And I'm ready and willing.
Thanks for bringing this
to everyone's attention.
Phil Smith, Fairfax, Virginia
To the Editor:
Just a short comment on your
article. It isn't that there are budget concerns or that cyberspace is
more economically enticing...although they are considerations. The sad
fact is that what NASA is doing is pale and boring compared to what should
be taking place in space. The 17,000 employees and the billions of dollars
IS enough to have a few hundred people living and working on the moon right
now. The government spending there would have spurred the private space
industry which would rapidly be supplanting the state as the explorers
of space. It is the difference between where we should be and where we
are that discourages young people from choosing NASA as a career. What
17-year-old wants to spend the NEXT 17 years working on a few probes to
the outer planets' moons? They look at the projects that should be and
the projects that are...and it looks to be one step from a waste of time.
Even if space is a burning
passion, it is actually a better plan to go after the internet millions
and then invest in something like Bigelow Aerospace. You are more likely
to be doing something in 15 years if you go this route. I'm not saying
likely... just more likely.
The excitement around NASA
is only there by comparison to what the others are doing. If you take the
dreams of your average techie high school graduate, NASA is nothing but
disappointing. The International Space Station? A sad, stunted political
blunder. They want Bonestall's kilometer-diameter torus space stations
and vacations on the moon. Is there ANY chance that NASA will give them
this? I didn't think so 17 years ago, and I don't think too many young
people today see that.
The only thing that will
get them into this field is if it is actually going somewhere faster than
a glacier. If any of the private ventures show any prospect of living up
to the dream, you will see a stampede of bright people leaving the dotcom
world to work at half the wage. The dream is alive...just not in any government
agency.
Clint Johnson
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Paul Spudis' opinion
piece "Next, Go Back to the Moon" drew numerous reader responses. Here's
a selection:
To the Editor:
Yes yes and yes. I agree.
I will add that it seems to me the only justifications for immediate Mars
exploration rather than moon exploration is that it has more of an emotional
attraction than a practical one. The moon definitely makes more scientific
and practical sense as a starting point and should have funding to reflect
that fact.
Andrew Lundell
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
To the Editor:
Paul Spudis writes: "By going
to the moon and mining the abundant water ice at the poles for rocket propellant,
we will be able to access GEO (geosynchronous orbit) with as much machine
and human capability as is required to build, service and operate the comsats
of the new century. Such capability is worth literally trillions of dollars."
I don't get it.… The statement,
as I understand it, comes down to this: Use the water and lower gravity
of the moon to launch vehicles into Earth orbit, and this saves us money.
Huh?
The moon as it exists now
is a barren wasteland. In order to reap any economic benefit, the vehicles
must be "built" there too. What sense is there in sending a vehicle to
the moon to be fueled and sent back to Earth for orbit? None. The only
way a launch from to the moon to earth orbit makes sense is if the vehicle
was built there. And that means stocking the moon with all of the facilities
necessary to produce the vehicle, a process that would take many decades
to do and even more to become profitable. Think of the many facilities
and people required to build today's satellites, let alone the future's.
That's an awful lot of infrastructure.
Sending a vehicle to the
moon for long-range exploration makes some sense. As a fueling and launch
point, the lower gravity of the moon would be a great place to send a vehicle
with empty fuel tanks about to embark on a long-term mission. But I just
can't see how the moon serves any useful purpose in putting something in
orbit around the Earth.
Adrian Forte, Chicago, Illinois
To the Editor:
I fully agree with P.D. Spudis!
The moon needs at first a
communication and technical infrastructure for further exploration, scientific
observations and preparation of permanent human presence. This should be
performed by robots between 2000 and 2010 supported by temporal visits
of international crews. A manned moon program should be based on cooperation
of all interested space agencies (NASDA, ESA, RAKA, NASA, etc.). Half of
the money spent by such an international holding should be provided by
the private sector. Clear rules and laws should ensure that the interests
of the public, as well as the commercial interests of the companies, will
be secured. Labor division is the magic formula for cost-saving technologies
and balanced benefits for the participating parties. Maybe a streamlined
United Nations space agency could take over management and coordination
(only of the moon program). It is not sure that there are really useable
water resources at the poles, but even if not, there will be ways to make
a moon colony self-sustaining. This will enforce the development of technologies
which are also badly needed in the future of the terrestrial civilization.
Recycling of water and any kind of consumables in nearly closed sub-ecological
systems is a main research area of enormous importance for the future of
overpopulated Earth. All the systems useful for the development of a Mars
colony could be first extensively studied on the moon's surface.
The moon would allow us to
study all biological and technical phenomena associated with reduced gravity
(but not weightlessness!). Of course, the key to the surface of the moon
is a manned moon-orbiting station that will not only act as the bridge
between ISS/Beta and the surface of the moon, but also to guide robotic
exploration and provide emergency capabilities for all kinds of crews.
Let us go to the moon first!
Dieter Kaemmer
Frankfurt, Germany
To the Editor:
I agree with [Paul Spudis']
initial assertion, about the two engineering projects that enjoy long-term
funding stability. That bothers me, because I disagree with [his] assertion
that [he has] built a case to return to the moon fitting in either category.
While the water on the moon
is a tremendous find, I think the physics which says it is cheaper to go
directly to Mars, [rather] than land on the moon to refuel, will diffuse
the argument.
It is also true that access
to GEO is easier from the moon, but I believe that argument will fall apart
too. The huge satellites you speak of will require huge boosters to fly
up on and, to my knowledge, none are past the conceptual stages. Besides,
the most common thing that kills GEO birds is a lack of fuel, and an automated
refueler could do the same job.
Where does that leave us?
I'm not sure. I'm a proponent of a humans-to-Mars mission, but not in the
model of Apollo. We'll see what happens.
Tom Hill
SPACE.com welcomes Letters
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