why mars is not the next apollo

We cannot treat Mars the same way we treated the Moon.

mars

According to Wired's laundry list of technical and political issues with getting humans to Mars by the year 2030 or so, exploring another planet many millions of miles away won't be Apollo 2.0 in many ways. It will be an order of magnitude more expensive per launch, require 30 months for a round trip, and needs to be financed, overseen, and executed by an international group that will include space agencies and ambitious aerospace companies with plans and launch vehicles of their own. And yet, the designs being drawn up sound remarkably like Apollo on steroids. We're basically working with the same basic mission plans we had in the 1980s with a few workarounds for handling fuel and oxygen. Come on folks, this is another planet. It's not just a status symbol and we don't need to rush there just to say we went. Really, we don't. Flag planting is great for propaganda and PR purposes, but it's disastrous for long term exploration, which needs to be a very boring, consistent, and yes, expensive effort. We need a better plan than this.

Now, as much as this blog will support my assertion that I'm all about space exploration and will go as far as to advocate augmenting humans to travel into deep space (which led to numerous arguments with the Singularity Institute's fellows), we don't have to go to Mars as soon as we're able to launch. It's been there for 4.5 billion years. It's not going anywhere for at least another five billion, and we owe it to ourselves to do it right. This is why instead of sending a much bigger capsule or an updated ISS for a 30 month round trip, we need to send inflatable, rotating space stations powered by small nuclear reactors. Instead of landers, we need to send self-assembling habitats. Instead of going to Mars to stick a flag into the ground, collect rocks, and do some very brief and limited experiments to look for traces of organic compounds, we need to commit to an outright colonization effort, and we need to test the basics on the Moon before we go. We won't fulfill our dreams of roaming the stars and living on alien worlds if we don't get this right.

Yes, it sounds downright crazy to propose something like that, especially thanks to the political climates of today. And it is. But at the risk of repeating myself, when we have trillions of banks to erase their bad bets from the books and nothing to aid the paltry budgets of space agencies or labs working on the technology of the future, the issue isn't money. It's priorities, vision, and will, and today's politicians have the first one skewed, and more often than not either lack the other two, or envision our society going backwards as if this is a good thing. And we can keep right on placating ourselves by saying that we'll at least get to roam around the solar system a bit like we did once, but that's not how we should be exploring space. We know it's not. if you want to really reach out into space, you go in for the long term with your eye on the spin-offs and benefits that will rain down from massive, ambitious, integrated projects that try to do what's never been done before not by reinventing the wheel, but by attaching said wheel to a new airplane.

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# space // mars / space exploration / space travel


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