http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewnews.html?id=1334
Dennis Wingo, Paul Spudis, and Gordon Woodcock
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Dennis Wingo, Paul Spudis, and Gordon Woodcock
Sunday, June 28, 2009
As Robert Zubrin so eloquently stated about Martian development, the most important developments are the ones we don't know about yet and will be invented as part of the pressing needs of developing the Moon. Mars? With a lunar space port and the ability to build large hardware there, Mars becomes much closer than it will ever be by focusing on developing new heavy lift launch vehicles on Earth. That much is evident by the past 37 years of our failure to move humans beyond low Earth orbit.
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]While appearing barren, the Moon has the resources upon which to build a prototype space civilization.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]With living space you can then start growing food in a separate compartment for food production. Hydroponics has been proven in these applications. With the importation of just a bit of fertilizer from the Earth (brought up by a modular, standardized lander on a Soyuz, Falcon 9, H-II, or light EELV) food production for the crew on the lunar surface would be possible, dramatically cutting the demand for Earth resupply.
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[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]Additional living space, bulldozer chassis, large machine bodies, and other metallic hardware could be built using methods known for centuries on Earth.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]Instead of lofting large integrated systems, only parts and information are needed from Earth. These parts would include motors, computers, actuators, seals, sealing material, etc. Heavy lift is simply not needed for delivering these things. Small parts could be carried to the Moon on any commercial ELV.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]We will need engineers, machinists, and "blue collar" workers to make the lunar spaceport work. Yes, we are going to need people who can clean dishes and toilets as well.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]A robust operational capability on the Moon will allow us to build space vehicles there that simply could never be built on Earth. These vehicles could carry heavy structures from the Moon to geosynchronous orbit to build large platforms for communications, remote sensing, climate and solar monitoring.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1] ISRU can help us with things as mundane as dealing with environmental waste on a global scale.[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=geneva,arial,verdana][SIZE=-1]The development of new robotic systems that will be force multipliers on the Moon can contribute to balancing the advantage of cheap labor that other countries have in manufacturing.[/SIZE][/FONT]
We'll never have reusable space-only vehicles to ferry stuff from LEO to Moon orbit. Why? Because the contractors wouldn't get hundreds of millions of dollars apiece to build launch vehicles that only get used once.
A military outpost on the moon? To watch against alien invaders?:lol:But, please don't get me wrong. I want a Moon base. Here's my take on why it may appear and be sustained:
- Military use
- Prestige race
- Unobtainuim found
Could it explain why airlines have discardable planes nowadays?
A military outpost on the moon? To watch against alien invaders?
I'm mostly thinking of using the dark side of the Moon as a perfect test ground for any nasty weapon and of controlling distant reaches of the near-Earth space.
It means a good business opportunity to open a gas station in the way... :rofl:They don't have discardable planes because they can usually refuel at a destination. Imagine Lindbergh was required to fly all the way back to the USA without refueling in Europe... I'm afraid the record setting would have to be postponed until building a version of Fosset's GlobalFlyer... Or someone would come up with a concept of a staged airplane that carries a smaller plane and fuel store for it to use on the way back. This way, it would be a real discardable plane.
I doubt any airline would ever appear under such conditions, though.
They don't have discardable planes because they can usually refuel at a destination. Imagine Lindbergh was required to fly all the way back to the USA without refueling in Europe... I'm afraid the record setting would have to be postponed until building a version of Fosset's GlobalFlyer... Or someone would come up with a concept of a staged airplane that carries a smaller plane and fuel store for it to use on the way back. This way, it would be a real discardable plane.
I doubt any airline would ever appear under such conditions, though.
We haven't reached the moon yet and we are thinking about polluting and making it inhabitable?![]()
Are you stating the Moon is habitable? Or that we did not reach the Moon?
I referred to the fact that we haven't reached there (to colonize) and we are already thinking about ways not to bring the best of us there.
For SiberianTiger:-
Wonder if it would have caught on?
N.