The Moon's Magnetic Umbrellas 125
eldavojohn writes "When it comes to space exploration, there are things that are good for humans (water) and things that are bad for humans (radiation). In order for exploration of the moon to occur, its lack of a global magnetic shield to block solar radiation must be addressed. Luckily, scientists have discovered that there are highly magnetized areas of the moon's crust that could shield settlements." From the article: "Current evidence suggests that impact-basin ejecta materials [material blasted out by huge asteroid or comet impacts] are the most likely sources of many or all of the magnetic fields ... These ejecta contain microscopic metallic iron particles that are the carriers of the magnetization."
hmmm... (Score:3, Funny)
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This is ridiculous (Score:5, Funny)
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TMA-1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:TMA-1 (Score:5, Informative)
The parent was a reference to the "Tycho Magnetic Anomaly 1," the discovery of the second Monolith in the novel and movie, "2001: A Space Odyssey."
The first monolith was temporarily positioned near the early homo erectus tribes, giving them a sort of gift of wonder and exploration, which immediately translated to tool usage and subsequent dominance over their competing tribes for resources.
The second monolith was a simple beacon to indicate when mankind was ready to travel away from its home planet. It was buried under the crust of the moon, and the ONLY indication it gave to humanity was that it disturbed the natural magnetic flux of an inert rocky ball. Tycho itself may have even been shaped to help lead mankind to it. Once exposed to the vacuum of space, it sent a loud radio signal that would be heard by the likely discoverers as well as lead them to the next monolith breadcrumb.
Of course, Dave Bowman found the third monolith despite the psychotic interference of a computer with competing secret directives.
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insensitive clod.
-nB
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-nB
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Spoil a 40 year old movie? (Score:2)
Actually though, you're kind of lucky. The original 2001:A Space Odyssey was really long and boring. Its 'magic' depended upon its special effects and the degree that they were taken seriously at the time. Now, they would be really boring.
Still
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Actually, it was sunlight hitting the previously-buried and newly-excavated TMA-1 monolith that caused it to emit the signal (shown quite clearly in Kubrick's film; see also here [wikipedia.org]) ... but you've got the gist of it.
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Nit: TMA
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Colonies in huge crater sites? (Score:1, Insightful)
So the question that remains to be answered is
Do asteroids hit the same spot twice??Terraforming (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Terraforming (Score:5, Interesting)
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Showing my ignorance here but I thought the atmosphere was the key shield against radiation. The magnetic poles switch every so often and while they're switching I thought the magnetosphere pretty much collapses. Yet life appears to go on.
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Terraforming would also probably be out of the question since the soil there is made of a rea
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At least, this is how I remember hearing it from that Discovery channel special about the history of the earth.
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Ah, yet another item in my to-do internet research list. (sigh)
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Short List (Score:5, Funny)
Vaccuum
Lack of hospitable worlds within a light-lifetime of Earth
Space junk in LEO
Lack of food/flora/fauna
Lack of easy return trips
Metric/English conversions
Klingons
Frakking toasters
Pod bay doors
Random ion storms which give superhuman powers
Maniacal dictators who for some reason want to use their newest Deus Ex Machina on Earth
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I thought you said these things were supposed to be bad for humans... if that's the case sign me up, I'll take one for the team here.
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OK, Dr. Von Doom.
Ah ha!
Re:Short List (Score:5, Funny)
I don't think giving superhuman powers to a guy named Apocalypse111 is the best move.
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You'll find that's a hazard on Earth as well. And it leads to some embarrassing questions from the EMTs, let me tell you...
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So the dictators are going to lower actors on stage with cranes? What's wrong with a little resolution?
Re:Short List (Score:4, Informative)
Self-aware planet destroying bombs
Aliens that look like beach balls with funny feet
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Don't you mean maniacal directors?
Lunar Magnetic Anomalies? (Score:2)
Never going to happen (Score:3, Interesting)
We might as well face it... settlements on planets is never going to happen. Couple of reasons:
1) The moon is too ugly and the gravity too light.
2) Mars is ugly too, but even beyond that, it won't be allowed because we won't want to screw up the natural environment for study.
The future of space settlements is space stations floating in space. We can have any environment we want (including green), we can simulate natural gravity via spinning, and we can engineer shielding. Settling other planets is romantic, but impractical, and arguably very few people would want to live on a dead rock anyway.
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Re:Never going to happen (Score:4, Insightful)
1) The moon is too ugly
I guess one man's ugly is another man's beautiful
A plus for most Americans - instantly lose 5/6 of your weight just by relocating
2) Mars is ugly too, but even beyond that, it won't be allowed because we won't want to screw up the natural environment for study.
Can't study it properly if we don't go there. Studying Mars will likely be the justification for any first settlement.
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I guess one man's ugly is another man's beautiful
I'm sure there's *someone* how would enjoy living on a cold, dead rock, just like there are people who choose to live in Antarctica... wait, does anyone choose and/or desire to live in Antarctica? Sure, it's a nice place to visit...
The beauty you speak of is the romance of living on another planet. After the romance is dead, we'll see how many people really want to live there.
A plus for most Americans - instantly lose 5/6 of your weight just by reloc
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Allowed by who? Seriously. If I happened to have the technology in my backyard, right now, to go to and survive on mars, who is stopping me from settling there or even claiming ownership of part or whole planet?
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If I happened to have the technology in my backyard, right now, to go to and survive on mars, who is stopping me from settling there or even claiming ownership of part or whole planet?
What, do you think your going to just load up your ark spaceship with a pair of every animal and supplies that will last forever? Any sort of settlement is going to need Earth support for centuries before it could be self sustaining, if it EVER could be self-sustaining. And it's not like an undertaking like that is going t
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Anyone know?
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The whole point people are missing here, is that nobody is there on Mars, that we know of. Mars is not a Nation, it is a planet, so the United NATIONS and any interNATIONAL agreement really has no clout.
I hereby proclaim myself the ruler of Mars
Of course th
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What if I happened to have knowledge that UNDER the surface of Mars there is plenty of natural resources for me and my small team of settlers to survive on? Just because you don't THINK it's possible, does not mean it's not. The only information we have about Mars right now comes from telescopic views, and quite
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What if I happened to have knowledge that UNDER the surface of Mars there is plenty of natural resources for me and my small team of settlers to survive on?
That's great -- and exactly how are you going to get all the digging equipment, refineries, and a million other products of civilization that you don't think about over to the planet? Unless you think there is some great supply of food growing underneath the rock, you're not going to have much time to build an industrial civilization before the next
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"What for?"
"Because it's mine."
"Where did you get it?"
"From my father."
"Where did he get it?"
"From his father."
"And where did he get it?"
"He fought for it."
"Well, I'll fight you for it."
-- Carl Sandburg, "The People, Yes"
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Huh? Oh, I get it... you are inferring that many Americans are overweight! Ha! That's so clever! And looking around the office right now, it seems you're right! There are overweight people working here! What a hoot! You should do your own comedy bit. Such a funny guy...
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Maybe he was referring to the fact that other folks talk about weight [sic] in kilograms, which won't change on the moon ;-) How much do you mass?
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(Apparently they're Slashdot readers -- who knew?)
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I don't see why Mars should have it easier than Earth. We have a whole universe to mess around with; fire up the ion drives and let's start sending our genetically modified progeny to start terraforming! Yee-haa!
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That said relativity can help a bit. go fast enough and it only takes a short time from the perspective of the travelers.
And with a bussard ramjet the whole universe is a sea of fuel.
Mycroft
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We might as well face it... settlements on planets is never going to happen.
They said the same thing about unix on the desktop.
Great settlement idea. (Score:5, Funny)
Metamaterial Shielding (Score:2)
But in regards to radiation shielding, could the recent advancements in metamaterial technology possibly offer a solution?
After all, there has been recent success with microwave radiation (albiet at a very limited and precise wavelength) - could meta-materials be concieved which block the other popular radation types?
What would be the major hurdles to overcome?
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See current Analog magazine (Score:4, Informative)
Are the sites ideal for other necessities? (Score:4, Interesting)
The article is great, because it does outline the major problem facing permanent settlement on the Moon: radiation. But there are some other necessities that need to be addressed, like reinforcing of the magnetic field during solar flares, the crater's proximity to other elements for the production of power and water, and the need for solar power.
While it's a great start, it doesn't answer all the questions, which leaves scientists and future lunar explorers with a great question: Do they build up a complex network of sites, or continue to try to find the ideal spot?
With increasing pressure from other countries to get to the Moon first, as well as additional programs to settle the moon as a research outpost, the pressure is on. So while this is a great find, and will augment any magnetic solution that mankind could come up with, it's only part of the puzzle. That being said, it is an important part of the puzzle.
... other countries to get to the Moon first (Score:2)
"Alexander the Great, Black Death in Europe in 1347, Neil Armstrong in 1969. And which timeline are you from?"
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Also what do to when whatever made the crater in the first place comes back!
Those things are bad for you..... (Score:1)
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Curiously Strong Magnets (Score:1)
Oblig. (Score:1)
I must be a freak then... (Score:4, Insightful)
Being a fan of light and heat but not drowning, does that make me a weird human?
As the old saying goes: all things in moderation. Radiation's pretty useful, just as water is. Overwhelm my body with either though and things start to go wrong. In the history of humanity though, I'm guessing more people have died from too much water than too much radiation - if only due to the convenience of access to excess of one and not the other.
Magnetic Anomalies on the Moon (Score:4, Funny)
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A very good joke on the Tanenbaum-Torvalds debate [wikipedia.org].
Extend the Earth's Shield? (Score:2)
Dome. (Score:1, Interesting)
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Meanwhile, at the astronaut training center...
Fry: Ow, my sperm!
Bender: Wow, neat. Mind if I try that again? [Points radiation gun at Fry again]
Fry: Huh! Didn't hurt that time.
Is it just me? (Score:2)
Alternative explanation (Score:3, Funny)
Just do what they did in the 60s... (Score:1)
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Wait (Score:2)
The best part of building near a crater is you are safer from future meteor strikes; it sort of follows the whole "lightening never strikes twice" principle. Speaking of which, I wonder how lightening rods work.....
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Magnetic umbrellas? (Score:4, Funny)
Listen, fellas.
Stop the rays
Or so they tell us:
Burma Shave
is it just me? (Score:1)
TMA-1 (Score:1)
Filthy Astronauts (Score:1)
Not a good idea (Score:2)
This is what I like to see (Score:1)
If we weren't such pussies about the word... (Score:2)
Why the hell do we keep looking for the whiz-bang expensive solution, when there is an easy and standard solution already available and working? I'll tell you why:
We are
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Yes, such a rocket could "explode and pollute our atmosphere", however, it isn't as if we as a species are doing much better here on the ground. Furthermore, I tend to doubt that the global rate of death (or even cancer) would increase that much even if it did happen - we probably increase such ra
Space 1999 (Score:1)
Nothing to worry about, it's all perfectly natural.
Hello!? What other major thing causes magnetism? (Score:1)
In 2005, the mission to comet Tempel 1 called Deep Impact shot a copper ball into that comet. To my knowledge, NASA scientists still have not adequately explained the results of that experiment even though plasma cosmologist accurately predicted the results *before* the impact occurred. For a thorough summary of those results, visit http://www.thu [thunderbolts.info]
Required reading for this thread: (Score:1)
Re:Three words (Score:5, Funny)
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