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Old September 6th 12, 02:44 PM posted to sci.space.station
Alan Erskine[_3_]
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Default Astronauts want to go to the moon

On 6/09/2012 11:24 PM, Jeff Findley wrote:
It's visible, but I'd argue that we've "been there, done that". Note
how coverage of the lunar missions peaked with Apollo 11 then tapered
off until the O2 tank blew on Apollo 13.


The same thing will happen with Mars missions. While people have been
to the Moon, there's not that much difference between the Moon and Mars
either. One beauty about the Moon is it's always visible to the Near
Side, whereas Mars isn't; that's at least comforting.


Exploring an asteroid that's *far* away from earth, as opposed to the
moon which is *in our backyard* would be far more interesting, IMHO.


Same thing with Moon/Mars missions.


In a lot of ways, a smallish asteroid is far easier to explore than the
moon since you don't need much of a lander, due to the very low delta-V
required to "land" and "takeoff". If the asteroid is small enough, you
don't need a lander at all. You can just "land" your
Orion/hab/propulsion stack right on the thing.



And have it bounce off too.