09-27-2022, 12:01 PM | #251 |
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It's incredible to me all the science & math that goes into calculating the intersection/impact/collision point.
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09-27-2022, 01:10 PM | #252 |
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10-11-2022, 04:28 PM | #253 | |
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Good news. I guess this means we'll be better prepared if there is an ELE asteroid headed our way.
DART mission successfully changed motion of an asteroid | CNN Quote:
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10-12-2022, 01:03 PM | #254 |
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I've been reading up on the multiverse. Marvel has it embedded in everything now, easy way to explain inconsistencies in their movies. Not a bad thing, I enjoyed the latest Spiderman and bringing in the other 2.
So googling on stuff, watching YT etc. Basically, it's a theory based on math/physics/quantum calculations that say there could be multiverses (and there are like 5-9 different types/versions of possible multiverses). One YT said Einstein's calculations implied some strange stuff (e.g. blackholes), and they were proven later. Providing credence that today's "calculations" can be "extrapolated" and, may well mean there are multiverses which will be proven in the future. There is one version of the multiverse that says there is a (incomprehensible) number of multiverses because every-single-possibility-from-every-single-event creates a new multiverse. All of this is way above my abilities to truly comprehend. But yeah, I'm calling BS on it. I like a single universe or, at most, a fixed and reasonable number of "parallel universes". Last edited by Edward64 : 10-12-2022 at 01:04 PM. |
10-12-2022, 01:10 PM | #255 |
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I don't think it's BS. I think it's unknowable/unprovable at this point. We aren't even certain our own universe has the shape we think it does, or whether it has boundaries. It's kind of like medieval Europeans thinking Earth was smaller than it is and having no idea the New World existed. Talk to them about other planets and they'd be dumbfounded.
If you look at how quantam mechanics works though for example, to me that's a far stranger reality than the idea of a multiverse. We're nowhere close to having a 'theory of everything' that explains how the physics of the small and the physics of the large fit together. We don't fully understand gravity even - we know what it does, but not why/how. There's a lot of unknowns, to the point where I think it's way too early in our scientific understanding to rule out multiverses. The way black holes function, to the degree we understand it, is absolutely insane even to physicists. Last edited by Brian Swartz : 10-12-2022 at 01:15 PM. |
10-28-2022, 06:22 PM | #256 |
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The Hubble one is easier to look at IMO but the Webb definitely has much more detail.
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11-07-2022, 07:56 PM | #257 |
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Map of Total Lunar Eclipse on November 8, 2022
There's a total lunar eclipse visible tonight from every point in the US. However, it's in the middle of the night or early morning for most people (in Houston, it's from 4:16-5:41). SI
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11-07-2022, 09:53 PM | #258 |
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It's another long one. For those of us in the east, partial begins at 4:09, total begins at 5:16. It will be very low on the horizon, visible to the west. In Ohio, the moon will set shortly after totality ends - fairly light by then.
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11-15-2022, 11:06 AM | #259 | |||
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There was a blurb on CNBC on Artemis. A commitment to "stay" on the Moon for various reasons including competing with China. They mentioned having "hotels" on/around the moon which is super cool.
(Unfortunately, I'll probably be dead or my bones too brittle before it becomes commercialized for common person. But wouldn't mind my ashes being buried there). A couple interesting notes from wiki Artemis program - Wikipedia Kudos to Trump admin for establishing the program. Quote:
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Last edited by Edward64 : 11-15-2022 at 11:10 AM. |
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11-16-2022, 09:08 AM | #260 |
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https://www.wsj.com/articles/artemis...d=hp_lead_pos6
Successful launch this morning. It's kinda crazy that as of December 14th, nobody will have been on the moon for 50 years. Last edited by Kodos : 11-16-2022 at 09:08 AM. |
11-16-2022, 09:29 AM | #261 |
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I briefly considered watching it but launch window was like 1-3am ET.
Must be pretty cool to live in/near Cape Canaveral and be able to watch all those live, in person. |
11-16-2022, 10:33 AM | #262 |
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I was up watching Kansas play but I saw there was still an hour left when I went to sleep and I had to be up early this morning. I'm bummed that it was a night launch but I'm sure it was then because it had to be, TV ratings be damned
SI
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11-16-2022, 10:36 AM | #263 |
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FWIW there was a two-hour launch window unless they wanted to delay it again. Roughly 1-3 AM EST. In terms of TV ratings, I'd say that's more important when we get back to landing human beings on the moon rather than an unmanned launch - important though that is. That won't happen until Artemis III, roughly three years from now.
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11-16-2022, 10:41 AM | #264 |
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Yes, yes - I was being glib. And, we were out at Johnson Space Center earlier this year reading about the Artemis project. I think 2024/2025 are probably a little ambitious, but we'll see.
However, I do think it's important for NASA to treat this as something that can help them get funding for the next generation. That needs to be a consideration, albeit certainly not a primary one. SI
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12-14-2022, 08:59 PM | #265 |
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Some pics from James Web
Dazzling galactic diamonds shine in new Webb telescope image | CNN Pic 1 / 17 is of 2 galaxies merging. I'm picturing like solar systems, suns, planets crashing into each other. I guess it takes millions of years to completely merge, but hate to be an intelligent species, in either of those galaxies, observing the night sky Pic 10 / 17 looks like the Grim Reaper |
02-23-2023, 02:40 PM | #266 |
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There are probably better links for this, just throwing up one to have something for reference.
The James Webb Space Telescope discovers enormous distant galaxies that should not exist | Space Analysis of JWST data has resulted in finding apparent galaxies much larger and more mature than expected near the edge of it's detection range. Younger and smaller galaxies were expected this close to the Big Bang. Lots of verification yet to be done, but there may be a new mystery to solve. |
02-23-2023, 05:55 PM | #267 |
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TBH I’m still stuck on the Big Bang where everything was together before being blown apart. I know there’s lot of evidence that some sort of Big Bang happened but I’m sure there’s a bunch of underlying assumptions that can be scrutinized more.
Beats me, mysteries are good though. Still also struggling with how Entanglements work. Wish I was an astrophysicist that could brainstorm all these mysteries. |
02-24-2023, 07:42 AM | #268 |
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In the end, there are still way more things in the universe that we don't understand than we things we do. I believe some day scientist will look at the science we have now like we look at ancient superstitions.
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02-24-2023, 08:01 AM | #269 |
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IMO not quite as bad as we have the scientific method now and we are more careful re: proof of vs evidence for.
But your point is taken |
02-24-2023, 08:43 AM | #270 | |
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Quote:
And there are a number of things we have a light understanding of more than a concrete one - say, we understand the black box input/output interactions of something but not the mechanistic ones SI
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03-07-2023, 02:19 PM | #271 |
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This was making the rounds on Reddit over the last day or two.
I didn't realize that the Soviets actually landed a number of probes on Venus in the 70s and 80s and we even have some photos and sound from Venus. It's actually a crazy fascinating story to me and kindof bummed we haven't heard more about it here, probably because of cold war politics. Venera - Wikipedia At first, there was the (understandable) assumption that Venus was a lot like Earth. At least until probes started breaking high up in the atmosphere from all the pressure and heat (Venera 3/4). The next set (Venera 5/6) has issues with the batteries and parachutes failing but got good readings and they managed to extrapolate the measurements and built probes that could, conceivably withstand the forces. Venera 7 (1970) was built like a tank to try and survive but its parachute failed and it crashed, damaging the radio antenna. It still managed to transmit a weak signal for a few minutes. Venera 8 (1972) landed successfully on the surface and transmitted data for an hour - no camera, though. They redesigned the probes for the next series to have a giant "brake" (read: round ring around the lander to catch wind) and a giant shock absorber base. Venera 9-12 (1975, 1978) all landed successfully and transmitted. However, all of their cameras had issues with camera lans caps. Still, 9 and 10 got some pictures of Venus. These were followed by Venera 13/14 (1981/1982), humanity's last visits to Venus. (Venera 15/16 in 1983 were just orbiters) Venera-9 imagery by Donald Mitchell Venera-10 imagery by Donald Mitchell The eerie yellow pictures look, well, alien. Rocky like Mars but yellow instead of red. Venus From 33 Years Ago, and Why We Need to… | The Planetary Society SI
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03-07-2023, 07:31 PM | #272 |
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Thanks for this. I have never seen this come up in all my readings & googling.
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04-13-2023, 12:10 PM | #273 |
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See inside NASA's 3D-printed Mars habitat where 4 volunteers will live for a year. It includes a gym, PlayStation 3, and a lot of red sand.
A Playstation 3? Why not a 4 or 5? Also wouldn't it make a lot of sense just to use prisoners for these types of studies?
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04-13-2023, 04:49 PM | #274 | |
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To rub it in Saddam Hussein's face? (Or was that the PS2?) SI
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04-13-2023, 05:30 PM | #275 |
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I'm going to be down around Port Aransas this weekend, but won't be able to stay until Monday. I was hoping to be able to stay in case the massive SpaceX rocket was able to launch from Boca Chica at 7am on Monday.
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05-04-2023, 11:32 PM | #276 | |||
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Some more fantastic & somewhat mind blowing James Webb pics.
Sick of Star Wars? Latest James Webb Space Telescope photos are just the tonic! | Digital Camera World Quote:
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Last edited by Edward64 : 05-04-2023 at 11:32 PM. |
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05-08-2023, 11:54 PM | #277 | ||
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Good news about more moons with water. Would love it if they find alien single-cell organisms or like before I die.
And ... is it time to change the name of Uranus? Let's get something less awkward like Caelus (see below). Scientists say they have found more moons with oceans in the Solar System | Ars Technica Quote:
History of the name Quote:
Last edited by Edward64 : 05-08-2023 at 11:55 PM. |
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06-26-2023, 01:10 PM | #278 | ||
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This sounds pretty cool. I would be willing to volunteer for a one-way ticket to Mars (or further) but not sure I'd volunteer to be in an enclosed habitat on earth. But kudos to them.
NASA should come up with a limited reality show from this. I know it won't have all the drama but would be neat to see the experiments, day-in-the-life etc. https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nasa-vi...sion-one-year/ Quote:
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06-26-2023, 01:48 PM | #279 |
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Wait a minute, I thought we already have "Stars on Mars?"-even William Shatner as the host.
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06-26-2023, 01:51 PM | #280 |
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I had to google on that, didn't know it was a thing ... I don't have Fox.
Is it any good? |
06-26-2023, 02:07 PM | #281 | |
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Quote:
No not really-I stopped after watching part of the 1st episode. A bunch of celebrities "on Mars" competing Survivor style to win it all. Only the challenges are all based on surviving on Mars rather than a tropical island. An interesting choice for a celebrity is Lance Armstong-who I guess has been forgiven for his doping scandal.
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07-06-2023, 08:32 AM | #282 | |||
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re: Artemis project
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It was the below statement that caught my eye. Reminded me of Apple's "For All Mankind". There was a race to Mars by 2 countries and 1 commercial enterprise. When one of them got into trouble mid-way, the other 2 helped out. Quote:
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07-07-2023, 07:42 PM | #283 |
lolzcat
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It's a toss-up whether to put this in the NASA/Space thread or the Strange News thread or some new "Crazy Conspiracy Theory Overload" thread, but in here it goes.
From the late 2000s to the mid-2010s, I worked as a molecular biologist for a national security contractor in a program to study Exo-Biospheric-Organisms (EBO). I will share with you a lot of information on this subject. It's well written and interesting if almost certainly fantasy. I want to believe. (I dont really, it was just an X-Files quote.) |
07-07-2023, 08:52 PM | #284 |
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Not a molecular Biologist but I believe. Who wants to join me and do an XCom infiltration into Ft Detrick?
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08-19-2023, 10:51 AM | #285 | ||
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It's a "space/moon race" all over again, circa 1960's. Happy it's happening. The US needs to be "encouraged" by competition to get going.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/techn...nding-artemis/ Quote:
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08-20-2023, 06:12 PM | #286 | |||
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Join Date: Oct 2005
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Guess nvm on the Russian landing.
Luna 25: Russia's lunar lander crashes into the moon | CNN Quote:
Chandrayaan-3: Indian spacecraft enters lunar orbit in step closer to moon rover soft landing | CNN Quote:
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08-21-2023, 05:00 AM | #287 |
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Remember the show Salvage 1 where Andy Griffith made rockets out of junk parts? That's what India's budget made me think of.
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08-21-2023, 05:37 AM | #288 |
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Every now and then I turn it on the NASA channel and I realize....just how much I hate polo shirts especially with big logos. They are just gross and make me feel even grosser. Oh yeah and they are in space and all that...
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08-21-2023, 09:19 AM | #289 | ||
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Quote:
Wed evening. It'll be pretty cool to see another rover on the moon along with US & China. Quote:
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08-21-2023, 09:48 AM | #290 | |
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Quote:
Well now we know what to get you for Xmas-not games but polo shirts
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08-23-2023, 09:08 AM | #291 | ||
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Quote:
Congrats India. I don't always agree with your politics but this is science! Chandrayaan-3 landing: India becomes the fourth country ever to land a spacecraft on the moon | CNN Quote:
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08-23-2023, 09:18 AM | #292 | |
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Quote:
Where things will get interesting IMO is on agreements like this. It might not be polar ice on the moon, but at some point resources will be found that are too valuable to share. Instead of the 60s space race analogy where the important thing was to beat the Russians not for any specific gain from getting to the moon but just for propaganda, I can see conflict over resources in 'near space' leading to actual wars between nations. 'We got here first' won't be nearly good enough at a certain stage. Probably won't happen in my lifetime, but I think it eventually will happen. |
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08-27-2023, 08:50 AM | #293 |
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Question for Edward as well as anyone interested in the search for life; are you familiar with the Europa Clipper mission? I don't want to bore the thread with things people already know, but it's interesting me as, super-short version, I think that
A. It's the most likely place afaik for us to find complex life in our solar system, and B. It will probably also be centuries before we can find out if there actually is any there or not. |
08-27-2023, 11:12 AM | #294 | |
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I was not familiar with it but just read about it on wikipedia. It's a scouting mission for a future lander. Not sure the timing of the lander but it shouldn't take centuries for the lander to be built and land on Europa?
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I know Europa has always been one of those planets/moons where bodies of water exists. When you say "complex" you mean like fish? I don't expect intelligent life like Spock, I'd be happy with finding alien microbes, bacteria etc. before I die. Last edited by Edward64 : 08-27-2023 at 11:13 AM. |
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08-27-2023, 11:28 AM | #295 |
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Could be fish, could be similar to some of the 'exotic' life at the bottom of the ocean near vents, etc. Basically just life that is more developed than the microbe/bacteria level.
I think we can definitely get a lander there sooner, but ... - As best we know, this mission will clarify the situation if it goes well, the water on Europa is under a layer of ice. NASA estimates the ice to be 10-15 miles thick currently. Which is a problem. There are more options for dealing with ice than dealing with rock of course, but we've gone about 7 miles at the deepest drilling into the Earth's crust. We can use whatever equipment we can build here of course. Hundreds of millions of miles away with communications lag of over 20 minutes at closest approach each way and a quite limited viable payload size is a little bit different. - Nothing we put on Europa's surface or near it will last long, due to Jupiter's radiation belts. A few months is the longest they think our current most-hardened spacecraft can last. That's why Europa Clipper is both prepared for the radiation but also not going into orbit around Europa, but rather doing dozens of flybys. So basically, if our best guesses so far are accurate, we need to be able to get through miles of ice to take some sort of assessment of the water underneath. Whatever does that needs to be able to operate with very minimal direction from Earth and do it quickly so that it's still functioning when it gets to where the water is. Or else find a way to predict where cracks in the ice will form and be able to get into them before they re-freeze, which ... maybe that's more possible than I think, but it seems like a pipe dream to me. We can't even accurately predict what a lot of the tectonic plates on Earth are going to do. I just think it's fascinating that from what I know about it, the conditions are really good for life - a large volume of water if we're correct, heated by tidal forces flexing Europa's core - but at the same time actually getting to it and finding out what's there is a monumental undertaking. I'm also super-curious to get more information from the mission in terms of confirming the water that we think is there, and how thick the ice is, and all of that ... would go a long way towards narrowing down just how viable it would be to actually investigate further. Last edited by Brian Swartz : 08-27-2023 at 11:31 AM. |
08-27-2023, 02:50 PM | #296 | ||
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Been reading a little more. This article is from 2016 but chuckled at below comment
NASA's Europa Lander May Drill to Find Pristine Samples on Icy Moon | Space Quote:
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Honestly though, isn't finding alien microbes/bacteria just as good a win as an alien fish? |
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08-27-2023, 02:55 PM | #297 |
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And, of course, Arthur C. Clarke's quote ...
ALL THESE WORLDS ARE YOURS – EXCEPT EUROPA. ATTEMPT NO LANDING THERE I remember enjoying "2010: Odyssey Two" but forgot about this line. Last edited by Edward64 : 08-27-2023 at 08:46 PM. |
08-27-2023, 06:55 PM | #298 | |
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Quote:
That depends on your goal I guess. For me it's more about understanding what's going on in places like this. I don't think finding microbes changes anything significant. |
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08-27-2023, 08:45 PM | #299 |
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IMO Step 1 is discovering alien life, any type of life. It will positively show we aren't unique and that life exists out there. We intuitively know that to be true already, but when we have the evidence, it becomes real.
I think you and I exchanged something similar earlier ... if and when we find alien life, there will be renewed interest & public support, massive investment by governments & private enterprises in more space technologies, exploration etc. New science & new technologies will come out of this. It'll be an exciting time for a sci-fi fan to be alive. So yes, finding an alien microbe is pretty much the same as finding an alien fish at the very beginning. Both will accomplish my second paragraph. And on a more practical matter ... Digging 3 ft is a lot easier than digging 10+ miles. So I rather do the low hanging fruit in the next 5 years (?), see if we can find microbial life vs waiting much longer for a lander that can drill the 10+ miles. |
08-27-2023, 09:33 PM | #300 |
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Oh I definitely agree that we should do whatever is practical now. I just don't think the effect on interest you describe would actually happen by finding a micro-organism. Most people wouldn't care, and they're not going to want to spend a bunch more money for something with no practical return (that goes esp. for private sector interests).
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