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I don't think there's even going to be an astronaut corps soon - at least for a while. They don't exactly have a replacement for the shuttle waiting in the wings.
Brett
I don't think there's even going to be an astronaut corps soon - at least for a while. They don't exactly have a replacement for the shuttle waiting in the wings.
Brett
By the way...great thread rescue Brett and Flash...![]()
I guess the bigger question that we are all tip-toeing around is...Is manned spaceflight the really that important? Should we, and why should we pursue continued manned spaceflight with beyond orbital capability? I would concede orbital requirements if for no other reason than to maintain capabilities we already have (GPS, communication etc...)but...
I was out at the IEEE Aerospace Conference this week, and heard an interesting presentation from NASA on what they call the "Constellation Program", which is essentially the future of manned spaceflight. To say it was an "optimistic outlook" is probably being charitable. It was a neat set of viewgraphs, but there is a huge gulf between pretty Powerpoint and rockets the size of Saturn 5s hauling 100 tons to LEO. And by "huge gulf", I mean "billions and billions of dollars." Given current budgetary priorities, I find it really hard to make a convincing argument for manned missions; robotic missions can do everything with much less risk and cost. (Sidenote: It's particularly interesting to see the radiation dose vs time results for any manned mission to Mars; let's just say they're not pretty.)I guess the bigger question that we are all tip-toeing around is...Is manned spaceflight the really that important? Should we, and why should we pursue continued manned spaceflight with beyond orbital capability? I would concede orbital requirements if for no other reason than to maintain capabilities we already have (GPS, communication etc...)but...
I was told that you can no currently be an astronaut if you have PRK or any type of eye-surgery. Can anyone confirm or deny this?
I was told that you can no currently be an astronaut if you have PRK or any type of eye-surgery. Can anyone confirm or deny this?
I find it really hard to make a convincing argument for manned missions; robotic missions can do everything with much less risk and cost.
For better or for worse, there's actually almost no contest among the people who do this for a living; robotic science missions are inifinitely preferable to manned missions by just about any metric usable. The only metric where manned spaceflight comes out ahead is in the intangible of "national prestige" - after all, that's what every manned mission since Mercury (or more precisely, since Yuri Gagarin and Vostok...) has been about.I would actually be interested to see the long-term cost-effectiveness dynamics of that sort of thing.