Looking Back At Apollo 17, and Why We Stopped Going To the Moon (examiner.com) 189
MarkWhittington writes: The 43rd anniversary of the mission of Apollo 17, the last time men walked on the moon, has elicited a strange kind of nostalgia, and no little melancholia in some parts of the media. These qualities are captured in a story in IO9 that purports to tell us why no one has been back to the moon in over four decades and why we might soon return at last. Deadline Hollywood informs us that "The Last Man on the Moon," a documentary on Apollo moonwalker Gene Cernan, is set for a release to both theaters and video on demand in February, having been shown at film festivals for the past year or so,
Nazis (Score:2, Funny)
Ther worst thing about the moon is all the damned Nazis.
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Nope. It's the spiders.
Re:Nazis (Score:5, Informative)
No, the spiders are from Mars, not the moon.
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No, we stopped going there, because NASA decided that the Moon was quite an immoral place, as documented in "Nude on the Moon": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
When those folks on the Moon put on some proper clothing, fit for US television prime time, we'll go back.
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Maybe, but you also have to take into account the amazon women.
I bet they speak the universal language!
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i've looked all over amazon.com and they don't have anything for sale even remotely resembling women from the moon.
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darn it, I thought Amazon sold everything.
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to much military (Score:5, Informative)
Why spend money on peace when war pays off now.
Re:to much military (Score:5, Informative)
We're not as afraid of war now as we were then.
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People have largely forgotten how dangerous war really is.
Today, war is like a video game. A guy presses a button and a bunch of bad guys disappear. It's almost cute.
Back then, war was terrifying mushroom clouds and entire cities in flames.
We've forgotten how fast the former could lead to the latter.
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I am pointing out how destructive and barbaric real war is. It's interesting how your response to this is "YEAH, WE NEED REAL WAR!!"
As for ISIS, the solution is easy: Get the fuck out of the middle east. They thrive on attention and adversity. They want a huge apocalyptic East-West war. It's their entire philosophy. http://www.theatlantic.com/mag... [theatlantic.com]
The world would be much better off without people like you. Kindly collect with your like-minded ISIS maniacs in a remote region of the planet and bomb each othe
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Get the fuck out of the middle east.
This viewpoint is remarkably similar to the (very popular in some areas, especially Midwestern) Republican Isolationist view prior to WWII. It's not our fight. It's not worth spending the blood of American soldiers. Let's just stay the f--k away, right? And, even if history disagrees with them, they had a very valid viewpoint at the time.
Years ago, before I travelled more internationally, I would absolutely have agreed with you. We have no dog in that fight, right? Our meddling there has produced no objecti
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> And, even if history disagrees with them
Does it? As far as I can tell, the decision to stay away from the war was a wise one. Pearl Harbor was bad but it would have been much worse to come in direct conflict with Hitler in 1938.
> What if ISIS takes over the whole Middle East and decides that oil should be sold at $250/barrel for any non-Sharia buyer?
What if my wife gives birth to a unicorn?
We can debate hypotheticals till the cows come home.
ISIS isn't Nazi Germany. It's foremost an ideology, and sec
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Does it? As far as I can tell, the decision to stay away from the war was a wise one. Pearl Harbor was bad but it would have been much worse to come in direct conflict with Hitler in 1938.
It would have been so much worse, if France had done it in 1936, after Germany militarized the Rhine, ending the Second World War before it began.Unfortunately, the profound irrationality of pre-war France seems to mirror similar irrationality today in the US and many other modern democracies.
For example, France of the time had constructed the Treaty of Versailles in order that Germany never harm France ever again. But when the treaty proved too onerous for anyone to respect, they looked the other way wh
Re:to much military (Score:4, Interesting)
The problem is that you are suffering from two-bit thinking - literally. For you it's either a choice between leaving them alone or engaging in hot war, because your mind is incapable of understanding subtlety, adaptivity, and planning ahead. Bullshit analogies with France serve to further cloud your judgement. Your analogy with Germany is bullshit because we HAVE been intervening in the middle east militarily for about three decades now, and it's always under the guise of "let's keep more bad things from happening." Something which uniformly backfires.
You correctly acknowledge that our miserably dumb policies were instrumental in creating the problem, but fail to see that it's precisely your type of thinking that enabled those miserably dumb policies.
Iraq would not be in the situation it is today if we hadn't deposed Saddam.
Having deposed Saddam, Iraq would still not be in the situation it is today if the streets of Iraq were properly policed and order was maintained.
Having descended into chaos, Iraq would still not be in the situation it is today if the advice of all the analysts and experts were listened to, rather than appointing military yes men who would do Cheney and Rumsfeld's bidding without question.
And given all of the above, Iraq would STILL not be in the situation it is today if we didn't play an active role in destabilizing Syria.
At any part of the process from the late 1980's to the present, simply doing nothing would have been far better than doing the stupid things we did.
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The problem is that you are suffering from two-bit thinking - literally. For you it's either a choice between leaving them alone or engaging in hot war, because your mind is incapable of understanding subtlety, adaptivity, and planning ahead. Bullshit analogies with France serve to further cloud your judgement. Your analogy with Germany is bullshit because we HAVE been intervening in the middle east militarily for about three decades now, and it's always under the guise of "let's keep more bad things from happening." Something which uniformly backfires.
Where was your higher level thinking when you wrote things like:
ISIS isn't Nazi Germany. It's foremost an ideology, and secondarily a pseudo-state that lays claim to some pathetic scrap of territory, in the midst of several well-armed modern militaries. Can ISIS take over all of the ME? Sure... but the only way is for it to take over ideologically. And the quickest way for that to happen is for us to wage an apocalyptic grand war against it.
or
I just don't understand your train of thought. ISIS is bad? Sure. I don't see how that leads to BOMB THE EVER LIVING SHIT OUT OF THE MIDDLE EAST FOR NOW AND ETERNITY
No bit thinking is even worse.
But sure, let's use nuance.
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> You are confusing natural gas production (which provides a significant amount of North American electrical generation and home utility) with light sweet crude oil production, which is what goes into the cars people drive to work, the tractor trailers that haul their consumer goods, and the airplanes they fly in. Middle Eastern oil prices have a HUGE impact on the American economy.
Uhm no I'm not. The USA gets 90% of its crude oil from either itself or non-OPEC countries. And of OPEC countries, the bigge
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You are confusing natural gas production (which provides a significant amount of North American electrical generation and home utility) with light sweet crude oil production, which is what goes into the cars people drive to work, the tractor trailers that haul their consumer goods, and the airplanes they fly in. Middle Eastern oil prices have a HUGE impact on the American economy.
No, he's not... The US could be fully independent of ALL foreign oil. Especially with the Bakken shale formations now being tapped.
And, why spend money in the ME when we could use that money more effectively making our country more independent of oil altogether, using alternative sources of energy? Advances in both wind and solar could serve our needs easily, if we would just use it! Get out of ICE and into EVs.
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I agree about the oil part. But, instead of investing all that money into the military to try and combat the situation, why not just invest it into alternative energy (better batteries, solar, fusion, etc.) to get off oil instead of fighting to keep it? That's what I don't get.
Subsidize every home to have solar panels and subsidize electric cars (something much cheaper than a Tesla) for each house. Problem fucking solved.
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there was plenty of money being spent on military interests
Including in the space program itself. Rockets are rockets, and you can aim them however you like.
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Imagine if they'd found oil...
Re: to much military (Score:2)
TL;DR (Score:2)
having been shown at film festivals for the past year or so,
Do you intend to complete the summary later ?
Why We Stopped Going To the Moon
NASA and White House shifting priorities. More demand for a space station (Skylab).
Re:TL;DR (Score:5, Insightful)
The only reason the U.S. goes back to the moon will be because China wants to try doing it. Otherwise a moon landing is in the hands of the rich entrepreneurs who are holding their own private dick waving contests.
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The Soviets were never in the 'race to the moon'. The Apollo program had many goals:
By the time the USA was finally putting people on the moon, their rocket program was highly competitive, the military/espionage value of humans in space was seen to be low, domestic opinion of the program was mixed (although people did s
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The Soviets were never in the 'race to the moon'.
First attempt to land on the moon: Luna 1, 1959 [wikipedia.org]
First hard landing on the moon: Luna 2, 1959 [wikipedia.org]
First soft landing on the moon: Luna 9, 1966 [wikipedia.org]
First unmanned sample return from the moon: Luna 16, 1970 [wikipedia.org]
First unmanned moon rover: Luna 17, 1970 [wikipedia.org]
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There's a whole lot of revisionist and bias-by-omission-of-data history going on with the space race. I like to try to figure things out, I like to figure out the reason for things. I've yet to fathom the reasons for this. I see it a lot with WWII history as well. I don't know the motives and I'm unsure of the source but, at this point, I'm inclined to think it's not people coming up with these things on their own but are people parroting things they've heard/read elsewhere and, probably due to confirmation
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Nope. (Score:2)
Re: TL;DR (Score:2)
Re:TL;DR (Score:5, Informative)
That was clearly an exaggeration. 9 manned missions got to the moon, 6 landed, and all 9 came back, with only one running into some problems.
If each had only 50% chance of survival, they had 0.2% chance of having no casualties in 9 flights. Even if you look at just 6 that landed, that's 1.6% chance of flying 6 times successfully.
I think their odds were likely quite a bit higher than 50%.
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It's the difference between a guesstimate before the fact to an analysis with 20/20 hindsight.
Re:TL;DR (Score:5, Informative)
It's you that don't understand how probabilities work.
You play heads or tails, and get heads 8 first times.
Gambler fallacy says that as heads and tails have overall the same probability, tails should happen next.
Pulzar guesses that the coin is most probably a biased coin, and heads should happen next.
Re:TL;DR (Score:5, Informative)
You fell for the Gambler's fallacy.
You misunderstand gambler's fallacy.
Let's say the chance to come back alive is indeed 50%.
We had 8 missions. The chance for the 9th is still 50%.
We have no missions. What is the chance that we get 9 missions coming back alive? (1/2)^9 = 0.001953125 = 0.2%.
Gamblers fallacy would be saying after 8 successful missions that the change for the 9th is 0.2% - which is not what the GP said.
GP is talking about statistical significance [wikipedia.org].
If the chance top come back alive is 50%, we expect 4.5 out of 9 missions to come back alive.
Null hypothesis: The difference between 4.5 expected and 9 observed missions coming back alive is due to chance.
Alternative hypothesis: The chance to come back is higher than 50%
SD = sqrt((1/2)^2*(1/2)^2) = 0.25
z = (observed result - expected result)/SD = (9 - 4.5)/0.25 = 18
NormalCDF(18,infinity) = 1.04E-70% = the chance that the probability to come back alive is indeed 50%
Conclusion: GP is correct, it is very unlikely that the chance to come back alive was 50%.
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SD = sqrt(0.5*0.5) = 0.5
SE = SD/sqrt(sample size) = 0.5/sqrt(9) = 0.16
z = (observed result - expected result)/SE = (9-4.5)/0.16 = 28.125 - So, the chance that it was 50% is even lower.
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>We have no missions. What is the chance that we get 9 missions coming back alive? (1/2)^9 = 0.001953125 = 0.2%.
This is true if you have a fair coin as in the Gambler's fallacy example. However, I do not believe a rocket can be treated as a fair coin. First of all you have to change the coin for every toss and these coins have to be imperfect. This will totally screw up a simple probability calculation.
In reality, if you go down to the quantum level you can say that the quantum state of each rocket will
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The calculations I did, and the point of the post by Pulzar you were originally replying to were showing that it is not a fair coin.
You obviously do not understand probabilities.
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No, I invoked the gambler's fallacy because it seemed to me that the original poster assumed that the system has memory.
It is stated in wikipedia:
Gambler's fallacy does not apply when the probability of different events is not independent...
Since I consider different rocket launch as independent events I think gambler's fallacy applies to some extent.
So, the only way to calculate a success rate of a launch if you get the failure rate of every component of the rocket and do some calculations based on those.
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Re: TL;DR (Score:2)
That's not the Gambler's fallacy! (Score:2)
Since the missions are independent of each other the sixth mission can have the same chance (50%) of success than the first one.
That's exactly what the GP is assuming! If each mission independently has 50% odds of success, then the probably of all of the succeeding is (0.5)^2=0.001953125, which is about 0.2%.
The Gambler's fallacy is something else entirely. In this case, the Gambler's fallacy would be: since we had such a long string of successes, we must be due for a failure. I.e. assuming that the true success rate is 50%, which is ridiculous, the probability for later mission must be less than 50% because the earlier missions had
Re:TL;DR (Score:5, Insightful)
In addition, the very first Apollo mission resulted in loss of life, and they still pushed on - albeit with a delay. Hardly ruinous.
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Well, that sort of depends on where you call the beginning, no? If you're counting the training then, yes. If you count the mission as starting at lift-off then not so much. I know, it's semantics but hear me out...
If a group of SEALS are going to go out and kill a bad guy next week and one of them dies in a training accident on Tuesday, do we say that they died on the mission or do we say that they died during a training mishap? The reason that I ask is because I've seen more than a few people are fond of
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In the Apollo case the flaws in the capsule would have resulted in death eventually and probably sooner then later. Sorta like if the SEAL got killed by a defect in a new weapon that was developed to kill the bad guy.
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Re: TL;DR (Score:2)
There was little to be gained by continuing to go (Score:3)
43 years ago, we quit going to the moon and it didn't seem like a bad decision given the expense and that we'd already been there several times. But I don't think anyone believed that it would be 50 years or more before a person would set foot on another planetary body.
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People who say they never became somewhat routine may be looking back through time-tinted lenses. They never became quite as routine as the space shuttle though. During the 80s-90s, they shot off so frequently that often they'd get just a 5 second blurb on the nightly news, or not even that if something more important was going on.
There are obviously benefits to manned spaceflight with regard to public awareness. Whether those benefits outweight the per diem science cost might be up for debate. Publi
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The shuttles were exciting at first too and it seemed we were on a track that could lead to ordinary people getting into space.
The shuttle program was designed to appear like an airplane with booster was able to reach high orbit. The image was more important than the reality.
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Unfortunately, the Vietnam war and its aftermath bled the USA until there was nothing left.
The Vietnam War didn't bleed the USA. It drove the wrong group into power: The feel-good, anti-science hippies got their representatives to cut back on everything that didn't produce immediate self-satisfaction. That meant no nuclear power, no space program, little basic science. Only when scientists managed to convince the military that something could be a good weapon did anything get done: ARPANET, GPS, etc.
Re:There was little to be gained by continuing to (Score:5, Insightful)
I've never seen any evidence that the same left wing groups who opposed nuclear power opposed landing people on the moon. Those two issues seem very unrelated to me in fact.
Meanwhile, fiscal conservatism has always been the reason for NASA budget cuts in my experience. With a shrinking budget should NASA have kept landing people on the moon or invested its limited resources in other less understood aspects of our universe?
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Of course I was talking about the left wing anti nuclear camp and made zero mention of social welfair advocates so your post is completely irrelevant. Furthermore your statisitics for and against the space program make zero differentiation between the ideologies involved in opposing the moon landings and are therefore useless in proving your (what seems to be) the Left is bad agenda.
So in summary, your post is both irrelevant and pointless.
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Maybe you should try reading some history. Eventually Americans got tired of seeing their children killed fighting an absolutely worthless war halfway around the world. That had zero to do with nuclear power or the lunar program, other than making people stop believing that "Daddy knows best".
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Did you see the Apollo 13 film (1995)? Part of the setup was that the moon missions were already old hat to Americans, who had mostly stopped paying attention after Apollo 11 had achieved the big goal.
I'm confident that the screenwriters had pretty good access to institutional memory at NASA re events that occurred 25 years earlier, there would've been a lot of old hands still around.
Too the moon (Score:2)
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Yes Bob, most certainly Bob!
But lets keep it a secret!
the then-promised future (Score:2, Insightful)
I was a teen then, and recall all the stories, the promises in the popular press about how we'd be sending men to Mars by the 1980's and have a permanent base there by 2000. It seemed like a time of unbounded, and in hindsight naive optimism.
Since I was not very old at the time I was not able to rationally evaluate those claims on my own, so I bought into them. It was the popular consensus, and I had no basis to reject it.
Now, as someone much older, I believe there is a place for manned space exploration,
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Why would we? What do we get out of cool photos of Pluto? Even if we do want the cool photos, how many cool photos of Pluto do we really need?
Space missions are a step away from a waste of money. NASA's budget should be 90% developing alternative propulsion methods, because ultimately the Space Age will never start if we're just shooting V-2 rockets at Mars.
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I think I was 12. I was born in 1957, at the end of it. I got astronaut pajamas a few days later and was very happy with them. They had feet and I could slide across the hardwood floor at supersonic speeds, or slightly faster. I, too, was going to be an astronaut some day. I was going to go to the moon and figure out the age of the craters. I wrote a letter to Buzz Aldrin and I got back a pack of information and a stamped signature and I joined some sort of club (I forget the name).
I never did make it to th
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it was aliens (Score:3)
I thought it was because the aliens told us to keep off their lawn.
Re:it was aliens (Score:4, Funny)
Attempt no ball games there. Damn kids.
Because Monsters (Score:2)
economics (Score:5, Insightful)
Kennedy sent us to the moon for prestige. "Look at America, aren't we wonderful!"
Where's the incentive now. It's a huge expense for little reward. Any mistakes cost billions, lives and ... prestige. Compare the costs and benefits and there is no logical reason to go. Some country more desperate for prestige will go next.
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You know super rich have a different idea what stuff is worth, e.g. extended lifespan in low gravity ... ... ...
What about this: http://www.therichest.com/expe... [therichest.com]
Imagine you could brew 100l beer on the moon or make wine/champagne there, using lunar water.
Or build up a grave yard
Heck, people would pay extraordinary sums just for having a keg of beer orbit the moon once or twice
Re:economics (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd actually disagree.
There is a tangible benefit as substantial as having a coaling station on the coast of Africa was in the 19th century, or having an unsinkable aircraft carrier called Hawaii or Diego Garcia today: the poles.
There are precisely 2 points on the moon that have (basically) uninterrupted line-of-sight to earth AND line of sight to the sun (ie power). Whoever gets there, and plants at least a basic base there, has a de-facto ownership based on occupancy.
Short of ejecting them by violence, that's forever. That's pretty important.
Re:economics (Score:4, Interesting)
There are precisely 2 points on the moon that have (basically) uninterrupted line-of-sight to earth AND line of sight to the sun (ie power).
Nice idea, but the lunar axis is inclined 1.5 degrees to the ecliptic. Not as bad as earth, but you are going to need a tower half a mile high holding up your massive solar array, to catch the winter sun. Small engineering problem there.
Worse, the lunar orbit has a 5 degree inclination, so the Earth (2 degrees across) will be rising and setting on a monthly cycle. Hardly uninterrupted.
What were you planning to do with this polar base?
has a de-facto ownership based on occupancy.
You might want to google the South Pole of the earth for a precedent that contradicts that.
Re: economics (Score:2)
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Ah, classic AC answer.
First assuming that tower weight/complexity is linear to height and gravity. (its actually easier than that)
Then neglecting the small matter of infrastructure required. Good steel suppliers and crane hire are rare on the moon.
Otherwise you are talking about launching a skyscraper to the moon?
Hilarious, but not as funny as when Douglas Adams did it.
Might cost lives? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is the loss of life in going into space always seen as such a big, scary risk with ruinous repercussions?
You want safe? Stay home and play in the back yard.
Pretty much any human exploration endeavor worth a damn risks life and limb -- exploring the poles, sailing to "the new world", etc.
Limiting space travel because somebody might die? That's lame.
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They're the same people who need safe spaces, need to disarm the populace, need to have equal outcomes, need to take away liberties for the sake of freedom, need to control how you speak, need to control how you think, need to know what you're doing, need to ensure that you're doing things the way they feel they need to be done, need to tell you what to eat, need to tell you what to put in your body, need to tell you who to worship, and need to tell you that you're doing it wrong.
They are cowards. They hold
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Getting Apollo funded was not a slam dunk and it was a unique period in American history that may never be repeated. Explorers of the past were sometimes funded by governments but often had to get money from private sources. Either way many times it was in exchange for the promise of territory or riches. Further, none
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Everyone accepts that people might die. What's hard to justify is spending a trillion dollars to send a few people to Mars, when for a few billion you can have rovers running for years. It's pretty simple math.
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But it's not just about studying Mars or any other planet for just scientific reasons. That's myopic.
Space travel is an end unto itself.
Re:Might cost lives? (Score:4, Insightful)
That's fine. But if you want the American public to fund it, you need to justify it. Do you have skin in the game? Are you willing to do without in order to fund a trip to Mars? Or do you just want everyone else to pay for it?
43 years? That's appalling! (Score:5, Insightful)
It is depressing to me just how few people admit haw mind bendingly awful it is that we have not been back for what used to be a lifetime.
As to why, I can think of several reasons that nobody from earth has been back in this time...
1. Lack of political leadership globally.
2. There are easier ways to fill pork barrels.
3. The press in the developed world is in the hands of an ever smaller bunch of sociopaths who take pride in being unscientific.
4. The world is too comfortable for the 1%
5. There is a myth that if we don't spend it on progress, the money will be used to feed/house the poor and hungry.
6. Fear by the powerful that once people are off earth, they will become "global citizens", not just good Americans, Russians, Brits or whatever.
43 years that's nothing (Score:5, Interesting)
Space exploration is for the patient. Science fiction is for phonies.
The popular science fiction (always endemic on this board) with its fantasy physics always ignores immense distances, energies, time, politics and money.
Most importantly money.
During the last 43 years we have probed the entire solar system and are currently roving the sands of Mars as we peck away at our keyboards at a safe distance and for costs that do not over burden society. Space exploration is a constant source of scientific achievement and with advanced directives and equipment (Kepler, Webb) we are going to explore the galaxy in the comfort of our sofas without breaking the bank
Because that's the trick, our robotics can pave the way for us because Space is a harsh place.
Now the next step, and it could take 50 years, is the when we land a lathe and a robot to operate it on the Moon. Soon after there will be an image of a dome and behind it the earth and in the dome there will be a bunch of green leafy things curling up from the lunar soil to reach for the sun. And then things will probably go a lot faster.
You don't need to break the bank, just print it. (Score:2)
USA could effectively print its Space Program...just print a trillion dollars, and make it available to NASA, to create the most amazing spaceship yet built, which will carry humans to every corner of the Solar system.
Not only will there be a worldwide economy boost, and a huge one in the US, but in the end you will have an actual spaceship.
And this program will accelerate all sciences and education in US, due to the tremendous demand for scientists and science-aware personnel.
Re: You don't need to break the bank, just print i (Score:2)
That's no moon! (Score:2)
My perspective (dating back to the early 1960s) (Score:5, Interesting)
(A comment I made over at io9 as well.)
As someone who lived through the ‘false dawn of space travel’ (to use Heinlein’s phrase), who grew up intensely following the space program, and who actually worked at NASA/JSC on the Space Shuttle flight simulators back in 1979-80, I can give you my observation: the American people got bored with space. Seriously. No one (outside of a small group of space enthusiasts, such as myself) was clamoring for yet more Apollo missions. TV ratings of flight and moonwalk coverage sank to the basement. It was all just more men in space suits skipping around in a black-and-white environment.
With no public demand or support, neither Congress nor the White House had much stomach for pushing things forward, not when the funds had other uses. The NASA manned flight division evolved into a jobs program, which is why NASA fought against privatization of space flight for so long. (The NASA unmanned space exploration division continued to work miracles, even as it does to this day.)
Of course, the real root problem was that the Apollo approach was fundamentally flawed in the first place; as some wag put it decades ago, it was like building a cruise liner for a single crossing of the Atlantic and sinking everything but one lifeboat at the end of the trip. Prior to Kennedy’s challenge, the US was working on an incremental approach: SSTO (single stage to orbit), gliding re-entry, and a space station. We basically lost half a century due to the Apollo approach (and the horribly expensive, horribly fragile kludge that was the Space Shuttle). Frankly, NASA’s current Orion effort is a repeat of just about all the mistakes we made with Apollo and threatens to soak up NASA’s budget for years to come, even as goal dates keep getting pushed back more and more.
The night that Apollo 11 landed, I was part of a group of friends (we were all high school students) who stayed up all night to watch the coverage. When I heard the words, “Houston, Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed.”, I felt the future had begun. I was sure I would live long enough to visit LEO myself and to see humans colonize the moon and land on Mars. If you had described to me back in 1969 what the state of space exploration (and, in particular, US space exploration) would be in 2015, I would not have believed you. And yet here we are.
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I'd say the American people were never interested in space. They got all interested in it during Mercury/Gemini/Apollo not because they were actually interested in space, but because they wanted to beat the Soviets. Apollo was particularly interesting because going to the moon was a new shiny. Once newness wo
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I'd say the American people were never interested in space. They got all interested in it during Mercury/Gemini/Apollo not because they were actually interested in space, but because they wanted to beat the Soviets.
Old guy here.
I'm certain that you are mistaken. Almost everyone during that time was excited about going to space in itself for the sense of exploration. That was the heyday of science fiction - it was very popular among adults and the general sense most people had was of new world excitement.
I would say that the beat the soviets thing was key to getting the support of politicians and the ultra rich because it answered the only question those people ever have: "What's in it for me?"
It's all about the Soviets (Score:5, Insightful)
Primary objective was to beat the Reds to the stars, back then it was them or us. When Apollo program started, USSR scored a number of firsts in the Space Race that demonstrated the superiority of Communism (not really but there's extensive discussions on all that). Whatever, Hugh Dryden suggested putting a man on the moon and there was already the Saturn rocket and F1 engine in development. Kennedy used his great oral skills, Johnson used his huge political power, James Webb used his knowledge on how to work the system to maintain budgets over a multi-year period.
Once we achieved a manned landing the race was over. What's even interesting is Bob Gilruth suggested no more Apollo flights as each one had so many opportunities for things to go wrong and lose a crew (and almost did with 13). Apollo 18, 19, 20 were cancelled to save money (wouldn't have saved much as hardware ready to go, crews pretty much fully trained).
There is the "What If" Gargarin never made the first space flight? Would we have worked on economic development of space like we are trying to do now? Dennis Wingo has some articles including past studies from those years after Sputnik but before Gargarin's flight. https://denniswingo.wordpress.... [wordpress.com]
Lunokhod was the Luna race victor, not Apollo (Score:4, Informative)
This approach was copied for Mars exploration, and will be used in many other expeditions. Not an Apollo type approach.
Robots first (Score:2)
We now have much more advanced robots. And robots just need energy, which can be collected from sunlight. No water, food, air. If we go back we would first do it with non-humanoid remote controlled robots. I see that leading on to humanoid telepresence systems with humanoid devices remote controlled from earth. Sure its a time lag, but it would give long term presence at a lot lower cost.
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You poor bastards actually think we went to the mo (Score:2)
https://youtu.be/cOdzhQS_MMw [youtu.be]
Sad that so many are short-sighted (Score:2)
small government (Score:2)
If you are a supporter of "small government", congratulations, you helped end the space program.
And I'm not being facetious. There are a lot of people who thought it was a waste of money and they successfully destroyed the space program using "small government" as the talking point. I'm not on their political team, but I congratulate their success.
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Aaah... Bullshit. (Score:2)
Sure, sure... let's just count the money.
That way most people's lives aren't worth the sweat off a donkey's balls.
And shit like those eggheads playing god with their giant electricity spending machines is beyond waste.
On the other hand... counting technological spinoffs...
Spinoff is a NASA publication featuring technology made available to the public.
Since 1976, NASA has featured an average of 50 technologies each year in the annual publication, and Spinoff maintains a searchable database of these technologies.
When products first spun off from space research, NASA presented a black and white report in 1973, titled the "Technology Utilization Program Report". Because of interest in the reports, NASA decided to create the annual publications in color.
Spinoff was first published in 1976,[14] and since then, NASA has distributed free copies to universities, the media, inventors, and the general public.
Spinoff describes how NASA works with various industries and small businesses to bring new technology to the public.
As of 2015, there were over 1,800 Spinoff products in the database dating back to 1976.[37]
http://spinoff.nasa.gov/spinof... [nasa.gov]
But the part I love the most is how that "spinoff is a myth" text, though it ignores the fact that those spinoffs are a BYPRODUCT of research for actual completed scientific projects and NOT of direct rese
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Now the Space Nutters will.....
I presume by that description, you are referring to people who can do better mathematics than 10 year olds, know some history and perhaps basic sociology?
No. They will mostly ignore you. I just felt like a bit of troll feeding before I went to bed.
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I never said you had to be particularly good at anything. Just possessing a basic grounding - hence the expression about 10 year old. That will not make you into a "space nutter". Education into some of the basics, not just mathematics, of being an adult will help you to make more informed decisions and statements.
A simple grasp of arithmetic would show you that spending less money on exploring space will not put any more money into the hands of the poor. A little background in human behaviour will expl
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... Maths provides no thrust, doesn't move mass, you can't eat it, you can't breathe it.
It does move mass. Without a lot of serious number crunching, we wouldn't have any modern cars, planes or anything else.Anything more complicated than a dugout canoe needs calculations.
You can't eat it, sure but without it millions would not eat.
If the world keeps trundling along without a few more sums, everyone will have as much fun breathing as people in Beijing
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"That's about 5200 mph to you and me, Russ."