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Moon NASA Transportation

Proposed Hab Module For Asteroid Redirect Mission Could Support a Lunar Return 55

MarkWhittington writes Space News reported on Wednesday that NASA is mulling a hab module as part of the Asteroid Redirect Mission. The inclusion of the hab module would extend the mission from 28 days to as long as 60 days. The module would provide enough consumables such as food, water, and oxygen and other support to sustain the crew of astronauts for weeks while examining a small asteroid in orbit around the moon. The module might also support a return to the lunar surface, given certain modifications.
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Proposed Hab Module For Asteroid Redirect Mission Could Support a Lunar Return

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Considering that it's likely that in a few decades humanity will transition to machine bodies (or at least much more resilient organic bodies), I'd be fine with limiting space exploration for the time being to probes and rovers where one doesn't have to waste so much payload and resources on water, food and oxygen.

    Yes, I support space exploration. However, I think the priority for now, our generation's Apollo moment, should be earthbound research into AI and neuroscience. Let's expand through the solar syst

    • It's always good to know EMPs could wipe out our species.

      • Maybe A/C's will not sound so uninformed in a couple of decades?
        • by mbone ( 558574 )

          Actually, after following artificial intelligence for some 5 decades now, I suspect he or she is highly likely to sound more uninformed in a few decades. Very few things are as wince-inducing as reading 3-decade old AI predictions.

    • How about genetic engineering to give future humans photosynthesis abilities [wikipedia.org]?

    • I like human exploration, but I tend to the opposite motivation from a lot of space fans. I don't want us to go out there because we have really screwed Earth up and simply have to find some other place and try again. That seems like a lousy motivation. The idea that we could screw Earth up enough that it would be easier to terraform Mars or something should be very disturbing and frightening to us, a strong motivator to fix what we are doing wrong right here instead of cut and run.

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        I think great reasons for manned space exploration have little to do with space exploration. It provides a sense of wonder and imagination that transcends all of humanity and it's earthly divisions. And manned space travel is human centric, so we end up learning a lot about humans that's valuable to living here, not just space travel. I think it also generates a ton of useful engineering -- materials, systems, technologies -- that also have use here and now.

        Arguing its less good science or not practical

      • swb's comment is insightful too. The best reason to go into space is because we are happy on Earth and want to grow that happiness further.

        That said, it is not unreasonable to want a distributed population for reasons of backup and resiliency, as well as reasons for new perspectives/exploration/innovation. Humans run simulations to learn things, and space habitats may develop a variety of approaches to things that are new and useful.

        Also, as human technological power grows, the Earth becomes ever smaller an

    • I don't think we're going to go machine bodies. Regenerative medicine will see to that.
  • The inclusion of the hab module would extend the mission from 28 days to as long as 60 days.

    I guess they want to avoid any "28 days later" scenarios.

  • humans on the moon make no sense, unless humans want to go there, AND will spend billions to to it. 2 billionaires might share a ride. thousands of tourists go to Antarctica. money to burn.
    • by rossdee ( 243626 )

      " thousands of tourists go to Antarctica. money to burn."

      Thousands of tourists used to get sightseeing flights to Antarctica back in the late 70's
      Air New Zealand stopped that when one of the DC10s hit Mt Erebus

  • by mbone ( 558574 ) on Thursday October 09, 2014 @06:52PM (#48107345)

    The real goal of the habitat is the Martian moon, Phobos [usra.edu], which is reachable for nearly the same expenditure of energy as the high retrograde lunar orbit planned for ARM. It would take a good deal longer, though, thus the need for a habitat.

    If you think of ARM as a training wheels dry run for Phobos, you would not be far off.

  • by k6mfw ( 1182893 ) on Thursday October 09, 2014 @06:57PM (#48107385)
    as Orion has no toilet compartment, no sleeping bunks for off shift use, no air lock, no room for treadmill (kinds of stuff Shuttle orbiter mid deck had).
    • as Orion has no toilet compartment [...]

      Neither did the USS Enterprise and that was a five year mission!

      • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
        well yes and their cellphones had global coverage, though no texting and video but didn't need zillion cell towers, audio was broadcast quality, and didn't have to futz with contracts and data throttling. And the women wore the mini-skirt outfits and go-go boots, big hair and heavy mascara (wow).
  • by koan ( 80826 )

    Are we going to capture the rock?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I mean, at minimum, we should use the Soyuz approach: a "space-habitation" module and an "Earth return" module. Minimize the size of the Earth return module, and you get more room for what is needed only in space. But launching a second, larger space habitation module would be just as good. Hell, use a Dragon v2 and a Bigelow BEAM. Both can launch on a single Falcon 9 rocket. (Although that wouldn't accommodate beyond-Earth-orbit fuel.)

  • If only certain key congress members would stop dictating NASA design and build a big ass rocket that will be too expensive to use and really not needed [thespacereview.com], the resources NASA already has could go into Nautilus-X [wikipedia.org].

  • Pork, pork, pork All this could be done for 10th or 100th the cost with a robotic mission. This is all about directing pork to congressional districts, but science.
    • The Mercury, Gemini and Apollo programs were "Buck Rogers"* (or "Captain Kirk" or whomever your favorite space hero is).

      We don't have any insert-your-favorite-space-hero, now. At least not one who can broadly inspire the support those 3 programs had. And I don't foresee one any time soon.

      There is no vision.

      It's not about humans vs robots. Yes, you can do a lot of real science for less money using robots. But it's not just about science. It's also about humans being humans. Of course, just putting humans out

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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