DailyDirt: Space Race 2.0
from the urls-we-dig-up dept
Space exploration is starting a new era. With more and more commercial ventures taking over low earth orbit missions, government space programs can focus on more long-term missions to increasingly distant places in our solar system. Unfortunately, there don't seem to be many collaborative international efforts for missions to other planets, so it's looking like a new nationalistic space race is emerging. Here are just a few space projects aimed beyond our planet.- NASA is about to announce ambitious plans for manned space outposts on the moon and at a Lagrangian point. There are only a handful of Earth-moon Lagrangian points, so if NASA gets to the better ones first, the US will occupy some of the best space real estate. [url]
- China is planning to land a probe on the moon sometime in 2013. China ultimately wants to have a manned mission to the moon, but it hasn't set a timeframe for that goal. [url]
- If you want to keep score, the Soviets have landed spacecraft on two other planets (Venus and Mars), while the US has only landed equipment on Mars. But if we're counting quality, not quantity, then the US has gathered far more information on Mars than any other space program. [url]
- NASA's Morpheus lander is designed to touch down on other planets, moons and even asteroids. Morpheus runs on methane and oxygen so that it could potentially re-fuel on extra-terrestrial bodies, and it could handle a variety of payloads such as robots, laboratories and even astronauts. [url]
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Filed Under: exploration, lagrangian point, mars, moon, morpheus, solar system, space, venus
Companies: nasa
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always send robots first!
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@1
nothing is more important to mankind.YEs robots at first but then we need ot really get out there and really get other places and a moon base is essential cause then you cna use that as a platform to launch more manned missions.
Private orgs are on track as well to land on mars inside 10-15 years so its gonna happen ....
OH and its far to costly to die off as a species no? That's pretty expensive....
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yep, voyages of columbus were far too costly
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Occupy Lagrange Points
You don't sit at the Lagrange points, you orbit them. There is LOTS of space available for doing that, so getting there first does not prevent others from using the same Lagrange point. There have already been several spacecraft at the Earth-Moon L1 and L2 points, and many more are planned.
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_objects_at_Lagrangian_points
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Landings
The next one that they should drop a probe on is Europa.
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Re: always send robots first!
Also once you have a base established your degree educated experts can do vastly more on-site work in a much faster time. They can also adjust quickly to the unexpected.
A 3D printer could be much use there printing out new tools and parts on site instead of NASA having to ship them all the way from Earth.
One example of how humans are better is travel time when one human driver in charge of a vehicle on Mars can cover more ground in just one day than all these rovers have done combined over the past decade.
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Re: Occupy Lagrange Points
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Re: Re: Occupy Lagrange Points
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One Up
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Re: One Up
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Re: Re: always send robots first!
Unless they send some kind of facility that can process raw materials collected from the planet/moon, they'd still have to send the raw materials for the tools and parts, so the weight would be the same. Actually, it would weigh more, since they can't know ahead of time exactly how much they'll need.
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Re: Re: Re: always send robots first!
The aspect you overlook is that NASA always needs to create entire backup systems in case the main systems fail and just like on the ISS they also need to keep a whole array of spare parts to hand in case anything breaks.
So being able to print out any one of thousands a parts in under an hour would certainly save mass from being shipped and they may even be able to remove some non-vital backup systems.
I know the military are already working on 3D printers but NASA would need to do some large charges to their materials for 3D printers to show their true worth.
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Re:
In Space terms it is quite boring... visiting empty space... but this allows them to get the know the hardware well and they would set a new record of how far humans have travelled away from Earth.
One other mission they should do is to control a rover on the Moon while in orbit around the Moon. Doing this removes the insanity lag of doing it from Earth. It also prepares them to do this same rover control around other planets and moons.
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Re: One Up
They just found where it was. With that knowledge, they could shine a laser at its mirror, which they could not do before because they did not know with enough precision where it was. But the mirror is completely passive, the rover does not have to be working for it to be usable.
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Re: Re: always send robots first!
While I am very, very sympathetic to the idea of manned spaceflight, I wanted to point out that this statement about human vs. robot travel capabilities may be somewhat misleading.
Assuming that humans have sufficient food, water, atmosphere, the correct temperature range, and protection from ionizing radiation, they currently are more flexible and intelligent in their exploratory abilities than robots.
However, delivering human necessities across the Solar System is prohibitively expensive and technically difficult. Delivering one small robot across the Solar System is a vastly simpler problem.
So, in practical terms, the flexibility/cost ratio for human space exploration is still far too low, as compared with that same ratio for robots. I'm not saying that human space exploration is a bad idea -- I'm just saying that I'd like to see more of the Solar System explored while I'm still alive.
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The Last Word
“Re: Re: always send robots first!
"Humans can travel where robots can't."While I am very, very sympathetic to the idea of manned spaceflight, I wanted to point out that this statement about human vs. robot travel capabilities may be somewhat misleading.
Assuming that humans have sufficient food, water, atmosphere, the correct temperature range, and protection from ionizing radiation, they currently are more flexible and intelligent in their exploratory abilities than robots.
However, delivering human necessities across the Solar System is prohibitively expensive and technically difficult. Delivering one small robot across the Solar System is a vastly simpler problem.
So, in practical terms, the flexibility/cost ratio for human space exploration is still far too low, as compared with that same ratio for robots. I'm not saying that human space exploration is a bad idea -- I'm just saying that I'd like to see more of the Solar System explored while I'm still alive.