To the Moon Alice!

NorthCyd

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I was having a hard time getting to sleep last night so I just happened to see the launch. It was a nice surprise! This launch, then a manned launch in 2024, followed by a lunar landing in 2025. If all that is successful the plan is to have annual launches with a long term plan of building a space station around the moon and a station on the lunar surface that astronauts can live in for months at a time. Amazing stuff! Hope we actually follow through with it!
 

Tailg8er

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Can anyone explain some of the benefits to mankind/the US that we've gotten from space exploration over the past ~50 ish years (and/or what we're hoping to accomplish in the next 50)?

Don't mean to sound naive, but genuinely curious. And I'm not trying to suggest we stop space exploration by any means, just wondering what exactly we're gaining with the billions we spend on it each year.

Other than it being cool/fascinating, what do we gain from landing a robot on Mars? Or why do we need astronauts living on the moon for months?
 

tman24

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Can anyone explain some of the benefits to mankind/the US that we've gotten from space exploration over the past ~50 ish years (and/or what we're hoping to accomplish in the next 50)?

Don't mean to sound naive, but genuinely curious. And I'm not trying to suggest we stop space exploration by any means, just wondering what exactly we're gaining with the billions we spend on it each year.

Other than it being cool/fascinating, what do we gain from landing a robot on Mars? Or why do we need astronauts living on the moon for months?
tang and pens that write upside down
 

tzjung

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Can anyone explain some of the benefits to mankind/the US that we've gotten from space exploration over the past ~50 ish years (and/or what we're hoping to accomplish in the next 50)?

Don't mean to sound naive, but genuinely curious. And I'm not trying to suggest we stop space exploration by any means, just wondering what exactly we're gaining with the billions we spend on it each year.

Other than it being cool/fascinating, what do we gain from landing a robot on Mars? Or why do we need astronauts living on the moon for months?

The biggest impact is the improvement of microchip and other computer technology.
 

Hoggins

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Can anyone explain some of the benefits to mankind/the US that we've gotten from space exploration over the past ~50 ish years (and/or what we're hoping to accomplish in the next 50)?

Don't mean to sound naive, but genuinely curious. And I'm not trying to suggest we stop space exploration by any means, just wondering what exactly we're gaining with the billions we spend on it each year.

Other than it being cool/fascinating, what do we gain from landing a robot on Mars? Or why do we need astronauts living on the moon for months?

Do you have a cell phone? Computer? Microwave?

NASA’s budget is also a drop in the bucket compared to Social Security or Defense
 

isufbcurt

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My FIL was down there for the launch. He woke us up texting us videos of the launch right after it happened.

He worked for an Engineering Firm in Waverly and was the head guy that designed the transport they use to move the rocket from the building to the launch pad. He retired from the Engineering Firm and then NASA hired him part time to help with the transport. He is always traveling to Louisiana and Florida for NASA work.

The first time this thing was supposed to launch I think in Sept. he was down in Florida the entire week doing nothing but waiting for it to launch lol.
 

Tailg8er

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The biggest impact is the improvement of microchip and other computer technology.

Do you have a cell phone? Computer? Microwave?

NASA’s budget is also a drop in the bucket compared to Social Security or Defense

How has space exploration improved microchips? Is there some mineral they mine or something? Or something to do with satellites? (Sorry, obviously not informed at all on these things)

Again, not trying to insinuate this is wasted money, I'm just not clear on how exactly it improves/impacts the average Joe's life.
 

isufbcurt

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Can anyone explain some of the benefits to mankind/the US that we've gotten from space exploration over the past ~50 ish years (and/or what we're hoping to accomplish in the next 50)?

Don't mean to sound naive, but genuinely curious. And I'm not trying to suggest we stop space exploration by any means, just wondering what exactly we're gaining with the billions we spend on it each year.

Other than it being cool/fascinating, what do we gain from landing a robot on Mars? Or why do we need astronauts living on the moon for months?

Medicines too
 

CloniesForLife

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How has space exploration improved microchips? Is there some mineral they mine or something? Or something to do with satellites? (Sorry, obviously not informed at all on these things)

Again, not trying to insinuate this is wasted money, I'm just not clear on how exactly it improves/impacts the average Joe's life.
Nothing directly mined from space. It's more of a push the boundaries of tech to get us there. Just like war does.
 

tzjung

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How has space exploration improved microchips? Is there some mineral they mine or something? Or something to do with satellites? (Sorry, obviously not informed at all on these things)

Again, not trying to insinuate this is wasted money, I'm just not clear on how exactly it improves/impacts the average Joe's life.

NASA funded/purchased over half of all early microchips created. Thier requirements guided microchip design and innovations to get smaller. Pretty amazing.

 

cysmiley

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Hydrogen technology, which could be a key energy and transportation source in the future, but probably not while I'm here.