Utah, the New Red Planet 174
tsornin writes "The Philadelphia Inquirer reports in this article that Mars Society crews have chosen Wayne County, Utah as an effective simulant for the Red Planet. Although Mars exploration is hardly a high priority on any government's list at the moment, Robert Zubrin and other Mars Society members hope that through their research in Wayne County and in the even more remote northern Canadian location, they can show world governments that a mission to Mars is viable."
Re:I can understand why... (Score:1)
Re:Does anyone remember "Pathfinder"? (Score:2)
Not very talkative bunch (Score:1)
Biased science (Score:1, Insightful)
Shouldn't the goal of this research be to determine if a mission to Mars is viable? The society has already decided that it is viable, and no doubt whatever research they do will be tainted and shaped by this assumption. The research that comes out of this experimentation will be no more accurate than Exxon's studies concerning the Valdez's environmental impact, or the IPCC's terribly flawed global warming studies.
Does anyone remember "Capricorn One"? (Score:1)
Martians??? (Score:1)
So when we go to mars we become Martians???
Re:Martians??? (Score:2)
Yeah, Mormon Martian Missionaries. By the time everyone in the trip reaches Mars they'll all be married and pregnant. Which means they should pack for colonization because they'll have more mouths to feed if they start heading back. Hey, at least they'll have accurate genealogical records.
Re:Martians??? (Score:2)
No.
When you go to England, you do not suddenly become British. If you are born in Britain, or live there for some time and obtain resident status - then you are British.
Presumably, the same would apply for Mars. However, this would suggest some form of Martian Government/Organisation. Presumably, this would be a form of colloboration or partnership between all interested parties.
Therefore, if you were born on Mars, you could call yourself an "American Martian" or "Chinese Martian", depending on your originating country in the Martian Union. In much the same way that a German could call themselves a German European.
Re:Martians??? (Score:1)
A German would call himself a German. A gentleman of Chinese extraction born on Mars would probably call himself a Martian.
It's only americans that are obsessed with this ridiculous labelling.
Only an American (or, to use the latest appalling neologism, "USian") would say something along the lines of "I'm one quarter Chinese, one quarter Navajo and half Scottish" and do so with a straight face.
Sorry for sneering, but I've never known whether I should be irritated or amused by this ludicrous tendency. So I just sneer.
Re:Martians??? (Score:2)
As soon as your start proudly identifying yourself with some smaller 'special' group -- be it national, religious, sexual, whatever -- the stage for conflict is set, especially when you make the group-think the focal point of your life.
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Re:Martians??? (Score:1)
I'm not saying that people don't describe themselves according to ethnicity/origin/whatever; I'm stating that it isn't the artform it is in the US. Try describing yourself as one-sixteenth Tamil in any accent other than American, and watch people laugh.
Re:Martians??? (Score:3, Funny)
>> possible the working conditions that future
>> Martians would have to endure.
> So when we go to mars we become Martians???
Far worse that that, there's a chance of meeting Donny Osmond!
Aieee!
Re:Martians??? (Score:1)
.
This just in (Score:2, Funny)
The Utah Global Surveyor has detected alcohol in the state. However, it's locked up below the surface in ice and little umbrellas. It does bode well for future explorers, though.
But seriously, folks... if you haven't read Zubrin's The Case For Mars, do so. You'll be on the streets demanding Mars missions within minutes of finishing it.
Re:This just in (Score:2, Insightful)
if you haven't read Zubrin's The Case For Mars, do so. You'll be on the streets demanding Mars missions within minutes of finishing it.
The current Mars Rush has all the potential to become another Apollo program - siphon off all the money from everything else, in return for 2 weeks of TV coverage, some flag-waving, and then everyone goes back to watching reruns of Star Trek Voyager. Bye bye funding, bye bye Mars, direct or not. And bye bye the rest of the space program.
Here's a radical thought - long term space projects should be self-funding.
Mars is at the bottom of an inconveniently large gravity well, so its export potential is severely limited. Exports are essential for an economic entity which is not self-sufficient.
So, how about a real, useful goal for the space program? I propose that, rather than land a man on Mars (what for?) we resolve, by 2020, to deploy an automated factory on a near-Earth asteroid.
The factory should make something that would be useful in low Earth orbit (fuel, oxidiser, solar cells, whatever), and be capable of delivering those somethings back to Earth orbit for use. It should produce enough useful stuff to pay back its development and deployment costs well within its design lifetime.
The ideal "useful something" for our factory to make should really be other factories, but that's a little further down the line. An oxygen/water/methane refinery would be a good start.
Of course, this won't happen. Good ol' George wants a nice pretty picture of an American astronaut saluting a flag on Mars, not a working space infrastructure.
Oh well, now I duck and wait for the flames...
Re:This just in (Score:2)
Then, of course, there's the problem with getting there, finding a suitable asteroid, avoiding collisions while parking, finding the right stuff to process, getting the processed materials back to Earth... the list goes ever on.
It's a good idea. But a lot of work needs to be done before; not just in terms of technology, but having that technology work for proctracted periods in hostile environments. What's needed is somewhere remote, but still within monkeywrenching distance if things do go wrong. And things will go wrong; what you're suggesting would be innovative in almost every respect.
So: where could we have a base that's remote, manned by the sort of people who'd need to work at maintaining these things, who would as part of their work be testing technology and processes that would be vital to a further understanding of what's necessary for an asteroid mining factory?
Final point: a Mars mission as outlined by Zubrin (and, increasingly, favoured by NASA) is to send a crew there for six months. That's no two-week propaganda mission.
Re:This just in (Score:1)
you've got to design a system that won't need repair in a long time
Or, you design cheap enough that you don't care if some of them fail, and send more. I'm not advocating one mission, but a cluster. Perhaps to the same asteroid to save on launch costs.
a Mars mission as outlined by Zubrin (and, increasingly, favoured by NASA) is to send a crew there for six months. That's no two-week propaganda mission
Yes, but John Q Public is not going to be interested after a couple of weeks. And then the politicians lose interest. And then the budgets get cut. See what happened to Apollo 18, 19, 20. See what happened to Space Station Freedom, er.. Fred, er... Ed. See what happened to the Pluto mission in order to keep the Space Station running in order to save face.
The only way to ensure funding is to move it out of the control of the politicians, who don't care about space as anything other than a gosh-wow morale booster and flag-waving excercise.
I guess that title makes sense... (Score:1)
I mean, the moon is actually a soundstage in Nevada right?
Tourism? (Score:4, Funny)
Wayne County, only slightly more hospitable than the surface of Mars
Re:Tourism? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Tourism? (Score:1)
* Martians means people pretending to be Martians and by no means means real Martians
Re:Tourism? (Score:2)
Seriously though, some of the remote desert locations in Utah and Nevada I used to go to as an undergraduate to look at stars and planets (in addition to strange airplanes) are much more remote requiring more planning and resources than excursions to anywhere in Wayne county.
_Race to Mars_ (Score:2)
I found a book in my local library's used book sale room from 1988 titled The Race to Mars (I don't remember the authoring organization and sadly, the book is downstairs and I am far too lazy to get it at this point in the morning).
It talks about the progresss made, mostly Soviet, up to the date of publication, with lots of cool diagrams and photos.
What bugs me the most is the introduction, with phrases to the effect of "the Soviets intend to land a man on Mars by the end of the century" and "during the nineties, the Soviets will map and survey mars extensively in preparation for a manned mission."
And still nobody's there. But I guess it's okay, cause we have Utah....
Re:_Race to Mars_ (Score:1)
ROTFLMAO (Score:2, Insightful)
Methane as propellant, uh hu. I'd like to know where the hell Zubrin wants to get the oxygen to burn the methane.
Re:ROTFLMAO (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ROTFLMAO (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ROTFLMAO (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ROTFLMAO (Score:2)
Re:ROTFLMAO (Score:1)
I searched the website for about 5 minutes without finding a page where the mechanism is explained in detail. The one-and-only issue that prevents an affordable mars-mission is taking enough fuel with to bring the crew back.
Maybe my laughing was too impulsive, but the article did not explain the method without leaving out the main source of energy Zubrin wants to use to produce the methane making it physicaly impossible. I'm not familiar with the masses, but assuming that you need a quarter of the energy to leave mars gravity field than to leave the one of earth, by taking account of that the energy density of methane is lower than the of hydrogen used by the Saturn V Rocket, you still need a huge amount of fuel to be produced by a fully-automated-and-never-tested-under-mars-condi
The key question is if NASA is willing to build this equipment and bring it to mars when there is the high risk that it may not function beacuse of one tiny stupid error.
Utah == Mars as desert == Moon? (Score:2)
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/SP-4203/ ch14-3.htm [nasa.gov]
Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org) [sethf.com]
Re:Utah == Mars as desert == Moon? (Score:1)
Better than that, some training/testing grounds have had craters blown into them to create a surface as nearly identical as possible to potential lunar landing sites:
Testing sites have been chosen for climate, surface cover, surface type, etc., depending on exactly what they're testing or training for.
but how do they simulate.. (Score:1)
Re:but how do they simulate.. (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, the Mars Society [marssociety.org] is also sponsoring a seperate study called Translife [marssociety.org] that will involve putting mice in orbit, then spinning up their craft to simulate a 1/3 g environment and see what (if any) effects prolonged low-gravity exposure will have on small furry mammals. A later step will involve a larger orbit and more direct exposure to the sort of radiation levels that Mars-bound astronauts will encounter. The research stations (the first up in the Canadian Arctic, the second in Utah, with Europe and Australia in the works) are just intended to simulate the actual operational side of Mars exploration...
Re:but how do they simulate.. (Score:2)
I find this offensive (Score:3, Funny)
Is NASA trying to say that Mars can be compared to a dust bowl inhabited by stray dogs, unintelligent rednecks, Mormons and inbreeders?
I request that NASA moves this experiment to a place devoid of culture, such as Australia or Germany.
Bob Zubrin can't paint the town red in Utah (Score:1)
Mars like place on Earth (Score:3, Insightful)
The other big question of course is "Why". Why do this at all? Do people really think simulating and then visiting Mars is a possible step in permanent habitation? Our only chance of survival in THIS solar system is here on earth. And any planets revolving around other stars are too far away for us, right now. It's a disservice to get everyones hopes up for living on Mars.
Re:Mars like place on Earth (Score:1)
Close.... more like the Arctic..
The Mars society has been using Devon island in Canada's north for a couple of years.
more info at the Mars society homepage [marssociety.org]
Re:Mars like place on Earth (Score:1)
Parts of Hawaii are a damn lot like Mars....
bkr
Re: Mars like place on Earth (Score:2)
True, Antarctica would probably have more appropriate mean temperatures, but inappropriate daylight patterns: in summer, near 24-hour days and in winter, 24-hour nights. Any Mars landing would presumably be reasonably close to the equator.
The other big question of course is "Why". Why do this at all? Do people really think simulating and then visiting Mars is a possible step in permanent habitation? Our only chance of survival in THIS solar system is here on earth. And any planets revolving around other stars are too far away for us, right now. It's a disservice to get everyones hopes up for living on Mars.
Even if we don't colonize Mars permanently, there are several reasons to go. Most compelling is to go search for life, or past life, and if we find it examine its structure. If we find it and discover it and Earth life evolved from the same source, that tells us that life can make interplanetary (at least) journeys. However, if we find it evolved independently it would suggest life has a pretty good chance of evolving wherever conditions were right. I think it would be worth going just for that purpose.
Secondly, you assert that it's impossible to colonise Mars. I would argue that we don't really know one way or the other at this point, and a manned mission (or two) is the only way to collect enough data to find out.
Re: Mars like place on Earth (Score:2)
Ignoring for a moment the irony of making an interplanetary journey to determine if life can make an interplanetary journey, it would be an an expensive fact to determine at considerable risk to life and limb.
Is this fact worth the risk and expense? Given the finite amount of money for basic research, a trip to Mars would mean delaying research into other areas that are arguably more interesting.
Considering the difficulty of keeping a tiny research station in operation in Antarctica, which is many times more hospitable than Mars, one can say with reasonable certainty that the cost of colonizing Mars is prohibitive. Generally, in science something must be at least theoretically possible before you attempt to prove it.
*NO* manned missions to Mars (Score:1, Interesting)
Planetary Chauvinism (Score:4, Insightful)
The best 'Case for Mars', IMO, is that it's a (hardly effective) motivator to get us off cradle Earth to secure our survival - people are just USED to living on planets and don't bother thinking outside the gravity well (box).
What we should be striving for is using the raw material in the asteroid belt to build large (rotating) space habitats which are much much much more efficient than the waste of space/material below your feet on Mars.
And hey, one day we'll probably disassemble Mars for its matter too -- we'll save Earth for last. :)
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Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:2, Interesting)
If I remember correctly, you need about a foot of lead between you and outer space to insulate yourself from the radiation... or a gravity well...
Of course, the efficiency of travel from one planet to another is... well... let's say that there is no really efficient way... only more or less efficient variants, in that I concur.
So, space stations are a good idea... and new insulation against radiation will be found... eventually... but until then, I'd be very happy if people started developing technologies for more efficient space travel... I'm still waiting for someone to actually get to the asteroid belt...efficient habitats, which are able to deal with micro-asteroids in an adequate manner (i.e. not: "Ok guys, get some insulation and glue and start searching") and a host of other things that, eventially, will lead to usable space stations...
One more comment... I do remember something about the effects of even a short space flight on the ability to procreate...
It's been at least 10 years since I heard that, so please correct me, but I think I remember that the damage is significant after only a few hours in space...
In that case, I'll stick to that gravity well for a while longer...
Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:1)
Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:1)
Here's [ucla.edu] some information that I should have researched before.
Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:2)
1) Magnetic shielding [islandone.org]
2) No shielding; any damage to plants, animals, and structure could be repaired by virtue of the fact that everything is infested with "smart nanobots" - basically a artificial immune system for everything (which is also necessary to counter the threat of "terrorist nanobots" since good will outnumber evil :-).
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Re:Planetary Chauvinism (Score:1)
Dinococcus radiodurans is a bacteria than can take a REALLY big pounding to the genome, we're talking IMPRESSIVE DNA repair mechanisms. After a bombardment sufficient to kill a human about a hundred (or thousand i forget the figs) times over, it's DNA is left in shambles, but quickly, it stitches the whole thing back into order, working order.
how does it do this?
does it do this because it came from space originally and this is just vestigial biochemical event?
why even bother going to Mars before we know these "simple" things about our own planet?
Re:Woo hoo - more rocks from Mars! (Score:1, Interesting)
Just send me. I haven't left my apartment in 4 years.
green... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:green... (Score:1)
Re:green... (Score:2)
All that aside, I for one would like to think that if there were any true Martians, they would have a more sophisticated, intellectually inquisitive and less main-stream white bread culture than we currently have in Utah.
The Human Problem (Score:3, Interesting)
Spending six months to a year or more in isloation, especially in a very small room no bigger than, and maybe smaller that a college dorm room, with only the food and entertainment you brought with you, can be very stressful.
Heck, for the nearest current equivalent look at antarctica [antarcticconnection.com], where they get snowed in for the winter, and thay have much larger facilities. While now they have email, etc, they are still pretty isolated, and start to get a little wacky after just the few months of social isolation. The culture starts to evolve and drift based on the unique events on the base.
It is sort of like a bunch of geeks working at a big company. The geeks form their own culture, and are somwhat isolatedfrom the main body of people, even when bumbing into a ton of people in the hall way. Who are the aliens there? the geeks or the working stiffs?
heck, you even see this in religion [radiofreenation.net], those isolated communities off in the desert, etc.
Re:The Human Problem (Score:2)
While I'm sure that it *can* be stressful, it's not as if this level of exploration is without historical prescident. Throughout history, exploration ships have spent months at sea with small crews.
Early caravels had crews of 6-8 people. Columbus' flag ship had a crew of 20. These aren't exactly the hundreds of friends you seem to want to bring along with you.
Plus, our modern-day explorers would be incredibly plugged-in compared with sailors on those old wooden ships. Sure, the scientists in Antarctica had email, but what makes you think the crew of a Mars expedition wouldn't?
Re:The Human Problem (Score:2)
Which is the attitude I was critcizing, the Us vs Them attitude between technology haves and have nots.
This is very easily seen in comedy pages about tech support horror stories, Like Computer Stupidities. [rinkworks.com] This is evidence of what happens when geek culture separates from the culture of those around it.
Note: in the USA "Working Stiffs" is a generic slang for people who work [pbs.org] for a living, vs those born to money, and is a common enough term [businessweek.com], and is not usually confused with the dead [time.com], except for moments of humor or irony.
People who recognize the term realize it is a term of respect.
A thousand years from now... (Score:3, Funny)
Prof.: Well, in those days Mars was just a dreary, uninhabitable wasteland, much like Utah. But unlike Utah it was eventually made livable when the University was founded in 2636.
Leela: They planted traditional college foliage. Ivy
Fry: Does that mean it's safe to breathe the air?
Prof.: Of course!
Polygamy simulators (Score:1)
MDRS Web (Score:2)
Fake Mars Landing? (Score:1)
Re:Fake Mars Landing? (Score:2)
Uh, the cameras could have lead shielding and LEAD GLASS (lead glass [def] glass that contains lead oxide and that has a high refractive index and optical dispersion; used in the manufacture of optical glass, in high-quality crystal glassware, and for radiation shielding.) What do you think they used?
Hint: Google search [ lead glass x-ray ]
Hint: Google search [ lead shielding thickness ]
Not sure what to make of them (Score:5, Insightful)
I was watching a 2 hour Discovery special on the Mars Society Canadian habitat project last night, and I couldn't decide if these guys are visionaries or crackpots.
One some levels, the organisation was impressive, with tons of construction material being airdropped onto an island. The last drop shed it's 'chute and wrecked the construction crane and some other material. Brought up on a diet of space opera (and Junkyard Wars), I expected them to swing into action with a "can do!" plan. What actually happened was that the project manager and society head had a falling out over safety, the construction team walked off, a new architect had to be flown in, and a long debate over what to do next ensued. OK, they did get it all sorted eventually, but the attitude of some of the team really surprised me. After all, this was an "opportunity" rather than a problem (to use management parlance), but some of them seemed to think that it was better to play it safe, call the whole thing off, and try again the next year. Uh, guys, a manned Mars mission wouldn't have that luxury.
And then there were the mock EVA suits that they were using, that were - to be brutally frank - kiddie playtime stuff, being mostly trash can lids and plastic tubing. They were quite honest about this, saying that the idea was merely to try out a lot of activities in the suits to try and predict the problems we'll encounter on Mars. Problem was, they failed to apply lessons that we already know, and started with circa 1950's technology. The big problems were that the helmets fogged up (duh), that it's hard to get items out of your own pockets (so you need mirrors on your wrists, which they knew that NASA suits already have but didn't put on their own suits) and that it's hard to read dim LCD screens through a fogged up helmet.
I really do want to be enthusiastic about the Mars Society, but I can't help but feel that it's a big talking shop and mutual support society for very frustrated people who really wish that some serious money would get put into a Mars mission. It's hard to criticize them for doing something, but it's also hard to take Mars Society seriously when they seem to be more like a Disney Space Camp group having a fun vacation rather than doing bona fide boundary pushing experimentation.
Re:Not sure what to make of them (Score:1)
Re:Not sure what to make of them (Score:1)
Devon
Re:Not sure what to make of them (Score:1)
A little of both. I am both a MS member (not active in the current technical program, though) and an independent engineer and space mission designer, and your criticisms are fairly well aimed here.
Accurate assessment, but really just points out what the Mars Society is and isn't.
It's a volounteer organization, fundraising focus, and PR organization trying to do some real field and technical work (on a shoestring) to advance the cause of manned Mars missions. It's not a professional engineering or space mission operations team. The lack of experience shows a lot. The lack of trained personel shows a lot. The lack of ability to select workers for the absolute best in their field shows a lot... a lot of people forget how selective NASA has been able to be in the past. Volounteer organizations have to make do with whoever shows up.
The plus side... they can deploy a base on a remote island in the Canadian arctic and operate it for a summer for about what it takes to keep two of the fifty seats in Mission Control in Houston staffed 24x7 year round, or deploy one to Utah for about the same amount. Useful things to do.
Fair assessment of the first pass suits.
There have been some pretty lively flame wars
over the suits on Usenet and other discussion areas. You're not alone in pointing out the problems with the alpha version suits. The suits basically were mostly impaired by ongoing lack of time and budget to engineer them. They were a rush job done by three harried volounteers in Boulder with almost no budget.
That said, they did discover some useful things about mobility and operations with them. Some of those discoveries were rediscoveries of things that NASA learned already, but there wasn't time to avoid. Some of them were new. One thing NASA really didn't record well was the planning and support cycle for planetary EVA operations; one of the things the Mars Society *has* done well was to videotape and study all of that. Right now, there's only one group with any current, active experience planning and supporting planetary EVA operations, and it's not NASA. The operational lessons are being properly recorded by real psychologists and operations engineers and should be retained by the aerospace community this time around, we all hope.
It's important to note finally on this topic that
the suits are an alpha test version. The two stations are going to be operated on an ongoing basis, and it's intended that the fidelity of the simulation increase over time: better suits, better gear, more realistic remote support, etc. There are some lessons that these early suits won't learn, but there are many that they can. As long as we eventually get to all of them, it's a reasonable program.
If these were people hanging around on vacation, that might be a fair criticism. But it takes an enormous amount of volounteer labor to make these things happen: tens of thousands of volounteer hours a year have gone into the Arctic and now Desert stations, for several years now. People aren't goofing off or lying around being lazy, they're doing the real work that building these things and operating them takes.
There are lots of things wrong with the Mars Society at one level or another, but it's not a summer camp. This was demonstrated when the parachute failed to open at Devon Island (for which I am eternally embarrassed... I believe I was the first person to suggest to Bob that they use paradrops for the equipment, though I had nothing to do with the actual operation to do it or build the base). That was demonstrated a couple of days ago when two members survived a plane crash on their way to the Desert station... we nearly lost Devo's guitarist there, damnit.
Get better soon, Frank and Matt!
Comparison (Score:2, Funny)
Has no strip clubs.
Has no alcohol.
Has no dirty mags.
Utah:
Has no strip clubs.
Has no alcohol.
Has no dirty mags.
Logical.
Re: Lame Comparison (Score:1)
Already Done (Score:2)
Didn't they just pick some desert in the US for the manned missions to the moon too?
i get it now... (Score:1)
makes sense now...ever seen Shawn Bradley anyway...
We need to get the US space program back on track (Score:1)
Quite honestly, as great as the ISS is, I wish NASA put its money and research into some sort of moon base. Some congressmen had pushed for this as an alternative plan of action. We would have kept ourselves a few generations ahead of nations developing their own space program while at the same time advancing science.. Now we'll have to play catch-up once another communist power begins its reach for the stars.
Re:We need to get the US space program back on tra (Score:1)
The chain should go Earth, ISS, Moon, Mars. Since the ISS is operational, it should be used now as a jump-off point to the moon. We didn't have the ISS in '69 and we still made it OK, twice actually.
Here's an idea: let's petition the Mars Society to change its tune and get with the Lunar Plan...
Re:We need to get the US space program back on tra (Score:2)
The space race will begin in earnest again very soon. Once the Chinese start their manned missions....
The Cold War is over and there's no propaganda victory to be had by space travel. The U.S. should base its spending on basic research on something more substantial than international public relations.
The net effect of the U.S. being first to the Moon is that it is not getting criticized for abandoning its lunar landing program. Whoever goes to Mars first is going to wonder how they'll pay for the next trip and what they'll get out of it.
OK, better get this out of the way _now_ (Score:2)
*return to your regularly scheduled thread*
*sigh*
I'm glad that's over with
Re:OK, better get this out of the way _now_ (Score:1)
I believe the combined IQ of Wayne county residences is *15*
r00tdenied
Terraforming already underway (Score:1)
Closest to martian reality (Score:1)
Re:Closest to martian reality (Score:1)
I gotta say sorry too. Being agnostic, religion leaves itself open to that sort of humor, IMHO. Mormons are cool with me, I know some, and they're all good ^-^
Mars, Mars, Always Mars... (Score:1)
Don't babies have to crawl before they can walk? Or walk before they can run? If we skip the moon, we're going to go from crawl straight to a dead sprint, resulting in us falling flat on our faces.
The Mars Society needs to change its name to the Lunar Society and change its focus from Red to Gray. That, and they need to get over the fact that the X-Files is coming to an end...
Re:Mars, Mars, Always Mars... (Score:1)
I highly doubt we are overlooking the moon. Most mission plans for Mars involves the moon from one degree to another. One is establishing a permanent lunar colony on the surface all the way to sending fuel generators to the surfaces to use the moon as a 'gas station' of sorts.
I don't think we are running before we are crawling, we need to begin this sort of planning to prove what technologies are viable and which ones need to be further developed. I agree that there needs to be more of a focus on the moon, but abandoning the red planet is not an option. It has far more resources than the moon does and it has the ability to be teraformed so we could live on it with out specialized life support systems, biospheres,etc.
r00tdenied
Well... (Score:1)
How many millions of years did it take to get Earth to where it has been since life appeared? The first organisms couldn't come out of the water or they'd be fried by UV or other radiation. Once they could resist that, they came out. Then they started affecting the world beyond surface tension.
How long did it take for those first landlubbing lifeforms to affect their environment, creating gasses released into the atmosphere, developing ways of converting energy (photosynthesis, anyone?)? While we can do all that relatively quickly and without a terribly insane amount of thought, how long will it take to affect Mars on a global scale? And how long before that global change will support life as we know it?
Or who's to say life as we know it will be around by the time we hit Mars? There are just too many questions that need answers before we can take a stab at it.
With all the press Mars gets, the common man has seemed to forget about the moon and replaced it with images of Batman/Jim Morrison giving Mars the finger, or Lieutenant Dan standing in a nifty CG model of the Solar System. They're all Mars-Crazy. When is there ever talk of the moon unless it's an eclipse?
The common man doesn't read Slashdot, they go to the movies and watch Captain Dan the Newsman on CBS. That's where they get their info. The media shapes their outlook on our policy towards Space, and has since Armstrong and Aldrin landed. Back then, it was all Moon Fever. But now, we've got Mars Syndrome. Since the media never talks much about getting a jump-off point on the Moon, common folk aren't in Moon Mode. The ISS gets more press, but that's just the first leg of the trip...
Re:Well... (Score:1)
Unless the Mormons do it; after what they did for the Salt Lake Valley, there's no doubt that they could terraform a parking structure in a decade! Maybe with the right kind of religious persecution we could have another habitable planet in no time! :D
There's a good reason why they chose Utah (Score:1)
Are Mormans allowed to use the Internet? If any Morman reads this, can you tell me why we haven't been getting the Church of Latter Day Saints TV commercicals in Canada anymore? What happened? I always loved those ads when I was young.
Re:There's a good reason why they chose Utah (Score:1, Informative)
Ummm. www.mormon.org [mormon.org] and www.lds.org [lds.org]. Utah is perenially in the top five most wired states, and has scored #1 for number of PCs per capita for the last 2 or three years.
If any Morman reads this, can you tell me why we haven't been getting the Church of Latter Day Saints TV commercicals in Canada anymore? What happened? I always loved those ads when I was young.
Take it up with your local TV station. They run just about everywhere else. I have heard that some TV stations won't run them, I guess because the insiduous message of Mormonism might "get you"?
Re:There's a good reason why they chose Utah (Score:1)
And yes, Mormons can definately use the Internet. I am a regular Slashdot reader, as well as a Linux user (100% Microsoft free) and Java programmer. I've programmed several open source applications over the years. I do stay away from the Pr0n sites, though.
Before the typical Slashdotters start flaming, please try to be somewhat respectful.
Re:There's a good reason why they chose Utah (Score:1)
Re:There's a good reason why they chose Utah (Score:1)
BTW -- I forgot to add on my other post that I don't know why the "Mormon" commercials stopped in your area. I actually had a tape at one time of all of the commercials from the 70's. There were some really great ones and lots of funny ones, all with messages about how we need to spend more time with our kids, more time with our spouses, etc.
One of the best ones was where they asked 3-5 years olds questions about God and Heaven. The kids had extremely funny answers.
Reason why they chose Utah instead of Canada, eh (Score:1)
Um, duh? The Moon? (Score:2, Insightful)
Hawaii Extinct Volcanos (Score:1)
As far as the weather, I agree with the other readers that polar regions on earth are probably a better training place. However, if you want the *visuals*, then Hawaii is the place. Plus, you can stop at Maui on the way home.
Also, the atmosphere was kind of thin up there, at least to an Earthling.
Futurama already knew it... (Score:1)
Fry: Very impressive. Back in the 20th Century we had no idea there was a university on Mars.
Prof.: Well, in those days Mars was just a dreary, uninhabitable wasteland, much like Utah. But unlike Utah it was eventually made livable when the University was founded in 2636.
Thumbs replacing fingers??? (Score:1)
Wayne County got a sex change (Score:1)
Re:wonder what Joseph would think--Kolob not Mars (Score:1)
Re:the root of the problem (Score:1)
This is the same community of people who hack consoles to put linux on them and use legos as web servers. Do you really think any of us need a reason besides the coolness factor.