Posted on 09/07/2003 8:23:14 AM PDT by mikegi
NASA has seen the future, and it is the space capsule. Seven months after the Columbia debacle the agency is giving serious consideration to bringing back a new version of the Apollo capsule, the expendable spacecraft that served the U.S. space program during its glory days in the 1960s through the mid-1970s. Supporters say they are not retreating into the past so much as waking up, at last, to the dangers of attempting spaceflight with winged shuttles, a notion given ample support by the Columbia Accident Investigation Board's report released last week. Boosters on Capital Hill, in the aerospace industry and even inside the astronaut corps point out the capsule has is a more versatile design: it is modular and can be outfitted to the specific needs of any mission. And unlike the shuttle, it can venture beyond low Earth orbit, which means the U.S. could once again send astronauts to the moon.
...
(Excerpt) Read more at time.com ...
Except that human endeavors spark the public imagination in ways robots never will.
Gee, I can tell you where you can buy some signed stuff. But you might have to pay big time for some used EVA gloves. Want a signed Buzz Lightyear doll? Ebay's full of it-- some of it even marketed indirectly by the astronauts themselves
Maybe that's a problem that could be fixed with enough imagination. But the celebrity culture stands so much in the way of worthwhile exploration that if we can't let it go to explore, perhaps it ought to *all* be let go. Other science (biomed, f'rinstance ) manages to forge ahead without movie stars--they perhaps deserve our money more than a show business enterprise.
When I am sitting for 14 hours in a mission control room thru the night, I certainly don't feel like a celebrity.
Not a chance. I've considered donating it to some institution, but I'm always afraid that it will just end up in a store room. I keep it as protected as I can, along with the issues of Aviation Week from the Apollo missions. I even managed to find a copy of the "Proceedings On the Chemistry of Lunar Geology" about the findings from the moon rocks. Stultifyingly detailed, but when you realize what they're talking about a real treasure. The other thing shoved into this collection is a photo-copy of a photo-copy (ad infinitum) of the original paper (with hand written notes) that Arthur C. Clark delivered where he laid out the idea of geostationary satellites.
I have worked with the space program for close to 20 years and in many ways I agree with you on this one.
And in many ways it was a public relations mistake to focus so much of the Apollo moon-exploration effort on geology. Who the F cared about minute details of lunar surface geology? Only a few scientists. If the focus had been more on "Let's see what's over that next hill" kind of exploration we could have sustained more interest rather than watching two guys drill a core tube for an hour.
And back in those days the Soviet Union was the source for 99% of the world's titanium supplies.
I sure did. It added peices to the puzzle of the origin of the moon. But then again, I am in the business.
That doesn't mean that the cult of the celeb has died, or that the emphasis on vicarious space-hopping has faded from the few that make the decisions on the nature of the missions. It was just too good a deal in the late sixties--they keep trying it and it keeps not working, this celebrity stuff. Merrygoround trips on the Shuttle to the SSI and back again, over and over...
The body cannot take the abuse that manned flight to Mars represents--at least not with what we know now. And getting back...? What we do know now, with a revved-up focus, is how to send some really wonderful robotics to Mars. And the bonus--we don't have to bring them home.
True. However each sex program do not cost US $80 billion. Persons also not normally experience orgasmic while watching video of shuttle launch.
NASA really is in trouble if they resuscitate the capsule at this stage (unless they can do it *REAL* cheap, in which case we have to ask, why didn't you do this before?)
Indeed. :-) I have friends flying those missions. However, I was invloved with a Mars sample and return design. (that one does have to get home! LOL)
My point exactly. We let the vision get away and public support dropped like a rock. NASA is too myopic.
The public got bored by the third moon landing. They would rather see reruns of I Love Lucy.
1) Robots-to-Mars has been done. Multiple times.
2) You can't build human settlements without humans.
Huntsville is about 4 hours from here and we used to visit at least once a year. I've often thought they might have a place for some of my stuff.
Huntsville is where I met (shook hands with and got a book signed by) Buzz Aldrin, as well as seeing the rest of the Apollo 11 crew. That was the 20th anniversary of their mission. A friend and I went to the adult space camp there, along with a group we put together through the old Space Forum on Compuserve. One of the guys on my team was an IBM contractor who worked on the Shuttle GPC computers, reviewing the code. We even had Jesco Von Putkamer, just retired from NASA headquarters, volunteer to be available to answer questions online if anything come up. Fun memory.
Because what they saw was some guys speaking in what to them was scientific gibberish and video of hours and hours of core drilling, cable unwinding, and rock collection. Even today the most diehard NASA fans cannot bring themselves to sit through all 6 DVDs of the Apollo 16 lunar EVA. It's too boring. Lone among the astronauts, Al Shepard thought the science secondary to the exploration and was ostracized for it. Even today the best two video clips from the lunar exploration are the 16mm films of the rover cutting donuts in the lunar soil, and the camera attached to the front of the rover as it traversed some small hills from the POV of the astronauts.
I wish we could bring back that old fire that so caught up this nation.
Science WAS the mission.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.