http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/STS-132
Sad. She had a good life. Atlantis was always my favourite for some reason.
Sad. She had a good life. Atlantis was always my favourite for some reason.
Having been born in the 50s I was used to something new every four or five years, Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, Skylab and then the shuttle program. So for me, it seems like we've been running in place for 25 years. I never really thought about the shuttle being someone's only exposure to the space program.To me, this feels like the end of an era. I was born in 1983, so I can't remember a time when there wasn't space shuttle launches.
To me, this feels like the end of an era. I was born in 1983, so I can't remember a time when there wasn't space shuttle launches.
Constellation was never more than a reiteration of what we'd already done.
goin' back to the Moon would be the first step in getting us out further.The new direction at least opens the possibility of getting us out further, it just takes smaller, more cautious steps in doing so.
Pretty much all prior plans to develop a permanent and permanently expanding presence in space have hinged on using the moon's resources.
To prove it's possible for humans to successfully cross that much distance exposed to interplanetary radiation, and deal with the long trip lengths in close quarters. We don't need to add a (much more difficult than on the moon) entry-and-return-to-orbit requirement the first time out.The new plan seems to be a couple of one-off missions to Mars, first a Mars orbit and return mission (to what point?) then a landing sometime later.
The new plan seems to be a couple of one-off missions to Mars, first a Mars orbit and return mission (to what point?) then a landing sometime later.
Pretty much all prior plans to develop a permanent and permanently expanding presence in space have hinged on using the moon's resources.
That will come.
The new plan seems to be a couple of one-off missions to Mars, first a Mars orbit and return mission (to what point?) then a landing sometime later.
To prove it's possible for humans to successfully cross that much distance exposed to interplanetary radiation, and deal with the long trip lengths in close quarters.
The whole notion of the flexible path concept is that half the battle is getting into and out of gravity wells; the other half is moving around the solar system. They're separable tasks, and the flexible path treats them as separate challenges.
Right now, we simply do not have a heavy lift capability good enough to get a manned capsule to Mars or beyond. We need to develop that first.
Planning a Trip to KSC in September. Hope the weather cooperates.Yep. Just Endeavour and Discovery left to make their swansongs, and then it's all over for Project Space Shuttle, I believe.
Discovery was my favourite Shuttle. She had a good name and a great life.![]()
but we do have the heavy lift capability to get to the Moon. and since gravity on the Moon is 1/6th of the Earth's gravity, we could use the Moon as a launch point to further points in the solar system with our existing technology. of course, we'd need to establish a permanent presence on the Moon, which is the next logical step.
but we do have the heavy lift capability to get to the Moon. and since gravity on the Moon is 1/6th of the Earth's gravity, we could use the Moon as a launch point to further points in the solar system with our existing technology. of course, we'd need to establish a permanent presence on the Moon, which is the next logical step.
Okay, this I don't get. Here's the current approach:
A) Build HLV with capacity for manned flights to Mars
B) Manned orbital flight of Mars
C) Mars landing
Your approach:
A) Rebuild HLV for Moon landing
B) Build base on Moon, requiring either very large HLVs or many, many trips
C) Build rocket-assembly facility on the Moon
D) Design and build Mars lander... on the Moon
E) Mars landing
Which seems like a quicker and more logical approach?
^um, no, we don't have an HLV to get to the moon right now.
Also, Constellation as a program was underfunded, over budget
The only good piece of it worth saving is the Orion capsule.
umm, yes, we do.
the Boeing Delta IV Heavy, first launched in 2004, could be used for lunar missions.
despite being underfunded, it was going over the original projected budget to reach completion.would you expect an underfunded project to come in under budget?![]()
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