Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
Is pork barrel politics why it costs so much? Making sure that all 50 states get some piece of the action?
NASA announced Tuesday it is delaying its first-crewed missions to the moon in decades, delaying a moon flyby until September 2025 and an attempted landing on the moon until September 2026.
"To safely carry out these missions, agency leaders are adjusting the schedules for Artemis II and Artemis III to allow teams to work through challenges associated with first-time developments, operations, and integration," NASA sad in a release.
Artemis II was scheduled to send four astronauts into space in 2024 for a lunar flyby before returning to Earth while Artemis III was planning to send four astronauts to the moon in 2025.
Sorry, I don't see the connection. Can you explain it to me?The Artemis program seems valuable and has scientific merit but it also seems to be very badly affected by crony capitalism.
Sorry, I don't see the connection. Can you explain it to me?
NASA announces delay of its Artemis moon missions until 2025, 2026
No great surprise there. The Artemis program seems valuable and has scientific merit but it also seems to be very badly affected by crony capitalism.
I'm guessing that there will be further delays and they might be significant.
3. Elon Musk won't be a part of it.
Well, it's certainly an unusual use of the word "successfully."
I don't think I have to go far out on a limb to predict these:
1. A successful Artemis human landing mission won't happen in 2026, 2027, 2028 or 2029. Indeed it may never happen.
2. Even if it does happen, China will get humans there before we do. They don't concern themselves as much about cost, safety and comfort.
3. Elon Musk won't be a part of it.
Well it just so happens that Tesla is working on those. I bet they will soon become good enough that the plans change slightly - robots will build the needed infrastructure before putting men on the Moon and Mars. This will become a no-brainer once they realize how much cheaper (and more expendable) a robot workforce will be. They are probably already making plans for it.Why bother sending humans? That was the only alternative in the 20th century. But now we have these things called robots that can do 99% of what humans can do (in terms of exploration) and don't need food, water or protection from the rigors of space. And so a robot mission would be almost as good in terms of science as one with humans and would be vastly cheaper. The human part is just basically useless window dressing.
Well it just so happens that Tesla is working on those. I bet they will soon become good enough that the plans change slightly - robots will build the needed infrastructure before putting men on the Moon and Mars. This will become a no-brainer once they realize how much cheaper (and more expendable) a robot workforce will be. They are probably already making plans for it.
BTW there's talk of Tesla using robots in their car factories too - not just the pre-programmed 'robot' arms that are currently used, but real humanoid type robots to replace people. The trade unions will go nuts!
Why bother sending humans? That was the only alternative in the 20th century.
But now we have these things called robots that can do 99% of what humans can do (in terms of exploration) and don't need food, water or protection from the rigors of space. And so a robot mission would be almost as good in terms of science as one with humans and would be vastly cheaper. The human part is just basically useless window dressing.
Humans will go to space because we want to and we can. No other reason is necessary.Yes, there is a strong argument for automated exploration. But then again, anyone can see pictures of the Eiffel Tower. Standing underneath it and experiencing it fully is another experience. Humans have a desire to go places and see things. And yes, you can make the argument that having human eyes and a human brain on site are scientifically advantageous. But it's not really the point. Exploration is not about data acquisition.
Humans will go to space because we want to and we can. No other reason is necessary.
Sorry, that's just ridiculously wrong. Sure, neither flight fulfilled all their goals, but they achieved many.In the Grauniad article they state of the SpaceX rockets: "Two flights have launched successfully but blown up at altitude". Given that neither flight even managed to fulfil a single goal and the first one failed to successfully clear the pad that quoted sentence is a blatant mistruth.