^ Interesting, in that the Trekverse has a manned mission to Saturn *before* the missions to Mars...
Unfortunately, no:^Shawn Christopher headed the first Saturn mission, but it could have been unmanned instrument probe, with him being the director of the project.
SPOCK: The doctor is correct. Unless we return Captain Christopher to Earth, There will be no Colonel Shaun Geoffrey Christopher to go to Saturn.
You ninja'd me, here.Maybe they went to Saturn first because of that black monolith they found on the moon?
Memory Beta said:The Lewis & Clark’s mission bypassed Mars and Jupiter in favor of exploring Saturn, its unexplained hexagonal polar storm, its deteriorating ring system, and its moons, as well as a never-before seen comet that was passing by.
What I find completely ironic is that if the fans hadn't gotten the first Space Shuttle renamed from Constitution to Enterprise, the plans at the time was for one of the later space-worthy shuttles to actually be named Enterprise!![]()
So, the irony is that the spaceworthy Enterprise could have had chances of blowing up or disintegrating on reentry? Eh... it's fine the way it was.
Another explanation would be that at the time TOS was on the air the American (and Russian) space programs were roaring at a fantastic pace.Real reason, of course, is that the Saturn mission was mentioned in TOS, when the "early 21st century" seemed a long time away, and the Ares IV mission was from VOY, so they used a date that seemed plausibly in the future from their vantage point of the late '90s, even though it didn't mesh with TOS so well.
Constitution was NASA's chosen name for the shuttle prototype, this is why NASA scheduled the roll out date for September 17, which is Constitution Day.I should note that there is a distinct lack of primary evidence that there was ever any intention of naming the first space shuttle Constitution.
......like a slap on the back from Doctor Spock........
SOLVED!
Did "One Small Step" ever claim Ares IV was the first mission to Mars? As Chemahkuu mentioned, there should have also been an Ares I, II and III, and there could have been Mars missions before the Ares program, too. If sleeper ships were obsolete by 2018 in the Trekverse, I'm sure they had been to Mars prior to 2032.
The 2014 budget appropriation for NASA is about $16.6 billion. In 1965 and 1966 NASA was getting approximately four percent of the government budget.
Four percent today would be around 152 billion dollars.
Going to Mars? We'd be going to Pluto.
![]()
Because he was Born...Steppenwolf will withstand the test of time.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.