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Mars Movies NASA

Can The Martian Give NASA's Mars Efforts a Hollywood Bump? 131

Flash Modin writes: NASA has poured considerable time and resources into Ridley Scott's The Martian — perhaps more than any other movie in history — going so far as to time a Mars human landing site selection workshop to coincide with the film. Jim Green, NASA's head of planetary sciences, was one of the consultants, with other astronomers fact checking every aspect of the set and script. The rockets, modules, and space suits were built — and 3-D printed — with heavy guidance from NASA. The filmmakers even hired Rudi Schmidt, former project manager of the European Space Agency's Mars Express spacecraft, to test the experiments done in the movie, including turning water into rocket fuel — which works. And, on the eve of The Martian's premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival this weekend, some of those scientists believe that this obsessive adherence to science fact will be enough to make NASA's Journey to Mars real for Americans. The space agency needs a Hail Mary because, in truth, the real program is nowhere near ready for prime time.
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Can The Martian Give NASA's Mars Efforts a Hollywood Bump?

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    Free Mars!
  • Propulsion science is just too primitive at this time. This is where the bulk of the money needs to be spent.

    • by invid ( 163714 )
      The only way I can see us going to Mars is if we use nuclear rockets. [wikipedia.org]
    • by khallow ( 566160 )

      Propulsion science is just too primitive at this time. This is where the bulk of the money needs to be spent.

      What do you mean? We've already developed the propulsion means, chemical propulsion engines, that's going to get stuff off of Earth for the first half of this century, perhaps longer. And we've developed several means such as electric propulsion, vacuum-optimized chemical propulsion, and solar sails for moving things in free fall in space. Current means are sufficiently advanced for what we want to do with it. And we'll have plenty of time to develop more advanced propulsion for when we'll need that.

      • We literally have the cart before the horse. It's a very unstable relationship. We need to learn the force of attraction, aside from the local sling shotting we do now. Radiation is fast and furious. Gravity is stable and enduring, hot or cold. If we can concentrate one, I don't understand why we can't the other, other than we're just not there yet. You know, a good 'old fashion' tractor beam to draw two masses towards each other. And a side benefit is that you won't get lost. Gravity is vastly underrated.

        • by khallow ( 566160 )

          Gravity is stable and enduring, hot or cold. If we can concentrate one, I don't understand why we can't the other, other than we're just not there yet.

          The problem is that gravity is a weak force. When you try to concentrate it, by packing a bunch of matter in one place, then electromagnetic repulsion pushes stuff apart.

          Well, there's another problem. Concentrating gravity doesn't actually get you anywhere. For example, your tractor beam would work, but it would require lugging a considerable amount of mass around to pull the smaller mass that you really want to move. That's much harder than merely moving the smaller mass around with chemical rocket engi

    • Actually, too much focus on transportation, and not enough on habitation and local production is why we have a problem. Use local resources, make stuff on-location. Then you don't have to haul everything from Earth.

    • by bledri ( 1283728 )

      Propulsion science is just too primitive at this time. This is where the bulk of the money needs to be spent.

      No, it's not. Barring catastrophes, future technology will always be better, but current chemical rocket technology is good enough or close to good enough. And has the advantage of existing or being a refinement of what already exists.

  • No.

  • Yes, the movie can give NASA a Hollywood bump. A small, ultimately meaningless bump.
    • I think the truth is, it's more a case of NASA giving Hollywood a bump, as well as Matt Damon, not the other way around.
      The movie starts off as sort of a disaster flick, doesn't it? How does that make a Mars mission look attractive? Then it has Damon almost magically managing to do the impossible, alone, to survive, because.. Hollywood.
  • by oh_my_080980980 ( 773867 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @03:37PM (#50505089)
    No, we are no interested. Next question.
  • The last big bump NASA got was the moon. I really wish that program had follow up instead of being just a giant publicity stunt.

    Currently there are plenty of arguments for and against man in space, either way I would like the decision not to be one of which looks the coolest.

    • That was the only real 'bump' that NASA got. It was estalished for the one and only one goal of meeting Kennedy's challenge It wasn't even about science, it was about meeting the challenge

      After Apollo, NASA's next big goal was finding a sellable justification for itself.

    • after the moon landings they had the earth rise photo on the wall on the oval office.

      a year later they replaced it with a stupid tree painting, that's the true level of commitment to space by dumb fucks in office that are nothing more than high school jocks in a suit.

      nasa also got a retard looser for a head that didn't want to be there.

      fact is, USA and corporations would rather spend $20 trillion dollars over 40 years on wars and military, while nasa gets a few crumbs. Criminals they all are in office, utte

  • by Robotbeat ( 461248 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @03:49PM (#50505191) Journal

    Have you seen the usual Mars movie from Hollywood? This movie is FAR more realistic than almost any other ones out there. And for true space geeks (of which NASA is full of), the book is fantastic.

    The movie isn't some ultra-clever attempt to kickstart public support, although that doesn't hurt. NASA's funding has shrunk as a portion of GDP, as a portion of government spending, and even when just adjusted for inflation even while NASA now is tasked with a far more ambitious mission (to send people to Mars), such that NASA makes up less one half of one percent of the federal budget (this while the public either think NASA has a much larger portion of the federal budget or has been utterly shut down). A little public support wouldn't hurt, though what NASA really needs is the political freedom to rationalize some of their programs (like being freed by Congress to use existing launch vehicles for exploration, like from ULA or SpaceX, instead of spending so much of their budget on SLS) so they can afford to build things like landers and the like instead of things the private/military sectors already have built (like launch vehicles).

    • We could have had permanent bases on the Moon and Mars for the cost of the war on terror. The money would have gone to the same contractors for the most part just different hardware.

      • The money would have gone to the same contractors for the most part just different hardware.

        Yeah, but that hardware would have been useless for oppressing people, you could only use it for science

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It would really help if NASA was allowed to cooperate with China and the EU more. Especially China.

        At this point it's 50/50 if the first person on Mars will be Chinese out American. Not that that's a bad thing, but it would be better if they both stepped out of the same capsule at the same time.

        I can't even calculate the odds of the first American being Elon Musk, or his employee.

  • Not that anyone's bothered denying the Moon landing lately; why bother? It's not even old news, it's history. And NASA still insists that people in a space station can't manage their own damn schedule with their own damn alarm clocks. Picture Mal Reynolds waiting for Mission Control to run through a million-point checklist to do anything . . .
  • I've said before to underwhelming response, we need to spend on protecting this gorgeous planet of ours from big rocks coming at us. It has happened before, so instead of trying to get off this really nice planet on to a crappy cold rock, we should first make sure we can defend the nice home with air, water and food before trying to build on a long shot.
    • by khallow ( 566160 )
      What makes you think current amounts spent on asteroid defense are insufficient? I think at current funding we're a couple of decades from finding every rock in the inner Solar System large enough to cause property damage of any sort on Earth.

      Having said that, dumping a bunch of money on NASA so that they can go to Mars may be a poor use of the money.
      • by khallow ( 566160 )
        Hmmm. looking at a distribution of asteroids [wikipedia.org] by size, there's probably somewhere around 100-500 million asteroids of the size of this one (10 meter radius) in the inner Solar System. That's harder than I originally thought which would make 2035 a difficult deadline to meet on current funding.
    • by bledri ( 1283728 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @05:31PM (#50506011)

      I've said before to underwhelming response, we need to spend on protecting this gorgeous planet of ours from big rocks coming at us. It has happened before, so instead of trying to get off this really nice planet on to a crappy cold rock, we should first make sure we can defend the nice home with air, water and food before trying to build on a long shot.

      The two are not mutually exclusive. As a matter of fact, they are complementary efforts. And given that there are 7 billion humans, we can actually focus on more than one goal.

  • The public isn't interested in space, period.

    The past N media spectaculars (fiction or non) didn't change that, the N+1th won't either. There's no camel's back for the straw to break.

    • > The public isn't interested in space, period.

      Nope, they have no interest in DirecTV, Dish, Sirius, On-Star, GPS, hurricane forecasts, Google Earth, or any of that space stuff. They just use it daily.

      • This is actually an interesting point.

        If you'll excuse the analogy, I like to eat meat, but I don't really want to know about the slaughterhouse. One could easily argue that one of the things that killed the Space Shuttle was that it made access to LEO too easy, too mundane, too boring. Most of us are interested in the end-result of science--the part where it gets turned into something useful to our every day lives or helps us in extraordinary ways. We don't want to know about the years of research and d

  • I think the book's key point was the other way around: He took Hydrazine [wikipedia.org] (rocket fuel) and converted it to water.

  • A bump? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by YrWrstNtmr ( 564987 ) on Friday September 11, 2015 @04:09PM (#50505389)
    "Can The Martian Give NASA's Mars Efforts a Hollywood Bump?"

    Yes, for about 30 days. Then we'll have BlackFriday, Xmas, etc. All will be forgotten, while waiting for the next Survivor/Dancing/Bachelor/whatever.
  • ...the entire country needs a hail mary, never mind NASA. It's constantly being fucked over by politicians. It's sad that I've gone my entire 40 year life now without seeing a single good US president.

  • How many people here pictured Scarlett Johansson playing the role of Johanssen?
    • by delt0r ( 999393 )
      When i watch movies i picture Scarlett playing *every role*. That way even boring movies look great :D.
  • Gravity and Apollo 13 and [haven't seen it yet] The Martian and others are stunning visions... intricately crafted works of awe-inspiring wonder. Some people working on these films, some folks going to see them, actually desire to explore space. So they must see these films, because they have some space in them. Many see these as space movies. I see them differently.

    GENRE: Things go absolutely fucking wrong.
    SUB-GENRE: Things go absolutely fucking wrong in space.

    We love those 'things go absolutely fucking w

  • Seriously, my mousewheel starts smoking whenever one of these new web 3.0 pages come up. Scrolling scrolling scrolling forever. Who the hell likes these things>? Is there something so wrong with embeded images? does every page have to be some downward scrolling adventure? its just supposed to be a god damn article!!!

  • Really NASA is the best of the world.It around of us worldwide. NASA helps of us connected all around the world. This blog very successfully explain about by NASA. Thanks for share this post. http://movie4downloading.blogs... [slashdot.org]">HD MOVIE DOWNLOAD!

One man's constant is another man's variable. -- A.J. Perlis

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