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Another Google Co-Founder Is Building a Secret Aircraft – Futurism
Posted: April 28, 2017 at 2:29 pm
In Brief Another Google founder apparently has plans of building an aircraft. According to sources, the vehicle closely resembles a zeppelin and is currently housed at NASA's Ames Research Center.
While Larry Page was busy bringing his flying car to reality, another Google co-founder, Sergey Brin, was apparentlyon a similar path, trying to create a vehicle that will take to the skies as well.
However, unlike Pages land/air hybrid vehicle, the Kitty Hawk Flyer, which could be introduced into the market as early as this year, Brins project is a giant airship resembling a zeppelin thats currently housed at the NASA Ames Research Center. According to a report by Bloomberg, the project was spurred after Brin saw old photos of the USS Macon, an old airship built by the US Navy.
This particular prototype could have beencreated as part of a potential business venture which would be timely, given that were at the cusp of airborne vehicles and flying taxi fleets becoming a reality. Or, it could be simply a passion project for Brin, who apparently has a long-standing fascination with airships. We just dont know yet.
News of this project has piqued the curiosity of many. New airship technology could potentially help cut delivery and transport costs, given that it can accommodate massive amounts of cargo and be more fuel efficient. But whatever his intentions are for this project,Brin certainly has a few experienced friends he can tap for advice.
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Blockchain Technology Has The Power to Let Us Build An Entirely New Internet – Futurism
Posted: at 2:29 pm
A New Internet
From the birth of language to the dawn of the Internet, the technologies that push humanity forward allow us to collaborate at new scales. We agree on a common purpose, and work together in groups of increasing size and power.
Today, with so many of us connected online, the goal of 3.5 billion people frictionlessly sharing knowledge and collaborating is, in theory, an achievable one.
So why hasnt the Internet united us? Why is our trust in institutions government, media, and business eroding? Why is it so hard for us to make compromises to achieve the ends we desire?
There are, of course, many answers, but heres a simple one: the Internet is broken.
The Internet democratized access to information in a way previously the realm of science fiction. Texts, videos, and ideas became widely available, and transmittable, and our ability to communicate with each other, organize groups, and choreograph our activities, exploded.
But just when it seemed like the world had opened up, we identified a new type of information, more valuable than any before, and stashed a lot of it away in private vaults. The Internet allowed us to generate, strategically collect, and deploy, rich data about people, programs, companies, markets, and societies. A small, exclusive group of users siphoned this data off, to store in guarded silos and leverage for private gain.
To resist the privatization of data, the open source community has existed as long as computing, beginning with cypherpunks and basement hackers. Their movement produced Linux, Wikipedia, and countless more platforms, tools, and projects that succeeded. But it lost the battle for control of the Web 1.0 and 2.0. The winners were personal data collectors, repackagers, and vendors like Facebook and Google.
Finally, though, the tide is turning. Today we have a chance at a new Internet, enabled by decentralizing technologies such as Ethereum, the world computer. Big players are recognizing the benefits of open source, and exploring the community-driven business models they bring. Creators and developers can take power again if we come together in time. We can build a new Internet that puts us, the users, first.
Theres an uncomfortable tension online today. Contributors of songs, ideas, art, code, and stories want to enrich the public sphere, but they need to sustain themselves and get paid for their work. That work adds enormous value to our lives, makes them vibrant, and sometimes even saves them.
The problem is that the way we exchange money captures value in only two dimensions. In truth, value is being created everywhere. Let your eyes linger on an ad in the subway, and value has been created. Tweet a popular hashtag. Turn on the lights. Sign in using Facebook. Report traffic on Waze. Tell someone your secret.
There is a shift coming in the way we use the Internet, from an Internet of information to an Internet of value, where we frictionlessly exchange and communicate with no intermediaries.
In this new world, our value is something we carry around with us, that belongs to us and us alone (unless we opt to trade it). Value is captured in as many dimensions as reality. The representation of value that exists on the virtual plane becomes so rich with data that virtual becomes flush with real.
Without trust, there is no love. Myth of Eros and Psyche
Why dont we trust each other? Maybe we did when we lived in tribes. In a small group, its possible to remember everyone from birth and the characteristics that make up their identities. Theres no, Shes warm-hearted. He exaggerates. She prefers to sleep all day.
Today, we empower institutions to guard the trust. We pay them royally for that service, because without trust, there is no business deal, no stamp on a passport, no line of credit, and no peace treaty.
But what happens when we create universal identity a common and accepted baseline of trust, that exists without need for authority? What if we build a system that is inherently logical, programmable, and safe? What if everyone could share it, access it, and help grow it, all at the exact same time?
Given a large enough beta-tester and co-developer base, almost every problem will be characterized quickly and the fix obvious to someone. Eric S. Raymond, The Cathedral & The Bazaar
There is a new Internet coming, and with it, a new reality.
The architects of the future are already building these systems. But those systems are open source, which means if you help build them, they will be even better and stronger. Join some of the worlds most innovative technologists, entrepreneurs, and humanitarians at Ethereal Summit on May 19th in Brooklyn.
We can use technology to make the world better.
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March for Science, climate engineering and China’s space station … – Nature.com
Posted: April 27, 2017 at 1:39 am
Research | Events | Publishing | Space | Funding | Facilities | Policy | Trend watch
Physicists excited by LHC anomaly The latest in a series of anomalies spotted in 5-year-old data from the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) could point to a new elementary particle, physicists hope. The oddities, in the decay of short-lived particles called Bmesons, were announced on 18 April by the LHCb experiment at CERN, Europes particle-physics lab near Geneva, Switzerland. So far, the statistical significance of the results is below 2.5 sigma, falling short of the 5-sigma threshold usually needed to claim a discovery. It could fade as more data are analysed. However, the anomalies chime with previously reported peculiarities, and match predictions that some theorists had made on the basis of those reports.
CERN
Detector elements of the LHCb experiment.
Google health study Googles life-sciences spin-off, Verily, launched an in-depth health study of 10,000 people on 19April. Project Baseline, in development since 2014, will track participants health for at least four years, to identify risk factors for developing disease. Data will be collected from wearable sensors, smartphones and regular clinic visits. The firm, in South San Francisco, California, is running the study with researchers at Stanford University in California and Duke University in Durham, NorthCarolina.
US malaria cases Malaria cases have been rising in the United States since the 1970s and could be more common than realized, according to a study published on 24 April (D. Khuu et al. Am. J. Trop. Med. Hyg. http://doi.org/b597; 2017). Between 2000 and 2014, 22,029 people were treated in hospital for the disease, the study found more than was estimated by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; treatment costs came to US$555 million. Transmission of malaria in the United States was wiped out in the 1950s, and the rise in cases probably results from an increase in visits to malaria-endemic areas, the authors say. They also highlight an apparent trend among travellers of avoiding preventive medications and measures.
March for Science Tens of thousands of people turned out across the globe for the March for Science on 22April, probably the largest-ever demonstration in support of scientific research and evidence-based policymaking. The main demonstration took place in Washington DC, with protests in at least 600cities around the world. The march was organized shortly after the inauguration of US President Donald Trump in January, largely in response to widespread alarm about his administrations attitude towards science.
Green bank sold The UK governments Green Investment Bank has been offloaded to Macquarie, a finance firm based in Sydney, Australia, for 2.3billion (US$2.9billion), ending a controversial sale process. The bank was set up to fund clean-power projects and energy-efficiency schemes, and at the time of sale was Europes largest green-energy investor. The sale had been expected for months and had been plagued by criticism; some fear the privatization could set back investment in green technologies.
Fake peer review Academic publisher Springer said on 20 April that it is retracting 107 papers from its journal Tumor Biology after finding that they had been accepted on the basis of fabricated peer-review reports. The problem has affected publishers including Springer before: investigations in 2015 and 2016 into irregularities in Springers peer-review process led to 122 retractions in various journals, including Tumor Biology. The latest papers were identified through extra screening processes put in place after those investigations. Springer stopped publishing the journal at the end of 2016; it is now published by Sage Publishing in Thousand Oaks, California. The latest retractions, all of papers by Chinese authors, have led to soul-searching in China. The state-run Peoples Daily newspaper blamed a lack of serious punishment for academic misconduct and pressure on overworked clinicians to publish. (Springer is part of Springer Nature, which also publishes Nature.)
China space station China has for the first time resupplied a space station in orbit. A Tianzhou1 cargo module automatically docked with the Tiangong2 station on 22April; the operation will be repeated several times to test different procedures, according to the China Manned Space Agency. Tiangong 2 was launched last September without a crew, with the aim of developing technology and expertise for a permanent space station that China plans to start assembling early next decade. Two astronauts were sent on board a month later for a one-month stay; the craft also carries multiple science experiments. Tianzhou 1 weighs in at 13.5 tonnes, 6tonnes of which are supplies, making it heavier than the 8.6tonne Tiangong2.
Spaceport accord Europes main spaceport, the Guiana Space Centre in French Guiana, has resumed operations following a month-long shutdown during widespread social unrest over living and working conditions in the overseas territory. An agreement reached on 21April with the French government will bring some 2.1 billion (US$2.3billion) in aid to French Guiana. The space centre, near the town of Kourou, had been caught up in the protests, with its roads blocked and three commercial launches delayed. The spaceport is also the location for research satellite launches, including the James Webb Space Telescope planned for next year.
Jody Amiet/AFP/Getty
Kourous mayor Franois Ringuet speaks to the crowd after leaving the rocket-launching space centre (Centre Spatial Guyanais CSG) that he occupied with other protest leaders, on 5 April, in Kourou.
Atmosphere study A fleet of 28 atmosphere-studying CubeSats, including Australias first three research satellites since 2002, soared into space from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on 19April. The miniature satellites are part of the QB50 international mission to study Earths lower thermosphere. This poorly studied part of the atmosphere, at between 200and 380 kilometres altitude, is where cosmic radiation can affect space weather and satellite communications. When released from the International Space Station next month, the CubeSats will provide the first detailed 3D glimpse into these processes.
Geoengineering The United Kingdom unveiled an 8.6-million (US$11million) programme of research into geoengineering the science of altering the planets systems to counter global warming on 20April. The Greenhouse Gas Removal Research Programme will fund around 100 researchers working on projects that range from combining tree planting with farming in agroforestry schemes to using weathering of mining slag to absorb carbon dioxide from the air. The government-funded scheme could eventually help Britain to meet its commitment under the 2015 Paris climate agreement to try to limit global warming to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels.
Drug regulators fate Senior figures from the worlds leading pharmaceutical companies have warned of dire consequences for the European Union if the future of the European Medicines Agency (EMA) currently based in London is not swiftly resolved. The agency is almost certain to move from London when the United Kingdom leaves the EU, but no formal decision has been made on a new home. Presidents and vice-presidents of companies including GSK, Merck, Sanofi and Novartis said in an open letter on 24April that a decision on the EMAs new location should be taken as soon as possible preferably in June. Otherwise, crucial work on approving new medicines and monitoring drug safety may be disrupted, they say.
Weather research The US Congress has passed its first major legislation involving weather research in more than two decades. Among other things, the law instructs the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to focus on forecasting high-impact weather events such as strong, damaging storms, and to improve its temperature and precipitation forecasts on the timescale of two weeks to two years. The bill also authorizes the agency to continue developing the use of commercial satellite data. President Donald Trump signed the bill into law on 18April.
The quest to wipe out Guinea worm is heading in the right direction again. The parasite is left in just four African countries, but an epidemic in dogs in Chad that emerged in 2012 threatened eradication efforts. The Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia, which is leading the global eradication campaign, reports that dog infections are down by 37% in the first three months of this year compared with the same period last year. It credits better health education and the tethering of infected dogs.
Source: Carter center; go.nature.com/2ohtfng
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Orbital ATK spacecraft docks at International Space Station – Loudoun Times-Mirror
Posted: at 1:39 am
A spacecraft manufactured by Dulles-based Orbital ATK successfully docked at NASA'S International Space Station Saturday.
The S.S. John Glenn which keeps with Orbital ATKs tradition of naming its Cygnus spacecraft in honor of those who made significant contributions to human spaceflight -- delivered approximately 7,600 pounds of cargo, including supplies and scientific experiments.
The Cygnus spacecraft launched aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station April 18. Orbital ATK said the spacecraft executed a series of thruster burns to raise its orbit and reach the space station.
Just after 6 a.m. on April 22 crew members aboard the International Space Station used a robotic arm to grapple the spacecraft. It was then guided to a berthing port on the stations unity module. The installation concluded at 8:39 a.m.
Known as OA-7, the mission marks Orbital ATK's seventh cargo delivery mission under NASAs Commercial Resupply Services (CRS-1) contract.
This is our fourth successful trip to the space station in little over a year and the third time we will use Cygnus as a platform for conducting scientific experiments, Frank Culbertson, Orbital ATK space systems group president, said in a statement.
Cygnus' cargo includes a NanoRacks cubesat deployer, food, clothing, crew supplies, spare parts, packaging materials and lockers that resemble freezers. Each locker carried critical science samples, experiments and laboratory equipment for the crew.
The crew planned to open the hatch this week and begin unloading the pressurized cargo. The spacecraft will remain berthed with the orbiting laboratory for three months before departing with close to 3,300 pounds of disposable cargo.
During its time in space, Cygnus will be used as a scientific platform, executing a series of secondary payload missions, according to company officials. Cygnus will carry the Saffire-III payload experiment to study the behavior of a large scale fire in microgravity and release. In addition, a NanoRacks deployer will release four cubesats used for weather monitoring and global ship tracking. For the final experiment, Cygnus will use three reentry data collection flight recorders to provide crucial data about the extreme conditions a spacecraft encounters when reentering the Earths atmosphere.
Once these missions are complete, Cygnus will conduct a safe, destructive reentry into Earths atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean.
Orbital ATK is viewed as a global leader in aerospace and defense technologies. Although headquartered in Dulles, Orbital ATK employs approximately 12,500 people in 18 states across the U.S., and in several international locations.
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Lightning and Mystery Objects Spotted by Space Station (Video) – Space.com
Posted: at 1:39 am
A stunning time-lapse video of Earth captured from the International Space Station shows a lightning storm flashing over the U.S. and "possible satellites" orbiting overhead.
The European Space Agency (ESA) created the video using images taken by French astronaut Thomas Pesquet, a member of the Expedition 51 crew on the orbiting complex.
"Time lapse over California with a thunderstorm on the horizon," Pesquet wrote in a caption posted with the video on Flickr. "These time lapses are made on Earth by taking many pictures and playing them one after the other. There are usually around 25 pictures for a second of video." [Photos: Earth's Lightning Seen from Space]
About halfway through the video, you may notice some small, bright objects streaking through the sky. ESA officials told Space.com that these are "probably functioning satellites," though scientists were unable to confirm which satellites they were. "The giveaway is the fact that the lights are not tumbling, which indicates they are actively controlled," ESA communications officer Daniel Scuka said in an email.
ESA's Space Debris Office determined that the objects are most likely not space junk, because "the objects' brightness in the video is consistent with intact objects," officials said. And they're probably not meteors, either, said Detlef Koschny, a scientist in ESA's Space Situational Awareness Program office who studies near-Earth objects.
Koschny explained that a bright meteor burning up in the atmosphere typically has a duration of a second or less, possibly 2 or 3 seconds for larger objects. This movie, however, runs 25 times faster than real time, he said, meaning the objects are bright for several tens of seconds.
The objects' altitude doesn't fit that of meteors, either, he added. "The typical altitude of a meteor is around 80 to 110 kilometers [50 to 68 miles]. This corresponds to the height of the airglow, which is visible curving above the Earth as a brightish band," Koschny said. "These objects are higher, at least 300 km [186 miles]. Meteors would not be visible in that height."
European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet takes photos through a window at the International Space Station.
When lightning illuminates the sky, it is considered an indication of strong updrafts before or during a thunderstorm, according to the National Weather Service. As air swirls around in a turbulent, stormy atmosphere, the friction generates electrical charges in the clouds. As those charges build up, it leads to electrification and lightning that can be seen both from the ground and in space.
Looking through the windows of the International Space Station (ISS) may seem like a convenient way to monitor storms from space, but astronauts at the orbiting lab don't spend much time storm-watching. Also, their vantage point is limited. The ISS flies roughly 250 miles (400 km) above Earth, and astronauts on board cannot see Earth's north or south poles due to the station's orbit. And because it travels at about 17,500 mph (28,000 km/h), the ISS doesn't stay over the same place for very long.
Last year, however, NASA launched the most powerful lightning mapper yet; it's on the GOES-16 satellite (previously known as GOES-R), which is in geostationary orbit above the Americas. The instrument, called the Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM), can view lightning beneath it to a resolution of about 6.2 miles (10 km).GLM beamed back its first photo of lightning from space in March.
Space.com senior producer Steve Spaleta contributed to this report. You can follow Elizabeth Howell @howellspace, or Space.com @Spacedotcom. We're also on Facebookand Google+. Original article onSpace.com.
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How Does The International Space Station Keep Its Orientation? – Forbes
Posted: at 1:39 am
Forbes | How Does The International Space Station Keep Its Orientation? Forbes How does the ISS keep its orientation? originally appeared on Quora: the place to gain and share knowledge, empowering people to learn from others and better understand the world. Answer by Robert Frost, works at NASA, on Quora: Nominally, attitude ... |
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Americans on International Space Station left unable to process URINE, say Russia – Mirror.co.uk
Posted: at 1:39 am
As far as toilet problems go, the location perhaps could not be worse.
The International Space Station was reportedly at the centre of loo plumbing problems in recent days after power issues caused issues processing urine.
The problem occurred on the American side of the facility, Russian media reports.
The claims have emerged only days after US President Donald Trump joked during a video conference with the ISS that he wouldn't want to re-use human urine as drinking water after hearing it was a practice common in space.
NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson had explained to Mr Trump in the Oval Officer how human waste was repurposed for consumption because resources such as water were so scarce.
With the urine processing problems, reports claim experts have been discussing options for replacing the power connection.
This may have required a spacewalk or "remote manipulator", Interfax reports.
"On Sunday, the urine recycling system is out of order, it specialists understand a problem with distiller," a space industry source told the outlet.
"Perhaps the unit will be replaced as part of the planned May 12, spacewalks, but may be required and unscheduled exit."
NASA tonight confirmed to The Mirror there was a "momentary" issue with the urine processing system.
However, the problem had been resolved and no astronauts were affected, a NASA spokeswoman said.
In 2012, The Mirror reported that three astronauts on board the ISS used a bag-like collection system to manage since the problem which concerns the collection of urine, not solid waste first occurred.
Wrenches, a spare part for the space station's oxygen generator, and a microbe-killing device for use in the space lab have all had to make way for the pump that should fix the Russian-built toilet.
"Clearly, having a working toilet is a priority for us, so some of these things that we didn't need for the next six months or so could wait," said payload manager Scott Higginbotham.
During a video call with NASA astronauts Monday, President Donald Trump joked that he wouldn't want to re-use human urine as drinking water.
It is a common practice in US spaceflight as astronauts "clean" the urine and reuse it.
Mr Trump responded that he would rather the space travelers drink it than himself.
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Napa native, space station astronaut Kate Rubins meets with … – Napa Valley Register
Posted: at 1:39 am
After going where no Napan had gone before, Kate Rubins has again entered new territory: the White House.
Rubins, a 1996 Vintage High School graduate who on Oct. 29 completed a 115-day journey aboard the International Space Station, met President Donald Trump on Monday in Washington, D.C. to join in his congratulatory phone call to Peggy Whitson, who set the record for most time in space by a U.S. astronaut.
During nearly four months in earth orbit, Rubins took part in two spacewalks including an excursion to install a new portal to dock future U.S. spacecraft replacing the retired space shuttles and oversaw more than 200 scientific experiments, including the first in-space tests of a handheld DNA sequencer.
Rubins noted that such sequencing on the cellphone-size device can detect microbes aboard spacecraft and monitor astronaut health.
Thats fantastic, Trump said. Ive been dealing with politicians so much, Im so much more impressed with these people, you have no idea.
The visit with the president was the latest honor for Rubins, who joined the NASA astronaut corps in 2009 after a career as a biologist investigating viruses and other pathogens. In February, she returned to Vintage to share with students the story of her journey, which followed two years of preparation and began with a July 7 liftoff from Kazakhstan.
Rubins is staying on with NASA as its deputy director for human health and performance. The post puts her in charge of other astronauts medical care and researching the life-support technology needed to sustain future travelers to Mars and other distant destinations.
On Monday, Whitson, in the midst of her third mission on the orbiting science platform, surpassed the record for NASA explorers of 534 days, two hours and 48 minutes of total time in space. By the time she returns to Earth in September, Whitson, at 57 the oldest female space traveler ever, will have logged 666 days in orbit over three flights.
This is a very special day in the glorious history of American spaceflight, said Trump, who was joined for his call from the Oval Office by Rubins and Ivanka Trump, his daughter and close adviser.
Whitson said its a huge honor to break such a record as NASA prepares for human expeditions to Mars in the 2030s, and called the space station a key bridge between living on Earth and traveling into deep space.
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Space station astronauts science their way into record book – CNET – CNET
Posted: at 1:39 am
The crew of Expedition 50 strikes a superhero pose.
How much science can a crew of astronauts undertake in a single week? The answer is 99 hours. The European Space Agency congratulated members of the International Space Station's Expedition 50 for setting a new record for the most time spent on scientific research.
The ESA announced the new record on Monday, though it was set earlier this year during the week of March 6. The ESA didn't specify the previous record for time spent science-ing on the ISS.
What makes the record more impressive is how much time astronauts are required to devote to other activities, including maintaining the station and gutting through 2.5 hours of exercise every day. "This new record for science shows the crew is spending more time using the Station for its intended purpose as a weightless space laboratory," the ESA says.
Expedition 50 consisted of ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet, NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Peggy Whitson, and cosmonauts Oleg Novitsky, Andrei Borisenko and Sergei Ryzhikov. The crew's massive docket of experiments included investigating the effects of weightlessness on astronauts' vision and research into crystal growth in microgravity.
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Space cheese and 9 other weird items we've sent into orbit (pictures)
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NASA Experts Say They Won’t Follow Star Trek’s ‘Prime Directive’ When Exploring Other Planets – TrekNews.net
Posted: at 1:39 am
A starship captains most solemn oath is that he will give his life, even his entire crew, rather than violate the Prime Directive.James T. Kirk
Though it is held sacred and the world of Star Trek, NASA may not adhere to the Prime Directive concerning human activity on Mars.
On a panel titled Journey to Mars at this past weekends Silicon Valley Comic-Con, a NASA terraforming expert explained that their mission on the planet would be in opposition to the Prime Directive, according to a recap of the event on Outer Places.
According to Memory Alphas definition, the Prime Directive is embodiment of one of Starfleets most important ethical principles: noninterference with other cultures and civilizations. At its core was the philosophical concept that covered personnel should refrain from interfering in the natural, unassisted, development of societies, even if such interference was well-intentioned.
We should try to make [Mars] a planet that is rich and diverse in life, the NASA representative stated. When asked by an attendee about the Prime Directive, he continued, saying that in order to accomplish this, life would need to be brought to the planet, regardless of the fact whether or not it already exists there.
Any life there, according to the expert, would only be in a microbial state, if it exists at all.
The panel explored other aspects of a potential Mars colonization effort, including the difficulties of communicating with astronauts on the planet.
The Prime Directive is not just a set of rules; it is a philosophy and a very correct one. History has proven again and again that whenever mankind interferes with a less developed civilization, no matter how well intentioned that interference may be, the results are invariably disastrous. Jean-Luc Picard
According to the panelists, there would be a roughly 22 minute communication delay both ways. This would be even after signal strength issues caused by Earths and Mars orbital movement are addressed. In lieu of a faster communication method, which they arent entirely ruling out, NASA would have to give colonists more a greater amount of freedom to act on their own accord than current astronauts are afforded.
They later explored parts of the recent SpaceX plan to colonize Mars. While they admitted that last years announcement by SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has moved us closer to Mars psychologically than anything in the past 20 years, they advised against one aspect of his plan, which involves nuking the planet as a way to heat the its surface to a more habitable temperature. By NASAs estimation, the heat of the combined arsenals of various nuclear powers, including the U.S. and Russia, would only amount to about four hours of Martian sunlight.
Though any colonization effort on Mars would be a long ways away, its important to start brainstorming now, so that fewer hurdles remain when that time comes.
What do you think? Should we adhere to a Prime Directive similar to Starfleet when exploring other planets? Tell us in the comments below.
You can follow Andrew on Twitter @acardi.
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NASA Experts Say They Won't Follow Star Trek's 'Prime Directive' When Exploring Other Planets - TrekNews.net
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