All posts tagged: Moon

Why the U.S. hasn’t returned to the Moon and what’s next

Why the U.S. hasn’t returned to the Moon and what’s next

In July 1969, the United States achieved a monumental feat in human history when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the first humans to set foot on the lunar surface during NASA’s Apollo 11 mission. The Apollo program, driven by intense Cold War competition with the Soviet Union, epitomized technological ingenuity, political will, and substantial financial investment. Over the course of six successful missions between 1969 and 1972, NASA landed 12 astronauts on the moon, conducting extensive scientific experiments and collecting valuable lunar samples. Yet, despite this remarkable success, no human has returned to the moon since 1972. Understanding why requires examining a confluence of technological, political, financial, and international factors. The Apollo program’s roots lie in President John F. Kennedy’s bold 1961 proclamation to land a man on the moon and return him safely to Earth before the decade’s end. The urgency stemmed from the Soviet Union’s early dominance in space exploration, including Yuri Gagarin’s historic orbit of Earth in 1961. Apollo became a matter of national pride and geopolitical strategy, with Congress approving …

Elon Musk Calls Out NASA’s Moon Ambitions: ‘We’re Going Straight to Mars’

Elon Musk Calls Out NASA’s Moon Ambitions: ‘We’re Going Straight to Mars’

Although SpaceX founder Elon Musk is known for outspokenness and controversial comments on his social media site X, he has been relatively restrained when it comes to US space policy in recent years. For example, he has rarely criticized NASA or its overall goal to return humans to the moon through the Artemis program. Rather, Musk, who has long preferred Mars as a destination for humans, has more or less been a team player when it comes to the space agency’s lunar-focused plans. This is understandable from a financial perspective, as SpaceX has contracts worth billions of dollars to not only build a Human Landing System as part of the Artemis program but also to supply food, cargo, and other logistics services to a planned Lunar Gateway in orbit around the moon. But privately, Musk has been critical of NASA’s plans, suggesting that the Artemis Program has been moving too slowly and is too reliant on contractors who seek cost-plus government contracts and are less interested in delivering results. Silent on Policy No Longer During …

As the US and China race to the Moon, these loopholes in space law could cause conflict

As the US and China race to the Moon, these loopholes in space law could cause conflict

Outer space is infinite, but that hasn’t stopped humans trying to impose their laws on it. There are more ways for people to travel to space than ever before, and the next few decades are likely to see the US and China sending humans to the Moon again. Both countries aim to set up long-term research stations on the lunar surface, a bit like there are now in Antarctica. But could disputes between these two countries – and potentially others, such as Russia or India – arise over where to locate bases on the lunar surface? And could the same happen over claims to the Moon’s resources, such as the water ice located in craters at the lunar poles? Countries will want to extract this ice because it can be turned into rocket fuel for onward journeys and for life support at their lunar bases. Indeed, the prospect of “space water wars” is actually nearer, timewise, than the prospect of providing clean drinking water to everyone in the developing world. But the legal arguments around …

Trump may cancel Nasa’s powerful SLS Moon rocket – here’s what that would mean for Elon Musk and the future of space travel

Trump may cancel Nasa’s powerful SLS Moon rocket – here’s what that would mean for Elon Musk and the future of space travel

Since Donald Trump’s recent electoral victory, rumours and speculation have circulated that Nasa’s giant Moon rocket, the Space Launch System (SLS), could be under threat. The rocket is one of several key elements needed for the US space agency’s Artemis programme, which aims to return humans to the Moon for the first time since 1972. For the first lunar landing mission, called Artemis III, the SLS will launch four astronauts on Nasa’s Orion crew capsule. Orion will then travel to the Moon. Once in lunar orbit, Orion will dock with Elon Musk’s Starship vehicle (which has been launched separately). Two astronauts will float into Starship, which undocks from Orion and travels down to the lunar surface. After walking on the Moon, the two astronauts return to lunar orbit in Starship, which docks with Orion. The two moonwalkers rejoin their crewmates and go home on Orion, leaving Starship in orbit around the Moon. The US space journalist Eric Berger recently posted on X: “To be clear we are far from anything being settled, but based on …

The Download: Bird flu, and waterless concrete for the moon

The Download: Bird flu, and waterless concrete for the moon

How worried should we be about bird flu? The past few months have seen some potentially worrisome developments in the US, including the continued spread of the virus among dairy cattle, the detection of the virus in a pig as well as cow’s milk, and—most concerning of all—the growing number of human infections. We don’t yet have any evidence that the virus is spreading between people, but the risk of a potential pandemic has increased since MIT Technology Review last covered this topic a couple of months ago. The good news is we are in a much better position to tackle any potential future flu outbreaks than we were to face covid-19 back in 2020, given that we already have vaccines. But, on the whole, it’s not looking great. Read the full story. —Jessica Hamzelou This story is from The Checkup, our weekly newsletter giving you the inside track on all things health and biotech. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Thursday. The moon is just the beginning for this waterless concrete …

The Download: Uncertainty over NASA’s moon rocket, and what’s next for nuclear

The Download: Uncertainty over NASA’s moon rocket, and what’s next for nuclear

2 The FTC is probing MicrosoftIt’s a wide-ranging antitrust investigation into its cloud computing, AI and security arms. (NYT $)+ The FTC has been preparing for this for a full year. (WP $)+ It’s notable it’s been signed off in the Biden administration’s dying days. (The Information $)+ Meanwhile, Google is hoping to have its recent antitrust ruling thrown out. (Bloomberg $) 3 RFK’s ‘Make America Healthy Again’ movement is in troubleJust days into the project, cracks are already beginning to show. (FT $)+ The MAGA policy agenda is extremely skeptical of actual scientific evidence. (NYT $)+ America’s opioid crisis probably played a role in Trump’s reelection. (New Yorker $) 4 TikTok is blocking beauty filters for teenagersBut the restrictions aren’t exactly difficult to circumvent. (The Guardian)+ Filters will be required to specify the nature of the tweaks they make, too. (The Verge)+ The fight for “Instagram face.” (MIT Technology Review) 5 Who is applying to join Elon Musk’s DOGE?Everyone from students to tech CEOs, apparently. (Forbes $)+ The division is highly likely to clash …

How Georges Méliès A Trip to the Moon Became the First Sci-Fi Film & Changed Cinema Forever (1902)

How Georges Méliès A Trip to the Moon Became the First Sci-Fi Film & Changed Cinema Forever (1902)

If you hap­pen to vis­it the Ciné­math­èque Française in Paris, do take the time to see the Musée Méliès locat­ed inside it. Ded­i­cat­ed to la Magie du ciné­ma, it con­tains arti­facts from through­out the his­to­ry of film-as-spec­ta­cle, which includes such pic­tures as 2001: A Space Odyssey and Blade Run­ner. Its focus on the evo­lu­tion of visu­al effects guar­an­tees a cer­tain promi­nence to sci­ence fic­tion, which, as a genre of “the sev­enth art,” has its ori­gins in France: specif­i­cal­ly, in the work of the muse­um’s name­sake Georges Méliès, whose A Trip to the Moon (Le voy­age dans la lune) from 1902 we now rec­og­nize as the very first sci-fi movie. Every­one has seen at least one image from A Trip to the Moon: that of the land­ing cap­sule crashed into the irri­tat­ed man-on-the-moon’s eye. But if you watch the film at its full length — which, in the ver­sion above, runs about fif­teen min­utes — you can bet­ter under­stand its impor­tance to the devel­op­ment of cin­e­ma. For Méliès did­n’t pio­neer just a genre, but also a range of tech­niques that …

Earth’s Second Moon Has Vanished, Scientists Say

Earth’s Second Moon Has Vanished, Scientists Say

So long. Once in a Blue Moon The Earth has parted ways with a tiny “mini moon” that had orbited our planet for two months — at least until it swings back around for another visit two months from now. The 33-foot space rock, dubbed 2024 PT5, was first spotted by astronomers in August. It only came by for a brief visit, circling the Earth for much of the late summer in a horseshoe-shaped path before the effects of the Earth’s gravitational field gave way to the much stronger forces from the Sun, as the Associated Press reports. Intriguingly, scientists believe it’s possible that 2024 PT5 was once part of the Moon itself but was chipped off by a different asteroid that hit it millions of years ago. The near-Earth object never posed a threat to Earth, orbiting the planet at a safe distance. And it was more than likely one of countless objects just like it hanging out in our close vicinity. In other words, it’s a reminder that “there’s a pretty busy highway …

The moon has new tales to share, some from its secretive far side

The moon has new tales to share, some from its secretive far side

The moon is Earth’s longtime companion. A bright full moon can light a path through the dark of night. It’s long been important for navigation and marking the passage of time. Many civilizations and cultures have used lunar calendars. The dates of some holidays are even set based on the moon’s cycle. Visible from everywhere on Earth, the moon has inspired countless bedtime stories, poems, paintings and other forms of art. “It’s one of the few things that unites everybody on this planet,” says Noah Petro. A planetary scientist, he works at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. But we Earthlings only ever see half of the moon. Earth’s gravity locks our celestial companion in such a way that the same side always faces us. The other half — the so-called far side — looks different. And scientists have only just begun to learn what it’s like. Over the past half century, scientists have studied hundreds of pounds of lunar chunks. Almost all were retrieved from the moon’s near side. In June, though, …

NASA Keeping Issue With Moon Rocket a Secret

NASA Keeping Issue With Moon Rocket a Secret

In late 2022, NASA launched its uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the Moon and back to Earth as part of its Artemis I mission, setting the stage for the first human lunar landing in over half a century several years from now. But Orion’s fiery reentry through the Earth’s atmosphere left behind plenty of scars — and several glaring questions unanswered. Orion’s heat shield started disintegrating, with subsequent reviews finding it had cracked and chipped. While the space agency now says it’s identified the issue, as Ars Technica reports, officials are being strangely secretive about what exactly went wrong. “We have gotten to a root cause,” assistant deputy associate administrator for NASA’s Moon to Mars program office Lakiesha Hawkins told Ars during an event on Monday. “We are having conversations within the agency to make sure that we have a good understanding of not only what’s going on with the heat shield, but also next steps and how that actually applies to the course that we take for Artemis II,” she said, referring to the first …