by 0mar » Tue 09 Aug 2005, 04:40:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Graeme', 'I') would like to inject a little more optimism and adventure back into this board by posting this very interesting interview of Buzz Aldrin:
Mars - the next frontier?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')e is currently promoting his new children's book, Reaching for the Moon, but is happy to discuss topics ranging from the current shuttle mission ("a near miss") to human travel to Mars ("probable") and his detailing of an other-worldly "close encounter" which he believes could occur on Friday 13 April, 2029.
Then he adds more lightly: "The other possibility is that they'll fix it in short order and squeeze in the rest of the missions, about 19, before 2010."
On the proposed Moon landing, announced in January last year by President Bush, Aldrin says: "Between 2015 and 2020, I think that's highly do-able. If the flying of the CEV [crew exploration vehicle] is accelerated to 2011 or 2010, which they would like to do, it's conceivable. Maybe by 2018, with four people.
Of the mission to Mars also announced by Bush, Aldrin seems more reserved. Could it happen in my lifetime? "It's probable. Between 2030 and 2035 is reasonable, depending on how much we want to establish a degree of permanence of explorers, to then turn over to commercial activities on the Moon.
http://news.scotsman.com/features.cfm?id=1743172005If humans can solve the enormous technical problems associated with going to the Moon and Mars, then surely those associated with Peak Oil can be solved too. I admire the courageous American spirit that enables this type endeavor to be achieved. What say the Americans? Can you do it? I say yes!
One is an engineering problem and the other, at heart, is a philosophical problem.