Why not Enceladus tho
Quote from: Jocephalopod on March 23, 2016, 06:43:40 AMWhy not Enceladus thoEuropa is a moon of jupiter. Enceladus is a moon of saturn.Europa is closer and more people know about it.
Quote from: BaconShelf on March 23, 2016, 06:49:26 AMQuote from: Jocephalopod on March 23, 2016, 06:43:40 AMWhy not Enceladus thoEuropa is a moon of jupiter. Enceladus is a moon of saturn.Europa is closer and more people know about it.Yea I know, but it's basically confirmed that Enceladus has a liquid water ocean beneath the surface and there are multiple geysers/ crevases that could be utilized for easier study. I always assumed we had more data to support going there rather than europa
If we do find life on that moon how are religious people going to handle that? I know the people would get rewritten to have a passage about god creating life in places outside the Earth.
inb4 Trump becomes president and cuts the founding for that mission to be spent on the military.
Quote from: Little Willie on March 23, 2016, 06:41:47 AMinb4 Trump becomes president and cuts the founding for that mission to be spent on the military.So? We need to take care of ourselves on earth more before we venture out into fuckin space. If your house is on fire you don't leave it to go to the supermarket.
For christians with a more nuanced understanding of their religious texts, it's interesting, and raises some questions, but isn't a huge deal.
Quote from: BaconShelf on March 23, 2016, 12:10:34 PMQuote from: Yulius Kaisar on March 23, 2016, 11:30:03 AMFor christians with a more nuanced understanding of their religious texts, it's interesting, and raises some questions, but isn't a huge deal.What kind of questions?How does this tie into our theology, if at all? Did God perhaps have some plan for us to encounter this life one day, or is their path independent from ours? Should we be interfering with them.More importantly, if we encounter intelligent life, we would have to ask very challenging questions- did Christ just save mankind, or did he save all intelligent life? Does sin affect these extraterrestrials as it affects us?
Quote from: Yulius Kaisar on March 23, 2016, 11:30:03 AMFor christians with a more nuanced understanding of their religious texts, it's interesting, and raises some questions, but isn't a huge deal.What kind of questions?
I'd prefer a rover landing, fly by missions make me sad
I really, really, don't care for any flavour of space travel. Seems like a waste of time and resources.
Good luck drilling through miles of ice as hard as granite.
Give the nerds at Nasa some thinking time and crack a whip and say "money" as you point at corporations and then to the asteroid fields in our system, and those two will find a way.
Quote from: Sandtrap on March 23, 2016, 08:42:50 PMGive the nerds at Nasa some thinking time and crack a whip and say "money" as you point at corporations and then to the asteroid fields in our system, and those two will find a way.That operation would require technology and resources that aren't practical whatsoever to send to Europa right now. It's not happening any time soon, and it's not as simple as just "Well NASA people are smart, they can figure it out if you give them a lot of money." There are a ton of challenges associated with pulling off something like this.
Quote from: Winy on March 23, 2016, 07:51:52 PMGood luck drilling through miles of ice as hard as granite.Granite is not necessarily difficult to mine if the resource within/below is worth it.Diamond drilling, yo