How Can Saturn's Exploration Illuminate Human History and Progress?

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The discussion highlights the exploration of Saturn and its moons, particularly Titan, emphasizing the advancements in space exploration since the late 1970s with missions like Voyager 1, Pioneer 11, and Cassini. It reflects on the significance of these discoveries in understanding both the cosmos and human existence, marking a transformative period that bridges the millennial divide. The conversation also touches on the scale of the solar system, illustrating the vast distances and sizes of celestial bodies in a relatable way. Additionally, it acknowledges the historical milestones in space exploration, from the launch of Sputnik in 1957 to the Apollo moon landing in 1969, framing these events within the broader context of humanity's quest for knowledge and connection with the universe. The narrative intertwines personal experiences with these scientific milestones, suggesting a deep interrelation between space exploration and human development.
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CUTTING THE MILLENNIAL DIVIDE

One of the most beautiful objects in the heavens is Saturn. It has 34 moons and one is called Titan, the second largest moon in our solar system. It was discovered in 1655, some 350 years ago. Beginning with Voyager 1 and Pioneer 11 in the late 1970s spacecraft have been taking photos of Saturn and its moons so that a great deal is now known about this planet and its systems. This is especially true since the most recent pass-over by the spacecraft Cassini in 2004 and the descent of the Huygens probe in 2005. A day on Titan is 16 Earth days.-Ron Price, “Internet Sites,” Pioneering Over Four Epochs, 26 September 2006.

We were beginning to get
a handle on Saturn and its
34 moons just as that long
Seven Year Plan started:
getting launched back in ’79.

We were just beginning all
those buildings on the Arc,
impressive tapestry of beauty,
when that Saturn program
had its start and the voyage
to Titan was well on its way
when an unfolding magnificence
of Terraces was helping us enjoy
a coherence of vision and action
that defined portentous events
cutting across the millennial divide.

We were learning things on Earth and
in the heavens that would shed light on
centuries to come and lift us slowly from
forecasts of doom and a slough of despond.

Ron Price
September 26th 2006.
 
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DISCOVERIES OF THREE EPOCHS

One way to visualize the relative sizes in the solar system is to imagine a model in which it is reduced in size by a factor of a billion. Then the Earth is about 1.3 cm in diameter(the size of a grape). The Moon orbits a foot away. The Sun is 1.5 meters in diameter(the size of a man) and 150 meters from the Earth.(a city block) Jupiter is 15 cm in diameter(grapefruit) and 5 blocks away from the Sun. Saturn(an orange) is 10 blocks away; Uranus and Neptune(lemons) are 20 and 30 blocks away. A human being on this scale is the size of an atom; the nearest star is 9000 km away -Obtained from Internet, 02/03/96.

On 4 October 1957 Sputnik, the world’s first artificial satellite was safely in orbit, circulating the Earth every 96 minutes. Five Orbiter spacecraft mapped the moon between August 1966 and December 1967. I finished my education, got married and pioneered to the Canadian Arctic that year. On 20 July 1969 the first man walked on the moon. Two years and two months later my wife and I left Canada for Australia. Sitting in our lounge room in Whyalla South Australia in the evening, felt like being on the moon. -Ron Price, 4 February 1996, Noon.

Wilder than your wildest imagination,
simply the most incredible reality
in existence: existence, the universe
in all its labyrinthian complexity.

Wilder than your wildest imagination,
simply the most incredible reality
in existence: one’s own life, its days,
its years in their labyrinthian complexity.

1957 to 1997: forty years on
in the great journey into space
with missions to the furthest reaches
of the solar system: Pioneers10 and 11.
Astronomy taking off at last.

Voyagers taking us to Jupiter,
Uranus and Neptune.
Light has gone around
the planet and we have gone
around the solar system.

The radio galaxy 3C65
in the constellation of Andromeda
lies some 8 billion light years
away, some say, in a universe
that expands forever,
dramatically less than a
second after its birth.

Just last week astronomers
discovered 1500 galaxies
whose light started its journey
toward Earth five billion years ago.

There are hurricanes
three times the size of Earth,
two-and-a-half billion miles away
on Jupiter-itself a sea
of liquid metallic hydrogen,
home of thousands of mysteries,
storms and chaos.
Home of the ten hour day,
home of four moons.
A place you could fit in all the planets.
Collector of comets,
protector of our planet.

Pioneering into the solar system,
into my psycho-spiritual system
into the global society
with an emerging world religion.

Ron Price
4 February 1996
 
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