Belz...
Fiend God
Yes bit if one costs x then 2 cost less than 2x .
How much less is the riddle.
There's no point to the riddle. They didn't want or need to spend the money for two. Why would they?
Yes bit if one costs x then 2 cost less than 2x .
How much less is the riddle.
Something like an heir and a spare.There's no point to the riddle. They didn't want or need to spend the money for two. Why would they?
Something like an heir and a spare.
I'm not. The time to evaluate his merits was when the telescope was being named. Maybe they should have picked a different name. But they didn't.
Changing the name now gives in to and encourages a pathological obsession with past sins. It's not healthy. And there is no limiting principle to this drive to erase the past. No name is safe.
Well if there was some fundamental flaw (like the way the Hubble's mirror was made) then building 2 now means 2 machines with the same problems.I wonder if building 2 of these things might have been a good idea.
Well if there was some fundamental flaw (like the way the Hubble's mirror was made) then building 2 now means 2 machines with the same problems.
Better to wait to see what (if any) problems exist and what needs to be done to correct it before building a second.
(Even if the second was built but not launched, retrofits will probably be more of a hassle than building from the ground up)
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Well if there was some fundamental flaw (like the way the Hubble's mirror
was made) then building 2 now means 2 machines with the same problems.
There are plenty of people "obsessed" with the past sins. With good reason. Don't forget the Holocaust. Don't forget the genocide of colonialism.
Not necessarily. If two independent teams each build one then they both probably won't make the same mistake. Both might succeed, one may fail, the other one may fail, or both may fail. So a one out of four chance that both will fail.
Except as Puppycow pointed out this is swim or sink.But if it's two independent teams building them, there's none of the cost savings Samson was anticipating.
Also, the chance that both will fail is the product of the chances of each of the two individuals failing. That's 1/4 only if that's what their product is, such as if each individually has a 1/2 chance to fail. I don't think either project would be funded at all if their chances of failure were expected to be that high.
Ah yes, James Webb, the notorious genocide and mass murderer, in whose "honor" nothing should ever be named. Thanks for putting this in the proper perspective!
There are plenty of people "obsessed" with the past sins. With good reason. Don't forget the Holocaust. Don't forget the genocide of colonialism.
Yes bit if one costs x then 2 cost less than 2x .
How much less is the riddle.
Except as Puppycow pointed out this is swim or sink.
I am now thinking that 10 billion is a modest expenditure, and future projects should be calculated with multiple redundancy contingencies funded by the wide boys from America, Russia, China, India and Mexico.
I'm pretty sure Elon would work something out.This thing is such an intricate apparatus and every single part has to work correctly. There won't be any possibility of sending a space shuttle out to repair it this time. That's what worries me.
10 billion isn't a modest expenditure.
For comparison, it's similar to what would have been spent on the Super Conducting Super Collider. That was cancelled after something like 20% of its budget had already been spent, because Congress just decided that it was too expensive.
If you want to start spending a lot more money on astronomy it makes less sense to just make two of everything than it does to make more. Get the next generation space telescopes approved and built.
Not enough less.
Yeah, the JW is considerably larger, more complicated, and much more expensive than the Voyager, Pioneer and Viking missions.To be fair though, this was often that case in the past, wasn't it?
Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 were basically identical copies of the same design, right?
Same with Viking 1 and Viking 2, and some of the Mars rovers.
But in this case I think I understand why they only built one.
Sure, if they are exact copies of each other, you don't need to redesign the second one, but actually building it seems to be what costed most of the money.
And Voyager and Viking were based on the 10 probe Mariner series. Wikipedia puts the cost of all 10 of the Mariner probes at half a billion which is about 4 billion in today's dollars.Yeah, the JW is considerably larger, more complicated, and much more expensive than the Voyager, Pioneer and Viking missions.