NASA Targets Venus, Asteroids With Potential Missions 47
coondoggie writes: NASA this week picked five possible contenders for a relatively low-cost robotic mission to space. The five candidates from a batch of 27 –include Venus, near-Earth object and asteroid operations – will ultimately be whittled down to one or two that will cost approximately $500 million, not including launch vehicle or post-launch operations, NASA stated. The DAVINCI probe would "study the chemical composition of Venus' atmosphere during a 63-minute descent. It would answer scientific questions that have been considered high priorities for many years, such as whether there are volcanoes active today on the surface of Venus and how the surface interacts with the atmosphere of the planet." A longer-range spacecraft called Lucy would "perform the first reconnaissance of the Jupiter Trojan asteroids, objects thought to hold vital clues to deciphering the history of the solar system."
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Re:More corporate welfare (Score:4)
The defense budget is $53 billion dollars a month. That's enough for 1,281,000,000 babies. If you are thinking of trimming the NASA budget instead of the Defense budget, your priorities are completely fucked up.
mission "to space"? (Score:1)
PASA one upped them (Score:1)
PASA surprassed this last week by proposing a mamission to the sun. They're going at night.
balloon probe of venus (Score:5, Interesting)
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Creating habitable space on Venus would be fairly easy. As you say, the upper atmosphere isn't that bad, so all you need is a balloon, and fortunately a breathable atmosphere doubles as a lifting gas when set among the denser CO2 of the atmosphere outside. You can live among the support structures of your mega-zeppelin.
Terraforming is a much bleaker prospect though.
The heat is bad. If you were somehow able to stop all incoming sunlight, completely shut down the radioactive decay feeding Venus' core heat, an
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Venus could be the most Earthlike planet from size and gravity perspective, but it would also be the most difficult to terraform. As you noted you would have to remove massive amounts of CO2 from the atmosphere and somehow neutralize the less pleasant compounds. Then there is the problem with the fact that it is tidally locked to the sun so one side always faces the sun (or at least it rotates very slowly). So you would either have to somehow engineer the environment to help equalize the temperature betw
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If we use the progressive-domino-slingshot effect, perhaps we can smash a big icy asteroid into Venus at a angle that gives it a faster rotation, and knocks the carbon out of the atmosphere.
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We are having trouble removing it from Earth's, and we have far less.
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We are having trouble removing it from Earth's, and we have far less.
The Earth used to have a lot more carbon in the atmosphere until all these pesky living things started photosynthesizing.
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Those pesky living things depend on hydrogen, in the form of H2O, of which there is a severe lack of on Venus.
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There's a severe lack of hydrogen on Venus, so no water and much too much oxygen if it is possible to remove the carbon.
Obligatory xkcd (Score:3)
https://xkcd.com/1456/ [xkcd.com] (title text)
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Some years ago, Jerry Pournelle pointed out that we are farther away from being able to land a man on the moon than we were in 1960. And since he said that, the respect-for-science problem has gotten even worse.
Ballooning in Venus (Score:2)
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A manned mission to Venus was on the drawing boards in the early 1970's, including a Russian flyby of Venus on the way to Mars.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manned_Venus_Flyby [wikipedia.org]
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Depends on how the planets are aligned. The shortest distance between Earth and Mars happens every two years. Subsequently, the launch window for a direct flight to Mars is every two years. A flyby of Venus provides enough gravity assist to approach Mars from a different trajectory. The Russian Vega probes flew past Venus on their way to the Halley's Comet in 1986.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vega_program [wikipedia.org]
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A breathable atmosphere is a lifting gas on Venus and the temperature is good at the height where the Venus atmosphere is 1 bar. The big problem is the amount of corrosive acid in the atmosphere. I believe there are pretty good winds at that altitude as well.
Hey, IAU... (Score:2, Funny)
Wait, you mean the formerly-known-as-a-planet "Jupiter" has failed to clear its orbit?
Quick, someone let the IAU know! This error in nomenclature simply cannot stand!
The Soviets have already done Venus (Score:2, Informative)