Independent reviews are a common thing.We need someone to make decisions for nasa? Can't they do it themselves? Are they *that* stoopit?
To me it looks like the best reason for spaceflight is to educate and employ highly qualified personnell and acquire sophisticated skills. Maybe this alone justifies the expenditures to improve our knowledge of the universe![]()
Having all of your eggs in one basket is a bad idea.
Are you certain?Nothing is certain except death, destruction and steady change of things.
Heinlein, like many others, does not seem to be aware of or either seems to strongly ignore that the universe on the whole is a rather dangerous basket for eggs. There is just a tiny place in it which had become suitable for a short period of time.
The irony is that we already have colonized a fraction of the universe, which was only possible because circumstances, more than rare circumstances, allowed to do so. By looking into the solar system and universe and not ignoring the facts, it turns out how rare the circumstances are really. There is not a single, not even a fraction of a comparable tiny place even within the, compared to the universe, totally insignificant range of our probes.
Nothing lasts forever very likely, obviously not even the universe as it is. Humans can not escape death less than ever. As amazing and as beautiful everything around us in space "looks", so destroying and hostile it is even more. Manned space flight has enabled us to realize how lonely we are and how fragile and important our blue planet is for us. Many humans are looking for something that does simply not exist: certainty. Nothing is certain except death, destruction and steady change of things. The Earth one day won't exist anymore, just as the solar system and with all that humans will disapear as well very probably. To colonize fractions of our solar system, which is simply not more than dreampipes, does not at all assure further human existence (we don't even coloinze lots of parts of our Earth, which already consists of more than 70%, for humans, inhabitable water surface). At best, it might just be a rather short life-extending measure. Many people can't deal with that stone cold reality just like many ignore that they're going to die and become old, wrinkled and frail. That's the disadvantage of the capability of our brains of realizing things, if not ignore them.
All lunar-science work (taking samples, fly them back to earth) can be done by robots at a fraction of the price.
Really...? If memory serves, the only 100% robotic sample-return mission to the Moon - one done by the Russians - returned with a few grams of lunar soil. Compared to Apollo, which brought back close to a half-ton of samples... including the Apollo 15 'Genesis Rock'.
Robots are nowhere NEAR that capable yet.
Nice in theory, but not true.Actually, they were three robotic missions totalling 326 grams of Lunar regolite. It does not really affect your point, but it's still dubiuos. It looks like a rover capable of moving from a site to a site and doing research where it sits is actually superior in its research capability compared to a team of astronauts who are tied to their base by the invisible string of life support limitations. All that, of course, AFTER some initial research is done on the Lunar soil brought back by the first missions.
Nice in theory, but not true.
In more than five years, Spirit and Opportunity combined have travelled "tens of kilometers" (haven't found an exact number, would love to have one though In four hours and a half hours on Apollo 17, the lunar rover travelled a total of 35.9km.
Nice try, though.
Well yeah, but they've also been there for more than 5 years.Moon is hell of a lot closer than Mars, you could almost drive real time couldn't you. (Even with a lag of 3 seconds)
The number you are looking for is 11km for Op and 10 for Sprit
Also remember they have do ALOT of science in between
Well yeah, but they've also been there for more than 5 years.
A human crew could have done probably an order of magnitude more in that same time.
You're absolutely right. Humans are not necessary for scientific endeavors.I am trying, really hard trying to imagine what kind of activity on the Lunar surface is best done by humans rather than by automated vehicles of kinds. For me it looks like a construction of the facility for humans to live in. Remember that humans have bodily needs like sleeping, eating, washing, defecating & urinating, resting, exercising to avoid misadaptation to Earth's gravity, entertaining to keep one's mind in order. How much time does it leave for a scientific activity, especially once we count away the time required for the surface station's upkeep and organization? I think, 3 hours a day at most.
Meanwhile, a rover's control team can work in shifts 24x7.
Please, please very much, convince me to the opposite.
You're absolutely right. Humans are not necessary for scientific endeavors.
This is why all laboratories have replaced humans with robots.
Meanwhile, a rover's control team can work in shifts 24x7.
Tell me how many laboratories do you know that cost $1,000,000,000 per a scientist just to get to and back.
Er what? I can make up numbers too, want me to start?Tell me how many laboratories do you know that cost $1,000,000,000 per a scientist just to get to and back.
Er what? I can make up numbers too, want me to start?
The year 2028.5: Parts from the first outpost are used in the construction of another, rather far away from the first.Ok.
The year 2025: a US lunar rock research outpost is built on the rim of the Shackleton Crater.
The year 2028: all the rocks within the 30 km radius of the outpost are researched to death.
What's supposed to happen next? Opening of a Lunar Hilton?
Right, because they actually ever sold any of those tickets, or even sent a Soyuz to the moon.A Soyuz lunar fly-by ticket was like $100 million two years ago (per a passenger). Just multiplied that by reality coefficient and added an extra charge for landing. 10 times larger may not even be large enough.