@PK nd
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BUT human nature is to explore. One day we will reach on moon and the infrastructure for now can be for 5 - 8 people right ...
Certainly. I still say that the OP's question takes into account our current predilection for exploration, and is asking when do we make a home?@PK nd said:BUT human nature is to explore. One day we will reach on moon and the infrastructure for now can be for 5 - 8 people right ...
@PK nd said:What do you guys think about humans settling on the moon ?
@PK nd said:THanks for ur replies and ideas ...
2 yr back i participated in NASA AMES SPACE SETTLEMENT CONTEST 2013 and got an international rank 3 on my ideas on an orbital setllement but damn thts not possible as it requires loads of money , unbelievable number of materials and some big engineering sikils
GUY ! WE are talking about a city floating in space ...
A lunar space elevator is possible with current materials. It would probably need several rocket launches to get the material up (it cannot be too thin as it needs some resistance against micrometeorites), but then it would save a lot of launches as getting to the surface and back gets easier.marcus said:Better than moon, I think. Moon too much dry rock. Too much gravity. Big deal to land and take off.
I agreenewjerseyrunner said:We went to the moon the first place for the sole purpose of getting there before the Soviet Union
I disagree. I don't think the American people are up for another one of those pissing contests. The cold war was one thing but I don't think it translates well to today's global economy., we will do the same thing with China
More succinctly: He who controls the High Ground controls the battlefield. We'll see propaganda of missiles raining down on Americans.newjerseyrunner said:"If we don't do it, the Chinese will. Let's make american great again and beat the Chinese threat. God wants us too."
Much easier to launch them from the Earth's surface - with a shorter flight time and harder to detect.DaveC426913 said:More succinctly: He who controls the High Ground controls the battlefield. We'll see propaganda of missiles raining down on Americans.
Agreed. But we are talking about what will motivate Westerners to join the race. And no mere facts are going to do what the image of raining missiles will do.Garth said:Much easier to launch them from the Earth's surface - with a shorter flight time and harder to detect.
Monsterboy said:Whatever ! A space race is better and mindless military expenditure , I am looking forward for Space race 2 , although with wrong motivations it will still turn out to be useful in the future, I want to see people on Mars and a functional ILS. There is no gold mine on the moon, so very little possibility of a direct conflict. We will also see some private players like SpaceX etc. Believe it or not this is the only way major technological breakthroughs happen , through national pride and jingoism , arms race and space race.
marcus said:You are talking about permanent settlement, with some kind of economy---e.g. manufacturing fuel, chemicals, material, equipment needed elsewhere---and self-sustaining. Well-shielded from radiation, vacuum, meteorites, cosmic rays. Growing its own food. Plenty of water and mineral elements.
I think the best prospect is in the subsurface ice layer of Ceres.
People on Ceres would manufacture stuff that is in effect already in orbit, because of low gravity. Could trade at a premium.
So that is a good site for human habitat, permanent habitation with a growing population. Deep enough in the ice to be well shielded.
Artificial lighting and heating would be needed. Nuclear reactor fuel have to be imported from Earth probably. Still a good economic prospect.
Better than moon, I think. Moon too much dry rock. Too much gravity. Big deal to land and take off.. And Mars even worse.
You would make your own atmosphere and contain it in domes or underground tunnels.15characters said:It does not even have an atmosphere... and everything would have to be "shipped in" from the "Mother Planet" at great expense.
That's because national pride and jingoism is about " here is something I can do and you can't" attitude and planting your flags, collecting soil samples and not much more .After the competition is over people lose interest but the technologies developed will help the industry and future missions. Space settlements will take much longer time, money, dedication and a much better reason.marcus said:Why can't national pride and jingoism motivate something more intelligent than a camp on Mars? .
http://spacecolonization.wikia.com/wiki/Colonization_of_Ceresmarcus said:A settlement on Ceres, with its thick ice layer, could be productive (in low gravity) and make economic sense.
I think NASA's primary objective on Mars is to find out if life is/was present on it. Sending humans there might get the job done quickly compared to robots which are extremely slow , NASA doesn't seem to have any plans for a human colony anywhere right now.Jess H. Brewer said:But NASA is embarked on an insane dead-end politician's fantasy of going to Mars BEFORE setting up a station on the Moon. This is a scheme guaranteed to sour everyone on the idea of putting humans into space. It is a suicide mission for NASA as well as the astronauts who go to Mars. What are they THINKING?!
DaveC426913 said:You would make your own atmosphere and contain it in domes or underground tunnels.
Not everything has to be shipped in. The idea behind settling the Moon is to mine as many essentials as possible from the Regolith.
You just finished saying that it would have to be shipped to the Moon at great expense.15characters said:Yes but surely we can mine the rock here on Earth much more cheaply.
That's why you build underground.15characters said:Also the radiation on the moon could be a problem possibly?
We discovered large deposits of ice in some of the polar craters. That was a big deal a few years back, because water is one of the critical resources for a colony.15characters said:Finally, where would they get water and petrol from?
Which is why you build underground.15characters said:Also, any moon colony would spend 2 weeks in total darkness and 2 weeks in brutal solar radiation.
We're not going there for the view.15characters said:there is nothing to see there on the Moon - its just a big lump of inorganic rock.
Of course it is. But this thread is about settling the Moon.15characters said:Earth is so much better than the moon/rock.
No need. Hydroponic farms are more efficient.15characters said:I like the idea of telescope arrays. What about food? Would we transport soil?
There's no point in settling the moon. That's last-century stuff. Nowadays, we can send robots and cameras that are better than people. Come to think of it, we really don't need people on Earth either.@PK nd said:... settling on the moon ?
Heating it sufficiently certainly breaks the lattice. Efficiency: well... call it "supplementary station heating".newjerseyrunner said:Extracting water would require breaking these lattices efficiently.

AgentSmith said:The only reasons for a moon base, not settlement, that make any sense at all, are astronomical research, and as some kind of staged launching pad for a manned Mars mission.
Perhaps a moon base would be more economical if the scientists had an inordinate taste for potatoes.![]()
Not there, but we have a permanent station at the South Pole (and they are growing some food there). We also have a space station that has been manned continuously for 15 years now.15characters said:Similarly, people don't do stuff in the North pole.
We can eat it, but we don't have to.15characters said:Remember, homo sapiens is a meat eating species,
Assume a spherical cow in a vacuum... the latter is easy to access on the moon.15characters said:OK but how would the cows deal with the low gravity?