the NEXT page of exploration
12/16/2011 8:52:37 PM
THE FINAL FRONTIER: PAGE 2
12/16/2011 9:02:08 PM
12/16/2011 10:04:35 PM
i skimmed but i didnt see anyone mention the fact that humans only develop the way we do (bone/organs/skin/etc...) because of our atmosphere and earth gravity. i'm not saying we shouldn't head out into space but be prepared to see something that is far from resembling "earth" human.
12/16/2011 10:32:50 PM
12/17/2011 12:55:34 AM
Really? I would say war, famine, disease are much more historically prevalent than times of peace and innovation.
12/17/2011 2:24:25 AM
War, famine, and disease are not by themselves obstacles to innovation. Famine encourages new developments in agriculture. Disease encourages new treatments, and promote innovation in other ways -- the Black Plague was instrumental in bringing about the Renaissance. War encourages all sorts of things, not just weapons but multipurpose inventions -- since we're talking about space exploration, we might as well consider the enormous leaps made in rocketry and jet propulsion during WWII, to say nothing of nuclear power. All of which we would have developed in time otherwise, but which we put together pretty goddamned fast under the pressure of conflict.War, famine, and disease are commonplace not only in the sense that they are regular occurrences, but also in the sense that most of them are, well, commonplace. The sort of conflict that would be necessary to put a dent in innovation, this day in age, would have to be huge without precedent: basically, a nuclear holocaust. A disease that set us back noticeably would have to be worse than anything we've seen in many lifetimes -- even the Spanish Influenza didn't slow down the march of progress very much. And famine would have to reach inconceivable levels to slow us down.The point I'm trying to make is that for a cataclysm to seriously impede human progress, it has to be very potent and very global. The collapse of the Roman Empire was potent, but it left China and the Arab world alone, and they continued to make important developments. The Spanish Influenza pandemic was global, not not potent enough to do much. Disasters, in short, are common. Disasters big enough to put the brakes on technological development are rare.---Of all the comments I've made here, I have to say the response to this one surprises me the most. I had thought that the exponential increase of technological development was more or less a given, especially after the industrial revolution and most especially after the development of computers.
12/17/2011 2:44:55 AM
As far as space travel is concerned, I don't think we really have exponentially increased our ability. Other tech like cell phones, computers, etc...yes.We haven't made any significant leaps in putting a man in deep space in the past 30-40 year. Sure we can put a man in low orbit and keep him there for years, but we've been doing that since Skylab essentially. Hell, we are at a point now, where the US gov't cannot put a man in LEO without buying a seat on a rocket from the Russians (and eventually a private company)We went from first flight of a heavier than air machine to landing on the moon in 67 years...that's incredible, where will we be in 2036 (67 years after moon landing), maybe if we're lucky, a guy on Mars?
12/17/2011 3:57:18 AM
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/environment/la-me-gs-breakthrough-double-solar-energy-output-20111216,0,3897047.story?track=rssSolar already cheap at $1 a watt? Try 50 cents per watt per panel. A few more breakthroughs like this and it doesn't make sense to build a home without them. Not to mention permanent space colonies or probes.
12/17/2011 11:55:20 AM
12/17/2011 2:34:47 PM
yeh this huge fucker is definitely a leap '2x' above hubble. let's not kid ourselves
12/18/2011 10:56:09 AM
12/18/2011 5:25:13 PM
^subtle jab at obesity. hahaha. i approve.i had a nice read here about realistic possibilities to build long range space shipshttp://www.projectrho.com/rocket/realdesigns.php[Edited on December 18, 2011 at 6:48 PM. Reason : link]
12/18/2011 6:46:38 PM
Ahaha, the Webb Telescope is a horribly over budget/mismanaged project.[Edited on December 18, 2011 at 7:44 PM. Reason : b]
12/18/2011 7:44:18 PM
^ it's still pretty awesome.
12/18/2011 9:28:36 PM
It is a really impressive piece of technology, there is no denying that. However, whether or not it actually gets off the ground and works is iffy. Right now, I think it's schedule to go up by 2018, also, keep in mind, it'll be at the L2 point if NASA screws up and there is something wrong, game over. We can't fix it with a shuttle like the Hubble.Spirit and Opportunity were much more impressive to me than the Webb telescope. Cheaper, efficient, very well managed program.
12/18/2011 9:33:14 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oxTMUTOz0w&feature=related
12/18/2011 10:33:48 PM
^ "Islamic fundamentalist destroyed the enlightenment era of the Middle East" I just don't feel there is any threat to our ability to explore and grow at this point. (Unless we let some extreme violent islamic sects get nukes and ignore when radicals flare up) Hopefully we are establishing a world where we can finally not have to deal with some of that and peacefully evolve and explore. There's always going to be a hitler/osama bin laden that comes around every so often. Hopefully because of the internet and media we'll destroy that shit before they get any real momentum.^^yeh man. i hope they learn from their mistakes. either way, the possibility to actually get images of the big bang and pretty decent imagery of planets/blackholes/whatever else they find, somehow makes it priceless:/ just my2cents[Edited on December 18, 2011 at 10:44 PM. Reason : ,]
12/18/2011 10:37:18 PM
^Why waste time explore when the rapture is coming and the return to the kingdom of heaven is near?
12/18/2011 10:54:45 PM
12/18/2011 11:10:15 PM
^^So exploration shouldn't be done until the jews/christians/muslims/hindus are eradicated and only big bang / no possibility other than atheism theorists exist like yourself. cool. enjoy your boring life waiting for that to happen.... more power to you man.^The L2 point is brilliant. Esp if it can rotate with it's solar panels constantly facing the sun to produce energy while shading the mirrors on the top from solar photons interfering with the images. i guess that's the idea there.^yeh speaking of risk, the russians have tried to land/orbit/pass/simply 'get to' mars/venus around 50 times. almost every single one of them has been a colossal failure. and they were 'religion free' for the majority of those tries too somehow flying right in the face of CaelNCSU's theory[Edited on December 19, 2011 at 3:15 PM. Reason : ,]
12/19/2011 2:51:03 PM
I'm totally fine with religious people doing space exploration until one of them references the Bible for the value of Pi
12/21/2011 3:10:48 PM
^Islam was taking route at the tale end of the Golden Ages, while other factors may have given them a hiccup I think there is a reason out of a billion people there are only a handful of Noble Prizes...
12/21/2011 3:48:10 PM
12/21/2011 3:57:00 PM
Once again, Neil deGrasse Tyson explains:http://youtu.be/6oxTMUTOz0w
12/21/2011 4:09:10 PM
12/22/2011 8:56:20 AM
there's a few other religion threads around the corner---->NASA building a program to take man out of LEODesign specifically built to handle a fully fueled departure stage for manned flight beyond orbit.Maiden flight planned in 5 years. 2017.
12/22/2011 2:18:04 PM
"planned"
12/22/2011 2:39:21 PM
Hey at least a date is set. That's usually half the battle.
12/22/2011 5:13:35 PM
what happened to that entire deal about privatizing space travel? I thought NASA wasn't going to be doing this stuff.
12/22/2011 5:18:46 PM
If that's the same project i'm thinking of, isn't it not yet fully funded?
12/22/2011 7:17:31 PM
12/22/2011 10:08:32 PM
since i was completely ignored earlier:
12/23/2011 12:01:36 AM
I think the reason we're not mentioning it is that you're putting the cart well before the horse. Permanent human settlements and several generations of people born and raised in those settlements will have to happen before serious deviation from terrestrial norms becomes apparent.There's also the fact that replicating Earthlike conditions is obviously a prerequisite for expanding beyond the planet or solar system. With concerted effort, we can replicate a lot of those things now (atmosphere, temperature, etc). Effective radiation shielding is probably also within our "easy" grasp. Recreating our gravity is a more difficult prospect, especially on settlements on fixed bodies; my understanding is that we could simulate it reasonably well on spacecraft through rotation, though I won't claim to know much about the physics of all that.In the initial phases of extraterrestrial colonization it also seems likely that self-sustaining generations of people would not exist. With the moon and Mars, I'd think the path would involve sterilization or, pending research into the effects of space travel on pregnancy, immediate return to Earth. That would mitigate some of the effects.In the long term? You're absolutely right. Even if stringent restrictions on reproduction exist for a while, Jeff Goldblum had it right in Jurassic Park: "Life finds a way." Or rather, human horniness well. People will fuck and get pregnant so often that either we'll start ignoring it or some will get through in spite of our best efforts.Lastly, I think that by the time all of these things come to pass, Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ will have returned to Earth in His glory and started the rapture so it won't be an issue. ( to disco_stu) Seriously, though, my gut says that if we haven't figured out how to get over differences in people by then, we'll have all killed each other. And if we have figured it out, nobody's going to freak over giant Martian people or blue Ionians or whatever the fuck else comes about.
12/23/2011 1:26:39 AM
12/23/2011 7:53:20 AM
For one thing, like I said, we're going to take great lengths to make settlements as Earthlike as possible. So while changes will exist from the start, they might not be apparent.Also, I took the thrust of GoodLock's post to be aimed at the eventual development of a separate "race" of extraterrestrial people, which would involve a genetic component requiring generations to develop.
12/23/2011 11:11:20 AM
Something tells me that's going to take a few thousand years (if done naturally)seems like we are on pace to cracking the human software OS and being able to produce a species that is right for the job. i give it about 75 years until we are building other types of chemical human lifeforms to do the manual labor of exploring the cosmos and finding suitable replacements for earth to allow for natural reproduction as well.
12/23/2011 1:24:33 PM
build space elevator with superduper nanocarbonmagic fiber tech, cost of space shit goes down, get rid of that no-nuke in space treaty shit, start making project orion style kinect plate nuke bomb ship things, get to proxima cent in a lifetime. improve that shit or make a hydrogen sucking magic ship or a nuclear fission deal and get to a high percentage of speed of light and BOOM relativity means ship time of <50 years and u can travel to the edge of the universe but buzzkill everyone u ever knew is dead and the earth is charred shit. or fuck it wormholes idk.
12/24/2011 1:28:32 AM
^^
12/24/2011 7:38:01 AM
12/24/2011 9:37:08 AM
youre not looking at the big picture just drop that bad boy in geosynch orbit and anchors away you cant afford NOT to have an elevator then the cost goes down you got to spend money to make money trust me i know what im talking about its simple economics
12/24/2011 5:29:12 PM
when we stop laughing at it, it becomes a reality
12/31/2011 9:42:13 AM
No way we could get to alpha cent. In 50 years. We Can't travel nearly at the speed of light. It would take more like 5,000 years.
1/1/2012 4:04:40 PM
At .1c it would take ~40 years.
1/1/2012 5:30:22 PM
.1c is a tall order
1/1/2012 5:55:35 PM
Theoretically doable with current tech
1/1/2012 7:05:52 PM
we have current designs that would allow us to reach 0.33% of the speed of light.it's just nobody has the care to invest in it. i'm sure we will soon
1/2/2012 2:24:42 PM
Actually, given how absurdly useful Voyager has been to science, I'm surprised that we don't do more of that.I think it will be a long time before we can fly a probe that will be a precision flyby of Alpha Cent.But since the interstellar neighborhood is of such interest, why don't we send out probes in several directions just to sniff out the parameters of space? Keep in mind, this has a time premium. It takes so long to travel that distance that it behooves us to start soon.Voyager 1 is traveling at 0.006 % of light speed by the way.We're going to send out a lot of lemming-like probes to empty interstellar space before we can do a flyby of Alpha Cent or any other star.We will do a flyby of another star looong before we capture orbit around another star. And all of this will be small robotic probes. Autonomous is a given since we're talking light-years away.A flyby requires 1/4th the propellant of a rendezvous mission, if I have the kinematics right.
1/2/2012 2:44:39 PM
^I'd like you to meet, New Horizons...current location:
1/2/2012 3:01:12 PM
1/2/2012 3:28:14 PM