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Tags nasa , NASA space program

View Poll Results: Is President Obama's plan for NASA a good idea or not?
It is a mistake. 10 34.48%
Who cares? I just want to watch Comedy Central. It is where I get all my political opinions. 3 10.34%
It is all good. 11 37.93%
President Obama can do no wrong. 5 17.24%
Voters: 29. You may not vote on this poll

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Old 22nd April 2010, 10:47 AM   #1
Bill Thompson
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Is President Obama's plan for NASA a good idea or not?

Is President Obama's plan for NASA a good idea or not?

I watched a comment by a former director of NASA say that it is not a good idea because a private company launching people into space is not the same as a government agency because of the likely fatalities. It would be more cost effective for a private company to discontinue and shut down rather than go through with the demands of an investigation. This former director (you can see him in the MSNBC videos) puts it, it is a colossal mistake.

Last edited by Bill Thompson; 22nd April 2010 at 10:48 AM.
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Old 22nd April 2010, 10:54 AM   #2
Drysdale
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Another dumb idea by the chosen one.
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Old 22nd April 2010, 10:58 AM   #3
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There are some aspects of his plan I can get behind, but in total, the plan is a cop out and a disappointment.
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Old 22nd April 2010, 11:42 AM   #4
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I was extremely disappointed that NASA is getting some rather extreme cuts. I've always been a big fan of the space program, and I would like to see it continue.
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Old 22nd April 2010, 11:46 AM   #5
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The program will continue. It merely takes a different form.

Look, two guys who walked on the moon can't seem to agree with the future of our space program: Neil Armstrong is very critical of the current way ahead, Buzz Aldrin generally supportive.

I like the idea of increasing the use of robots/probes to explore Mars. The lessons learned and advances will enable, or demonstrate the wrongness of, a manned mission to Mars.

Going back to the moon: why?
DR
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Old 22nd April 2010, 01:26 PM   #6
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Originally Posted by Darth Rotor View Post
Going back to the moon: why?
DR
Why study the earth? We live here we see it every day. We pretty much learned everything there is to learn about the earth.


Climb mount Everest? Why? a crap load of people have done that already. Why would anyone else eve want to climb that old boring pile of rocks?

Been there done that.


Explore the bottom of the ocean? why? It takes alot of money and equipmemt to support people down there. It's dangerous. Robotic exploration of the sea floor is much more safer and economical. Lots of people have died there already. Anyway we've already had people down there, it all pretty much the same, just alot of water and silt.

And soforth......
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Old 22nd April 2010, 01:28 PM   #7
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Bickering about the best way to go aside, we all agree that abandoning the Space Shuttle program is a good thing, right?
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Old 22nd April 2010, 01:34 PM   #8
Bill Thompson
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Originally Posted by Darth Rotor View Post
Going back to the moon: why?
DR
(1) Clean and Limitless Energy. Using the materials that are up there (silica and titanium) you could make solar collectors the size of entire nations on the moon. The amount of energy would be outrageous. It could easily be sent via microwave to collectors on earth.

(2) Putting The Hubble Telescope to Shame. What makes Hubble so valuable is the fact that it is not restricted by our atmosphere. So too would be true entire farms of Observatories on the moon but with abilities we cannot even imagine now. So you might say "big deal". How about this idea then: Our planet (Earth, by the way) is in a shooting gallary of life ending asteroids and commets. We do not have the time or technology to find and study them all. If we did, we could do something about it, thus saving our species. Populating the Moon with observatories that could track them is a good reason for going back to the moon.

(3) Our First Test of Lunar Soil. Few people know this but the first people to touch the service of the moon with their bare hands were not the astronauts. They wore gloves, remember? One of the first things scientists wanted to know about the lunar dust was if plants grew in lunar soil. They do. I remember it was a fern tree seedling. This means we can grow food on the moon. This means we can ship people up there -- albeit, it will have to be via a that space elevator (sigh, I know, i will have to stop and explain that here). Just think of it. If there was a sustainable ecosystem on the moon, prison overcrowding and dealing with islamofacists could be pushed aside. The UK once used Australia in a similar way dealing with their unwanteds.

(4) Going to the Moon makes going to Mars much much easier. The moon has a tiny fraction of the Earth's gravity. THis is good for many reasons. Two of these reasons are: (#1) it makes the possibility of building huge objects much easier and; (#2) it makes it much easier to launch huge objects. It will be easier in the long run to build and launch rockets to Mars from the Moon than from the Earth. So, why go to Mars? (sigh) I could make a long list for that too. Manned missions with a lab right there on the surface of Mars would speed up the understandings of the solar system and why live did or did not get kicked off on Mars. In short, we would learn what we did not even know what we do not know. Also, it is not talked about often but the asteroid belt has enough material wealth (apart from the unobtainium ) to make everyone on earth billionares (so to speak, that is. I mean, I know the economy would be offset).

(5) It is a lot like asking "why go to the New World?". Lots of people in the 1700's and 1800's would ask such a question. But people did because of an undescribable spirit. They knew why but they could not put it into words. And they were right, it has turned out.

I can come up with more reasons perhaps. But how does ending the engergy crisis, saving humanity and creating a more peaceful world sound so far?

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Old 22nd April 2010, 03:17 PM   #9
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
I can come up with more reasons perhaps. But how does ending the engergy crisis, saving humanity and creating a more peaceful world sound so far?
Good post.

I suspect his call for going to Mars or an asteroid is just grandstanding.

But then, perhaps Obama got "The Briefing" about the real asteroid threat or the threat from martians?

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Old 22nd April 2010, 03:50 PM   #10
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I like the idea of going to Mars. I liked the idea when Bush pitched it as well.

Mars > Moon
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Old 22nd April 2010, 04:19 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by willhaven View Post
I like the idea of going to Mars. I liked the idea when Bush pitched it as well.
But Bush didn't pitch the same thing. He pitched a moon program to serve as a "stepping stone" for future manned missions to mars. He pitched using lunar resources on those mars missions. He pitched establishing an "extended human presence on the moon" that "could vastly reduce the cost of further space exploration, making possible ever more ambitious missions". He pitched assembling and provisioning spacecraft on the moon which "could escape its far lower gravity using far less energy and thus far less cost." He pitched a lunar colony that might have accomplished much.

What Obama is pitching is basically grandstanding, not unlike the first race to the moon. And how many of Obama's supporters think that was a good idea?
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Old 22nd April 2010, 09:30 PM   #12
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
Is President Obama's plan for NASA a good idea or not?
You forgot the poll option for: cautiously optimistic.

There were two threads about this already in the Science forum.

Some technical points:
- Is everyone agreed that humans did not travel beyond low earth orbit since before 1973? That's 37 going on 40 years, with no reasonable outlook!
- Whether you supported Constellation or not, can we at least agree that even optimistic NASA estimates put Orion and Ares I at 2015? That this was the so-called "gap," and was a concern to lawmakers before Obama ever addressed it?
- Can we agree that even once the Ares V design was complete it would be between 40 and 50 years since humans had gone beyond low earth orbit, and that a subsequent launch date was mere speculation at this stage?
- Whether you supported Constellation or not, can we at least agree that Constellation had technical detractors, that Orion had to be scaled back due to Ares I performance issues and that Constellation was bound for a low flight rate?

Things needed a serious kick in the pants and a massive change in direction. Some people believe that another grand plan was in order with some kind of goal like, "Land 13.5 humans on Mars by 20tickety2. Plus, spit on the Chinese." I strongly believe that that day is done. I'm cautiously optimistic that this route is the radical change that human spaceflight required.

I suspect that there are going to be bumps, perhaps even retrograde steps. At times it will look like commercial spaceflight may fail. However, I suspect that from the perspective of 200 years from now, this era will have been seen not as the beginning of the end, but as the beginning of the beginning...

...

Now politics.

It annoys me to see conservatives wail and gnash their teeth about such things as access to health care for their fellow citizens. They cry that private industry can do everything better. Yet, finally with a destination (the ISS and maybe Bigelow), giving private industry access to transport contracts in space is also roundly decried! Which is it? Is private industry good or bad? Very frustrating...

Conversely, it frustrates me to read about liberals wanting to scrap the space program altogether. Uruk, I think you were reading something like this into DR's post, but I'll ask the non-political question:

...

Why the moon? I don't mean stop exploring, I mean why bother? Why not develop the technologies to reach further out into the solar system? Frankly, the moon would be an afterthought rather than a stepping stone. Once people can travel to Mars, putting a telescope on the moon would be almost inconsequential as a secondary outcome.

Finally,

From a technical perspective this is, hands down, the best approach in my mind. Money should be given to private companies to develop crew transport and for Heavy Lifter research. In fact, I submit that for a decade or so, these activities should proceed with no regard for fancier long-range missions! One of the most painful legs of any space trip is the stage to low and higher earth orbits. We should really focus on making that part easier with higher flight rates (and maybe, just maybe, access to private flights by private citizens which is what some of us space fans have hoped for, all along ).
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Old 22nd April 2010, 11:27 PM   #13
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
(4) Going to the Moon makes going to Mars much much easier. The moon has a tiny fraction of the Earth's gravity.
Yes, but the problem is that everything we actually want to send to Mars is down here, and not up on the moon. The additional cost of escaping the Earth's deeper gravity well are huge, but still pales against the costs of developing the moon to the point where you can actually build a spaceship on the moon from materials mined on the moon.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 03:37 PM   #14
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Originally Posted by BeAChooser View Post
Good post.

I suspect his call for going to Mars or an asteroid is just grandstanding.

But then, perhaps Obama got "The Briefing" about the real asteroid threat or the threat from martians?

Then give me kudos. You can do that here, right?

I thought of another reason. The moon, to much of the world is a "heavenly body" a "celestial object". It is etched in your collective psyche somehow. It is because of this that going to the moon was such a big deal in The Cold War. It was a psychological triumph. It gave the USA a boost over the USSR that nothing else could.

Going to the moon the first time was mostly a military mission. Even though it was a PR mission in this sense, it was still effective.

We are overlooking how returning to the moon (not necessarily by us alone) could also be used as a military and PR mission. It could be one heck of a proverbial "carrot" This time, launch the Saturn V rockets from Pakistan using Afghani astronauts under US engineering.

Something else is this. We do not have to send people there straight away. We could send up supplies for now, even tanks of water. That alone might make people consider that peace would be better for their and their kids future than war with the west. The spirit that we can do anything is something to be shared with the world.

=========

I thought of another reason (I smell a blog forming -- I might rework this into a blog) is that we don't have a choice. We have to if we want to survive. Eventually, human live on the Earth is going to end by one of several causes. Spreading humanity across several different moons and planets increases the odds of our survival.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 03:46 PM   #15
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Originally Posted by Leif Roar View Post
Yes, but the problem is that everything we actually want to send to Mars is down here, and not up on the moon.
That is not correct. A mission to Mars will not look anything like a mission to the Moon. There are little simularities. We are not talking about a few days. We are talking many months.

It is a bigger deal no matter how you do it. And no matter how you do it you are going to need either big bulky ships or many small ships.

Raw materials that would make the bulk of the hulls can be from the moon and launched from the moon. The small expensive components can come from the Earth.

I know, lots of people think that we will build something in orbit and shoot it to Mars. But that is a one-shot expensive pipe dream.

The reality is this. It took several baby-steps and many Saturn V launches to get to walk on the moon just once. Remember, it was Apollo 11, not Appllo 1 or even Apollo 4 that was a complete step down to the moon. If we really wanto to go to Mars, it would most likely be sucessful if we build dozens of big bodied ships on the moon rather than a single roll of the dice from Earth's orbit or lower.

Building a huge ship to make a mission successful and launching it from the earth would be difficult.

Assembling anything in orbit is also difficult. Just look at any of the latest footage from Nasa.

The best choice is to build it on the moon.

Putting a base on the moon is not as difficult as you might think. I wish more people could have attended the meetings about the Space Elevator that I have sat through.

The bottom line is this. An argument that going to the moon will not help or aid going to Mars carries little weight (ha, a pun).

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Old 23rd April 2010, 03:57 PM   #16
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Originally Posted by Jimbo07 View Post
Frankly, the moon would be an afterthought rather than a stepping stone. Once people can travel to Mars, putting a telescope on the moon would be almost inconsequential as a secondary outcome.
Why is that? Why would walking on Mars come second to a telescope on the moon?
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Old 23rd April 2010, 04:20 PM   #17
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The moon is a very bad place to site a telescope.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 04:52 PM   #18
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The Space Program is a gigantic waste of money. Once cannot consider themselves a fiscal conservative and support NASA.

NASA should receieve zero funds as long as we have yearly deficits.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 05:52 PM   #19
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Originally Posted by Darth Rotor View Post
Going back to the moon: why?
DR
This:


http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...m3_000630.html
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Old 23rd April 2010, 06:04 PM   #20
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Originally Posted by BenBurch View Post
The moon is a very bad place to site a telescope.
but a good place for an observatory.

Do you mean it is a bad place for a telescope like Earth's orbit is also a bad place for a telescope?

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Old 23rd April 2010, 06:07 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Iamme View Post
This further supports my idea as using it as a lunch pad to Mars.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 06:14 PM   #22
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Old 23rd April 2010, 07:01 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
Is President Obama's plan for NASA a good idea or not?

I watched a comment by a former director of NASA say that it is not a good idea because a private company launching people into space is not the same as a government agency because of the likely fatalities. It would be more cost effective for a private company to discontinue and shut down rather than go through with the demands of an investigation. This former director (you can see him in the MSNBC videos) puts it, it is a colossal mistake.
Wrong. It is BECAUSE of the fatalities that the private sector will take the lead. It costs too much money to even put a test rocket or craft in space, that a failure would be the end financially - to say nothing of the negative press.

Consider Virgin Galactic. They're charging $200,000 for a 3-hour space flight, plus a few days and night of pre- and post-flight celebration at the Virgin Island that Branson owns. ONE bad flight, and that program is over. Besides Branson, there is another billionaire named Paul Allen behind the technology and concept.

I certainly hope you aren't a tea party member, or in any way supportive of smaller government or against government-run health care, because if you are, irony meter gonna blow.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 07:31 PM   #24
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
Putting a base on the moon is not as difficult as you might think.
Putting a base on the moon is one thing. Putting an [i]industry[i] on the moon is something else entirely.

How many thousand men and how many thousand tons of equipment do we have to send to the moon before we'd even be able to make milled steel there?
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Old 23rd April 2010, 07:42 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
but a good place for an observatory.

Do you mean it is a bad place for a telescope like Earth's orbit is also a bad place for a telescope?
No, I mean its a bad place for an observatory;

1. The sky is only half-visible.

2. There is a LOT of thermal "shine" from nice hot moon rocks much of the day and the first few days of the night.

3. Dust that is very sticky and electrically charged - bad for optics.

The right place for a large telescope is orbiting the Earth-Sun L2 point. Which is where the Herschel Telescope was deployed.

MUCH easier to get to/from than the moon, too, in terms of Delta-V required.
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Old 23rd April 2010, 10:38 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
Why is that? Why would walking on Mars come second to a telescope on the moon?
I think there's been a misunderstanding. Once we could put boots on Mars, putting a telescope on the moon as a follow-up project would be comparatively trivial. In short, a program of building up technology potentially gives us both.

Originally Posted by BenBurch View Post
No, I mean its a bad place for an observatory;
Why? I thought it was the best place in the solar system due to the EM blind spot away from Earth. That's touched on in this article, which reminds me...

... another technology that Obama mentioned was in situ resource utilization. It seems to me like he was really listening!
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Old 24th April 2010, 12:12 AM   #27
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Originally Posted by Thunder View Post
The Space Program is a gigantic waste of money. Once cannot consider themselves a fiscal conservative and support NASA.

NASA should receieve zero funds as long as we have yearly deficits.
Hah! As a fiscal conservative, I am deeply offended. The Space Program has likely resulted in the highest ROI of any industry--public or private.

Which is to say nothing of the black holes (had to use a space analogy) that nearly all other government programs are--especially entitlement programs.
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Old 24th April 2010, 07:16 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Thunder View Post
The Space Program is a gigantic waste of money.
You've now just expressed what I think a large fraction of Obama's base believe. Which is why I'm a bit skeptical about Obama's sincerity where space exploration and development is concerned. If I were NASA I wouldn't depend on him staying true to this latest vision any longer than is politically convenient for him and his party.
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Old 24th April 2010, 07:44 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by barrymore View Post
Hah! As a fiscal conservative, I am deeply offended. The Space Program has likely resulted in the highest ROI of any industry--public or private.
I think that's a baseless assertion which has no foundation in anything but wishful thinking.

I like the space program, and I'm in favour of the space program, but this idea that the spin-offs and technologies developed from it are so many and so great relative to the total cost of the program -- I've never seen that idea actually supported with anything resembling a thorough analysis. It's just a feel-good meme, "this must be true because I want it to be."
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Old 24th April 2010, 08:00 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by Leif Roar View Post
I think that's a baseless assertion which has no foundation in anything but wishful thinking.

I like the space program, and I'm in favour of the space program, but this idea that the spin-offs and technologies developed from it are so many and so great relative to the total cost of the program -- I've never seen that idea actually supported with anything resembling a thorough analysis. It's just a feel-good meme, "this must be true because I want it to be."
I suppose here is a good place to start:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_Budget
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Old 24th April 2010, 10:10 AM   #31
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Originally Posted by Bill Thompson View Post
(1) Clean and Limitless Energy. Using the materials that are up there (silica and titanium) you could make solar collectors the size of entire nations on the moon. The amount of energy would be outrageous. It could easily be sent via microwave to collectors on earth.
They could do that in the Sahara, Gobi, Western America, and lots of other places RIGHT NOW without the added cost of leaving Earth and landing on the moon. They could also build huge solar collectors IN SPACE right now that are always in sunlight, without landing on the moon. When you discover why they haven't done either of these things, you'll discover why they won't do it on the moon.

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(2) Putting The Hubble Telescope to Shame. What makes Hubble so valuable is the fact that it is not restricted by our atmosphere. So too would be true entire farms of Observatories on the moon but with abilities we cannot even imagine now. So you might say "big deal". How about this idea then: Our planet (Earth, by the way) is in a shooting gallary of life ending asteroids and commets. We do not have the time or technology to find and study them all. If we did, we could do something about it, thus saving our species. Populating the Moon with observatories that could track them is a good reason for going back to the moon.
A better idea is putting more Hubble-like telescopes in space so they can look 360 degrees along all three axes. On the Moon, they could at most look 360 degrees along one axis and 180 degrees on the other two. Plus, the telescope in space, again, could always be in sunlight, while one on the moon might be in darkness part of the time.

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(3) Our First Test of Lunar Soil. Few people know this but the first people to touch the service of the moon with their bare hands were not the astronauts. They wore gloves, remember? One of the first things scientists wanted to know about the lunar dust was if plants grew in lunar soil. They do. I remember it was a fern tree seedling. This means we can grow food on the moon. This means we can ship people up there -- albeit, it will have to be via a that space elevator (sigh, I know, i will have to stop and explain that here). Just think of it. If there was a sustainable ecosystem on the moon, prison overcrowding and dealing with islamofacists could be pushed aside. The UK once used Australia in a similar way dealing with their unwanteds.
What? There's still very little water on the moon and no atmosphere (no CO2), so most of the water would have to come from Earth. ONCE AGAIN, it would be so much easier to transform deserts on Earth than to incur the added cost of leaving Earth, landing on the Moon, and enclosing a huge area in a biosphere.

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(4) Going to the Moon makes going to Mars much much easier. The moon has a tiny fraction of the Earth's gravity. THis is good for many reasons. Two of these reasons are: (#1) it makes the possibility of building huge objects much easier and; (#2) it makes it much easier to launch huge objects. It will be easier in the long run to build and launch rockets to Mars from the Moon than from the Earth. So, why go to Mars? (sigh) I could make a long list for that too. Manned missions with a lab right there on the surface of Mars would speed up the understandings of the solar system and why live did or did not get kicked off on Mars. In short, we would learn what we did not even know what we do not know. Also, it is not talked about often but the asteroid belt has enough material wealth (apart from the unobtainium ) to make everyone on earth billionares (so to speak, that is. I mean, I know the economy would be offset).
So... you agree that going to Mars is a good idea. Then why not just skip the Moon and go right to Mars, which has the same atmosphere problems as the Moon, but has lots of water and low gravity? Everything you needed to launch rockets from the Moon would have to come from Earth. Save a step and billions or trillions of dollars and go right to Mars. You're practically arguing this already.

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(5) It is a lot like asking "why go to the New World?". Lots of people in the 1700's and 1800's would ask such a question. But people did because of an undescribable spirit. They knew why but they could not put it into words. And they were right, it has turned out.
Again, you're practically arguing for going to Mars already. Because the New World people didn't have debates about going to Iceland, Greenland, the Azores, the Canaries - they'd already been there, just as we've already been to the moon. They argued about going to the New World, which is a metaphor for MARS in this case.

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I can come up with more reasons perhaps. But how does ending the engergy crisis, saving humanity and creating a more peaceful world sound so far?
Like a pipe dream. If we're not doing it here, we're not going to do it anywhere else. Are you in favor of giving up petroleum-based energy? Do you own an electric car, or have windmills or solar panels on your property? Right, and neither do most other people.
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Old 24th April 2010, 10:40 AM   #32
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Originally Posted by Jimbo07 View Post
I think there's been a misunderstanding. Once we could put boots on Mars, putting a telescope on the moon as a follow-up project would be comparatively trivial. In short, a program of building up technology potentially gives us both.



Why? I thought it was the best place in the solar system due to the EM blind spot away from Earth. That's touched on in this article, which reminds me...

... another technology that Obama mentioned was in situ resource utilization. It seems to me like he was really listening!
A RADIO telescope on the far side of the moon might be useful, but a robotic radio telescope in deep space would be more useful as you can use it to create a very, very long interferometry baseline, while being so far from the Earth that our radio emissions are insignificant to it. The moon is a disadvantageous place for any optical telescope.
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Old 27th April 2010, 06:22 AM   #33
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Originally Posted by Leif Roar View Post
I think that's a baseless assertion which has no foundation in anything but wishful thinking.

I like the space program, and I'm in favour of the space program, but this idea that the spin-offs and technologies developed from it are so many and so great relative to the total cost of the program -- I've never seen that idea actually supported with anything resembling a thorough analysis. It's just a feel-good meme, "this must be true because I want it to be."
Try these also:
http://www.sti.nasa.gov/tto/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NASA_spin-off

And you thought NASA just did space stuff.
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Old 27th April 2010, 06:28 AM   #34
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isnt NASA to socialistic/Communistic?

i dont know why Commrade Obama is so against Socialiced space travel.

he as a Communist. strange

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Old 27th April 2010, 08:01 AM   #35
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I think we get more bang for our buck by sending machines into space than humans. The best science we're received from NASA in the past 30 years has not come from human space travel.
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Old 27th April 2010, 09:11 AM   #36
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Originally Posted by Darth Rotor View Post
Going back to the moon: why?
For one reason, to explore. You can't go to a world 6 times for 3 days or less each time and claim to have explored it. And for another, probably more important reason... we have a lot of work to do to become proficient living and working on another planet before we go to Mars. We could probably throw together a mission and send people to Mars to plant a flag and say we've been there. Then it would be over and people like you would say why go back, we've been there. We can check off Mars on our list of places to explore.

Naturally though we want to take advantage of Mars and explore it and learn to live off the land. We need to figure out how to reliably produce fuel and refuel for the return trip home. We need to learn how to do critical maneuvers like landing on another planet without mission control support because of the 20-40 minute comm delay time. Not to mention the 2 week comm outage when earth and mars are on opposite sides of the solar system.

We need to learn to operate on another planet WAY more than 3 days... more like months at a time. That means maintaining equipment with minimal backups and no resupply. Learn to handle medical emergencies when the nearest hospital is 40-150 million miles away. And on and on... We must learn all these things and get them right the very first time on a trip that's 170 times further and 85 times longer than any of the moon missions during a mission to mars at what will be more than 65 years after the last moon landing by BO's schedule.
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Old 27th April 2010, 09:15 AM   #37
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Originally Posted by ksbluesfan View Post
I think we get more bang for our buck by sending machines into space than humans. The best science we're received from NASA in the past 30 years has not come from human space travel.
I would say that not an entirely accurate statement (see links to NASA spinoffs) but I will agree that the manned space program has been floundering a bit aimlessly for the past 30 years because of a lack of commitment and direction.
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Old 27th April 2010, 09:21 AM   #38
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Originally Posted by ksbluesfan View Post
I think we get more bang for our buck by sending machines into space than humans. The best science we're received from NASA in the past 30 years has not come from human space travel.
Robots weren't able to tell us where the moon came from. Lunar samples brought back by astronauts did that. I'd say that's pretty good science.
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Old 27th April 2010, 10:17 AM   #39
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Originally Posted by DrBaltar View Post
Robots weren't able to tell us where the moon came from. Lunar samples brought back by astronauts did that. I'd say that's pretty good science.
They could have if we would have sent robots instead of humans.
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Old 27th April 2010, 10:29 AM   #40
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Originally Posted by ksbluesfan View Post
They could have if we would have sent robots instead of humans.
The Russians did send rovers and robots that brought back samples. They found nothing like the Genesis rock. Besides, science isn't the only thing that can be done there. Louis and Clark didn't go out west with a chemistry set. I don't think people know what exploration means anymore.
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