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#1 |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
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For all of you space buffs and fans, it is time to vent!
What is the most overlooked mission that you think should happen now? What is a mission that you think should be given priority? What mission would fill in some vital piece of knowledge or provide a new window of insight or explore new territory? The rules:
Surprise us. Be creative. |
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#2 |
"Jeff"
Feb 2012
St. Louis, Missouri, USA
115710 Posts |
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I suppose it would be out of line to suggest that NASA should send a craft to the nearest star: Sol.
We waste a great deal of time and energy studying boring lumps of rock like the moon. It is time for that And since cost is an issue we could save money on heat shielding by going at night. Sorry, I actually think this is a great thread. Though I'm for putting that Billion toward the space elevator. Last fiddled with by chappy on 2012-12-27 at 02:59 Reason: space elevator FTW! |
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#3 |
If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
34·137 Posts |
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Let us assume there is a non-zero probability that a relatively massive asteroid might impact Earth within the next 100 years.
Somewhat minor private funding (only a few hundred million dollars or so) would be able to detect this, using spacecraft located at Lagrangian points. Might be a bit better than NASA funded scientists noting after the fact "oh, look, that asteroid just missed us yesterday".... |
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#4 | ||
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
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#5 |
Romulan Interpreter
"name field"
Jun 2011
Thailand
3·23·149 Posts |
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Landing on Mercury. I mean, manned mission. I still believe Mercury will be the next celestial body the mankind will walk on (this means, after the already trodden Moon, and before March, Venus, other things). Colonize may be not, but walk on, for sure! That is first because of the lower gravity (easier to come back) and then because of the temperature (contrary to popular beliefs that Mercury is very hot, because is close to the Sun, its polar caps are frozen, due to its orbital tilt, some area is never reached by the Sun, there is even ice there - i.e. solid, frozen water). As its equator is very hot, there is a "convenient" area somewhere in the middle, the "dew point", where the humans could live with only an oxygen mask for a while, dig some holes, take some stones, boo hoo, come back, happy ending...
Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2012-12-27 at 05:03 |
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#6 |
Basketry That Evening!
"Bunslow the Bold"
Jun 2011
40<A<43 -89<O<-88
722110 Posts |
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#7 |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
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To costly.Beside that, it takes a lot of energy to get to Mercury and if you want to get back, it takes a lot of energy to get back to earth.
"A trip to Mercury requires more rocket fuel than that required to escape the Solar System completely." - wikipedia And a manned mission is much heavier that an unmanned mission. |
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#8 |
Romulan Interpreter
"name field"
Jun 2011
Thailand
3×23×149 Posts |
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whoops...
you are destroying my dreams ![]() ![]() I know everybody is terrified by descending into this "solar well", the ship gets faster and faster, and if it does not do something (like active changing velocity) then it will pass Mercury fast... Think about a parachute, in the Earth's atmosphere. It does not get faster as it descends. Now think that the parachute is a big solar sail and the Earth's atmosphere is the solar wind... This can be quite interesting (and cheap, close to free) when it comes back. With a little planning, it may lift the mercurial module without (much) other fuel... Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2012-12-27 at 05:44 |
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#9 |
6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
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My current personal preference is to plant some (2 or 3) radio telescopes on the moon. This would be for Extremely Long Baseline Interferometry. Ideally they would be about 10 meters in diameter once unfolded and contain an atomic clock, a generous amount of solar cells, and an RTG to provide a bit of power and some heat for the long nights.
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#10 |
Bemusing Prompter
"Danny"
Dec 2002
California
249510 Posts |
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Not a "space mission" per se, but I'd really like to see a working Heim drive.
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#11 | |
Aug 2002
217316 Posts |
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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0448134/ Edit: An excellent song on the soundtrack as well: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/ad...er/id579343029 |
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