I don't know, but it will be a big deal either way.Colonizing by who? The military or the private sector?
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I don't know, but it will be a big deal either way.Colonizing by who? The military or the private sector?
Meh, it's not really a big deal to me. We've been going to space pretty much my whole life and the next big deal will be to colonize another one of the rocks floating around out there.
Colonizing by who? The military or the private sector?
I will agree with you….these companies have done nothing that hasn’t been on an engineers white board somewhere to do.Despite the media hype, none of these players has done anything groundbreaking. Landing rockets vertically is something NASA had on the drawing board from the beginning, but they didn't have the computing power to control the spacecraft the way it can be done today. The USAF was dropping rocket powered craft from large mother ships 70 years ago. Re-usable spacecraft that launch via rocket propulsion and glide back like an airplane was done 40 years ago.
At some point a number of wealthy civilians are going to die on one of these excursions and the safety protocol (or lack of) will be under intense scrutiny slowing the race to a crawl.
I'm not what this is all about. I have enough outdoor skills to survive in the wild for 3 weeks and yet I don't want to live on a space colony which would obviously have some type of artificial human friendly atmosphere before it would be populated.I laugh at the hubris that would make folks who wouldn't last 3 weeks in the wild, suddenly think they can survive on a rock that doesn't support life.
The distance to these "rocks" are way too far away to ever make this possible. We can send bots instead to gather samples and shit....but sooner or later that will seem like a futile exercise.
I doubt any of us are expecting to see it happen because we are generally an older crowd, but it may not be so far fetched for the children today. My grandmother was born in the time of the horse and buggy (1893) and lived til 1978. From being a child wondering what the hell those noisy horseless carriages were to the wonder of man's first flight to virtually every family having a car to routine cross country flights to rocket powered ships to space and man landing on the moon to dying just a few short years shy of a reusable spacecraft all while airline travel was so routine and relatively cheap that millions flew each year.I am very confident that none of you will ever see man colonizing any other planet or moon.
That wasn't my intention. I was just pointing out that the hype was not matched by the accomplishments.That’s not discrediting to what they did.
That’s a fair opinion.That wasn't my intention. I was just pointing out that the hype was not matched by the accomplishments.
Love the point you illustrated with your grandmother. I think many have become disillusioned after a few generations of ridiculously expensive and ultimately uninspiring space exploration.I'm not what this is all about. I have enough outdoor skills to survive in the wild for 3 weeks and yet I don't want to live on a space colony which would obviously have some type of artificial human friendly atmosphere before it would be populated.
The moon is close enough to be our first space colony. Just sayin.
I doubt any of us are expecting to see it happen because we are generally an older crowd, but it may not be so far fetched for the children today. My grandmother was born in the time of the horse and buggy (1893) and lived til 1978. From being a child wondering what the hell those noisy horseless carriages were to the wonder of man's first flight to virtually every family having a car to routine cross country flights to rocket powered ships to space and man landing on the moon to dying just a few short years shy of a reusable spacecraft all while airline travel was so routine and relatively cheap that millions flew each year.
Think about the technological innovation that will occur in the next 80 years as AI becomes more prevalent. If it doesn't wipe out the human race it should be a pretty freakin wild ride for our grandchildren.
I doubt any of us are expecting to see it happen because we are generally an older crowd, but it may not be so far fetched for the children today. My grandmother was born in the time of the horse and buggy (1893) and lived til 1978. From being a child wondering what the hell those noisy horseless carriages were to the wonder of man's first flight to virtually every family having a car to routine cross country flights to rocket powered ships to space and man landing on the moon to dying just a few short years shy of a reusable spacecraft all while airline travel was so routine and relatively cheap that millions flew each year.
Think about the technological innovation that will occur in the next 80 years as AI becomes more prevalent. If it doesn't wipe out the human race it should be a pretty freakin wild ride for our grandchildren.
Learn how to read and get back to me Captain Ladder Climber.A horseless buggy?!?!? really?!?!?
I just knew some dumbass would be along to say it's all possible and then give some analogy of something accomplished here on Earth as an example.
Hey dummy....try doing your analogy on Mars and then get back to me because until then you are missing my point.
You can't survive on Mars by yourself. Quite a bit different than here on Earth. On Earth there is food to sustain you and the god damn horse. You can't grow oats on the Moon! You and the horse would not survive for long......
You’re…..missing his point.A horseless buggy?!?!? really?!?!?
I just knew some dumbass would be along to say it's all possible and then give some analogy of something accomplished here on Earth as an example.
Hey dummy....try doing your analogy on Mars and then get back to me because until then you are missing my point.
You can't survive on Mars by yourself. Quite a bit different than here on Earth. On Earth there is food to sustain you and the god damn horse. You can't grow oats on the Moon! You and the horse would not survive for long......
Apparently @Bayou Tiger has it in his head the we are going to send the Nina, The Pinta and the Santa Maria up there with 100 or so pilgrims to set up their own biosphere and conquer the uninhabited lunar/martian landscape.You’re…..missing his point.
You’re right on one aspect though, kind of. It’s not been proven that food can or can’t be grown on Mars (and no, Matt Damon doesn’t count).
But you can be assured once they can start getting people there specialized in answering this question they will. They won’t just start shoving people there. The very genesis of SpaceX was based on this question. Elon wanted to get a delivery there and set up a biosphere to see. He couldn’t find anyone that even had plans on this. So he started a company to do it.
Maybe the answer is yes and colonization will be possible.
Maybe the answer is no and they won’t do more. Won’t that be a great day for you?
I would disagree.I laugh at the hubris that would make folks who wouldn't last 3 weeks in the wild, suddenly think they can survive on a rock that doesn't support life.
The distance to these "rocks" are way too far away to ever make this possible. We can send bots instead to gather samples and shit....but sooner or later that will seem like a futile exercise.
I am very confident that none of you will ever see man colonizing any other planet or moon.
We (the U.S. and Russia) have been sending astronauts and cosmonauts to live on floating space stations for 50 years Why can't we or why shouldn't we expectto be able to send them up to live in static space stations on the moon or Mars?
Is that what passes for clever and funny in the fetid swamp you live in?That's a space station in near Earth orbit retard. Using a scale of the the Earth and Moon wherein the Earth is a basketball and the Moon then the size of a tennis ball......the distance between the two being 30 Earth diameters or 30'-0"
At that scale the Moon is about 30'-0" from the surface of the Earth and the space station is half an inch. Thanks for playing bird brain. Stay in your lane, er...birdhouse!
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You’re right. It is a much more complex operation to run such a station around the moon, in your example. Right now the ISS gets resupplied quite a few times a year.That's a space station in near Earth orbit retard. Using a scale of the the Earth and Moon wherein the Earth is a basketball and the Moon then the size of a tennis ball......the distance between the two being 30 Earth diameters or 30'-0"
At that scale the Moon is about 30'-0" from the surface of the Earth and the space station is half an inch. Thanks for playing bird brain. Stay in your lane, er...birdhouse!
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