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NASA Mars Moon Space

Moon is Stepping Stone, Not Alternative To Mars, NASA Chief Says (scientificamerican.com) 64

The moon has not superseded Mars as a human-spaceflight target, despite NASA's current focus on getting astronauts to Earth's nearest neighbor, agency officials stressed. From a report: The Red Planet remains the ultimate destination, and the moon will serve as a stepping stone along the way, Jim Bridenstine, NASA administrator, and Bill Gerstenmaier, associate administrator of NASA's Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate, said during congressional hearings Wednesday. "The moon is the proving ground, and Mars is the goal," Bridenstine said during testimony before the Subcommittee on Space, Science and Competitiveness, part of the U.S. Senate's Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. "The glory of the moon is that it's only a three-day journey home," Bridenstine added. "So, we can prove all of the technologies, we can reduce all of the risks, we can try all of the different maturations that are necessary to live and work on another world. And we can do it all at the moon, where, if there is a problem, if there is an emergency, we know that we can get people home." He cited NASA's Apollo 13 mission in 1970, which famously managed to make it safely back to Earth despite experiencing a serious problem on the way to the moon.
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Moon is Stepping Stone, Not Alternative To Mars, NASA Chief Says

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  • So, we can prove all of the technologies, we can reduce all of the risks, we can try all of the different maturations that are necessary to live and work on another world.

    If this guy thinks that Mars has no "surprises" up its sleeve he is going to be proved sorely mistaken. Possibly fatally so.

    • If this guy thinks that Mars has no "surprises" up its sleeve he is going to be proved sorely mistaken. Possibly fatally so.

      While your statement is true, it is unrelated to anything he's said. He's still correct; while dealing with lunar dust is not the same as dealing with martian fines, it's still a good analogue in many ways and it certainly is nearby. It's close enough to where if there are problems, we can send more supplies in a timely fashion. Or where it might even be possible to recover crew members from the lunar surface, although they'd have to have a vehicle on hot standby for that.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Obviously the Moon is not Mars and it is a wholly accurate description to call it a stepping stone. So the long term role of the Moon in terms of human exploration of the galaxy, is being that stepping stone. It is kind of better to have high speed objects, space craft, aiming at a largely empty moon, rather than the earth, even though the atmosphere would diminish the impact, it is still not desirable.

        So the Moon, is the logical space station by which we explore the rest of the galaxy, where space rescue

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yes, yes, no one expects the subterranean Martian psychic vegetables.

      The idea of lunar testing is to see the feasibility of different options in an (even) lower gravity and negligable (really near 0) atmosphere but enough proximity that corrections and emergency resupplies are a possibility.

      Sure there will be surprises, but they don't have to be the sort of stupid mistake that we could've spotted with relatively easy testing.

      (Also, this gives us a chance to put up a color-safe flag by Tranquility Base. No

    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @03:11PM (#57386310)

      It is kinda like saying, if we are trained to boat across the great lakes, we can take on crossing the Atlantic.
      However if no one crossed the Atlantic by boat before, I would much rather have someone who was able to cross large bodies of water before, with enough skills to deal with such an undertaking.

      • On the other hand, if you've never succeeded in boating across the great lakes, you'd better not try the Atlantic!

    • Why did you read "reduce all of the risks" means "eliminate all of the risks"?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's about time somebody stated this. We supposedly went to the moon in the 60's/70's. Haven't been back in nearly 50 years? WTF?

    Now they talk about going to Mars! I've always thought that it would make more sense to build a moon base to launch spacecraft further into space. Finally someone else says it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, because they are easy, not because they are hard, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept. Going to Mars we are willing to postpone, which we intend to lose, and let others, do.

  • Mars is interesting, no doubt, but it's not where we should be going.

    Venus is Earth's twin.

    • by Wulf2k ( 4703573 )

      Honestly, anybody going anywhere is pretty alright.

      Things have been a bit stale on the exploration front since that whole New World thing a couple centuries back.

    • Re:Mars Schmars (Score:4, Informative)

      by NikeHerc ( 694644 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @04:23PM (#57386842)
      Venus is Earth's twin.

      "Lead would melt on the surface of the planet [Venus], where the temperature is around 872 F (467 C)." https://www.space.com/18526-venus-temperature.html [space.com]

      "At the surface, the atmosphere presses down as hard as water 3,000 feet beneath Earth's ocean." https://www.space.com/18526-venus-temperature.html [space.com]

      Not a twin in those regards.
      • by Greyfox ( 87712 )
        Bah, just give the Earth a couple of centuries, it'll catch up!
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Not a twin in those regards.

        Venus is still the most similar planet to Earth in our solar system. Mercury, Mars and Pluto (if you want to include it) are barren rocks, and Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune are all balls of gas.

        Curiously, near the poles the Venusian atmosphere is colder than anywhere on Earth, and with a surprisingly low atmospheric pressure. There's probably a thermal sweet spot somewhere on Venus.

        https://www.iflscience.com/spa... [iflscience.com]

      • Not a twin in those regards.

        Well, let's say evil twin.

    • On Mars we can more or less readily live, on the surface.
      On Venus we can't, we can only live in floating balloons in the skies ... what would be the purpose of that?

      • by synaptic ( 4599 )

        It's an open question if human beings can thrive on a planet like Mars with 38% of the gravity of Earth.

        Venus has a bit over 90% of Earth's gravity.

        Floating habitats in the Venus atmosphere can be situated at 1 Earth atmosphere of pressure. It's doubtful Mars will be able to have a 1atm atmosphere ever due to its low gravity.

        And unless Venus is isothermal, it's theoretically possible to create a heat engine to cool some portion of it to any desired temperature.

      • by mmutka ( 5495542 )
        Actually, it is healthier to live a little bit *below* the surface on Mars and Moon, due to things like radiation, meteors, and temperature variation. You can visit the surface for short periods with appropriate preparation and equipment, but that applies to Venus as well.
        • You hardly can visit the Venus surface ... especially if you mean with visit: a human in a suit. Obviously you can drop a probe, or let a robot out of its cave.

          • by mmutka ( 5495542 )
            The suit needed for Venus surface would of course need to be different from day and night suits for walking on the Moon, but I don't think a Venus surface suit is against the laws of physics as such. Existing atmospheric diving suits are almost rated to the pressure on top of Skadi Mons. Active cooling is of course needed.
            • but I don't think a Venus surface suit is against the laws of physics as such.
              Cough cough ...
              Active cooling is of course needed.
              You see, you are smart enough to figure it.

              Now if you find a way to have active cooling "in a suit" that can sustain the pressure on Venus with the temperatures there: you likely get a Nobel Prize.

              But you can backpedal and we can agree on a kind of "submarine" ...

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Radiation protection is something humans need to figure out. I don't know that we need a moon orbiting space to learn that, but we definitely need to be outside LEO.

    We also need some artificial gravity - spin the damn thing most of the time to have .8G to 1.0G - there are lots and lots of reasons for that too.

    But spending too much money on the lunar crap to "be there for 50+ yrs" isn't needed. NASA needs to learn to build what you need and nothing more. Their budgets get fucked with every year because the

  • by Pfhorrest ( 545131 ) on Thursday September 27, 2018 @06:30PM (#57387596) Homepage Journal

    There's a lot of places on Earth that are a lot more hospitable than the Moon -- the middle of the Sahara, Antactica, the seafloor -- that are still pretty inaccessible to us. Yeah, we can get there, and with a continuous supply chain we can stay there a while, but we're not going to have a continuous supply chain to Mars. Whoever goes to Mars has to be able to make it there on their own. So we need to be able to at least have permanent self-sustaining settlements in the most inhospitable places on Earth, if we're ever going to have permanent self-sustaining settlements off-Earth.

    And by the time we're able to do that, we've eliminated one of the biggest reasons to have people off-Earth in the first place, because if we have "colonies" on Earth that are capable of surviving Martian conditions, they'll also survive everything that could ever happen to Earth short of the death of the sun. Climate change? Nuclear holocaust? Giant meteor? Living in the aftermath of those is a cake walk compared to living on Mars.

    • To have a supply chain anywhere. Fuel can be really cheap if done well.
    • So we need to be able to at least have permanent self-sustaining settlements in the most inhospitable places on Earth

      Something that hasn't been accomplished at contemporary tech levels in at least a millenia. The task is so difficult, even at pre-industrial revolution tech levels, very few even tried.

      And that's here on Earth where air and water are freely available and the most complex parts of a basic life support system was a heavy coat and an iron pot.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Mars may not be as bad as you imagine compared to the three places on Earth you suggest. Martian soil looks like it could grow various food sources, which could be difficult in the Sahara or Antarctic. You can grow some stuff under the sea, but lack of sunlight is an issue that Mars doesn't have. And the sea is an extremely harsh environment in terms of corrosion and pressure.

      Water is also a big issue. Obviously the Antarctic has loads, but the other two do not. At least, not relatively clean, pure water th

    • You are making some wrong assumptions here. The goal is not to save the human race but the civilisation and Earth itself. Even in the worst case scenarios of asteroid strikes or supervulcano eruption the human race will survive, the human civilization or the earth ecosystem not.
      Technologically we can do any time a self-sustainable earth “colony” anywhere on Earth but there is no need for it. Nobody will invest in a self-sustained outpost in Artic or desert when is much cheaper just to haul suppl

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