Tuesday, November 2, 2010

100 Year Starship project announced by National Aeronautics and Space Administration and DARPA

The space community is buzzing over a new project. NASA and also the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, are teaming up for this one. A spacecraft is to be intended that will take not only enough cargo, however also crew, to Mars. The project, which is called the 100 Year Starship, is not too dissimilar to the Apollo moon landings, but with a slight catch. The difference is kind of significant. The hitch is that the astronauts on this mission won’t come back.

National Aeronautics and Space Administration and Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency will see Mars soon

At the Long Conversation conference in San Francisco, Pete Worden of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center announced a new project between National Aeronautics and Space Administration and DARPA. The project, based on The Telegraph, is so far called the 100 Year Starship program, and the 2 govt agencies are planning to enlist help. Co-founder of Google, Larry Page, had been just one of the numerous billionaires being asked for donations. By next year there ought to be a first design. This would be really great. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Challenge, which was an endurance race for self-driving vehicles, was much more concrete than this project. The goal of this project is to come up with a spacecraft that can ferry a crew of astronauts and a great deal of cargo to Mars. This project is different than the international Space Station and Apollo 11. The astronauts will not be coming back from Mars.

Only 1 way tickets available

There’s a huge distance between Earth and other planets. This makes it hard to just create a ferry between planets. A journey to Mars would take nine months to complete. Those who end up there could have to learn to be self sufficient. NASA has $1 million to spend, however it’s envisioned the project would cost at least $10 billion to pull off. Four pounds of fuel are needed for every 1 pound of equipment being moved into space, reports Fox News. Getting to Mars within the first place is difficult enough, and a return journey that much closer to extremely hard.

Colonizing on Mars

Mars is just the next step in space exploration. It won't be long before other planets are being colonized. A permanent colony on Mars with numerous astronauts would be the plan. They would need to adjust to living on the Red Planet. Our planet is going to die 1 day. Mankind, if it is to survive, must find a way to live someplace else.

Citations

The Telegraph

telegraph.co.uk/science/space/8091965/Nasa-unveils-bold-plans-to-send-humans-one-way-to-Mars-to-colonise-planet.html

Fox News

foxnews.com/scitech/2010/10/29/nasa-cover-up-hundred-year-starship/print



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