Postby Dante » Wed Mar 22, 2006 4:37 pm
I don't think the question is whether it is possible, but rather, whether we have the patience to see it through. The problem with these things, is that all the reasearch in this area will cost lots of time and probobly a good number of human lives. Unlike the next pentium proccessor, the next step in space will only seem like a relatively small advancement. Compared to the billion dollar flying techno-turkey called the International Space Station,`1 we may only advance to a slightly larger (possibly less useful?) space station within your life-time. Such things don't exactly imspire people to continue the space program. Further, whenever we have a space tragedy like the Columbia or the Challenger (R.I.P. brave souls) people tend to want to cancel the space programs human pilots for less human, robots. While robots do elliminate the risks of space travel, they also elliminate the desire by human beings to invest in the adventure. In other words, if there is no human ellement of excitement and exploration, why pay to send souless, emotionless robots out on exspensive rockets? Who among the general populace would care about the research and the researchers (the robots)?
This said, the opposite is also true. If humanity truly desires to reach the stars, instead of say... creating new freeways, getting a new football stadium or being able bully others through military power, than we can certainly increase the rate of our space exploration. But it is all a matter of human desire, and we can only do so much. Sports games or Nova? But the question comes down to general populace. Your desires for your future will be your reality with or without science. Personally I don't care which you choose, I am a theorist and as such, I can do every experiment I ever desire to do with nothing more than a reem of paper, a set of mechanical pencils and my brain.
Currently I see the trend heading back to the 70s. The space program's new idea is to return to the moon, elliminate the shuttles for space capsules and eventually build a moonbase. While the moonbase may be interesting, as a better jump off point, other than the materials for the ship, we are never told how NASA intends on bringing the fuel up to these ships. In which case, you might as well leave the rockets you used for the moon base in space and refuel them with fuel from bought up from earth to space. Frankly I don't see fusion as a viable fuel source when we can't build a fusion generator on Earth.
So in the end I don't see us going into space anytime soon. But hey, who am I. You're human and just as capable as anyone else. Why don't you figure out how to get us to space? See... There's my point, you probobly laughed at the last question and therefore displayed your desire for us to get into space. In other words people find space exploration as an interesting concept to read about in science fiction or see in pictures, but few really want to work in it and devote countless hourse to really seeing it work. That's not bad though, it just shows that the priorities of the land aren't the way people say they are. Good luck on your report!
Pascal
FKA Pascal