Zero_Hour wrote...
It's been about half a century since humanity took it's first baby steps out of it's cradle on Earth. Everything was going great. We had launched satellites into space, built space stations, and landed a man on the Moon. There were even plans to have a base on the moon as well as to land a man on Mars before the millennium was over. What happened to that drive? We've spiraled down since then. If humanity were to die out in the next 5 years, would landing on the moon be the greatest thing we ever achieved? Even though we had the technology to do so much more...
What do you guys think about what we have done in space? Are we where we should be or have we fallen behind?
In my opinion, we have not fallen behind, we simply caught up with our own limitations as of the moment. Particularly technology. Not spiraled down, more like "slowed down".
Back in the days when our parents oohed and aahed over the sight of astronauts on the moon, little was mentioned beyond the usual scientific community about the geniuses that made it possible and the events that led to Apollo 11. How many years of research it must have been. How many centuries of human knowledge, culminating into one mission to land a man on the moon. The smart people who thought of what material to use for the astronauts' suits to the moon. The scientists and engineers who built the lunar module that landed on the moon. The geniuses who made the right mix of fuel to blast the spaceflight up out of Earth. The men who helped determine the possible atmosphere to be encountered on the moon. And so on, the countless scientists and engineers who transformed knowledge into "applicable technology".
The "applicable technology" USA had in 1969 was enough to successfully send Apollo 11, a manned space flight, to the moon and back.
Now, beyond that is still, beyond us. But certainly, we're not lacking in effort.
Space scientists all over the world are still laboring on how to travel faster through space. "Space tourism" keeps popping up in Technology news in major publications and magazines. We're still figuring out how to possibly create a structure on the moon that will withstand space, or if possible what to use to create it. Or how to keep men in space long enough without developing any sign of health problem - basically to live in space for a long period of time. Or, even harder, how to send spacecraft in space without being such a budget wreckingball and preventing it from consuming a shitload of fuel that costs so much.
These technologies are still beyond us.
Maybe the current generation is looking for its own Apollo 11 moment. Our parents certainly had it, and they're happy with it since they got to live in those magical moments seeing Neil Armstrong's moon walk transmitted on black and white TV.
What about us?
We are where we want us to be. There were plans, of course, back then when enthusiasm for space exploration exceeded what is possible within our grasp. You know, the usual stuff. Men to Mars. A NASA base on the moon. Stuff like that. But when the scientists calmed down and gathered the information and knowledge they had, the stuff cooled down, the dreams halted, not because of a lack of drive as many think, but more of a reality check, that simply we can't do those just yet.
Technology doesn't come out of thin air. People have labored for those, even died to have it known by their peers. Wishing for men on Mars or building bases on the moon is fanciful, but we have arrived at the point where we are now searching for the means to fulfill those dreams, and we have to accept it takes TIME and EFFORT. Yes, most of us can accept effort, but a lot of us take it hard that it takes TIME and fearing we might not live long enough to see the next big space moment. And USA certainly ain't the only space authority. China and Japan are already rolling the dice on their space dreams. Europe has ESA. Russia is still maintaining its space know-how. If "we had the technology to do so much more", we could have done it already years ago, or some other nation's space agency could have done it already. But we have to keep ourselves grounded in the reality, we are still gathering enough scientific knowledge to fulfill our dreams, and indeed it is taking time.
If "the next big space moment" happens within our lifetime, great. It's an added bonus to a good life we're having right here on Earth, our generation's own Apollo 11 moment. But if we don't live long enough for it, we should accept it, and just be proud that we paved the way for the next generation's hope to have that next big space moment for them.