Mars Race Heats up Further 51
anzha writes "It seems what was once the province of the superpowers is no longer so. ESA and the Japanese attempted their own Mars orbiters (successfully and not, respectively). The Brits fired off Beagle 2 and are talking of going for Beagle 3. Now the Canadians are talking about a probe for Mars in 2011. How long before we see the Japanese and Russians try again? Might India or China take a stab at it as well?"
Ugh, not a good thing (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:5, Interesting)
Don't get too attached to this planet, or Mars either. Someday, we're going to be building gigantic structures in space. We'll be using the energy equivalent of many many stars total output. If you think that we're going to leave a planet in one piece, you're mistaken.
The ultimate future of Earth and Mars, and all the other planets in our system, is that they will be complete dissassembled for raw materials.
How will the world end? In fire? In ice? More like in a bunch of tiny pieces that were smelted into raw metals.
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:2)
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:5, Interesting)
While I see your point, I hope it wouldn't come to that. I don't have a problem dismantling "dead" planets like Mercury and Mars, maybe even Venus, and certainly the asteroids.
But the Earth has so many unique features that you can't preserve outside an Earth-sized gravity well. You're not going to be able to recreate Yellowstone's hot springs and geysers on the surface of a Dyson Sphere, for example.
On the other hand, there's the
Yellowstone (Score:2)
Yellowstone's springs and geysers are already choked with crap from people throwing their laundry in to see it come out clean.
Other than the rape of the American continent which will finish long before we're building Dyson Spheres, though... point taken.
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:1)
Possible, though I would hope that if our inheritor species reach such a level of technology, they would by that time have developed long-term thinking and ecological concerns, and would let Earth lie "fallow" to possibly develop new intelligent species. (See David Brin's "Earthclan" novels for some interesting ideas.
But I'd say it's about 50/50 at best as to wh
Re:Ugh, not a good thing (Score:4, Insightful)
You obviously fail to realize just how large the earth is. 1/2 the size of the earth is still a lot of land. Come to think of it, 2/3s of the earth is covered by water, so if you restrict landers to only land, there is more room on Mars. (assuming we accept your numbers, I don't feel like checking them and they sound right).
Space junk is a problem in orbit because it is moving very fast. Space junk on Mars is not moving. Everybody will avoid the functioning rovers, because there is a lot of area to cover so it is best to cover something far away. You wouldn't make claims about the goegraphy of the earth based on only samples from your backyard, and you don't make claims about Mars from samples from one area, you try to cover them all.
Lessons learned vrs need to learn (Score:5, Interesting)
Based upon the lessons learned from prior missions, others could be encouraged. But, based upon the numerous failures, just as easily discouraged. Then when you factor in the costs involved, you certainly can argue against it.
What Spirit and Opportunity discover will probably be the main factor.
Hopefully it doesn't turn into a collaboration (Score:4, Insightful)
I applaud the rest of the world for becoming competitors in the space rafe and giving the US a new determination.
Why not (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe they can out-source the labour to the West!
Hope the Japanese rethink this (Score:4, Interesting)
Leave launches to the Indians and Russians for now. When North Korea finally comes around to join the rest of us in the modern, civilized world there will be plenty of time for space exploration.
Re:Hope the Japanese rethink this (Score:3, Interesting)
I say Japan should go forward full force. Waiting for NK to get its act together could take centuries, seriously. No point waiting for those dolts to get it together while Japan could become one of the first multiplanet nations.
Let the land grab begin. The more, the merrier.
Right.... (Score:4, Funny)
India: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Yeah, take that US!
Japan: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Yeah, take that US!
ESA: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Yeah, take that US!
BFE: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Yeah, take that US!
<random 3rd world country>: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Yeah, take that US!
US: Going to the moon and mars ===> \. Never going to happen. It's only political showmanship.
Re:Right.... (Score:2)
Smart Alex Answer (Score:3, Funny)
They're too busy to fool with this. They have jobs.
Turn the Page . . . (Score:2, Troll)
But, why do I get visions of "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World?"
Re:Turn the Page . . . (Score:1)
In point of fact, Clinton only followed Reagan and Bush the First's policy of allowing dual-use technologies to be soldto China. As with most of the right wing's charges against Clinton, this one doesn't hold water.
(Which doesn't change that he's a rat bastard who, in any sane society, would have long ago been institutionalized for the protection of himself
Wal-Mart (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wal-Mart (Score:2)
X... (Score:2)
Canada's Mars Mission Site (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.marsrocks.ca [marsrocks.ca]
Canadian Space Agency == Geeks? (Score:5, Funny)
Now the Canadians are talking about a probe for Mars in 2011.
Website Link:
Imagine that. A Beowolf cluster of Mars Landers. I wonder if they would run on linux?
Re:Canadian Space Agency == Geeks? (Score:1)
Did anyone else read that as "nework of small ladders"?
Sometimes low-tech is the way to do it, but I'm not so sure about this time...
Just what we need (Score:3, Insightful)
What this is shaping up to be is a land grab which should be healthy for Mars exploration. Here's hoping. There's a lot of land up there to grab. Now let's get those crazy space treaties rewritten by some people who aren't "citizen of the world" hippies.
Re:Just what we need (Score:2, Funny)
You can legal all you like (Score:2)
Why Not the UNSA? (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh sure, there'd be lots of collisions between agendas and between individuals. That's to be expected. But when it happens those responsible should me marked for replacement rather than placation. It's time we grew out of that sort of nonsense and space exploration is the perfect venue for that.
If the US and the USSR can come together in the Apollo-Soyuz project, surely today's more enlightened countries can set aside differences much less than mutually assured nuclear destruction.
The major problem would be the same problem NASA has: professional administrators and politicians. When engineers ran things we got to the moon. When managers ran things we got "My God, Thiokol, what do you want me to do, wait until April?" and no more Challenger.
Space exploration should be the right, responsibility and heritage of all humanity, not just those who can pry enough GNP away to put together their own team. This is not sports, this is science, and if done right, a chance to evolve socially as a planet.
Re:Why Not the UNSA? (Score:5, Insightful)
Almost everything great done in space was the result of competition. We need more of that, not less. If no one feels any pressure to work toward a goal harder, you will have engineers and administrators world-wide leaning on their shovels for decades to come as they we continue to be bound in low Earth orbit.
Re:Why Not the UNSA? (Score:2)
The ISS wasn't built by a committee, it was built by 3 of them: the US space agency, the Russian space agency, and the group of administrators and politicians from both sides tasked with making the other kids take turns and play nice. This last group spent so much time and energy placating nationalistic spoiled brats and making
Re:Why Not the UNSA? (Score:1)
While I'm sure that there will be quite a lot of redundancy in the competing programs, I have to say multiple space programs will also produce multiple different solutions to the same problem. This will lead to innovation, and efficiency as inefficient solutions fall by the wayside. If you are all focusing on one single solution then chances are that it will be missing ma
Re:Why Not the UNSA? (Score:2)
Competition is what drove the space industry to great heights. L
Canadian mars probe (Score:4, Funny)
They do know that liquid beer can't exist under Martian atmospheric pressures, don't they?
Re:Canadian mars probe (Score:3, Funny)
Canadiens on Mars? (Score:1)
Seriously, gl to my northernly neighbors.
And to the US in general, are we gonna sit back and let all these stupid countries pass us by? I say hell no, time for us to get out of slumber mode and kick everyone's ass again. Nothing like a bit of competition
How About The US? (Score:3, Insightful)
Good luck to the rest of you countries... I hope you catch up to make it more interesting.
Re:How About The US? (Score:1, Funny)
Hate to be the devil's advocate, but we allegedly put a man on another celestial object "sucessfully"...
Not Again (Score:1)
Canada in space (Score:2)
And They're Off! (Score:1)
The sun? (Score:1)
2011 - Canada's nanobot Mars probes - oops (Score:2)
Launched from a hot-air balloon, powered by the most useful emissions from Ottawa, the probes closely approached the edge of the atmosphere where a giant sneeze sent all 50 of the little buggers far enough out into spac
Just Fake It (Score:1)