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Space

NASA: Planetary Exploration, Or Better Coffee 154

6EQUJ5 writes: "I sighed bitterly when I read the headline at MSNBC_SpaceNews_Front: "NASA voices 2020 vision for Mars" (OK, let's hope I live that long!) Bitterness gave way to sheer comedy when I read the next headline: NASA craft to watch coffee crop. Dan Goldin has the worst sense of priorities if he thinks 20 years is an acceptable time frame for a manned (and/or womanned) Mars mission -- in the meantime NASA picks up odd jobs like watching coffee grow." While these stories make a funny contrast, a) I'm sure there's a lot to learn (and plan) before sending a mission to Mars and b) if NASA's going to test cool new tech, like that solar wing, perhaps giving it a practical earthside purpose is a good idea.
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NASA: Planetary Exploration, Or Better Coffee

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Dan Goldin has the worst sense of priorities if he thinks 20 years is an acceptable time frame for a manned (and/or womanned) Mars mission
    Huh? Just the day before, I was discussing it with a friend and we figured about 30 years (10 if we really wanted it). Personally, I think U.S. priorities overall aren't very strong in favor of manned Mars missions anytime soon.
  • Here is NASA's budget (year 2000 numbers):

    $13.6 billion total. The breakdown: $5.5 billion for human space flight, $2.5 billion is for mission support. (I don't know how much of that is indirectly/directly supporting human space flight.) and $5.5 billion for "Space Aeronautics and Technology"

    In comparison, the entire National Science Foundation budget is $3.8 billion.

    Don't get me wrong, I think space flight is just as cool as the next person, but the return just doesn't justify the expense.

    And don't give me some crappy argument about how we will never develop better technology for manned space flight unless we go ahead and just do it *now*. This is pure nonsense. Did we gain anything by going to the moon in 1969 instead of 1999? Nope. Rocket technology would have still advanced just as much over the last 30 years as it did (Think of all the commercal satellites launches). And it would have been a lot cheaper(as a percentage of GDP) if we had gone in 1999 instead of 1969, and we could have brought along a lot better equipment to analyze the moon with than with we did in the early 70's. We would be ahead scientifically, that's for certain.

    In general, we can get nearly equivalent science with sophisticated AI unmanned probes as we can with people and for fraction the price.

    Which is better: spending several billion a year on a manned Mars mission or spending that same money on researching and building advanced aeronatics spacecraft which will make it much cheaper for to get into space in the first place?
    This puts it a much different perspective, doesn't it?

    Sorry, it doesn't make much sense to go to Mars just yet. Let's spend our money on the underlying technologies (material sciences, aeronautics, computers) which will make it easier to get us there when we do go. This is the much faster route for space colonization that attempting to got to Mars now.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    You have bought into NASA's propaganda machine.

    We would have ended up with much cooler stuff if we had invested those enourmous sums of money into other areas. Instead of spending money going to the moon, we could have spent the same money on semiconductor research in the 1960's and 1970's and have jumpstarted the computer industry by 10 years.

    Think about it: you would have a computer 64 times faster than the one you have now (Moore's law over 10 years).
  • by Anonymous Coward
    "You don't get advances by pumping money into something specific (better microprocessors), you get advances by pumping money into a *goal* (reaching mars)"

    This is just isn't true.

    IF you have to choose between the two, it's much better to choose technically challenging goals that accomplish sometthing worthwile, than it is to choose goals (like going to Mars) which have little direct benefit.

    Take the Human Genome Project. We get something very useful out of it (The human genome map) and we have devoloped several useful technologies along the way (better gene sequencers).

    Given that there are countless useful, technically challenging goals we can shoot for, sending people to Mars just for the sheer challenge of it displays a lack of imagination and feel for what are the important scientific and engineering problems we have right now.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Why doesn't NASA go back to the moon, establish a colony, and learn lots about living on an alien world 4 days away, rather than 18 months away.

    Once the ISS is fully populated, we'll know enough about living in space (not to mention have our best launching platform for inter-planetary travel) to be able to establish a colony on the moon. The information gained from this exercise could allow us to easily begin population of Mars, without sending (wo)manned missions that have to return after a few months because they run out of food.

    Much better to take the risk of things going wrong on the moon, where anything going wrong won't lose so much time.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 13, 2001 @09:00PM (#224266)
    The problem with manned missions is that they can, in the case of an accident, be a huge PR loss for NASA. And bad PR means further cuts in funding (the US public will ask itself, why spend millions to send people to their deaths when it could be spent looking for cures for our heart conditions?).

    In light of this, I can understand the careful planning. But I'm not sure that sending people to Mars is at all a good solution - it is expensive, dangerous (both in the human life and the PR senses) and takes more time.

    Developing and sending better remote-controlled and semiautomated equipment would be a better investment, since a) it's cheaper and b) developments in robotics and AI will have added positive side-effects.

    --
    Hans Petter

  • by jandrese ( 485 ) <kensama@vt.edu> on Monday May 14, 2001 @06:01AM (#224267) Homepage Journal
    Agent Smith apparently never downloaded the Nature Channel. The only thing keeping animals from growing out of control and eating everything in sight is that they just aren't all that good at hunting/reproducing/staying alive, at least as compared to humans. Check out what happens in an area when a local wolf mauls some baby. The wolves are "relocated" elsewhere and the deer population starts exploding until they literally eat everything in sight.

    I can guarentee that if some big preadator (like Lions or something) suddenly discovered an easy and effective way to hunt, their population would explode until the prey supply was exausted, then they would starve to death if they don't move on to another area. Humans are the only animals on the planet that actually make a concious effort to not eradicate certain speices some of the time, even when its in our power.

    Down that path lies madness. On the other hand, the road to hell is paved with melting snowballs.
  • Never mind all the amazing technology (like, uh, the transistor...maybe you've heard of it...) that you use every day.

    The vacuum tube was invented to improve the phone system, and the transistor to replace the unreliable, hot vacuum tube. The initial market was largely military, until Japanese companies like Sony developed the transistor radio. NASA didn't have a whole lot to do with it.
  • In a way, a lot of you don't get it. Goldin picked twenty years because in twenty years, people will have forgotten that Goldin made a promise about getting to Mars and we still aren't there yet. I remember when the space station was supposed to be done in ten years; I also remember when the shuttle really was supposed to be economical.

  • My mention of war was because war is often the other great instigator of technology. The amount of technical development we've had from the two world wars alone is staggering, simply because the necessity arose.

    I would argue that JFK's "goal" of reaching the moon was, in fact, motivated by war. The Cold War was in full swing in the early sixties. NASA was a logical extention of the DOD's missile development programs. The USSR's space program even moreso. When we shot a missile into space with a human aboard, we were demonstrating our technical acumen. We were demonstating that we can go faster, higher, farther...just like with the U2 spy planes. JFK's goal was as much to avoid a "Red Moon" as it was to land a man there.

    This leads one to conclude that war (hot or cold) was the primary driving force in technology during that period. Now, we could probably argue that technological developments, while still progressing rapidly in military arenas, are now largely dominated by hardware/software improvements in the private sector. And these are brought about solely by the almighty buck.

    That said, going to Mar...or even going back to the Moon, is not going to be a priority in the near future. We don't have to beat the "ruskies" there, and there is no profit in it. The only goal is to fulfill some Star Trek fantasies...and why bother, Hollywood does this for the greater mass of the population...$8 for a movie ticket, or $25 billion for a interplanetary mission?

    NASA will continue to be a hard sell. I don't necessarily like the situation, but the conclusions are pretty inescapable.
  • Heck, watching coffee crops on earth still has extraterrestrial implications - Watching vegetation for subtle changes has applications in watching for any kind of vegetation on a distant planet. It's one of the biggest uses of remote sensing technology today.
  • But we've all seen what would happen if modified bacteria from a NASA probe ended up back on earth. It's all documented right here [imdb.com]. Nothing would happen? I think NOT!
    --
  • Ah, but Og, rather than send tribespeople, we can throw rocks into the next valley first. Rocks are plentiful, and if there is a an firebreathing invisible-ape, we will hear it go "ouch!" when the rocks hit it. Some same that this is less heroic or exciting than going into the valley ourselves, but it seems very clever.
  • > big spacecraft that rotates to provide gravity.

    Or a smaller spaceship in two parts connected by a tether, rotating about the centre of the tether.

    --
  • by slpalmer ( 6337 ) <slpalmer@NoSPAm.gmail.com> on Sunday May 13, 2001 @08:41PM (#224275)
    So this mean's that NASA's now doing Java?
    ---
  • Get some perspective, please. European settlement of Australia was performed, in the beginning, by a bunch of second-rate soldiers, and (mostly) petty criminals, who were cooped up in hugely overcrowded cabins for six months, with terrible food and not that much water, to be dumped in a location as isolated as Mars was at the time, for the rest of their lives. They survived, set up a society, and after a long struggle the colony survived and prospered, becoming self-sufficent in all basic needs. Exploration trips were routinely conducted , often by relatively small parties away for months at a time - the exploration of Australia's south-eastern coast was performed in a boat little bigger than a modern sailing dinghy.

    Compare that to the slightly cramped, but well-equipped communcation-and-entertainment-equipment-laden (oh dear, it might take as much as *twenty minutes or so* for email to get through . . .) Mars explorer of the future, with a highly-trained and motivated crew knowing that immortality and fortune awaits on their return to Earth. Draw your own conclusions.

    Go you big red fire engine!

  • What makes anyone think that a manned mission of such unprecendented length will go off without a hitch?

    Mir. If the Russians can manage to keep people alive for months at a time with their inadequate budgets, why can't a Mars ship? I don't doubt there are considerable problems, but I can't see that the life-support issues are the intractable ones.

    Surely a ship can be assembled in earth orbit.

    Assembling things in orbit is an extremely slow and expensive proposition. It's much easier to screw bits together on Earth, where you can just get a technician to hit things with a hammer if they won't fit together :)

    Seriously, having to design things to screw together in orbit adds significantly to the cost and complexity - though I suppose that the US, Europe and Russia are spending $60 billion or so to make their mistakes with the ISS.

    Lots of redundency. We can't, for example rely on having a single ship (fueled by one of these proposed fuel `factories') at the other end ready to come back. It is too large a single point of failure. We'll need to send at least two of everything and three of some things.

    As soon as the crew launches, you have a single point of failure - what if the shuttle/launch vehicle blows up? Seriously though, it might be a good idea to do that. Why not put the Earth Return Vehicles a couple of hundred kilometres apart, and equip the lander with a couple of cars with enough range to travel to either one? That way, you get the redundancy, and an extra bonus of another base you can use for exploration purposes.

    Propulsion. It'll need to be done as quickly as possible, which means propulsion. This in turn means Nuclear (either directly or more likely powering a plasma drive or something).

    As I understand it, the way the orbital mechanics work out, you can't do much better than a 180-day trip, regardless of the power source, until you can get something that can maintain a continuous acceleration for the whole trip (which would require fusion power or something similarly exotic). Of course, if you can do that, the whole gravity question becomes irrelevant :)

    Finally, food? Are you serious? Ever heard of that remarkably complex technology known as "the freezer"? Ever seen the freeze-dried food bushwalkers eat (devised during the Apollo program, if I recall correctly)? Sure, they'll take along a few seeds to see whether the can make them grow in the Mars "soil", but they'll definitely be bringing their food with them using a combination of 19th-century and 1960's technology.

    Compared with the difficulty of 100% reliably intercepting ICBM's with another missile, Mars is easy. The greatest problem, in my view, is one you *haven't* touched on, the risk of a solar storm.

    Go you big red fire engine!

  • This "burn in your minds" ain't new. It's been around here for the last 30 years. Yes, it's cool to state such things. But the fact is, that projects are dropped out, funds are cut and certain politicians even applaud some over-volunteered move from NASA to nail us on Earth.

    Mars in 2020? Under the current political mood it would be impossible. Under the current administrative terms NASA rules it is not only impossible but also no less fantastic than a Heinlein's novel.

    Today is 14 of May 2001. So we are twenty years from Goldin's dream. Today ISS flies with technologies that Russia created some 20 years ago. USA & Russia flies ships that were projected 30 years ago and have been flying for nearly 20 years. Today most rockets work on ideas that are as old as our fathers. And the large majority of engines preserve the same designs of 30 years ago. Apart from this, we have several interplanetary probes that work on designs projected on the 70s and most of the probes sent to Mars failed.

    And today we scrapped nearly all interplanetary projects, except Mars. We also nailed into the coffin tens of projects to modernise and develope the present fleet of ships. The most flagrant, the desmise of the new Space Shuttle design (truly, the US Air Force took patronage of it but they are also not living their best days)

    This is the status of our Space Conquer, exactly 40 years after Gagarin... Mars-2020? Give me a break.
  • by DHartung ( 13689 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @11:45PM (#224279) Homepage
    I'm not a huge Goldin fan, but you can't blame him for talking about Mars while stuck monitoring coffee. Those priorities are set by Congress, and Congress is very suspicious of any program NASA funds that even slightly resembles preparation for Mars exploration by humans. For one thing, back under Bush, when Dan Quayle headed the Space Council, they delivered an Apollo-style to-Mars-in-20-years program that would have cost half a trillion dollars. Bush had called for the Mars plan, but when he saw the pricetag he didn't know anybody that had their names on it. Congress saw the pricetag and ever since they have believed that NASA is secretly lusting after a twenty-year pork barrel, and they'll try to get it by stealth if Congress doesn't watch carefully.

    Meanwhile NASA operational costs are eaten up by a ridiculously expensive launch vehicle and a circular-reasoning space station that, while it has its benefits, doesn't really deliver for the dollar. Science and exploration suffer. NASA is frustrated, but Congress's point of view is that back in 1970 they promised a shuttle that would do A through Z for a dollar, and NASA delivered a shuttle that does A through maybe G for ten dollars.

    Short answer: Congress does not trust NASA with money.

    The $4B accounting overages in the station program this year are just one more example.

    Again, I'm not a Goldin fan, but he does show creativity, as when he persuaded the Italians to maybe come on board the station program as full partners, not just as part of the ESA, by building the US a habitat module, maybe even the CRV. We'll see how that works in terms of actual funding.

    For those who aren't aware, there's a nifty Mars explroation proposal called Mars Direct [nw.net], which would cost a fraction of the NASA proposal -- perhaps $20 to 40 billion. NASA modified it into a $50-100 billion proposal dubbed Mars Semi-Direct. In any case, Congress still thinks a lower figure is a lowball figure and the taxpayer will get screwed in the end.
    ----
    lake effect [lakefx.nu] weblog
  • Hmmm, I was thinking more of this [imdb.com], but yours works too :)

    Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!

  • Umm . . . I was also joking, and it seems to have gone right over your head. Silly me, thinking that humor could be conveyed through clever writing, instead of liberal amounts of smileys. I suppose all the humor writers of the pre-Internet era got it wrong.

    That was humor, too. :) See?
    --

  • Because you'd immediately get all the conservationists claiming that, no, no, Venus should be left in its natural state, and doing anything to it would be evil and bad and wrong--sure, there aren't any living creatures there now, but why let a little thing like that stand in their way?

    And before we even get that far, we'd have all the same people making the fuss about genetically modified food and cloning joining forces with all the people making the fuss about NASA wanting to use nuclear power plants in its probes (and thus causing them instead to rely on overly complex solar arrays that probably contributed nontrivially to the recent Mars probe failures) to try to block the development of said bacteria. It's not natural! What if it goes off-course and crashes here on earth?! (Yeah, sure, in reality probably nothing would happen, but try telling that to someone worked up into (Self-)Righteous Indignation with their emotions firmly behind the wheel. They tried explaining that with the nuclear power plant in that outer-solar-system probe a few years back, as chronicled in the first chapter of that e-book about Australian hackers [underground-book.com] that was mentioned here in Slashdot [slashdot.org] a while back, and it didn't work then, no reason it would work for bacteria now or any time soon.) How dare we play God, Frankenstein, other classic movie monsters, etc. etc.

    People are all starry-eyed about doing all these science fiction things exactly until it seems likely that they could actually become reality. Then all of a sudden all the (tiny) real and (mostly) imaginary risks cause them to scream bloody murder. Gregory Benford had a great column about this sort of thing in F&SF Magazine in September of last year.

    In a very real way, one of the greatest obstacles to our space program is not lack of budget, it's all the protesters who will picket Cape Canaveral at the drop of a nuclear isotope. This is the sort of thing that causes NASA to ditch observatory satellites with at least several months of service left in them just to avoid the one in a ka-zillion chance that someone might be hit by it when it comes down otherwise. This is the sort of thing that makes every space probe and satellite we create nowadays more complicated and thus more likely to failure even before it gets into space. This is the sort of thing that will continue to dog us the more advanced our space program gets. Human nature. Human fear. Human stupidity. Is there a cure? I doubt it. Probably not for at least another couple of generations, until most of the fearmongers have died out and the new youth are more open to that sort of thing--unless the fearmongers pass their fear on to their progeny, of course . . .
    --

  • Oh, my. I may have to bow to the brilliantly reasoned and insightful scientific refutation to which you have linked, and concede the argument.

    Probably not, though.
    --

  • So, what you're saying is . . . Mars is a harsh mistress [booksamillion.com]?
    --
  • Frankly, I wasn't even talking about nuclear power here on earth originally, though the few quotes I was able to select from that article might have given that impression. I was talking about space probes that use power generators that are essentially big batteries that just happen to have a smidge of nuclear material in them. They don't fiss or fuse at all, they just provide a steady stream of power that won't run out in a few days or weeks the way a nine-volt will.

    But people hear the word "nuclear" in almost any context and have their own nuclear meltdowns. To quote Gregory Benford again:

    But the staffs of congressional committees are political to the bone, and they're scared of the N-word because the public has been terrified of it for decades. Nuclear power, nuclear weapons, even nuclear medicine; one wonders what they think of the nuclear family. Using isotopes on cancer patients has a tough time in some communities; Berkeley, California, banned such treatments, and has big signs up at the city line proclaiming so. But when I asked a friend who is a cop there, he allowed with a laugh that of course they all look the other way when Alta Bates hospital uses them, and brings in more short-lived radioactive isotopes for the purpose.

    --from A Scientist's Notebook: When Technology Fails, Fantasy & Science Fiction, Jul2000, Vol. 99 Issue 1, p104, 6p

    People are scared of it far out of proportion to the actual risks, largely due to reading all those science fiction stories of the previous century in which SF writers wanted to scare people and relied upon the most convenient bogeyman available--nuclear power. We're paying for it now.

    Look at Chapter One [sourceforge.net] of Underground, which chronicles the launch of the Galileo space probe, despite all the protestors trying to shut it down because there was an infinitessimal chance of something going wrong.

    Nobody's saying we should just go ahead damning all risks. But the thing is, the scientists calculate the risks. The odds of Galileo inadvertantly re-entering the atmosphere were 1 in 2 million. The odds of something happening on launch were 1 in 2700. NASA was well aware of the risks, and had done everything it could to minimize them. But the anti-nuclear folks decided not to believe them, and went to court over it.

    How infinitessimal a risk is "okay"? Should we not do something because of one in millions or one in thousands odds something might go wrong? Should we stick all our money in a sock under our mattresses because our bank might fail, taking all our livelihood with it? Should we take out mortgages on our houses and live it up, just because we might win the lottery and be able to pay it all back?

    Perhaps we should stop using solar energy and look for an alternate power source, because the sun might blow up, destroying our entire planet.

    Are these straw men? Perhaps. But then, it seems that most anti-nuclear arguments, like the one against the battery in Galileo, are founded on emotional appeals at their core--the fear of something that only might come to pass, at odds just about as infinitessimal as our bank failing or the lottery paying off, or, to use the old cliche, as being struck by lightning.

    Heck, look at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl, the worst nuclear accidents of all time. I mean, really look at them. Here's another quote from that first Benford article upthread:

    Chernobyl has yielded 31 dead already from direct effects. Among the 24,000 living between 3 and 15 kilometers of the plant, a simple projection from the dose rate they got gives 131 added cancers in that population. That is a 2.6% increase in the expected number. If they all smoked -- and a majority did, actually -- that would give a 30% increase.

    Ah, but what of the future? Considering the 75 million exposed in the Ukraine and Byelorussia, we get about 3,500 extra cancers, summed up over their entire lives.

    Sounds like a lot. But this is only a 0.0047% increase in the expected 15 million cancers they should have in future.

    Newspaper headline, front page:

    3500 DEAD FROM CHERNOBYL.

    Or, taking the other tack, there's a small item at the bottom of page 35 of that same newspaper:

    CHERNOBYL CANCER RATE "INFINITESIMAL PERCENTAGE" SAYS PHYSICIST. ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS ATTACK HIM.

    Okay, I favor the guy in the second headline. Still....

    Which one of these methods is "right?"

    Neither -- they just weigh different aspects of the problem. But it's clear how the media play the game.

    People are against nuclear power because they're scared of it. And in many cases, for no real reason other than what might happen.
    --
  • I cracked up when I saw these three articles listed in this order in my AvantGo Space.Com [space.com] download:


    --
  • by Robotech_Master ( 14247 ) on Monday May 14, 2001 @12:10AM (#224287) Homepage Journal
    What failures have we had so far with a space probe using nuclear power? We did it for decades before Three Mile Island and Chernobyl--with no accidents yet. Slashdot recently ran a story on how scientists had been able to contact one of the Pioneer space probes which is out far beyond the range of Pluto, where the sun is just another star and solar panels would be of no use. Think that would be possible without nuclear power?

    Think there's anything in the world without risk?

    Here are some excerpts from A Scientist's Notebook: Risk and Realities by Gregory Benford, Fantasy & Science Fiction, Sep 2000, Vol. 99 Issue 3, p112, 12p., retrieved from EBSCOhost via my public library's website. (Much as I'd like to, I can't paste the whole thing without stepping far outside the limits of Fair Use, so to obtain it with all context intact, go to your local library or equivalent website.)

    Still, such questions arise constantly in our technological world. In my last column I dealt with the Mars probe failures, but the element of risk appends to every human activity.

    We often forget this, demanding that something be "safe" when nothing ever truly is. As you sit reading this, probably indoors, radon gas accumulates in the room with you. In many homes it probably yields a higher level of radioactivity than if you were sitting right on top of a nuclear waste storage facility.

    . . .
    Lawyers argue their cases as though the world should rightly guarantee us all a life free of any chance of accident -- and if something bad happens, it must be somebody else's fault.

    That attitude arises because juries welcome it. Their perceptions of risk color courtroom judgments and public policy alike, but seldom very rationally (i.e., seldom with any quantitative sense).

    . . .
    Nuclear power provides a need that will be met somehow, after all. In North America it has lost the battle for public opinion. In Europe there is a regional schizophrenia. The French generate most of their electricity in nuclear plants, and have never had any big, risky events. Yet most of the rest of the western Europeans are trying to shut down the reactors they have. In Eastern Europe, reactors get a better perception. Even the Russians continue on with their extensive program, probably because they have so much invested.

    Burning oil and coal, on the other hand, kills about 10,000 people per year in the U.S.A. from increased lung cancer and emphysema. This number has been known from careful NIH studies for decades. Nobody gets excited about those deaths, ever...except the relatives, of course.

    The article also goes into why airline travel is perceived as more dangerous than automobile travel when air travel has a far lower death-per-miles-travelled rate than automobiles, why nuclear power is perceived as more dangerous than coal when coal kills far more people, and why you can find cancer-causing agents in almost everything, including peanut butter.

    Risk is always present. We can confine it to within acceptible levels and move forward, or we can try to make everything completely "safe" and stay frozen right where we are--because no matter what, someone is going to object to any attempt to introduce bold new techniques or technologies (ion or nuclear propulsion, anyone?) as too unsafe to try out, even under carefully restricted study and implementation. We can't just stagnate, or we'll never get humanity off this rock and safely ensconced on other planets before someone finally goes nuts and pushes The Button.
    --


  • I would rather spend less of my tax money on unmanned probes. I think I will get far more "spinoff" per dollar that way, without sending some poor people into space to deteriorate physically at best and die at worst.

    I think we'll get FAR more cost benefit from developing smart machines to explore Mars for us. We can turn right around and use these smart machines here, WITHOUT the expense of boosting a multi-year human habitat and life support all the way to Mars and back.

    Silicon survives in space better than people, after all. The only benefit of sending people instead of a probe is so that we can put footprints in Marsdirt.
  • Our trips to Mars should serve as the beginning to the eventual human expansion into space, and not some cheap theatrical stunt. They should be accomplished in a considered and sustainable manner.

    But what will that do to FOX, and their cadre of "ex-spurts" and investigative reporters? If it is done well, in a sustainable manner, how can FOX run, "Did We Really Go To Mars" in 2051?

    --
  • I think it was Popular Mechanics last fall that had an article on the debillitating effects of prolonged null-G living. They talked about rotating craft, but also about exercise machines that could create their own gravity. For example, a not-quite-stationary bicycle. Picture a vertical centrifuge, with a seat, pedals and handlebars in place of the "pod" that the person sits in. (Turn the centrifuge shown in so many space movies on its side.) Pedalling the "bike" causes the centrifuge to rotate, providing "gravity" to the person on the "bike." Possibly cheaper than a controlled rotation of the entire craft.

    --
  • I wonder what the first human on Mars will say, and whether it will be as memorable as Neil Armstrong's famous words...

    Yeah, I hope it doesn't have an "[a]" in it somewhere.
  • I promise that ninety four zillion more people will die from car accidents than all accidents concerning all forms of plutonium, from now until the end of time.

    Risks can be managed. The risks from nuclear thermal generator power plants in satellites are vanishingly TRIVIAL compared to, say, getting into your bathtub with wet feet.
  • Extracting water from regolith is an extremely difficult process. It basically involves baking cubic meters of soil to get out deciliters of water...with a tremendous energy cost. So, my point stands: water is readily available on Mars, and not on the Moon.
  • Twenty years? Dear God, the American rocketry program went from zero to the moon in eight years.

    The problem has nothing to do with technology, and everything to do with motivation. The American public is not sufficiently well-versed in history to realize that all exploratory endeavors like this pay back many times their cost. I'm making a purely economic argument...one which I believe is trivial compared to the sociological one. Humans are defined by the frontiers they conquer. Our lack of a frontier spirit shows up on the front page of every newspaper on Earth. Mars (and space exploration in general) provides an excellent goal. Why are we wasting 20 years to get to it? I've seen mission plans that cost 1/10 what NASA plans to spend, which allow us to set foot on Mars less than seven years from TODAY. Unfortunately, NASA is more concerned about preserving their monopoly on American heavy-lift rockets (a task for which the Space Shuttle is staggeringly ill-suited) and building Battlestar Galactica (er, I mean the ISS) to actually pick an EFFICIENT plan to go to Mars.

    I want to go so bad I can taste it, but it looks like NASA is doing everything possible to thwart the dream...
  • Like what, smart guy? If not for the Cold War, the money would have probably gone into some useless black hole like welfare (we called it the Great Society back then) or educational reform...and gotten exactly nothing back from it.

    The tax revenues from the communications satellite industry alone have more than paid NASA's funding. Never mind all the amazing technology (like, uh, the transistor...maybe you've heard of it...) that you use every day.
  • Considering the advances in life sciences and engineering we've made in the twenty (!!!) years since we went to another celestial body, and considering that getting out of Earth's gravity well puts you about half way to anyplace in the solar system (from a logistics standpoint), I'd say that an eight year plan to get to Mars is not overly ambitious. Twenty MORE years is just lazy.
  • Or think about Apollo 1. Gus Grissom, one of the astronauts who died in the fire on the launch pad, stated explicitly that the exploration of space is worth the sacrifice of human life. Every astronaut who ever strapped on a rocket knew the risks involved. They had huge numbers of brilliant people working beyond the limit of endurance to minimize those risks, but the risks were still there. The Challenger astronauts were no different...they knew that their chosen profession was risky, yet they stepped up to the line and took their chances. Any astronaut who thinks that space travel is "safe" is incompetent and not fit for the job.

    As far as your argument about pollution, I must infer that you haven't the faintest idea how a nuclear thermal generator works. If you did, you wouldn't be drawing these ludicrous parallels between NTGs and fission piles. They're about as much in common with each other as a yo-yo has with a semi truck.

    Here's a bit about NTGs. Machines with zero moving parts don't often fail.

    http://starfire.ne.uiuc.edu/~ne201/1995/cerven/r ea ctors.html
  • You don't have to trust anything I say. Do some research on your own. I suggest you start with R. Zubrin's "The Case for Mars". It's an excellent study that outlines precisely why a) returning to the moon is FAR less interesting and useful than Mars and b) exactly how one would go about supporting a long-term manned presence on Mars. It's FAR EASIER to do so on Mars than on the moon, simply because many important consumables (air, water, fuel) are easy to produce from indigenous materials on Mars.

    The moon is far more hostile and dangerous than Mars. Just because Mars happens to be farther away does not greatly compound the risks associated with the mission. Ready access to consumables, and a pre-made shield against cosmic radiation, are two major advantages for Mars over Luna. There are many more...I'll leave you to read about them.

    I am in no way suggesting a "glory quest" flags and footprints Mars mission. That would be worse than useless! Just look at what such a strategy has gotten us WRT the moon...absolutely nowhere. We've been jacking around in low-earth orbit for the last 20 years, and all we've got to show for it is a very mediocre space station that is years away from being useful. With current technology, it is possible to have a long-duration (910 day total, 400+ day on Mars) mission, doable in 10 years, for a small fraction of NASA's current budget. Why is NASA not doing it this way? Because they're trying to justify the ISS as a necessary component of any further exploration of the solar system.

    Read Zubrin's book, and think about every single successful exploratory expedition in human history. The best ones travel light and live off the land. It's possible to do much the same thing on Mars.

    We've already crawled. We know how to walk. What NASA is currently telling us is that we need a PhD in walking theory in order to run. Any four year old can tell you that that's not true. I say that we can figure it out quite nicely without all the intermediate nonsense (like ISS).
  • by Moofie ( 22272 ) <lee@ringofsat u r n.com> on Sunday May 13, 2001 @10:44PM (#224299) Homepage
    Because the Moon has very little life support infrastructure available. Mars has plenty. It's relatively easy to crack and compress the atmosphere into a human-breathable one, and water's not terribly hard to come by. You can even manufacture rocket fuel for your return trip using very simple chemistry.

    Supporting life on the moon is a pain in the ass. No air, no water, nothing interesting to anybody except geologists, whereas Mars has an excellent chance of supporting life, both human and indigenous varieties. It's not substantially more expensive to establish a base on Mars than on the Moon, but the return is far greater.
  • It's flying over Hawaii as mentioned in the story. Read the story before you make a stupid-ass anti-goverment comment.

    Besides, no one is forcing people to work on this specific plantation.
  • Your analogy makes no sense. We weren't destroying anything by going to the moon (as throwing a brick in a window destroys something).
  • We rushed to the Moon for political purposes, and all we have to show for it now is some grainy footage and a bunch of lucite encased rocks.

    Uh, not to mention the piles upon piles of research data. We have the Apollo program to thank for all sorts of advancements.
  • NASA is an arm of the US federal government. It operates on a 15 to 18 year cycle of high employment because otherwise its employees would start to acquire pension rights. Hence assuming that its operations will move at a faster rate is unrealistic. I think Goldin is being much more realistic than anyone is giving him credit for.
  • I wouldn't doubt that it could take 20 years for a manned Mars flight. If you knoe the history of the moon shots you know that it's a damn miracle that they ever worked at all. Just shove some guys into a tin can and blast them off into space! Yes, it was super cool and it did turn out great. But they technology that was used really wasn't up to the task. It was they men and women who were behind the metal and machines that made it possible. And I honestly don't know if we have any people like that around anymore. A good reason for this can be seen in this article [computeruser.com] published in the May issue of ComputerUser [computeruser.com].

    ---
  • How true. The conditions on Mars are so harsh that it will make an outstanding location for a penal colony. Mars will be our prison!

    Ha! You never know... Maybe it will start out that way, then go the route of Australia. Actually, that would be kind of cool if the penalty for violating the DMCA was deportation to Mars... Copyright violation, here I come.
  • Could be so, it could be that Mars is 20 years away just like AI and (useful) fusion have been 20 years away for the past 30 years. On the other hand, it does sound like he's saying, "we'll be there in 10 years if you fund us more, 20 years if we keep up the current pace".

    If he's not lying through his teeth, that's good enough for me.
  • by tbo ( 35008 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @08:47PM (#224307) Journal
    Check out this quotes from NASA Administrator Daniel Goldin:
    "Let's burn into our brains that this civilization is not condemned to live on only one planet... Let's burn it into our brains that in our lifetimes, we will extend the reach of this human species onto other planets and to other bodies in our solar system and build the robots that will leave our solar system to go to other stars, then ultimately to be followed by people."
    It sounds like NASA understands what so many don't: Earth is our birthplace, not our prison. The purpose of humanity, if we can be said to have a purpose, is to disperse life throughout the galaxy.

    I also find 6EQUJ5's whining about the 20-year plan to be misleading. Again quoting Goldin:
    "In no less than 10 -- and if we decide to do it, it could be done in 10 -- and certainly no more than 20 years we'll start writing history again and not looking back but looking forward,"
    In other words, if we put the same kind of effort and sacrifice into this that we did with the Apollo program, we'll be there in 10 years. Otherwise, 20 years. That's comparable to the timeline for the Apollo program, and it seems reasonable to me.

    I wonder what the first human on Mars will say, and whether it will be as memorable as Neil Armstrong's famous words...
  • Telstar, the first communications satellite, was launched in July 1962. The design of Telstar started in 1960, before Kenendy's man to the moon speech.
  • Ironically enough, I work for Fox. Perhaps I'll propose, "When Mars Faces Attack -- II!"

  • by marcsiry ( 38594 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @08:48PM (#224310) Homepage
    We rushed to the Moon for political purposes, and all we have to show for it now is some grainy footage and a bunch of lucite encased rocks.

    Our trips to Mars should serve as the beginning to the eventual human expansion into space, and not some cheap theatrical stunt. They should be accomplished in a considered and sustainable manner.

    All us dot-bombers know what happens when you throw together a grand plan in too little time. Think IBM, not eLaundryBasket.com.
  • I say we send Yahoo Serious.
  • "I personally love being cramped up in a 2-3 room house."

    Cramped up in a 2-3 room house? Can you hear the sound of my teeth gritting? Sir, have you *ever* lived in an apartment? A poor-college-kid downtown studio 0-bedroom apartment?

    Do you also have a Cadillac Escalade to go with your "cramped" 2-3 room house?
  • Acording to Dr. William Dobelle [dobelle.com] (creator of the first artificial vision - like Geordi LaForge) there are three steps to the aceptance of any significant scientific advance.
    1. It is contrary to the will of God.
    2. It will never work.
    3. Ok it works but we knew it all along.
  • Amen, brother. Once it becomes economically feasible (profitable), greed will get us there faster than you can say "Bill Gates has the biggest dome on Mars, the bastard!".
  • Such a plane would be excellent for picking up girls in Minsk.

  • I don't think it's that simple. The Europeans moving to America found a surrounding there that was able to support them easily. There were plants and animals and water and breathable air. Yes, it still was hard work, but at least they didn't have to bring everything with them for hundreds of years.
    I am not all that convinced that Mars is such a worthwile goal. Yes, it is a goal in itself. But apart from that, I think the benefits of people settling on Mars are exaggerated.
    Even the part about growing semiconductor crystals in space and stuff proved quite useless (or at least not economically interesting), and that was a concrete plan. But for Mars, I haven't seen any ideas like that.

  • I wonder what the first human on Mars will say, and whether it will be as memorable as Neil Armstrong's famous words...

    "FFP!!!!"

    (As in, First Footprint!!!)


  • You know, it's not exactly like Neil could have said "That's one small step for man... wait, let me try that again."
    --

  • Team up with Starbucks to hurry and send rockets to Mars, then have Starbucks help them hurry to deliver that horrible coffee they so often dispose on the public....

    Honestly though, they should take as much time preparing to get it right. I would rather see them wanting to wait 19 more years at the cost of a couple billion tax payer dollars, then see them spend a couple billion per year in failed missions going there. If all else fails, they could always fake pictures of lannding on Mars (har har) or explore another planet. Whats the big fascination with Mars anyways, there are so many others involved. Are they leaking out something they don't want the public to know?

    I've never heard any major stories surrounding any trips to other planets. Come to think about it, aside from Mars and the Moon, I've never even heard of any trips to places like Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, etc. Do they know something [antioffline.com] they don't want others to know?

  • Eh, check your history. The most important reason to send people to the Moon was to get their before the others did.

    If there would have been any actual benefit, be it from exploiting the resources, the technological advances made, or just sheer happiness of the people, we wouldn't have stopped after less than a dozens trips to the Moon, all about three decades ago.

    I cannot fathom one benefit from sending people to Mars. Sure, it would trigger some new technologies - but that's not Mars specific. After all, technology has advanced rapidly even after we stopped going to the moon, not to mention its progress the thousands of years before Kennedy's reactions on Gagarins first trip into space.

    What did the manned trips to the Moon bring us that we wouldn't have had without them? Neither velcro nor teflon were mined on the Moon. And the handful of rocks that were brought back could have been brought back by unmanned flights as well.

    -- Abigail

  • NASA represents a lot of what is Noble about being an American.

    You are referring to the time they mixed up metric and imperial measurements, right?

    -- Abigail

  • All it takes is proper procedures, design standards, and training, and nuclear reactors are safe as houses.

    Given Three Miles Island, Chernobyl, Sheffield and a handful of smaller incidents, it's clear that either we apparently don't have the proper procedures, standards or training, or that your claim is incorrect.

    Nuclear reactors, when handled properly, aren't any more dangerous than any other large, complicated thing that gets hot.

    It's not the temperature that makes nuclear reactors dangerous. It's the thing that causes the high temperatures that's dangerous.

    -- Abigail

  • Thirdly, the lack of atmosphere means that the satellites could be launched by a coilgun-like device from the lunar surface. So, there would be no need for messy and wasteful chemical rockets that ruin our atmosphere, especially the ozone layer. The energy for the coilgun would be solar electric power, which is abundant on Moon.

    Eh, yeah, right. Care to calculate how many rockets are needed before the moon has a base advanced enough to create earth bound satellites solely from the resources found on the moon? Could you compare that, taking into account that a rocket needed to shoot something to the moon is bigger and heavier than one to shoot a satellite into orbit, to the number of launches needed for satellites? And, while you are at it, compare the number of satellite launches to the number of launches needed to sustain the moonbase?

    -- Abigail

  • by Abigail ( 70184 ) on Monday May 14, 2001 @05:10PM (#224324) Homepage
    And I honestly don't know if we have any people like that around anymore.

    Most certainly do we have people like that. And lots more than in the late '60s, early '70s. The problem is that nowadays there are far more places such brilliant people want to work, and that are willing to pay such people lots of money. The problem certainly isn't the number of knowledgable people - the problem is hiring enough critical mass of brilliant people.

    As for the referred to article, the existance of a black cow doesn't decrease the number of blue parrots. I've little knowledge about the stock market, French literature and Hindi gods. But that doesn't prove anything about the quality of stock traders, French literature buffs or Hindi priests. Nor does it say anything about my qualities; at best it says something about my interests.

    -- Abigail

  • Starbucks is worse than tasteless slop. It's foul and/or putrid.

    --
  • I dont get it. With all the research going on surrounding hardy micro organisms that can survive extreme temperatures, why are they not looking into changing the climate of another neighbour of ours: Venus?

    Is it not unreasonable to believe that we could develop a bacteria that can survive extreme temperatures and pressures? They already exist on this planet, so who is not to say they cannot (with a few modifications) survive there?
  • some form of artificial gravity. I don't see the big deal here - just spin the damn space craft.
    Have you seen Babylon 5 [midwinter.com]? It would take something as enormous as that.

    You can't rotate quickly or everyone will get motion sickness. Studies I've heard of indicate a rule of thumb is one revolution per minute maximum.

    Do the math. To provide 1 G of rotational accelleration at 1 RPM , you have to have a radius of about 900 meters.

    w = (1 / 60) * 2 * 3.1416 = 0.105 radians / second

    a = w^2 * r

    1 G = 9.8 meters / second^2

    9.8 = 0.105^2 * r

    r = 894 meters

  • Mars would be far easier for man to exist on. Venus has something like 100 times the atmospheric pressure of eart, rains hydrofluoric acid and has temperatures over 200 degrees C. Compare that to average temperatures of -70, atmosphere 100 times less than sealevel on earth and no rain! You should read more science fiction!
  • by jimmoores ( 87214 ) on Monday May 14, 2001 @12:03AM (#224329)
    I don't think some of the readers have a grasp on just how difficult space travel is. Its all very well bandying around "We could do it in X years", but has anyone actually thought about this: NASA can barely hit the damn planet with a piece of junk reliably. What makes anyone think that a manned mission of such unprecendented length will go off without a hitch?

    If we do go we will need:

    • some form of artificial gravity. I don't see the big deal here - just spin the damn space craft. I've heard some comments that there are problems controling two body systems in a stable way, but there must be some way around it (rigidity, three-body systems, active feedback...?). All this endless talk about overcoming weightlessness (sp?) is stupid when such an obvious solution is at hand.
    • Lots of redundency. We can't, for example rely on having a single ship (fueled by one of these proposed fuel `factories') at the other end ready to come back. It is too large a single point of failure. We'll need to send at least two of everything and three of some things.
    • Size. The space craft will need to be large enough that the crew don't go mad and actually are comfortable. No spacecraft to date has been comfortable. NASA's approach seems to be: design something just big enough that the crew don't rip each others bodies apart inside a month and call it a success. It all seems motivated by wanting to fit the whole craft on a single, Saturn 5 style, launcher. Why? Surely a ship can be assembled in earth orbit.
    • Cost. Its going to be expensive. It'll cost at least $150 bn and probably more like $1 trillion. All this stuff about Mars on a shoe string is balls. It might be possible, but it won't be safe and nothing good would come of it. The crew would be miserable and in constant danger. Mars rather than a tax cut anyone?
    • Propulsion. It'll need to be done as quickly as possible, which means propulsion. This in turn means Nuclear (either directly or more likely powering a plasma drive or something). Nuclear means hard time winning over the public (even though it is so obviously the only choice and I am not generally a supporter of nuclear fission)
    None of this is in place. No propulsion system, no power systems, no space suits, no large ships (could we just fit out the ISS and actually make it useful?), no reliable food source (what if crops fail?) and heres the crux of it: NO MONEY. It will happen when there is cheaper access to low earth orbit and all these technologies are more mature. Perhaps I'm too young to remember Apollo, but that was a series of (remarkably lucky and I mean no disrespect to the people who worked on making it as safe as it was) week long outings. This is an eighteen month voyage. It is like assuming you can stay under water for two hours just because you managed to hold your breath for two minutes.
  • Okay, I agree that there are a lot of agricultural applications for this technology. But a couple of things just don't jive when we are talking about coffee. The article states:

    NASA will send an unmanned solar-powered aircraft soaring above a Hawaiian plantation so growers know exactly when to pick the beans for the most flavorful brew.

    First of all, the coffee cherries are not picked all at once, which is why coffee havesting is still done by hand. They ripen at different times and only the ripe ones are picked. Whether to pick or to leave a particular cherry on the tree is a human judgement call that can not be done by machine.

    The only way I could see this technology being applied is to determine the optimal time to strip-harvest the entire plantation by machine. It might actually save labour costs to sort the ripe beans from the unripe ones after they are harvested. But isn't this a terrible waste of otherwise good coffee beens, which, left on the tree longer, would produce good beans? Premature beans that get picked have to be composted to be of any use at all. Anyway, I think that such labour savings would only be significant in the US (i.e., Hawaii). In the countries where most of the worlds coffee is grown, stripping the unripe cherries from the trees would be more costly (through reduced yield) than by reducing the already cheap labour.

    From a flavour point of view, all this is moot anyway, since most of the worlds good coffee is a) improperly roasted, b) blended with inferior robusta beans and/or c) stale by the time it reaches the consumer. Never mind that most people don't even brew it properly.

    That's why I roast my own arabicas at home.

    Confessions of a Coffee Snob [hardfocus.net]

  • The problem with manned missions is that they can, in the case of an accident, be a huge PR loss for NASA. And bad PR means further cuts in funding (the US public will ask itself, why spend millions to send people to their deaths when it could be spent looking for cures for our heart conditions?).

    But we already have cures for our heart conditions:

    Get off the couch.
    Use your legs once in a while.
    Eat less KFC/MCD etc.
    Eat more fruits & vegetables.

    There, your heart condition is cured, let's go to mars. :)


  • I'd bet that by now most NASA folks have a love hate relationship with manned missions.

    They love manned missions for their ability to inspire enough people to get grassroots support from the public and from Congress to actually get enough money to do something.

    But, the cost of these missions is a *lot more* than what you'd need for sending a robot in place and there's the risk of a Challenger-like incident to depress everybody.

    I'd like to see funding increase for heavy use of increasingly sophisticated automated probes and remote+robotic construction to the moon, to Mars, etc.

    Then, as we get some kind of remote infrastructure built up, go for sending a human, once you can reduce the complexities of providing a habitable environment into smaller pieces that can be done remotely and automatically. Eg, get an electric power generation capability first, then see if you can get a climate-controlled, pressurized environment sustained for a while, grow plants, etc.

    I cannot know what great things we'll discover by doing these things, but I do know there will be amazing discoveries.

    If you ask me to sell the unknown to a Congressman badgered by HereAndNow demands for funding, then I am at a loss.

  • What when you don't really know the risks? Do you really think nuclear fascilities never dump their stuff out in the rivers? We've just had one such incident here in Norway, and we don't even have any powerplants! How about all the invisible changes due to radioactive clouds from Chernobyl spreading over most of Europe. When thinking about space, don't think about the Apollo moon-safari. Think Challenger.

    Btw, people talking about taking risks, mainly it's just talk. They want OTHERS to take the risk, cough up the dough and eat the pollution.

    - Steeltoe
  • Once it becomes economically feasible (profitable) See, the thing is, it will never become profitable if the technology isnt developed first. You need some massive R&D to get any space mission off the ground. Somone has to be the initial adopter. Think of computers, the first oomputers were millions of dollars apeice and didnt do all that much. The only people who could afford to build one was the government, because the government needed a computer to crack codes or whatever. After the initial outlay of money for R&D, companies started jumping on board, like the ISS. Russia is building a commercial module for the ISS, and of course the Tito flight shows that if you build it, they will come. Hell, the russians probably made a profit off that soyuz flight, even if thy have to give a little of it to NASA. My point is, in a new risky venture that has the potential for big loss, nobody wants to be first, but everybody wants to be second. If the government absorbs the initial risk, then the commercial interests can come in and exploit it. You really think any buisness looking out for their bottom line would build a 33 billion dollar space station? But any buisness looking out for their bottom line would love to have a spot to research on said space station when it gets built.

  • Dan Goldin has the worst sense of priorities if he thinks 20 years is an acceptable time frame for a manned (and/or womanned) Mars mission.

    What's wrong with it? I think it's an admirable goal. NASA's technically there already in terms of technology...they did plenty of research and development in the 70's, figuring out how to launch humans with the power of a nuclear rocket to Mars. There is only one problem: round trip is 1 year, 3 months time.

    What NASA has to do is figure out how to extend the physical and mental stress environments in order to accompany humans through space for that long period of time. Easiest (conceptual) solution: create some means of artificial gravity (I said a conceptual solution, not realistical). Well, either that, or make a faster rocket...

    They could do it in ten years...heck, I'm sure they could "do" it in five years, but for reasons of PR and government funding, they need the other 15 for research, development, and PR work.
  • by cperciva ( 102828 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @11:21PM (#224339) Homepage
    Twenty years? Dear God, the American rocketry program went from zero to the moon in eight years.

    Yes, but the moon is much closer than Mars.

    If we had rockets which could take us from earth to Mars in a couple days, we'd probably have men on Mars within a few years. When it takes at least 6 months to get to Mars -- which means at least 6 months for probes and equipment to get to Mars -- things are obviously going to go a bit slower.

    Somehow I doubt we'll go from zero to Alpha Centauri in less than 8 years either.
  • The problem is that we've been 10-20 years away from Mars. The problem is that 15 years from now, Goldin or his succesor will say "we could get to Mars in 10-20 years if we start working on it now".

    At this rate, the first person on Mars' famous words will be, "it's too bad only the five of us could be saved before that comet smashed the Earth."

  • I imagine how this kind of aircraft
    could be used for intelligence gatehring.
  • all the people making the fuss about NASA wanting to use nuclear power plants in its probes (and thus causing them instead to rely on overly complex solar arrays that probably contributed nontrivially to the recent Mars probe failures) to try to block the development of said bacteria. It's not natural! What if it goes off-course and crashes here on earth?! (Yeah, sure, in reality probably nothing would happen

    Well, d'uh. "probably nothing will happen" just isn't the kind of risk you take when a failure means tens of thousands of people getting a dose of Plutonium.

    In a very real way, one of the greatest threats to the continued existance of the human race is not lack of scientific knowledge, it's all the morons who can't get it into their heads that doing stuff because we can do it isn't good enough a reason to risk people's lives and do things we can't really predict the consequences of.

  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @09:46PM (#224348) Homepage
    In the late 1960s, NASA made serious plans for manned flybys (not landings) of Mars and Venus in 1977. Mission lengths were two to three years. The astronauts probably would not have survived that long in zero G. The zero-G record is 438 days in Mir, and that cosmonaut had lost bone mass, lost blood volume, and sustained other injuries.

    If this is ever tried, it either has to be a faster trip (which would require something other than chemical rockets) or a big spacecraft that rotates to provide gravity. Nuclear propulsion would work, but the political problems are tough.

  • by susano_otter ( 123650 ) on Monday May 14, 2001 @11:58AM (#224349) Homepage

    We would have ended up with much cooler stuff if we had invested those enourmous sums of money into other areas. Instead of spending money going to the moon, we could have spent the same money on semiconductor research in the 1960's and 1970's and have jumpstarted the computer industry by 10 years.

    You seem to be assuming two things:
    1. There are insuffcient resources to engage in both space exploration and semiconductor research with any degree of success.
    2. That desireable avenues of research and exploration are trivial to identify and commit to.

    Re 1: History suggests that this is not true. Generally, resource shortages have always been due more to bad resource management than a true scarcity of resources. We could conceivably have both "successful" space exploration and "successful" semiconducto research - at the same time.

    Re 2: Isn't it a little anachronistic to demand that your predecessors have the same desires and goals as yourself? Just because you would have chosen semiconductor research over space exploration in the 60s and 70s - if you knew then what you know now - this doesn't mean they should have made the same choice. In fact, it looks like everybody - the goverment, the populace, the scientists, &c. - wanted space exploration. So that's the direction they went in.

    Your argument is like saying the ancient Egyptians should have researched Existentialism instead of Pyramids, or that the ancient Greeks should have come up with a polio vaccine instead of the Socratic Method.

    Your criteria for evaluating the prior achievements of a society are underspecified.

  • We don't need to risk lives travelling to the next valley, We are doing just fine here in this valley. Besides, the young males would try to overthrow Chief Wug if he sent a team to go to the next valley and they were killed by the Giant Fire-Breathing Invisible Ape that lives just beyond our valley.

    Yes, we have everything we need here in Olduvai, so we don't need to do anything like explore what's over the horizon.

  • by GenChalupa ( 150051 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @10:26PM (#224358)
    It would probably be a wise move to attempt colonization of the Moon before colonization of Mars. The moon would serve as a shakedown field test for technology and techniques. If something goes wrong, it's a lot closer back to Earth.

    The key to major investment in the Mars program is potential profit. Mars is an untapped planet of ore, minerals, and *potentially* fossil fuels. While Congress might hesitate to fund a Mars mission for humanity's sake, they'd be happy to do it for Diamond's/Gold's/Oil's sake.

    And while the concept of stripmining Mars may seem unpleasant, it's quite necessary, and is the only way we'll ever see real colonization attempts. (Such mining would be severely limited, anyhow, due to purely geographic reasons.) Just as the New World provided land and resource to 16th-century Europe, so would a new world to 21st-century America.

    I imagine that such a massive endeavor is also going to require privatization. We've had the technology and resources to set foot on Mars for years. It's been a cf of silly alternate programs and disasters that have been the restraint. After the Martian rover wowed the American psyche, NASA should have intensified its efforts to get a manned expedition underway. A simple American flag on the surface would have been the catalyst for colonization.

    Dennis Tito has probably done more for the space program than he ever could have dreamed. I suspect that cash-strapped Russia will continue it's space tourism sideline. Eventually, it's going to allow a private commercial enterprise (no pun intended) to begin space flight and exploration. American industry will eagerly invest in such programs, (think of the profits and PR) pressuring the American government to allow similar commercial exploration (under the auspices of NASA, who would serve as an administrative body. NASA would undoubtedly continue it's scientific work as well.)

    In his upcoming report of massive military overhaul, Secretary Rumsfeld also seems to be casting an eye towards space for military endeavour. (Beyond the missile defense shield.) Not to sound too Trekker, but Starfleet may be closer than we think.

    GenChalupa
  • I was fortunate enough to attend a presentation by Robert Zubrin [space.com] when he was on my campus about 3 months ago. He provides a compelling argument for a direct-to-Mars project, utilizing technology which currently exists. We could be on Mars in under 10 years. Specs are located here. [nw.net] Zubrin, a succesful author, is also one of the leading supporters of the Mars Society [marssociety.org]. The most fascinating aspect of their proposal, is that they want to use "private" funding (ie not governmental funds). I really don't know of a cooler open source project. This could be the next SETI@Home.
    ----
  • by Dark Nexus ( 172808 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @08:34PM (#224363)
    Better coffee (be it better tasting, just a bit cheaper because of larger crops, or something else) could lead to the NASA Engineers being able to pull more all nighters and get us to Mars sooner!

    The road to Mars is paved with double cream, double sugar!

    Dark Nexus
  • I guess what you are kind of saying is "We got a lot of stuff out of the exploration of space and the shot to the moon because so many different technologies were advanced. But now that we've done that, we are really only extending the capabilities, and not therefore going to produce those neat spin-offs like astronaut ice cream and space blankets."

    I kind of agree. What will we accomplish by landing there? It isn't like in the movies, when we find all these killer bug-like creatures or are enlightened and attuned with the unverse by meeting up with some wispy gay Martian guy. It will be like the Moon Landing, but with better audio/video, and much more coverage. Or no coverage; hard to tell since the timelines are so long.

    On the other hand, why not go to the moon? We sure spend our money on worse things, and relatively speaking, this would be a somewhat noble human conquest, turning all our heads skyward. NASA represents a lot of what is Noble about being an American, and a human being, too.

    The real answer, of course, is that we Are in our birthplace, and our graveyard, and it's our job to take care of everything in between. If you want to talk priorities, think of NASA's Mission to Planet Earth. Now there's a good spin-off, IMO.

    One more thing: I got the pleasure to hear Dan Goldin talk at a company meeting. Very dynamic fellow, and compelling as well. I'm sure he's from my hometown area New York! I can't imagine a neater job than to be steering the largest non-military space program in the world, albeit after the Challenger disaster. (Well, except for that last part, the job would be cool.)
  • Are you not forgetting something ?...

    Don't get me wrong, I think space flight is just as cool as the next person, but the return just doesn't justify the expense

    Well sure, Armstrong didnt find huge amounts of gold on the moon, so of course that trip itself was expensive.
    What you seem to forget is that there are huge spinoff effects, both in science and other areas. Money spent is money earned, which is money made... the economical spiral.

    The travel to the moon has had great impact on humanity, where would the world be today otherwise ? No satelites ?.. that would suck

    You're argument is like saying : It would have been better if Christofer Columbus sailed to America in 2000, it was to expensive at the time."

    Time is of absolute relevance to research, the earlier, the better!

  • I'm all for a mission to Mars in 20 years, but I hope it doesn't take much longer to find a good reason to do it.

    While it is generally agreed that Columbus was not the first European to discover America, he was the first to generate any kind of commercial interest to be there. Just 100 years after that, serious settlement began. The same thing could happen on Mars, perhaps within a similar timeframe. You might think that's an outrageous, not to mention expensive proposition, but I'm sure that Europe had the same sentiment just 500 years ago.
  • Sounds good, but there are technologies needed for Mars that cannot be tested on the moon. Moon has no atmosphere - Mars does. Mars has more gravity than the moon - a differently engineered landing technique is needed.

    At least one other poster has mentioned Robert Zubrin. His Book The Case For Mars explains how we could go to Mars cheaply and within 10 years starting from scratch. Remember Apollo was "zero to the moon" in about ten years. We are not starting from zero here (although nearly zero because of twenty years of stagnation).

  • some form of artificial gravity. I don't see the big deal here - just spin the damn space craft. I've heard some comments that there are problems controling two body systems in a stable way, but there must be some way around it (rigidity, three-body systems, active feedback...?). All this endless talk about overcoming weightlessness (sp?) is stupid when such an obvious solution is at hand.

    If we can get the nuclear propulsion (perhaps the Arthur C. Clarkesque fusion power, ejecting a propellant) that can be kept on for long enough - you don't have to even bother spinning the sucker. Just have it accelerate at a constant 5m/s per second - which will give you 0.5G gravity. Or if you have good enough propulsion systems, have it accelerate at 10m/s per sec. - that's 1G. At the halfway point, flip around and decelerate at the same rate.

  • "It would probably be a wise move to attempt colonization of the Moon before colonization of Mars. The moon would serve as a shakedown field test for technology and techniques. If something goes wrong, it's a lot closer back to Earth."

    We'll probably go back to the Moon sooner rather than later. NASA has a 'secret' wish list called the 'Decadal Plan', which examines what they would like to do in the decade following the completion of the International Space Station in 2006-07. Rumour has it that they are looking at 100-day missions outside lower Earth orbit, either extended stays of 2-3 months on the Moon, or (even cooler), missions outside Earth orbit entirely to passing asteroids. The ISS would serve as an assembly and staging post for such missions. I wish I had a link for this, but it han't been leaked in its entirety yet. Any obliging NASA employees out there?

    "The key to major investment in the Mars program is potential profit. Mars is an untapped planet of ore, minerals, and *potentially* fossil fuels."

    Leaving aside the extremely dubious possibility of fossil fuels, it is unlikely that bulk materials mined from Mars will ever become a commodity here on Earth. You'd have to boost them out of Mars' gravity well and on a trajectory back to Earth. We mine mineral ores here on Earth by the millions of kilograms, so unless we develop antigravity anytime soon, it's unlikely to be economically feasible.

    Far more likely is the exploitation of mineral resources in Earth-crossing asteroids. A lot of them are essentially billion-ton lumps of high-grade metals. We could install big ion drives or other propulsion sources on their surfaces and slowly coax them over a period of years into a (high enough for public-opinion comfort) orbit around Earth. It would then be simple to use Earth's gravity well to deliver the mined materials direct to Earth's surface.

    Even this is unlikely to ever happen. We just aren't that short of raw materials here at home, and recycling is likely to be far more economical for the forseeable future.

  • "NASA voices 2020 vision for Mars"

    That's good. We don't want any blind planets around.
  • Ever heard the saying "they can put a man on the moon, but they still can't make a decent cup of decaffinated coffee"?

    Looks like NASA's finally responding to what the people want! [/me dodges thrown tomatoes]

  • I agree that the Moon should be colonized first, but I think Moon has much more potential than just a testbench for colonization technology.

    Moon has no atmosphere. This means, it is a natural cleanroom for spacecraft building.

    Secondly, a launch to low-Earth orbit requires much less energy when the starting point is Moon, not Earth. (This may sound a little odd, but you can check the physics.) The energy required is less than 20 per cent of that needed for the modern Earth-based launches.

    Thirdly, the lack of atmosphere means that the satellites could be launched by a coilgun-like device from the lunar surface. So, there would be no need for messy and wasteful chemical rockets that ruin our atmosphere, especially the ozone layer. The energy for the coilgun would be solar electric power, which is abundant on Moon.

    Fourthly, Solar cells can be made from Lunar ilmenite (a realitively abundant mineral), so manufacturing them up there would be relatively easy. This means not much material needs to be transported to the Moon from here to start Lunar development.

    Finally, in Moon there are no (environ)mental NIMBY's.

    To cut it short, Moon is a natural spaceport.

  • some form of artificial gravity. I don't see the big deal here - just spin the damn space craft. I've heard some comments that there are problems controling two body systems in a stable way, but there must be some way around it (rigidity, three-body systems, active feedback...?). All this endless talk about overcoming weightlessness (sp?) is stupid when such an obvious solution is at hand.

    To spin a spacecraft takes FAR to much power. You have to anchor a portion of the spacecraft so that it doesn't spin, and then spin another portion. One way of offsetting the spin is to spin two equally sized chunks, in opposite directions.. Also, spinning the shuttle wouldn't work. It would have to be hundreds of feet across to have a serious effect. If you spun the shuttle, you would have max gravity on the floor, and max negative gravity on the ceiling since the middle of the craft is still 'no gravity' and either size is pulling towards the outside of the spin. You craft would have to be large enough to put the entire human on one side of the craft. And it wouldn't be 'perfect' gravity since the higher you go the less gravity there is.

    Their current plan to overcome weightlessness is to build an operating table sized bed. The astronaut lays on the bed, with their feet on two supports at the foot of the bed. The head of the bed is connected to a motor device. The whole bed spins in circles and causes weight on the astronaut who then exercises in a 'excessive gravity' environment. He can then go back to living in weightlessness without serious health concern. This system takes far less power and is easier to maintain and build.

    Size. The space craft will need to be large enough that the crew don't go mad and actually are comfortable. No spacecraft to date has been comfortable. NASA's approach seems to be: design something just big enough that the crew don't rip each others bodies apart inside a month and call it a success. It all seems motivated by wanting to fit the whole craft on a single, Saturn 5 style, launcher. Why? Surely a ship can be assembled in earth orbit.

    Or get people that like small spaces. I personally love being cramped up in a 2-3 room house.. With a little training and a lot of stuff to work on (Constant science projects there and back) I could handle it no problem. It's not for people that like large open spaces, but for those of us who like a tight area this works great. Also think though, the crew of a Sub stays in the tight sub space for 3 months (IIRC) so it's not a completely impossible option.

    Propulsion. It'll need to be done as quickly as possible, which means propulsion. This in turn means Nuclear (either directly or more likely powering a plasma drive or something). Nuclear means hard time winning over the public (even though it is so obviously the only choice and I am not generally a supporter of nuclear fission)

    Remember once you get it started it maintains its momentum really well. 6 months there and 6 months back really isn't that long of a trip. It's not short, but it's not 4 or 5 years. Current rocket based systems would still work. And a nuclear reactor? In space solar panels are FAR more effective than on earth. No sense in installing a reactor when they can pull lots of energy from the sun itself.
  • by number one duck ( 319827 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @09:37PM (#224398) Journal
    Seriously though. You don't get advances by pumping money into something specific (better microprocessors), you get advances by pumping money into a *goal* (reaching mars), and then solving the new problems that arise. The former just gets you refinements of existing things, the latter tends to get you things that are completely new.
    My mention of war was because war is often the other great instigator of technology. The amount of technical development we've had from the two world wars alone is staggering, simply because the necessity arose.
    I'd rather set a goal, then reach for it, than depend on market forces or the coming of some dire necessity.

    Gezundheit.

  • Earth is our birthplace, not our prison.

    How true. The conditions on Mars are so harsh that it will make an outstanding location for a penal colony. Mars will be our prison!

  • by DreamSynthesis ( 415854 ) on Sunday May 13, 2001 @11:48PM (#224404) Homepage
    All personal feelings on this topic aside (and I assure, I've got 'em), let's stop for a second and ask ourselves what people really want out of NASA, anyhow?

    Yes, I know I'm risking a science/culture/gov holy war here (so please DON'T GO THERE). I simply pose the question: What do the people want?

    NASA is funded by YOUR tax dollars (at least, "your" applies to American /.'ers) as well as the guy/gal next door's. On the one hand, you have the fact that a lot of emphasis recently has been put on "staying close to home" with federal R&D money, which is what NASA funding essential boils down to. For people who lean this way opinion-wise, NASA should spend its time figuring out ways to enhance human life on Earth through space research.

    On the other side you've got the folks who are advocate pure research and "science for the sake of science." This crowd might as well start slapping "Mars or Bust" bumper stickers on their cars tomorrow.

    I tend to go for a more middle-of-the road approach, as in "leverage *all* forms of space research, whether far from or close to home, for the direct benefit of all on Earth." Unfortunately, this requires more of the average citizen than is commonly found: the ability and interest in taking the time to *really* research what's actually happening in space tech, *really* research what's actually lacking in our societies as a whole, and merge the two into concrete objectives.

    I'm as guilty of this as the next Joe, but it's generally a true statement the most people who are heavily involved in hard science and research aren't heavily involved in "human matters." Kind of a paradox, I suppose.

    I'd appreciate comments on this (seeming) issue.

  • Earth is our birthplace, not our prison. The purpose of humanity, if we can be said to have a purpose, is to disperse life throughout the galaxy.

    That's nearly a direct quote from Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower [allscifi.com], a sci-fi story about a girl who fled her gated community when it was attacked by gangs and angry mobs. The dream that kept her going specifically was for humans to "take root among the stars."

    I whine about "20 years" because NOBODY can be held accountable for that long if things go wrong. Even some murderers are released in less time. What if I promised I'll build you a huge, elegant mansion to live in.. but I won't be around when it's finished- how convenient! No earth can ever be broken on big, risky projects if people aren't held accountable. With a 5 or 10 year project, at least you'll have someone to blame when bad luck, incompetence, and cowardice all come together and the mission fails.

    Helping coffee growers max out their yearly profits is absolutely ridiculous. It's a nice, safe mission, isn't it? I'm sure the iron men of the old NASA would be very proud. (lol)
  • by asincero ( 450481 ) on Monday May 14, 2001 @05:50AM (#224411)
    The guy you replied to said:
    "You don't get advances by pumping money into something specific (better microprocessors), you get advances by pumping money into a *goal* (reaching mars)"

    You said:
    "This is just isn't true."

    To back this up you used the following example:
    "Take the Human Genome Project. We get something very useful out of it (The human genome map) and we have devoloped several useful technologies along the way (better gene sequencers)."

    How does your example support your statement that what the guy you were replying to said was untrue? The goal was to map the human genome. To accomplish this goal, new technologies had to be developed.

    Now, I know the point of your response was "choose worthwhile goals." But the "not because it is easy, but because it is hard" reason for sending people to Mars seemed to be a good enough reason for sending people to the Moon. Besides, how is sending people to Mars not a worthwhile goal? You must think humans eventually being able to colonize other worlds to be a total waste of time.

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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