Your assertion that NASA is "America's legally designated national BLEO human and robotic spaceflight agency" is irrelevant. There is no legal constraint on private companies or individuals landing on the Moon. If Golden Spike or some other company can raise enough capital and get customers (not very likely, I admit), then they can go to the Moon. Despite your comments denigrating private space efforts, I think if you want to see humans on the Moon in a sustainable fashion, then an economic reason for them to be there will have to be found.
Clear to *us*. Not clear to the mundanes sheople.
Quote from: kch on 04/16/2013 03:14 pmYour quotes are from Hap, not John ... Thanks for pointing that out. Apologies to John. Edited.
Your quotes are from Hap, not John ...
[smirk]There is no legal constraint on private companies or individuals landing on the Moon. If Golden Spike or some other company can raise enough capital and get customers (not very likely, I admit), then they can go to the Moon...[/smirk] [ ]
Quote from: douglas100 on 04/17/2013 08:22 am[smirk]There is no legal constraint on private companies or individuals landing on the Moon. If Golden Spike or some other company can raise enough capital and get customers (not very likely, I admit), then they can go to the Moon...[/smirk] [ ]Why is it that Mars huggers never make the same argument when it comes to Mars?
Quote from: Lar on 04/16/2013 06:22 pmClear to *us*. Not clear to the mundanes sheople.Fixed that for ya.
...Anyway, this thread seems to be spinning around the same themes as usual. Hap is serenading us with walls of text... Different people are pointing out that there needs to be some economic incentive for private industry to get involved and that we have a chicken/egg problem. Jim pointing out that there is no mandate for NASA to do anything, that there is no economic value at all in the moon or mars, etc.Just another day at NSF ...I can't decide if I am a moon hugger or a mars hugger. Is there a quiz I can take to tell for sure?
I can't decide if I am a moon hugger or a mars hugger. Is there a quiz I can take to tell for sure?
Quote from: JohnFornaro on 04/17/2013 01:29 pmQuote from: Lar on 04/16/2013 06:22 pmClear to *us*. Not clear to the mundanes sheople.Fixed that for ya.I like mundanes, it's a nice SF/Gaming word from back in the day. And I thought it was sheeple not sheople (sheople sounds like Sheol...)Anyway, this thread seems to be spinning around the same themes as usual. Hap is serenading us with walls of text... Different people are pointing out that there needs to be some economic incentive for private industry to get involved and that we have a chicken/egg problem. Jim pointing out that there is no mandate for NASA to do anything, that there is no economic value at all in the moon or mars, etc.Just another day at NSF ...I can't decide if I am a moon hugger or a mars hugger. Is there a quiz I can take to tell for sure?
Isn't the Moon is considered to be beyond low earth orbit? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I believe it's the case that both China and Russia are committed to sending humans there. Every other space agency on the planet except NASA wants to send humans there as well. And if the NASA is not exactly disabled or in ruins, the asteroid mission is a sign that the agency has become rather impotent: asteroids were chosen rather than going straight for Mars because Mars is considered to be too hard, and in fact asteroids were chosen over the Moon not because of the BTDT argument so much as even the Moon is considered to be "too hard" due to the expense of the porkalicious Altair lander design. And now it's apparently turning out that even the asteroid mission is too hard: hence the Keck proposal to bring a meteoroid to astronauts, rather than the other way around.
Quote from: RanulfC on 04/15/2013 02:45 pmQuote from: WarrenQuote from: RandyAn "aggressive" Mars program would be especially subject to avoiding the "side-tracking" of putting infrastructure on the Moon which we've seen demonstrated in both the "Mars Direct" and "Constellation" concepts. Mars Direct was the inspiration of Constellation. It was not the only possibility on the table, however: [The VSE was about] going to the Moon for propellant and THEN using THAT to go to Mars; [that] WAS the plan, before Griffin perverted it.No it wasn't, however it was the ONLY "plan" that would fit the political and financial reality that there was NO support for going back to the Moon to establish ISRU to provide propellant for a much longer range Mars mission and a Cis-Lunar infrastructure to support it.Not true. There was plenty of political support for the VSE back in 2004--just go back and read what the pundits had to say about it back then. Congress approved the plan multiple times. The actual implementation--Mars Direct-inspired CxP--on the other hand, was Griffin's brainchild. He literally laid out the design for the Ares rocket on the back of a napkin, and then ran with it. Griffin's (2005) white paper on why he chose not to go with a depot-based, commercial architecture is attached, in case you're interested.
Quote from: WarrenQuote from: RandyAn "aggressive" Mars program would be especially subject to avoiding the "side-tracking" of putting infrastructure on the Moon which we've seen demonstrated in both the "Mars Direct" and "Constellation" concepts. Mars Direct was the inspiration of Constellation. It was not the only possibility on the table, however: [The VSE was about] going to the Moon for propellant and THEN using THAT to go to Mars; [that] WAS the plan, before Griffin perverted it.No it wasn't, however it was the ONLY "plan" that would fit the political and financial reality that there was NO support for going back to the Moon to establish ISRU to provide propellant for a much longer range Mars mission and a Cis-Lunar infrastructure to support it.
Quote from: RandyAn "aggressive" Mars program would be especially subject to avoiding the "side-tracking" of putting infrastructure on the Moon which we've seen demonstrated in both the "Mars Direct" and "Constellation" concepts. Mars Direct was the inspiration of Constellation. It was not the only possibility on the table, however: [The VSE was about] going to the Moon for propellant and THEN using THAT to go to Mars; [that] WAS the plan, before Griffin perverted it.
An "aggressive" Mars program would be especially subject to avoiding the "side-tracking" of putting infrastructure on the Moon which we've seen demonstrated in both the "Mars Direct" and "Constellation" concepts.
The fault of the administration was...
Congress had very little to do with the origination of the CxP "implementation"--if you have DIRECT evidence to the contrary, please provide it;
IF there is a lesson HERE, it is that IMHO aeronautical engineers and astronauts should NEVER be chosen as the top Administrators. They should be deputy administrators at the highest. Consider that the two best administrators NASA ever had were James Webb and Sean O'Keefe: the former was a businessman and O'Keefe was an accountant--people who can understand the economic aspects of the Space Program IOW.
Quote from: RandyThe problem is/was that the DAY Bush suggested the VSE, Congress started making it VERY clear that they had NO support for Lunar missions, Bases, or ISRU ... Again, I don't believe this is the case because I am not aware of any direct evidence that that is the case.
The problem is/was that the DAY Bush suggested the VSE, Congress started making it VERY clear that they had NO support for Lunar missions, Bases, or ISRU ...
Quote from: RandyGriffin played that angle by pitching ESAS/Constellation as a "cheaper-more-direct" mission. He played up all the financial and program angles straight to the Zubrin play-book, making any build up of "infrastructure" or Lunar missions as a money-pit, side-track that would cost billions for no return.This I agree with: but if O'Keefe and Marburg had been in front of those committees instead of Griffin, things would have turned differently. No one in Congress had enough expertise to call incorrect on the Ph.D. aeronautical engineer.
Griffin played that angle by pitching ESAS/Constellation as a "cheaper-more-direct" mission. He played up all the financial and program angles straight to the Zubrin play-book, making any build up of "infrastructure" or Lunar missions as a money-pit, side-track that would cost billions for no return.
The Golden Spike proposal shows that we could be doing a couple of "human precursor" missions 2 or 3 times per year for less than the current cost of SLS/Orion.
While these necessary scouting missions are taking place, over half the HSF budget would still be available for developing (commercial) other legos in the system, like an ACES 3rd-stage, depots, and a heavy Lunar lander. These would allow the construction of a relatively major, permanently manned, research station on the Moon.
There is more public support for this plan of action than any other (Evidence: National Research Council Report [2012], free pdf here)
Warning: Personal opinion follows. May not agree with your world-view. Caution is advised.
...there really is no money for what would be needed for a return to the Constellation-type lunar architecture. There never was, actually...
Perhaps, a wiser reporter question could be:Can you describe the conditions which would have to exist for there to be minable lunar water?
The other side is that NASA is being focused on asteroids and later Mars as the next steps. NASA, I'm sure, is full of Moon-huggers just as this forum is, and it isn't exactly productive to have NASA pulled in two directions. The goal is asteroids by the 2020s (2021 for the first mission, just 8 years away) then the Mars system by the 2030s.
Quote from: gbaikie on 04/17/2013 10:41 pm Perhaps, a wiser reporter question could be:Can you describe the conditions which would have to exist for there to be minable lunar water?Why would you expect him to be able to answer that in any useful detail? He's a political appointee, and has been adminstrator of NASA for 4 years now... any useful knowledge he ever had has leached away by now.I'm not (just) being unkind, I really want to know why. I wouldn't ask Ginny Rometti how any of my software works either...
YVMV, but for me, the quickest path lay with Delta IV Heavy + Oriion. It could have been done and the proof lays (perhaps only a little) with the test launch for next summer. Alternately or perhaps simultaneously, make it a race with SpaceX and fully fund both efforts.