First off, the Starship Enterprise is not a load of BS. It is the style of ship we're gonna need if we are to do any serious exploring. Granted we don't need EVERYTHING the Enterprise has. But our craft should be of similar size and have similar propulsion capabilities. Perhaps not warp drive, but something much better than chemical rockets. Much better. Not phasers, but perhaps terrawatt lasers which is almost doable now. Forget the transporters, if we can build a ship similar to the Enterprise, surely we can build SSTO and similar landers.
:uhh:
No offence, but I actually
have looked into (present and futuristic) spacecraft design.
And I've looked into Star Trek 'spacecraft design'.
Suffice to say, unless you reject reality and substitute it with Star Trek, it doesn't work.
And we have had an SSTO lander. Ok, so it wasn't single stage... but it did ascend on a single stage.
And why from here to Mu Arae do we need
terawatt lasers? For wiping out Klingons, what? Personally I prefer
antimatter weapons with a total destructive radius of 0.16 AU! :dry:
20 years from now we'll *STILL* be farting around in LEO.
If we go by your logic of "we'll be ready when we're ready" and not actually do anything about it, we sure will be stuck in LEO in 20 years time.
Humans have too many issues when you stuff them in a zero-G tin can. Radiation, fluid redistribution, exercise, sanity, clarity of thought for creative and critical thinking. All that goes out the door for the common man. Hell, it even goes out the door for well-trained professionals such as scientists and pilots and other professions where you need to have it together. Today's astronauts, or lack of, now, are a special breed that have had the best training and ground support we can muster. And that's just for screwing around in low Earth orbit. Imagine a trip to the outer planets or Kuiper Belt.. ??
Yes, there are issues. Yes, they are difficult to solve. That doesn't mean you just give up, it means you actually
try to solve them.
And I think you misunderstand human psychological limits. People have gone through things far worse than spaceflight (not the same, mind you, but arguably far worse psychologically) and survived.
We don't know how people will react psychologically to BEO spaceflight, that's why we have to
find out, not give up. :facepalm:
It's too costly and risky with the toilet-paper-like materials we have today.
And what do you, Uber Engineer Rocket Scientist, suggest to replace these "toilet-paper-like" materials?
Unobtanium?
Handwavium?
"Force-tensor fields"?
Sorry, but all three do not exist. If you actually tried to research what the real unknown problems in spaceflight are, you might make good points and not "We don't have nonsensical sci-fi ships, therefore we should give up".
Yes, we don't know enough
yet. That's why we have to
figure it out. And to figure stuff out you actually need to
do things. Not sit around and moan.
Personally, I'm very disappointed in the space program currently... because we are not doing enough to fix those problems and actually develop to the point where Mars missions and such are indeed possible.
And no, spaceships that don't exist and never will exist, will not make Mars missions possible.