I can't wait for those conspiracy retards against the moon landings to get a mouthful when a private company sees the landing sites. What a glorious day that'll be
Quote from: Naru on August 04, 2016, 04:26:45 AMI can't wait for those conspiracy retards against the moon landings to get a mouthful when a private company sees the landing sites. What a glorious day that'll belet's say those conspiracy theories were truehow much would you shit, and what shape would it be
Quote from: Yu on August 03, 2016, 07:23:28 PMPrivate companies and the like actually need permission to head to the moon?Someone explain this shit.The Outer Space Treaty means the US has an obligation to oversee what private space companies do, mainly to make sure that the treaty is actually being followed by these companies
Private companies and the like actually need permission to head to the moon?Someone explain this shit.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on August 03, 2016, 11:10:05 AMQuote from: Verbatim on August 03, 2016, 10:41:17 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 03, 2016, 09:03:15 AMOpening up other planets for private companies is amazing.It's actually immensely depressing.Why? Besides some ideological opposition to the involvement of private companies in, well, anything, what actual reasoning do you have that this is a bad thing and that governments would be more adept at handling it?It's not that government would necessarily be more "adept" at it--I just find the prospect of a future Planet McDonald's to be viscerally harrowing. The human desire to leave our smelly footprint on everything has always been highly affronting to me.I don't have any problem with Moon Express in particular--mining the moon for its resources seems like a good and honest undertaking--but in general, the less human beings we have dancing around the universe, pretending to do something important, the better off the universe is."Human race" and "virulent parasite" become more and more insidiously synonymous every single day.
Quote from: Verbatim on August 03, 2016, 10:41:17 AMQuote from: BaconShelf on August 03, 2016, 09:03:15 AMOpening up other planets for private companies is amazing.It's actually immensely depressing.Why? Besides some ideological opposition to the involvement of private companies in, well, anything, what actual reasoning do you have that this is a bad thing and that governments would be more adept at handling it?
Quote from: BaconShelf on August 03, 2016, 09:03:15 AMOpening up other planets for private companies is amazing.It's actually immensely depressing.
Opening up other planets for private companies is amazing.
I mean, spreading our influence out of the solar system wouldn't be so frightening if we, as a species, weren't so immature and pathetic.
Deep Space Industries announced today its plans to fly the world’s first commercial interplanetary mining mission. Prospector-1™ will fly to and rendezvous with a near-Earth asteroid, and investigate the object to determine its value as a source of space resources. This mission is an important step in the company’s overall plans to harvest and supply in-space resources to support the growing space economy.“Deep Space Industries has worked diligently to get to this point, and now we can say with confidence that we have the right technology, the right team and the right plan to execute this historic mission,” said Rick Tumlinson, chairman of the board and co-founder of Deep Space Industries. “Building on our Prospector-X mission, Prospector-1 will be the next step on our way to harvesting asteroid resources.”Recently, Deep Space Industries and its partner, the government of Luxembourg, announced plans to build and fly Prospector-X™, an experimental mission to low-Earth orbit that will test key technologies needed for low-cost exploration spacecraft. This precursor mission is scheduled to launch in 2017. Then, before the end of this decade, Prospector-1 will travel beyond Earth’s orbit to begin the first space mining exploration mission.“DSI’s Prospector missions will usher in a new era of low cost space exploration” said Grant Bonin, chief engineer at Deep Space Industries. “DSI is developing Prospector-1 both for its own asteroid mining ambitions, as well as to bring an extremely low-cost, yet high-performance exploration capability to the market. We hope to enable both existing and new public and private organizations to explore the inner solar system using this affordable platform.”Prospector-1 is a small spacecraft (50 kg when fueled) that strikes the ideal balance between cost and performance. In addition to the radiation-tolerant payloads and avionics, all DSI spacecraft use the Comet™ water propulsion system, which expels superheated water vapor to generate thrust. Water will be the first asteroid mining product, so the ability to use water as propellant will provide future DSI spacecraft with the ability to refuel in space.“During the next decade, we will begin the harvest of space resources from asteroids,” said Daniel Faber, CEO at Deep Space Industries. “We are changing the paradigm of business operations in space, from one where our customers carry everything with them, to one in which the supplies they need are waiting for them when they get there.”The destination asteroid will be chosen from a group of top candidates selected by the world renowned team of asteroid experts at Deep Space Industries. When it arrives at the target, the Prospector-1 spacecraft will map the surface and subsurface of the asteroid, taking visual and infrared imagery and mapping overall water content, down to approximately meter-level depth. When this initial science campaign is complete, Prospector-1 will use its water thrusters to attempt touchdown on the asteroid, measuring the target’s geophysical and geotechnical characteristics.“The ability to locate, travel to, and analyze potentially rich supplies of space resources is critical to our plans,” continued Faber. “This means not just looking at the target, but actually making contact.”Along with customer missions already in progress, such as the cluster of small satellites being built by DSI for HawkEye 360, the Prospector missions will demonstrate the company’s simple, low-cost, but high-performance approach to space exploration. The Prospector platform will soon be available to government and commercial explorers interested in developing sophisticated, yet low-cost missions of their own.“Prospector-1 is not only the first commercial interplanetary mission, it is also an important milestone in our quest to open the frontier,” said Tumlinson. “By learning to ‘live off the land’ in space, Deep Space Industries is ushering in a new era of unlimited economic expansion.”More detailed information about the Prospector program, including the Prospector-X (eXperimental) and Prospector-1 missions, and the DSI technologies that are making these missions possible, can be found on the company’s website:DeepSpaceIndustries.com/Missions