startrekmaniac
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Dumb question but the primary mission of the iss is to study the earth? As well as parts of the solar system?
No and no. The ISS is not an environmental satellite and it lacks any deep space study equipment. It's primary focus is on microgravity experiments.Dumb question but the primary mission of the iss is to study the earth? As well as parts of the solar system?
Read my reply again. They don't study the environment!Why would we spend all that money to study the environment? They have to do more than that.
With a Science module that has only just been installed.
"We have learned so much about our space environment by flying the Shuttle. And no it's time to go farther"
Eileen Collins
...and I hope we'll really do so and stop wasting money in LEO and call it "science" for another decades...
The ISS is part of going farther. Dig up Griffin's recent speech and statements by the Planetary Society and Mars Society. They all agree that the ISS will be a staging platform for flights to and from the Moon with an additional extended stay on the ISS to simulate a trip to Mars. Don't kill off the very thing that will give you exactly what your're hoping for.
The ISS is part of going farther. Dig up Griffin's recent speech and statements by the Planetary Society and Mars Society. They all agree that the ISS will be a staging platform for flights to and from the Moon with an additional extended stay on the ISS to simulate a trip to Mars. Don't kill off the very thing that will give you exactly what your're hoping for.
Well, Griffin has to propagandize the ISS to exculpate its expensive funding. It sounds great that the ISS will be a platform. But it has to sound great although it won't be a platfrom really.
At the time when we return to the Moon, the ISS won't exist anymore I think (past 2020). Constellation does not really include the ISS or another earth orbital space station. Of course Ares can be used to dock with the ISS (here we go for funds again). But this will be final flights to the ISS before it ends up in the deep and cold ocean like Mir once did.
And not to mention manned Mars missions in the 2040's/2050's. At that time the ISS will be something like Skylab is today. All you'll find might be rather old mockups of Columbus und Co. somewhere in a museum.
I don't think any of them would agree that the ISS is a staging post for lunar missions. That concept was abandoned over a decade ago.
... as Friedman and Jacques Blamont put it in a recent document ... A New Paradigm for a New Vision of Space, A paper by Louis Friedman and Jacques Blamont."many strata of prejudice and arrogance"
Griffin's speech means nothing?
"When Ares lifts off..." We might as well be wishing for flying unicorns.When Ares lifts off, the ISS will have only a very few years left before it is over. You can't prevent its aging.
Interesting. But where is the evidence for all this ? I can't decide if I'm reading your own opinion on this, or something that happened in a meeting I missed.
"When Ares lifts off..." We might as well be wishing for flying unicorns.