moon is the worst place for testing. Little to no wind. No atmosphere. Lots of micrometeorites (mars has some, not many). Temperature extremes (mars does not get hot). Radiation galore (far far more than mars gets). In fact, mars surface gets less radiation than does the ISS (which is partially protected by our magnetosphere). The Radiation hitting the moon surface is 4-8x what the Martian surface will get. So, if BA units check out in Antartica for 2 years or longer, AND can check out for several years as a space station, then it is fully tested for Mars.
About the only advantage for the moon is testing a lander. Nothing else. All else should be tested here on earth or at the ISS.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Your sig: You should list the URL in your /. account/options, and maybe even mirror it in a /. journal.
I always hesitate to click on shortened URLs but took a chance after looking at your comment history.
Free Martian Whores!
It will be paid for by anyone who contributes a portion of their labor to the government, which is represented virtually by this thing often called dollars.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
So, is this going to be some kind of launchpad for a new NSA/Prism program to avoid jurisdiction/constitutionality? Kind of like Gitmo?
"Be polite, be professional, but have a plan to kill everybody you meet." General James Mattis
The best way to encourage children to get STEM degrees is to create high paying STEM jobs. Pay scientists and engineers what we pay CEOs and sports stars, and you'll start to see the culture change.
How crass. If STEM people want money it means Americans are lazy and won't accept delayed gratification. That's what CEO's and their sycophantic politicians say anyway.
NASA does not lack for volunteers, and the technology exists, and is tested. NASA just lacks the self generation of male reproductive organs.
There are a lot of high paying STEM jobs.
And kids don't thing of money, they think of cool things. The find out about 'cool thing' from the media. So having a Space Program that is big, and exciting and in the news has kids want to go into engineering and science.
Most kids don't even realize there is a pay differences in jobs until the are between 10-12.
Do you really think some 9 year old sits down and does a cost analysis between careers to determine what they want to do?
ALL you would see is an influx of crappy engineers and Scientists, along with pressure to create an easier path for a PE via trade schools.
If you want to use money as a motivate, guarantee them time off and a good retirement.
And engineer and scientist should get a sabbatical every 5 years, and 50% of there averaged pay in retirement.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on
it's not about the boondoggles. The reason we got away with it was the super rich were just as scared of the Soviets as the rest of us, and they let the rest of us have some money long enough to do something great. Now that the threat is proved to be silly they've gone back to grabbing up all the wealth and power and running us head long to a new dark age. For those of you keeping score at home that's what: Austerity means.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
did anyone every think about the _good_ bureaucrats do? Stop laughing, I'm serious. Every time there's a major disaster the lawmakers sneak several nasty little bills through. All perfectly legal. Who do you think used to call them on that? The press? They've been owned by the powers that be since the 70s, so now you're making me laugh. The police? They do murders and petty crime. Those committees of bureaucrats aren't just faceless minions. They're the ones in charge of enforcing the less immediate but no less important laws.
Next time you meet a bureaucrat thank them. They're people too, and they do good work.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
Why can't those Republican senators demand that he be the initiator for this project?
Oh that's why...
To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
The hard part of going to Mars isn't the rockets - it's building a long-term sustainable ecosystem that can keep some humans alive without a convenient resupply system. There have been a few little terrarium experiments like Biosphere 2, and even they had to cheat when they borked their atmosphere. We've really only experimented with one large-scale ecosystem that can support humans (it's called "Earth").
Perhaps the best part of this project will be that it tells Republicans they've got to take ecology seriously and tell the people who keep messing with the thermostat to stop it.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I'm willing to bet a large lump of bitcoins that the next human on the Moon will come from China. This may make Congress act if they are able to do anything but fight. Do you have a budget yet?
Their space policies are inspiringly ambitious.
(Not that this excuses them being assholes to anyone whose skin color, sexual orientation or income bracket they don't like.)
if you include all the idiots and morons from fox news, right wing hate talk nazi propanda talk radio, and the tea party, then i am all for it. or we can just wait for the rapture and god will smite them and that will save us a lot of tax dollars.
And I would like a pretty pony!
pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
That is not quite accurate.
First, the inflatables have NOT be subjected to several years of cold/weather extremes. And there is nothing in the our environmental set-ups that test it. In addition, you do NOT want the inflatable in a hanger. Set it up at the Amundsen–Scott base during the summer and let it stay there year around. Ideally, we would also have a small nuclear generator that would provide power to it, but, via nebulus treaties, they may not be allowed. However, a small nuke is exactly what is needed at the base. It can provide not just power, but heat, all of which will be needed on mars as well.
In addition, no other nation has set up an inflatable at the south pole. NONE.
Now as to supply chain, it is far more important, to test the supply chain to Mars, then to the moon. However, the fact is, that both the moon and mars will occur at the same time. Why? Because private space is pushing this, and multiple nations are backing it due to low costs.
But your argument that the moon is needed is absolutely false. Even on the supply chain, better to have several years of supplies there, as well as multiple robotics in place working on things, PRIOR to sending a single. And NONE of the conditions on the moon equates to what is on mars. I mean NONE.
,br> But, as I said, the moon will happen around 2020 (barring neo-cons interfering or pushing their god forsaken SLS), and Mars will be around 2025.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Mars should ONLY be done as a one-way trip, or a minimum of 10 years.
The fact is, that life likely is there. The last thing that we want to happen is for it to be transported back to earth.
And believe me, there are PLENTY of ppl that are willing to move to Mars and pioneer there.
But, the bet is on.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Kennedy had it right: "We choose to go to the Moon. We choose to go to the Moon, not because it is easy, BUT BECAUSE IT IS HARD."
Sometimes you have to push the envelope. And sometimes, that means good people have put their life on the line. Humans in general don't get really serious about things unless they have skin in the game. You have to get them interested. Call it STEM motivation. But one Apollo launch is worth a million laptops in some third-grade classroom.
Forget STEM. Let's think about JUST ONE question on Mars... one we cannot possibly answer inside Earth's atmosphere; only long-term exploration of the Martian surface will suffice: Is there life on Mars? The possible answers are "No", "Yes, a long time ago.", and "OH MY GOD IT'S EIGHT FEET TALL WITH SIX EYES AND IT WANTS TO SPEAK TO YOU SIR!"
Say it's "no" - there's no life on Mars, and never was. That tells us something important - Life is precious, life is delicate. Very important
message.
Or there _was_ life on Mars: what kind of DNA did it have, if any? ... or... if the physics are such that it couldn't have happened naturally, then (1) we are not alone, and (2) Mom is out there somewhere...
Again, very important message: either DNA can fly thru space ("panspermia"- and we are _NOT_ alone) or it evolved separately-
and we are still NOT alone - but there's another way for life to happen!).
Or there _is_ life on Mars: Same messages above, plus a whole new and mostly untarnished ecosystem to understand. We have only 1.1 ecosystems here (I count the undersea "black smokers" as 0.1 ecosystem). Add another, and maybe we can make some understanding headway.
What will we need to invent? I don't know! Neither do you. Neither did Kennedy. And it wasn't velcro, Tang, and funny ballpoint pens that were important. It was things like radar, and heat-resistant materials (look up Carnot efficiency to understand why that's important), and lightweight sensors, and lightweight, fast electronics, and computational fluid dynamics, and finite element methods, and precision navigation, and ...
We went into 1960 as a species that, if you couldn't solve it with fifty guys with pencils, papers, and slide rules, we couldn't solve it. (that shot of a roomful of guys in white shirts with slide rules calculating like crazy in "Apollo 13" was real, dudes.)
We came out of Apollo as a species that, if the problem was important enough, we had the means, the methods, and (most importantly, the confidence) to throw as much computation as had ever been done in the whole history of the world, every second, at the problem.
Oh- and that computer you're reading this on? Doesn't matter what brand, what OS... Wouldn't have happened if it wasn't for deciding that we needed to solve those FEMs and CFDs needed for space flight.
Those solar panels? Every gram you put into space costs you about $500. You're damn right we're gonna go full-bore on making good solar panels, simply because it's cheaper to spend a hundred million bucks on the research than to loft one more overweight comsat.
That pretty weather report with satellite images? Never would have happened if the First Seven hadn't all been shutterbugs, taking photos of weather systems like they were all out for the Pulitzer Prize. Same with the GPS in your phone, or your satellite TV.
It's not what we know we will find. It's what we don't know that is the value.
This is all Pie-In-The-Sky stuff until the teaparty decides it's time to raise taxes on their masters (Uber rich bastards) and fund not only NASA but also national infrastructure, etc., etc. As far as I'm concerned, until they do this they are simply blowing smoke out there arses!!!
My karma is bad. Don't get too close!!!