Posts Tagged editorials

The Conquest of Space

By Space Ship to the Moon by Jack Coggins & Fletcher Pratt, 1952

You’ve probably figured out by now that I post as much science fiction and fictional spaceflight as I do “real” manned spaceflight. Give me space shuttle Discovery, the Saturn V, the Eagle, the White Star, the Heart of Gold, the Millennium Falcon — I love them all. I’m a big fan of the retro-future, the places we might have gone and the ships that might have taken us there. That they don’t yet exist gives me no less desire to dream that they might, in the future. Perhaps in my lifetime. Perhaps not. I admit, although I hadn’t necessarily expected tourist travel to the Moon by now, I thought at least somebody would be going there in person, from some country. Alas, earwax.

I read something the other day that keeps coming to mind, as one reason I believe we haven’t gotten further in the conquest of space (along with a lack of understanding as to what exploration means, and why we should be doing it.) It’s a thing called risk. Our culture views risk-taking as a positive thing, when it applies to financial or entrepreneurial ventures, but abhors it when it applies to life and limb.

Here is the quote, emphasis mine:

Not as famous as the Wright Brothers, after all, is Lt. Thomas Selfridge, the first man in history ever to die in a plane crash, but by no means the last. The conquest of the air filled graveyards with pilots. Great futures exact great prices. If we have not conquered space, it is perhaps because we are unwilling to fill our graveyards with the number of astronauts such an ambitious dream requires.
The Big Idea: John C. Wright

The Mercury 7, being test pilots, knew full well the risks they were taking, and that sudden demise was a distinct possibility. They rode the rockets anyway, and if they died, they died in pursuit of something they believed in. Amazingly, none of the NASA astronauts died right off — in fact, nobody died for a while, which made the Apollo 1 fire all the more shocking. Challenger and Columbia, likewise, shocked and grieved the American public, and the world. However, looking back, it’s amazing we did what we did with the US space program with so little loss of life. How silly is it for us, as a culture, to expect to skip all the grisly bits and proceed straight to streamlined, trouble-free space travel? We emphasize and remember the major accidents (Apollo 1, Challenger and Columbia), and granted they were horrible, tragic events, but certainly people don’t make the same fuss over fatal plane crashes. Planes still crash, people still die — sometimes pilots, sometimes innocent passengers. I dare say, there is not the same public outcry toward the FAA as there is toward NASA when we lose astronauts.

Which is a long way of saying, I agree with the above quote. We are unwilling to pay the price*, and that is in part why we have not conquered space travel in the present, to the degree we expected sixty years ago. Heck, this isn’t the future we expected even thirty years ago. What happened to the weekly space shuttle launches?

So, what’s holding us back from our “rightful” place in the heavens? Our culture’s abhorrence of death? Failed leadership? Lack of vision? Money? Technological progress?

What are your thoughts? Please leave a comment below!

 

* And am I willing to pay that price, you might ask? Fair question — I don’t know. It’d depend on what sort of mission we’re talking about, and I’d have to think about it in any case. (Lunar mission? Maybe. LEO? Not so much.) I doubt many people have an instant answer as to whether or not they’d die for something. Choose your thing carefully.

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Space Camp

Advanced Space AcademyFor a while now, I’ve been meaning to write about my experiences at Space Camp® — I went twice in high school, in the summers of 1994 and 1995. (I say “Space Camp” because that’s what people commonly know; really, I attended Space Academy Level II, two years in a row. Now they call it Advanced Space Academy®, and it has a spiffy new logo. I am quite envious. Do they make it in a patch? Because I’d buy one.)

Anyway, I was sitting here today with my U.S. Space & Rocket Center “Danielle” mug (lovingly carried back from Huntsville and camp in 1995), thinking that it was high time I talked about my camp experience. Space Camp changed my life. Truly! Just now I discovered and filled out the Alumni Survey (because hey, why not?), and the questions prompted me along the same lines as what I hoped to post here. Here are a couple of questions, and my answers.

How did camp affect your life or career choice?

Space Academy II ABSOLUTELY changed my life. I was interested in spaceflight from a very early age, but grew up in a rural area with nobody around that shared my interests.

My first year at camp was just before my junior year of high school. I was in a team of eight (six guys, one other girl), and we INSTANTLY got along: we ALL loved science fiction, ALL wanted to be astronauts, ALL liked the same movies and books and “nerdy” hobbies. For the first time in my life, I felt like I BELONGED somewhere. I fit in. That was mind-boggling for me. I came back a changed person, “flying” my space-nerd colors openly at school, and caring far less about what the “cool” people thought of my interests.

In the end, my career took a different path than my childhood goal of becoming an astronaut, but to this day, Space Camp remains one of the most powerful, wonderful experiences of my life. It gave me a much-needed boost, and I’m very grateful to have gone not once, but twice!

This is my mug.I still have my flight suit (although some of the patches are no longer attached; I have no idea what possessed me to take them off, but at least I know where they are), my team photos, my name tag for the suit and my wings. And my coffee mug. ♥

Tell us your favorite, funniest, and/or most inspiring camp memory, tradition, or activity.

Funny memory: During EDM, a shuttle crew member became “sick” with “constipation”, which we had to diagnose and treat. She acted this out by doubling over and repeatedly moaning “I FEEL the PAIN!!”

[Ed: The above is all I could fit in the survey box. It leaves out the fact that we were DYING of laughter. DYING. The "medical condition" assignments we randomly got were supposed to be Taken Very Seriously. Believe me, nobody could help this sick crew member, NOBODY, because we were collapsed all over the simulator, on both decks, and on the ladder, DYING of laughter. The counselors couldn't even get mad at us for not trying to diagnose the patient; they were laughing too.]

Both times I went, I was assigned to the shuttle pilot position, which is actually (imho) more fun (and intense!) than commander, because you have a LOT more switches to flip and buttons to press. (And procedures, OHHH the procedures.) My first EDM (extended-duration mission, the all-nighter/24-hour simulated mission), I was in Mission Control the whole time which sucked, ahem, which was not nearly as fun. Tiger Team was very frustrating. My second EDM, I was on the shuttle, which was a great experience for the aforementioned pilot-switch-flipping aspect, aforementioned funny story, and I also got to command the space station during the second half, which was cool.

To finish this off and to justify the several “digging” attempts to find this photo, here’s a picture of me and my dad, the day I flew home from Space Camp in 1994. (I wore my flight suit home. In fact, all of us that bought suits wore them flying home. We must have been a sight, running through the Atlanta airport..!!)

My dad and I, August 1994

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In a word, "yes"

Apollo Lunar Lander

I don’t post editorials around here much. This really is my “neat” blog: here’s some neat things I found that are space-themed, here’s some neat retro space stuff, and here’s some neat pictures of space, aren’t they inspiring? I readily admit that I like pretty pictures of space and spaceflight, and I’m passing the savings onto you.

(I used to post my editorials somewhere else, but I just can’t write that sort of thing every day. NASA depresses me at the moment, and I just can’t stay up on the politics of the space industry, government or commercial. I’ve never been much for politics and I must have been kidding myself that space politics would be any different at all from all the other kinds. I digress.)

I submit for your reading pleasure an editorial by Dr. Paul Spudis, preeminent lunar scientist, and someone whom I highly respect. He rebuts a strategic plan suggesting that we abandon going back to the Moon (because “People don’t care about going back to the Moon and there’s no rationale for going back to the Moon”) by discussing public support for the space program, which fluctuates between 40-60% approval, averaging a solid 50%. As usual, he nails it perfectly (bolded emphasis mine.)

If your poll results are always around 50-50, then in a fundamental sense, people are “indifferent” about what you’re doing. So, in one sense, Lane is right — the public really doesn’t “care” about going to the Moon. What he leaves unspoken is the fact that at least half of the country doesn’t really “care” about anything NASA does.

So true, so very true. I know people that feel that way, and heck, being a space nut myself, even I do not care about some, or most, of what NASA is doing. Sorry guys, it’s the truth. A lot of people do have some interest; it’s just not the rabid geekfest NASA would prefer. Instead, it’s pretty much like this (again, bolded emphasis mine):

In broad and vague terms, people support our space program — they don’t want to see NASA on the chopping block. They like the idea of going to new places and making new discoveries — they just don’t focus and orient their lives around the “sausage making” of space policy, like we in the business do. What they want from their government is a space program that does interesting things (and not too many dumb things) with programs that will make and keep the country smarter, inspired, proud and hopeful.

Key word there being interesting. The strategic plan he’s discussing wants to focus NASA efforts on global climate change, and I hate to break it to the minority of vocal politicians and scientists that are ever so worked up about climate change, but the average person is not lying awake thinking about climate change and in general does not care. Joe Public is not as upset about this as they would like him to be. And frankly, the public is not going to be interested if NASA goes this route.

Do I think NASA should cater to the interest-whims of the public? Well… yes. Outreach is good, educational programs and sites are good; pretty pictures and exciting video footage (imho) is better. And yes, if NASA wants to receive our votes, our tax dollars and our support, I do think they should be doing something… interesting. The public doesn’t live and breathe the space program the way those involved in it do, and thus, they’re not going to have the automatic interest, the deep knowledge. You have to engage them, and part of that is making what you’re doing… look interesting. Better yet, be interesting.

The public is indifferent. “Exciting” to NASA just isn’t necessarily “exciting” to us average folk. Going back to the Moon won’t necessarily solve the public support issue, but cutting off any potentially exciting bits and devoting NASA’s energies to decidedly less-interesting subjects sure isn’t going to help!

Anyway, that’s my two bits. Feel free to comment (and add your two bits to mine.)

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Reprinted: Why I gave up on NASA

“Why I gave up on NASA”, originally posted at Hoshichan.com on July 30, 2008; reprinted in full on December 1, 2008 since the blog is no more.

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Brian sent me this yesterday. I started this post as a reply back to him but realized it made for a good rant. And good post fodder.

Apollo 11 astronaut Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin Jr. told SCI FI Wire that fantastic space science fiction shows and movies are, in part, responsible for the lack of interest in real-life space exploration among young people.

“I blame the fantastic and unbelievable shows about space flight and rocket ships that are on today,” Aldrin said in an interview during an ice cream party held by the National Geographic Channel at the Television Critics Association press tour in Beverly Hills, Calif., this week. “All the shows where they beam people around and things like that have made young people think that that is what the space program should be doing. It’s not realistic.”

For the most part, I disagree with Mr. Aldrin. I do not think lack of realism is making kids less interested in the space program. I think lack of anything interesting happening, AT ALL, is making kids less interested in the space program. And it’s not just kids.

There’s a lot of talking, organizing, but nothing is really HAPPENING at NASA right now. Hence the commercial interest in the Google Lunar X Prize (in my opinion.) My LPI internship adviser is now the chief scientist for one of the X Prize teams, because he’s not waiting for NASA to get around to getting back to the Moon. There’s a lot of disgruntled scientists (I know, I saw them at the LPSC, in 2000 and 2003) who’ve been living on crumbs of hope, project to project, grant to grant, but how long can that really sustain you?

Since I turned my back on the scientific community, I’m going to write science fiction and go to the Moon whenever the heck I want. :P For whatever non-scientific flippant reason I want. And stay as long as I want.

So for once, for a change, I think Aldrin’s full of crap. Usually I’m pretty much on his side, he’s a great advocate for spaceflight… but people need more than realism. They need hope, dreams… things to inspire them. They need the bar set too high, to give them something to shoot for. They also need to see something happening, and if the space program can’t provide that, they’ll go elsewhere. And they will. And they are.

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Perspective, and a barred spiral galaxy

I rewrote the Common Themes About section earlier this week. While conversing with my best friend and my husband about that day’s post, my reasons for posting it, and posting things here in general, I finally and fully understood this site’s mission statement, which is:

From the dawn of the Space Age to the present moment, spaceflight has a profound influence on culture. Images of space and space exploration inspire awe and enthusiasm in each generation, and over time they percolate into our everyday lives and society as a whole. From stylized hints in industrial design to literal interpretations, from the mundane to the obscure, spaceflight is all around us.

Common Themes explores the influence of spaceflight and space exploration — also astronomy and science fiction — on aspects of human civilization and culture.

I knew when I first thought up this blog that space and spaceflight have a considerable, even profound influence on our culture; in the United States and around the world, objects, designs and works of art influenced by space/spaceflight pop up regularly. I never really made the connection of why that was.

It’s because space and spaceflight are awe-inspiring.

We may not want to pay for it when voting time comes around, but here in the US, public support for the space program is startlingly high and strangely consistent. You can’t help but feel… something… when you look at an image of a far-off galaxy, when you see video footage of the Space Shuttle launching, when you look up at the Moon. It stirs something within each of us. I believe it’s different for everyone, but that internal lurch is why I post here. It certainly does something to me!

I will be posting some amazing images of space and spaceflight, with the intent to inspire awe. The space-themed things I feature on Common Themes come from that feeling you get when you look at these images. If they didn’t strike someone with awe, sometime, nobody would paint the Moon, or work spiral galaxies into jewelry, or print thousands of variations of comics with stylized rockets, daring astronauts and buxom space beauties

Nothing I reproduce here would EXIST without that awe and inspiration.

Regular post series will continue as usual; I’m simply augmenting them with some larger perspective. I hope you enjoy them! To kick things off, this image was featured on June 22 (much larger version of this image available there for download.)

 Barred Spiral Galaxy NGC 1300

Big, beautiful, barred spiral galaxy NGC 1300 lies some 70 million light-years away on the banks of the constellation Eridanus. This Hubble Space Telescope composite view of the gorgeous island universe is one of the largest Hubble images ever made of a complete galaxy. NGC 1300 spans over 100,000 light-years and the Hubble image reveals striking details of the galaxy’s dominant central bar and majestic spiral arms. In fact, on close inspection the nucleus of this classic barred spiral itself shows a remarkable region of spiral structure about 3,000 light-years across. Unlike other spiral galaxies, including our own Milky Way, NGC 1300 is not presently known to have a massive central black hole.

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