![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
This is interesting:
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=4272721 Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too. Which I think is rather odd considering that the ESA has no manned spacecraft, the ESA has yet to land *anything* on another planetary body succesfully (even the Moon) and the ESA has a grand total of two (2) sucessful interplanetary missions (Giotto and Mars Express). Add to that the fact that the ESA is always in a budget crunch and it leaves you scratching your head. NASA, at least, can afford to spend a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight because it *already* is spending a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight. Granted, 2030 is plenty of time to get caught up, but they certainly do have a lot of catching up to do! I found these quotes to be rather amusing: [excerpt] "The plans are more precise than the broad U.S. goals of sending a man back to the moon by 2020 and to Mars by 2030, revealed last month by President Bush." [/excerpt] Following that is a *vague* description of how it may be "technically feasible" to have a manned moon mission between 2020 and 2025. Which is so much more precise than Bush's broad 2015-2020 timeline for going back to the Moon. [excerpt] "We need to go back to the moon before we can go to Mars," he told an audience of space scientists, academics and industrialists. [/excerpt] Yeah, well, there's one tiny problem with that. You guys didn't go to the Moon, NASA did. You aren't going "back" to the Moon, you haven't even sent unmanned probes there for cryin' out loud. The ESA wasn't even created until well after the last man left lunar orbit. "Back" indeed! There's also a bunch of stuff about an ambitious Mars sample return program, which would bring back material in 2014. Again, considering how much ground work the ESA needs to do that sounds pretty optimistic, but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. My take on this is pretty simple, Reuters blew it. This is not really an official ESA goal as yet but merely a pie in the sky "if only" statement akin to the same stuff that NASA, the RSA, and even the ESA have routinely spelled out before. The tell tale for me is the simple fact that the ESA cannot simply increase it's own budget, that would require the consent of the heads of state of the member nations. So put this in the "maybe" column, for now. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Plans are one thing, execution is another - neither idea is feasible due to
the time frame. If they (politicians with the purse strings) really want to go the the Moon (first, then Mars), they'd give their respective agencies (ESA or NASA) a challenge as was done in 1961 - say, five years. That's not out of the question considering what was done during Apollo - design and development of not just a spacecraft, but also the launch vehicle and the C3 (Command, Control, Communications) systems to boot. These days, it would be somewhat easier as existing equipment could be used for much of what is needed. "Christopher M. Jones" wrote in message om... This is interesting: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=4272721 Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too. Which I think is rather odd considering that the ESA has no manned spacecraft, the ESA has yet to land *anything* on another planetary body succesfully (even the Moon) and the ESA has a grand total of two (2) sucessful interplanetary missions (Giotto and Mars Express). Add to that the fact that the ESA is always in a budget crunch and it leaves you scratching your head. NASA, at least, can afford to spend a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight because it *already* is spending a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight. Granted, 2030 is plenty of time to get caught up, but they certainly do have a lot of catching up to do! I found these quotes to be rather amusing: [excerpt] "The plans are more precise than the broad U.S. goals of sending a man back to the moon by 2020 and to Mars by 2030, revealed last month by President Bush." [/excerpt] Following that is a *vague* description of how it may be "technically feasible" to have a manned moon mission between 2020 and 2025. Which is so much more precise than Bush's broad 2015-2020 timeline for going back to the Moon. [excerpt] "We need to go back to the moon before we can go to Mars," he told an audience of space scientists, academics and industrialists. [/excerpt] Yeah, well, there's one tiny problem with that. You guys didn't go to the Moon, NASA did. You aren't going "back" to the Moon, you haven't even sent unmanned probes there for cryin' out loud. The ESA wasn't even created until well after the last man left lunar orbit. "Back" indeed! There's also a bunch of stuff about an ambitious Mars sample return program, which would bring back material in 2014. Again, considering how much ground work the ESA needs to do that sounds pretty optimistic, but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. My take on this is pretty simple, Reuters blew it. This is not really an official ESA goal as yet but merely a pie in the sky "if only" statement akin to the same stuff that NASA, the RSA, and even the ESA have routinely spelled out before. The tell tale for me is the simple fact that the ESA cannot simply increase it's own budget, that would require the consent of the heads of state of the member nations. So put this in the "maybe" column, for now. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Plans are one thing, execution is another - neither idea is feasible due to
the time frame. If they (politicians with the purse strings) really want to go the the Moon (first, then Mars), they'd give their respective agencies (ESA or NASA) a challenge as was done in 1961 - say, five years. That's not out of the question considering what was done during Apollo - design and development of not just a spacecraft, but also the launch vehicle and the C3 (Command, Control, Communications) systems to boot. These days, it would be somewhat easier as existing equipment could be used for much of what is needed. "Christopher M. Jones" wrote in message om... This is interesting: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=4272721 Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too. Which I think is rather odd considering that the ESA has no manned spacecraft, the ESA has yet to land *anything* on another planetary body succesfully (even the Moon) and the ESA has a grand total of two (2) sucessful interplanetary missions (Giotto and Mars Express). Add to that the fact that the ESA is always in a budget crunch and it leaves you scratching your head. NASA, at least, can afford to spend a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight because it *already* is spending a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight. Granted, 2030 is plenty of time to get caught up, but they certainly do have a lot of catching up to do! I found these quotes to be rather amusing: [excerpt] "The plans are more precise than the broad U.S. goals of sending a man back to the moon by 2020 and to Mars by 2030, revealed last month by President Bush." [/excerpt] Following that is a *vague* description of how it may be "technically feasible" to have a manned moon mission between 2020 and 2025. Which is so much more precise than Bush's broad 2015-2020 timeline for going back to the Moon. [excerpt] "We need to go back to the moon before we can go to Mars," he told an audience of space scientists, academics and industrialists. [/excerpt] Yeah, well, there's one tiny problem with that. You guys didn't go to the Moon, NASA did. You aren't going "back" to the Moon, you haven't even sent unmanned probes there for cryin' out loud. The ESA wasn't even created until well after the last man left lunar orbit. "Back" indeed! There's also a bunch of stuff about an ambitious Mars sample return program, which would bring back material in 2014. Again, considering how much ground work the ESA needs to do that sounds pretty optimistic, but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt. My take on this is pretty simple, Reuters blew it. This is not really an official ESA goal as yet but merely a pie in the sky "if only" statement akin to the same stuff that NASA, the RSA, and even the ESA have routinely spelled out before. The tell tale for me is the simple fact that the ESA cannot simply increase it's own budget, that would require the consent of the heads of state of the member nations. So put this in the "maybe" column, for now. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It's not just Reuters blowing it. I've said this many times, but the
language coming out of the EU portraying anything EU-related versus its American counterpart reminds me very much of reading the People's Daily as it describes Chinese projects. This at one time was mostly confined to lesser-covered meetings and panels of Eurocrats, but it's increasingly (rapidly) becoming par for the course in all things that are remotely related to EU prestige. The journalist may have blowing around, but he wasn't the source of the wind. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
It's not just Reuters blowing it. I've said this many times, but the
language coming out of the EU portraying anything EU-related versus its American counterpart reminds me very much of reading the People's Daily as it describes Chinese projects. This at one time was mostly confined to lesser-covered meetings and panels of Eurocrats, but it's increasingly (rapidly) becoming par for the course in all things that are remotely related to EU prestige. The journalist may have blowing around, but he wasn't the source of the wind. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 3 Feb 2004 22:17:46 -0800, (Christopher M.
Jones) wrote: Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too .... That is interesting; if the ESA works with us, it could be very interesting indeed. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Christopher M. Jones wrote: Yeah, well, there's one tiny problem with that. You guys didn't go to the Moon, NASA did. You aren't going "back" to the Moon, you haven't even sent unmanned probes there for cryin' out loud. They've sent SMART-1 on its way. -- Hop David http://clowder.net/hop/index.html |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
(Christopher M. Jones) wrote in message . com...
This is interesting: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=4272721 Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too. Which I think is rather odd considering that the ESA has no manned spacecraft, the ESA has yet to land *anything* on another planetary body succesfully (even the Moon) and the ESA has a grand total of two (2) sucessful interplanetary missions (Giotto and Mars Express). Add to that the fact that the ESA is always in a budget crunch and it leaves you scratching your head. NASA, at least, can afford to spend a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight because it *already* is spending a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight. Granted, 2030 is plenty of time to get caught up, but they certainly do have a lot of catching up to do! I found these quotes to be rather amusing: [excerpt] "The plans are more precise than the broad U.S. goals of sending a man back to the moon by 2020 and to Mars by 2030, revealed last month by President Bush." [/excerpt] My own plans (at least for the moon - the transport element is he http://groups.google.co.uk/groups?dq...ing.google.com) are even more precise than either ESA's or NASA's. Now all I need is $20 billion. If I were ESA, that would be $40 billion. If I were NASA, that would be $60 billion. Of the three, only NASA is going to spend its amount. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Alex Terrell" wrote in message om... (Christopher M. Jones) wrote in message . com... This is interesting: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.j...toryID=4272721 Hot on the heels of Bush's new long term plan for NASA manned spaceflight, the ESA says they're going to the Moon and Mars too. Which I think is rather odd considering that the ESA has no manned spacecraft, the ESA has yet to land *anything* on another planetary body succesfully (even the Moon) and the ESA has a grand total of two (2) sucessful interplanetary missions (Giotto and Mars Express). Add to that the fact that the ESA is always in a budget crunch and it leaves you scratching your head. NASA, at least, can afford to spend a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight because it *already* is spending a couple billion a year on manned spaceflight. Granted, 2030 is plenty of time to get caught up, but they certainly do have a lot of catching up to do! I found these quotes to be rather amusing: [excerpt] "The plans are more precise than the broad U.S. goals of sending a man back to the moon by 2020 and to Mars by 2030, revealed last month by President Bush." [/excerpt] My own plans (at least for the moon - the transport element is he http://groups.google.co.uk/groups?dq...ing.google.com) are even more precise than either ESA's or NASA's. Now all I need is $20 billion. If I were ESA, that would be $40 billion. If I were NASA, that would be $60 billion. Of the three, only NASA is going to spend its amount. LOL! Yes, but at least we'll have more than some pipe dream. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
One heck of an interesting object in Mars panorama | Tony Sivori | Space Shuttle | 36 | February 11th 04 01:18 AM |
Interesting Trajectory Problem | Ian Stirling | Technology | 3 | December 31st 03 12:54 PM |
interesting papers on microwave thermal launcher | Joe Strout | Policy | 38 | December 11th 03 04:06 AM |
interesting data point for rocket courier service... | Kaido Kert | Policy | 2 | August 15th 03 04:52 PM |
Interesting NPR story on Columbia debris search | Patty Winter | Space Shuttle | 1 | July 26th 03 12:54 AM |