NASA Asks: What Would You Pack For a Trip to the Moon? (nasa.gov) 111
AmiMoJo quotes SlashGear: We're still many years away from casual consumer trips to the Moon, but it's easy to fantasize about such trips. NASA is getting in on the fun with a new campaign presenting the public with a simple question: what would you pack if you were taking your own lunar trip? NASA is encouraging anyone interested to share a picture of what's in their bag (for this imagined Moon trip) using its new #NASAMoonKit social campaign...
NASA is encouraging the public to get a container that meets this volume limitation, pack it with the precious few items they'd bring along on the trip, then take a picture and share it on social media — either Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter — using the #NASAMoonKit hashtag. NASA says that it may share your post on its own social accounts if it likes what it sees.
"What can't you leave the planet without?" asks the campaign's official web page. "Is it your camera? Your drawing pad? Or maybe your musical instrument?
"How would you organize everything you need for your next giant leap?"
NASA is encouraging the public to get a container that meets this volume limitation, pack it with the precious few items they'd bring along on the trip, then take a picture and share it on social media — either Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter — using the #NASAMoonKit hashtag. NASA says that it may share your post on its own social accounts if it likes what it sees.
"What can't you leave the planet without?" asks the campaign's official web page. "Is it your camera? Your drawing pad? Or maybe your musical instrument?
"How would you organize everything you need for your next giant leap?"
Is it a trick question? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Is it a trick question? (Score:1)
Too diluted. Take a pocket device to make pure medicinal alcohol outta those hydroponic carbs!
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Sounds like you drink just to get drunk.
Not judging, times I do the same, but good beer tastes good too. Pure alcohol, I have an in-law in eastern europe I can ask for that.
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Easy (Score:5, Funny)
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Maybe the book too. Having something to read could be nice.
Scrub that, take an eBook reader full of books.
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The Guide was already in e-reader format.
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Yeah, but it's almost impossible for the primitives of Earth to get their hands on a copy.
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There was one model that had a lifetime pre-paid cellular modem with access to its store and one web site - wikipedia. If that's not pretty much exactly the model of the Guide, I don't know what is. https://xkcd.com/548/ [xkcd.com]
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Plus Nokia is building 4G on the Moon!
Rachel Welch lookalike (Score:2)
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Or Emma Peel
Diana Rigg passed away last month at age 82.
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Not so fast... do you know where your towel is?
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Definitely the right choice!
Dream on (Score:2)
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Everything (Score:5, Funny)
I need my emotional support dog and a bunch of face mask and hand sanitizers, you never know who you run into on the moon. There are stories, you know.
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I need my emotional support dog and a bunch of face mask and hand sanitizers, you never know who you run into on the moon. There are stories, you know.
And toilet paper. Lots and lots of toilet paper.
No need to pack (Score:2)
"Trips to the Moon" for the masses will continue to be fantasy for at least a century, and I'll be long dead then.
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"Trips to the Moon" for the masses will continue to be fantasy for at least a century, and I'll be long dead then.
Here, let me re-word your comment as you stand on the field watching the Wright Brothers a century ago.:
Trips in the air" for the masses will continue to be a fantasy for at least a century.
Hope that clarifies just how bad humans are at predicting the future. The human cyborg with the latest Sony Brainstation implant will be able to clarify that for you old-fashioned ignorant analog meatsacks likely within 20 years.
(And yeah, I know I'm probably wrong. It'll be more like 10.)
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Faulty analogies based on ignorance are the staple of slashdot. You're not an exception :)
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Trips in the air" for the masses will continue to be a fantasy for at least a century.
Hope that clarifies just how bad humans are at predicting the future.
It might, except you are lying. Nobody said that. Quite the contrary, they were already predicting space rockets. It even made the movies. [wikipedia.org]
The Wright Brothers were high-school dropouts who financed their aircraft from their bicycle shop, and fifty years later we had commercial intercontinental jet travel.
In contrast, the Apollo program cost $200 billion in today's money, and fifty years later we had Soyuz tickets to the ISS costing $90 million per seat. The fundamentals have not changed. SpaceX mi
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Trips in the air" for the masses will continue to be a fantasy for at least a century.
Hope that clarifies just how bad humans are at predicting the future.
It might, except you are lying. Nobody said that. Quite the contrary, they were already predicting space rockets. It even made the movies. [wikipedia.org] The Wright Brothers were high-school dropouts who financed their aircraft from their bicycle shop, and fifty years later we had commercial intercontinental jet travel.
In contrast, the Apollo program cost $200 billion in today's money, and fifty years later we had Soyuz tickets to the ISS costing $90 million per seat. The fundamentals have not changed. SpaceX might get the cost down so the 0.1% can afford a ride, but don't hold your breath.
The entire point here is, none of this will take anywhere near a silly prediction of a century to be sold on Amazon with 1-click reservations and 6-month financing.
We've gone from The Wright Brothers to the planet Mars in a little over a century. And I hope cost is not THE factor driving (or not driving) future innovation.
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You've not gone from anything to anything, you're just a spectator who doesn't understand the basic principles of how these things happen - neither the science, nor the technology, nor the economics.
But, boy, don't you have that big American mouth.
Fact: Humans achieved flight around 1903.
Fact: Humans landed on the moon around 1969.
Fact: Humans, put a rover on Mars successfully around 1997.
Fact: You're one hell of an arrogant fucking human who can't accept facts. I don't care how they happened. The fact is, they happened. And within a century.
And these are human achievements asshole, so shut the fuck up with the nationalism already (and I say that as an American)
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Please ignore the idiot ACs. Best to not even read posts below '1', or feels like the youtube comment section.
Back to topic, I would argue that the first 50 years from Kittyhawk saw far more progress in transport than the next fifty.
And sorry, yes it is all about economics, as we ran into resource constraints.
While computers have become much smaller, using far fewer resources to achieve more, this has not happened in transport.
This is why we did not have those flying cars by the year 2000. Or manned mis
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Cost is a sane driving factor. Whether you count the cost in dollars or yen, material resources, human resources, there's a cost to everything. Shit gets crazy when national pride comes in and you neglect W, X and Y to pay for getting to Z first or getting to Z at all. Now, there may be a very good reason outside of national pride to get to Z first (or ever) but not always.
As for the Wright brothers, lighter than air flight predates them by over a century (hot air balloons, 1783, France).
As for being able t
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It might, except you are lying. Nobody said that. Quite the contrary, they were already predicting space rockets
Plenty of people said things like that. Plenty of people said the opposite as well, but there are always naysayers. Lots of sober, credible people claimed that we would never break the sound barrier. Similarly, lots of people said that powered flight would never work, or, once it was achieved, that it would never be practical as anything other than a hobby. Heck, lots of people claimed that humans would never be able to travel more than 50 mph because the air would be sucked out of their lungs and they woul
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I don't need to read up on it, I know what I'm talking about. The sober, credible people I'm talking about there fall into the category of "intelligent but outright wrong" or "intelligent but stuck in a particular outdated paradigm". Basically people whose expertise in a subject has trapped them in a box they can't see out of, or people whose expertise in one or more fields have lead them to believe that they're polymaths who know everything. While I'm not sure how much credibility to give to the dinosaur
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It's not like trips to the moon are going to solve some problem that people have. It would be a curiosity and that's about it, maybe get a few tourist bucks.
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There was a clear reason why people might want to take trips in the air... land travel sucked. Air travel would be so much better, it was a HUGE incentive. It's not like trips to the moon are going to solve some problem that people have...
Guess that depends on how bad this planet gets, doesn't it? Global pandemic and all.
As they ignorantly exclaimed while clanking celebratory cups together 100 years ago in crowded bar..."Pfft! Second wave! Hogwash!"
Ah, ignorance. Never goes out of fashion.
Food, shelter and ... (Score:2)
"What can't you leave the planet without?
Sex doll: Since it's a long trip, the space-saving inflatable model might be required.
What? Someone had to be honest!
Re: Food, shelter and ... (Score:1)
Doll? I'd fight for an equal opportunity for women!... to go with me to the moon and fuck me!
Oh, ... I forgot ... this is Slashdot. ;)
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George Carlin already generated the list (Score:3)
https://www.bing.com/videos/se... [bing.com]
Money, keys, comb, wallet, facial tissues, pens, contraceptives and a book!
A few ideas (Score:4, Funny)
given the space limitations, with no weight limits listed...
a 2TB e-ink reader with some extra 2TB cards.
The rest of the space could be filled with weed for the trip and seeds for "The Hydroponics Section"
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Hi there, Lisa from Nasa astronaut selection here. As 2TB e-ink readers don't exist we regret to inform you that we had to give up your seat to another astronaut.
I know you spent the last 15 years of your life preparing for this trip, so I would like to let you know how sorry I am.
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given the space limitations, with no weight limits listed...
a 2TB e-ink reader with some extra 2TB cards.
The rest of the space could be filled with weed for the trip and seeds for "The Hydroponics Section"
Add rolling papers to the list. Smoking a doober made from other forms of paper is not a great experience,.,,,
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given the space limitations, with no weight limits listed...
a 2TB e-ink reader with some extra 2TB cards.
The rest of the space could be filled with weed for the trip and seeds for "The Hydroponics Section"
Add rolling papers to the list. Smoking a doober made from other forms of paper is not a great experience,.,,,
Let's discuss how bad an idea smoking things in space is.
I was thinking edibles.
You could probably use the rest of the plants as fiber for rope or nice scarves.
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Unfortunately my cross-yagi isn't set up for EME communication. You may have a chance at moonrise and moonset 'though. Also, the best omnidirectionals are the ones that don't radiate towards space and the distance will wreak havok on your dBm. So unless you've made prior arrangements, I won't count on getting a lot of connections.
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I suspect a yagi would work just fine. You never have to rotate it, just aim it at the earth, and you're done. (The moon is tidally locked to facing the earth) You aren't trying to receive a reflection, just a direct line of sight, so the losses are MUCH lower. The transmitters on the Apollo experiments were 1 watt, and did just fine.
Definitely NOT (Score:1)
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They have cheese there, but it is all goat cheese.
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What tools would you bring (Score:1)
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At least until we start making fuel on the moon. At least oxygen - that's plentiful (the regolith is 42% by mass), and roughly 80% by mass of the propellant for Starship.
If you could fly to the moon with only enough oxygen to get you there, plus enough methane to also get you back, you could dramatically increase your payload capacity, and return payload would likely be even higher than the payload you could take there. Even without a first stage, having 1/5th the escape velocity radically reduces the pro
long underware (Score:2)
Something to fuck. (Score:1)
Something to eat.
Something to shit.
Something to sleep.
And something to do.
Oh, I almost forgot:
Something to breathe.
And something to shelter.
There. No go away with your amateur hour attempt at PR.
I'd bring wank material, honestly (Score:1)
Nose clamps (Score:1)
A Tether (Score:1)
I don't want to be floating over to the dark side.
Obviously (Score:2)
A copy of Pink Floyd's 'Dark Side of the Moon', even if landing during the day.
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Golf balls and some golf clubs of course. (Score:2)
No, seriously, I'd have to pack my wife as she wouldn't ever talk to me again if I went alone...
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No, seriously, I'd have to pack my wife as she wouldn't ever talk to me again if I went alone...
Problematic plan. To fit her in a 5x8x2” container she will need to be ashes.
I’d take a camera, wife can enjoy the photos.
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Bah, "petite" does fit everywhere...
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No, seriously, I'd have to pack my wife as she wouldn't ever talk to me again if I went alone...
Already set: https://www.shutterstock.com/i... [shutterstock.com]
Easy (Score:4, Funny)
Antracete for the dragons.
Apples for the elephants.
A fountain pen that works upside down (use pencil?).
Hook and rope for lifting the turtle's tail (that's not very polite, is it?).
Librarian.
Crackers, of course! (Score:5, Funny)
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https://youtu.be/T0qagA4_eVQ [youtu.be]
I had a notion what you were linking to (well, your title was a big clue, ofc). I haven't seen that one for a few years, so thanks for the memories!
Moonies drink (Score:2)
Coffee. Nasa needs construct an espresso machine in zero gravity use. Pods almost work but for the stale grounds inside them. First coffee brand to get it right gets bragging rights on earth.
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Don't they have one on ISS? I remember S. Cristoforetti famously had the first sip.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Sunscreen (Score:2)
Need to ask (Score:2)
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Moonsoon.
No, not a hearing aid. (Score:2)
"In space no one can hear you scream..."
So for those times I'm audibly secluded and not have to be afraid, some quality music with proper playing apparatus would be ideal.
The most obvious answer (Score:5, Funny)
Air. Lots and lots of air.
Lots and LOTS of these. (Score:1)
A WHOLE lot of Depends for all of those "HOLLY CR*P" moments.
That and a body bag.
I'd pack a hammock, sunglasses and... (Score:2)
78% nitrogen and 21% oxygen ... (Score:2)
... so I could play the instrument.
Same as on a deserted island ... (Score:2)
... a book on how to build a boat.
A vagina. To be selected. (Score:1)
Stop the fem1naz1 sexism. Employ people for their knowledge not their gender.
Duh (Score:2)
5" x 8" x 2" (Score:2)
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Or, maybe a giant graphene energy collector tied to a tiny self replicating machine.
If you've got one of those, you should be buying a ride share sooner rather than later.
Not beeing original ... (Score:1)
... and following answer given by N. Armstrong, I'd say more fuel. :-)
in 2020, this should be obvious (Score:2)
Toilet paper and hand sanitizer, of course. Tons of the stuff. More than you'll ever use, just in case...and because there are so many unknowns.
In 2020, toilet paper is apparently the new duct tape [sigh].
The world's smallest mining factory (Score:2)
First we need to build a mine/factory that can replicate itself, no matter how crudely. If we can mine enough materials to make enough stock to build a second mine and machine shop, and power source, we're set.
Once that's up and running, I'll decide what to pack.
You mean... (Score:2)
What'd I pack in addition to the everything machine?
Pies (Score:2)
Natalie Portman and hot grits (Score:2)
A lot depends on what's already onboard (Score:2)
Basic essentials are down, you don't need those. You've probably got computers on board, so if you want to be able to look at videos, listen to your favorite tunes, etc. then you just need a compatible storage device, not the whole machine. I'd bring 2 or even 3 storage devices loaded with what I want just to make sure a cosmic ray doesn't zap my only digital refuge.
That leaves a lot of space in the "expert mode" box. My next move depends on what space coffee is like. If space coffee sucks, my preferenc
Only one acceptable answer (Score:1)
Cheese Slicer/Knife (Score:1)
How else to see what it tastes like?
Ummm... (Score:1)
A great bottle of an islay single malt scotch is also desired.
A top notch video camera.
And, a guaranteed ride back home (in case the first 2 items fail to manifest something greater)!
That's an easy one... (Score:1)
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A harpoon. Next question.
Why bother? It's just a big, dull rock.
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We're whalers on the Moon, we carry a harpoon. But there ain't no whales so we tell tall tales and sing our whaling tune.
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Call me Ishmael.