SpaceX Plans To Send Five Uncrewed Starships To Mars in Two Years (reuters.com) 105
SpaceX plans to launch about five uncrewed Starship missions to Mars in two years, CEO Elon Musk said on Sunday. From a report: Earlier this month, Musk had said that the first Starships to Mars would launch in two years "when the next Earth-Mars transfer window opens."
The CEO on Sunday said that the first crewed mission timeline will depend upon the success of the uncrewed flights. If the uncrewed missions land safely, crewed missions will be launched in four years. However, in case of challenges, crewed missions will be postponed by another two years, Musk said.
The CEO on Sunday said that the first crewed mission timeline will depend upon the success of the uncrewed flights. If the uncrewed missions land safely, crewed missions will be launched in four years. However, in case of challenges, crewed missions will be postponed by another two years, Musk said.
Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:1, Troll)
"2 years," which, due to Elon-Time-Dilation, means at least 7 years.
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cybertrucks?
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Musk's original plan was to send automated greenhouses, Kimbal Musk currently heads up a hydroponics farming company called SquareRoots
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VS NASA (Score:2)
Wonder how much SpaceX mission to Mars will cost VS NASA's latest mission?
It it comes in well under NASA's budget number, then how is SpaceX so much more efficient than NASA, and why is NASA getting so much extra funding for the same thing?
Thinking this is a big fear in the space / defense arena of government agencies and their long term bedfellows in the defense contracting arena.
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Re: Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you genuinely think he is going to send FIVE rockets to Mars before he can send ONE rocket to the moon?
Probably not. It is likely a Starship rocket will go to or around the moon before this. I'm not sure why you would think otherwise. But note that with aerobraking, Mars has only a slightly larger delta-V than that to the moon if a ballistic capture orbit is used. The numbers are worse for Hohmann transfer orbits but not by that much.
Re: Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:2)
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The moon seems like it could be orbited much sooner than 2 years given the recent cadence of his Starship progress
This seems likely to me. If the next couple of test flights go well and orbital refueling is demonstrated by early next year, there's no reason SpaceX won't try sending a Starship to lunar orbit (if not the lunar surface) sometime in 2025. This has been the plan under the Starship HLS component of the Artemis program for some time now.
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He never said he wouldn't shoot other Starships to other nearer gravitational bodies before sending 5 to Mars you know...
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Re: Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:2)
How many years overdue is full self driving? Actual full self driving would be level 5, Tesla does a bad job of level 3 with fatalities that could be solved by adding LIDAR.
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How many years overdue is full self driving? Actual full self driving would be level 5, Tesla does a bad job of level 3 with fatalities that could be solved by adding LIDAR.
Tesla already has depth map data from their cameras. If they can't avoid firetrucks with that data, having a second set of depth map data isn't likely to make any difference. (Also, I'm pretty sure all of the fatal crashes were on the legacy highway stack, to within the margin of error, which makes them borderline irrelevant at this point.)
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Musk acts like a micro manager, but isn't one. Like all CEOs. And like all CEOs you have to remain a bit skeptical about what they say at all times. The difference here is that Musk can't keep from talking, and while also owning a social media company the ability to talk endlessly is unchecked.
SpaceX succeeds best when they push back against their boss and do things the right way. After all, the boss is not a rocket scientist, not even an engineer, despite the misleading title of "chief engineer", and o
Re: Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:2)
The general tendency (with some exceptions) is that Musk says some highly optimistic time frame ...
and then it ends up happening somewhere in the middle.
I think this is the point. The goal is efficiency. In other words, if you give yourself more time than you need to finish something, not only will you likely take all of that time but you may think you have enough time for project goals that may not even be necessary.
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In this case, I believe their timeline is accurate -- Starship is almost ready and their already showing the ability to pump out Starship rockets faster than the FAA can move a sheet of paper from one desk to another. Assuming the FAA doesn't block them for purely political reasons, 2 years is very doable.
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Yuuup.
This is a good thing, though.
People are realizing that establishing property rights on Mars now will forever rule out terraforming.
For instance pushing the asterioid belt into Mars over a few centuries would help with mass and heat.
Can't do that if it's populated.
We're better off mining the Taurids into a massive space station at a Lagrange Point, and remove the source of Tunguska-type impactors.
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People are realizing that establishing property rights on Mars now will forever rule out terraforming.
People everywhere aren't very bright at realizing anything, that's why there's so few people like Musk so far out ahead of the Jonny-come-latelies. "establishing property rights" is just more Old Historic Order bullshit from people who think they already own places but need to formalize it. Like wearing a crown. Kings don't need crowns; they're Kings. Subjects need crowns. Bradbury will have been correct; Mars will be decided 'by the barrel of a gun'. It's another planet FFS, what are you going to do, send
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It is helpful to recall that in 2016 he predicted an unmanned Mars mission in 2018 [time.com] and a Mars colony by 2024 [dw.com]; and that in 2018 he predicted a Mars base by 2028 [space.com].
Musk has always over-promised on his Mars obsession, so we may reasonably expect him to miss the 2026 window for even a Mars fly-by, but maybe in the 2028 window.
Re: Special Relativity -- Elon style (Score:2)
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This particular effort won't work with Musk's usual time dilation, because there is a defined transfer window for optimal delta-V to get between Earth and Mars.
If he misses the transfer window, he's either using WAY more fuel and time to get there, or waiting 26 months for the next window.
If he doesn't hit the window in 2 years, he'll get another shot in a little over 4 years, with everyone mocking him for missing his stated goal for 2 years and nothing to be done about it.
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Uh, he did reach orbital velocity in flight 3 and flight 4. Flight 5 -- the FAA is blocking him because they think turtles are traumatized by rocket noise. What happens to turtles during thunderstorms? I wonder. How can it take them 3 months to do a phony environmental review each time he launches a Starship? Reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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What kool-aid? The rockets are orbit capable and have proved that. Just because you say it isn't doesn't make it so. Will be funny when they does demo fully re-usable reach Mars, we'll be able to say a lot of people said it was impossible. You'll be an example of someone who said Starship won't work. Congrats.
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Yeah, but I can "plan" to launch 5 rockets to Mars in two years. Heck, I can "plan" to do it in one year and have them carrying a Von Neumann machine that will build a ready-made colony from scratch for the 20 million colonists that I "plan" to deliver there six months later. The question is if my plan is remotely realistic. Do I actually have the required resources in place and is my "plan" actually a solid, step by step plan with achievable goals, or is it just a blind ambition?
Now, no doubt SpaceX clearl
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So you're just an idiot then.
The wings and flaps weren't melting until AFTER THEY WERE ALREADY RE-ENTERING THE ATMOSPHERE. In other words, well after they had already exited the atmosphere and continued burning to orbital velocity.
All that was missing was a burn at apogee to "circularize" the orbit, which they could have done if they wanted to in order to prove what anyone that is familiar with how any of this works already knew - they were in the orbit they wanted, at the speed they wanted. They just did
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All that was missing was a burn at apogee to "circularize" the orbit
The key word is "missing"
Now go away, adults are talking.
Bwahaha! Man you guys cannot STAND anyone naysaying your boy Elmo or SpaceX. Once SpaceX gets Starship to orbit, completes actual in-space refueling, and delivers on its promise to the US taxpayer land astronauts back on the moon....THEN Elmo can go off with his grand delusions for Mars. But as I mentioned to someone else, he wasn't saying this to get you fanbois hyped. He was saying this so more hedge funds will dump money into SpaceX. Because SpaceX burns through cash like a
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And here's where you continue to look like an idiot:
Man you guys cannot STAND anyone naysaying your boy Elmo or SpaceX.
I'll say it in bold, in case your eyes are bad: Elon Musk is a fucking douchebag ketamine-addict wanna-be oligarch who routinely shows how much of a gullible rube he is by amplifying fake news, and can fuck himself with a pitchfork.. Now that we've dispensed with your utterly banal and stupid dismissal, we can move on: him being a deplorable shitpiece doesn't mean his company didn't prove they can shoot a starship into an orbital trajectory and speed if t
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doesn't mean his company didn't prove they can shoot a starship into an orbital trajectory and speed if they want to
No, I think the fact that they have yet to put Starship in orbit proves this.
they proved every aspect of the mission to do so for anyone that actually understands how spaceflight works, and you clearly do not.
Ah yes, I don't agree with you so clearly I am the one who is wrong. You're like Aristotle or something, I can't keep up with this withering attack of logic. SpaceX has exactly two years to meet the original deadline for their first lunar landing. Yet they continue to waste billions on multiple launches that have shown only incremental gains. It's been 3 years since they successfully landed Starship under its own power after se
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...The Starship went around 7.2 km/s. Stable low earth orbit is around 7.8 km/s, and if one moves slightly higher up, then the orbital velocity is 7.12 km/s, which is lower than that of Starship.
If you go even higher up, the orbital velocity is even less. Go up to 10000 km, and orbital velocity is 5 km/s. Can we claim that any rocket achieving 5 km/s is orbital?
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No because going up that much higher is difficult.
You got it. If Starship didn't have enough delta V to get to low orbit, it didn't have enough delta-V to go higher and then go into orbit either.
The minimum delta V to get to orbit is when you go to the lowest orbit. It is true that if you go "slightly" higher up the orbital velocity drops to 7.12 km/s, but the delta-V to get higher is more than the reduction in orbital velocity.
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What you right is accurate, but you are missing something: Starship had more than enough reserve fuel for the return and landing. So it had delta-V to spare to make it to orbit if they had wanted to.
I just consider "could have" to be a lesser degree of accomplishment than "did".
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Fixed that for ya
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153.31.113.21
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You can't even get them to Earth orbit.
Given today's news of as many as five un-crewed missions to Mars, there is still no mention of any plan or effort to return any of the vehicles, (and presumably humans in the future), back to Earth. If that's not the goal, why even bother with the monumental costs and risks of sending people to Mars, instead of all the quality instruments we're already so successful with for actually accomplishing science stuff, (and over extremely lengthy durations)?
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He's talking to investors. But the fanbois think he's talking to them.
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You can't even get them to Earth orbit.
Given today's news of as many as five un-crewed missions to Mars, there is still no mention of any plan or effort to return any of the vehicles, (and presumably humans in the future), back to Earth. If that's not the goal, why even bother with the monumental costs and risks of sending people to Mars?
Elmo is only selling a retirement on Mars or somewhere en route, and you'd truly be surprised at how many takers there are.
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The only difference in the last flight between actual orbit and what happened, is an engine burn at the apogee of the suborbital path to bring the perigee out of the atmosphere. They didn't do that, because they didn't actually want it to stay in orbit.
But they got it out of the atmosphere and up to orbital velocity. There is absolutely nobody (besides you, apparently) who thinks it wouldn't still be up there if they wanted it to be.
Hopefully there's a payload (Score:3)
Rather than just testing consistent landing ability, sending a fuel generator, some supplies, a rover, etc. would be nice to see. Make the rover remote deployable and operable and use it to prep some nicer landing space for the crewed mission.
And one of those rockets should launch again, at least to Mars orbit.
Re:Hopefully there's a payload (Score:4, Insightful)
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Solar's pretty weak on Mars... But they're as likely to be cleaned by a breeze as cover with dust by one, so I think it would be interesting to send up some solar tarps and peg them down to the ground. Or just move rocks onto the corners. It would save a lot of mass on mounting hardware, and if you don't care so much about the mass, think of the volume. Either way you get more room to send more stuff.
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Is it reasonable to just have a "robot dusting arm" with a brush on it? "Oh no, the panels are covered with--never mind, I pushed the button and they're clean again now."
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Standard solar panels are more efficient now.
The high tech panels used on the rovers - or any other space technology - are the same.
There is not much room in approvement in them.
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Higher efficiency is good, but the real question is surface area. It is hard to find information on exactly how big the panels on Spirit and Opportunity were. Everything just talks about how many Watts they produced. However one source says 2.65 meters in diameter. If they were actually a circle, that would be about 5.5 square meters. Looking at the shape though, and at how much is covered by instruments and other bits and pieces, it looks more like around 3 square meters. That's not really a whole lot. One
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Space probes and landers and rovers do not use off the shelf silicium solar panels.
They use serious high tech in the range of 45% efficiency. I think Gallium Arsenic, not sure.
So 3 sqm in earth orbit would be close to 1.5kW. On Mars it would be probably only 500W (to lazy to make the Mars, erm Math)
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The solar cells are more efficient than normal, but the real-world performance is still only about 30%. This is with theoretically 43.1% of the insolation as on Earth. However, that isn't the whole story, so it's not just a matter of multiplying those numbers. While Mars gets less total insolation, it also has much less optical depth to its atmosphere. It also has no clouds, or at least anything resembling a cloud is extremely rare. There are dust storms, but those are more of a seasonal phenomenon. So, ult
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Mars has clouds.
There are wonderful pictures about it.
About efficiency of solar panels. The atmosphere of Mars is very thin, and 90%++ CO2.
Frequency wise that should not affect solar panels.
No idea about your point about the poles. Are there really areas with sunlight all day all night? I know there are on Luna.
I guess the questions will be complicated. Around the equator are chasms, that are so deep, that the air pressure down there is half an earth atmosphere. But it is nearly pure CO2. And sunlight only
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Mars has clouds.
There are wonderful pictures about it.
I know. That's why I qualified that with:
...or at least anything resembling a cloud is extremely rare...
because there are clouds, but they are very rare, seasonal, and only sometimes made of water like Earth clouds. Like you said, rare enough that they make little difference to solar generation.
I guess the questions will be complicated. Around the equator are chasms, that are so deep, that the air pressure down there is half an earth atmosphere. But it is nearly pure CO2. And sunlight only goes down so deep occasionally.
Spots like that could be good for the radiation shielding and the higher pressure so that habitat walls don't have to be so thick. Power for something like that could come from a solar farm outside the chasm and you could just run transmission lines. With the lower gravity and
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Better to have a rover there first, with actual science being done, than prematurely sending people who have no way to get home and no way to stay there long term. Ie, do something useful first instead of showing off.
Re:Hopefully there's a payload (Score:5, Interesting)
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That's a lot of posting about what they could send, nothing definite about what they will send. If you're up on the latest and can provide links that are more comprehensive than the article linked to this discussion, it would be genuinely appreciated.
I'm no fan of Musk, but I am a fan of space exploration and won't deny SpaceX has pushed things forward quite a bit.
How quickly will this get borked? (Score:3)
IIRC, in the documentary "Good night, Oppy", JPL had a hell of a time making sure that the thing worked while also being beyond squeaky clean. Some people are very concerned about "contaminating" Mars with Earth microorganisms. I'm guessing that elements of the government are going to try to bork SpaceX's efforts for political reasons while claiming that it's for biological reasons.
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The same government that gave SpaceX a $2.89B contract (a sole contract at the dismay of the other bidders at the time) for Starship/HLS which is all but an official endorsement of the program.
Do you not think contamination is a concern that should be addressed if they are going to attempt to land the ships? SpaceX already knows this is a requirement, I don't think the thousands of engineers who are working on this are so cynical or stupid to disregard it as you think they are.
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Only a very tiny chance that politics are involved here, more it's about Musk with an outsized ego unwilling to cooperate with others. But there are conspiracy theories, and Musk fans, and Musk fans with conspiracy theories...
No creamy nougat center, neither. (Score:2)
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You might be interested to know that Apples and Oranges are indeed different things.
Mars has a thinner atmosphere, which is less deep, and the planet itself has quite a bit less mass. That means that entry friction will be less due to thinner air, last for less time due to less depth, and gravitational acceleration will be substantially less, causing far less extreme heating of the spacecraft.
As it turns out - atmospheric entry on Mars is quite a bit easier than Earth. The problem is surviving the trip th
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I think that might be a slightly over-positive view of the benefits of a thinner atmosphere. For example, you say that it will last for less time "due to less depth", but you just pointed out that the atmosphere is thinner. A thinner atmosphere also provides less braking. To aerobrake on Mars, it seems like you would need an almost horizontal trajectory that slows the craft very gradually. You would hit the atmosphere at at least 7 km/s. From the point you actually hit the atmosphere, acceleration due to gr
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There's lots of strategies for dealing with the thinner and shallower atmosphere. For example, they can do a slight aerobrake through the top of the atmosphere on several passes to shed velocity before going for the final landing. And they plan on doing a powered descent - I mean they spent all that time making Starship able to land on it's loud firey end for a reason - they aren't counting on aerobraking alone because they have smart people who designed the spacecraft to be able to do this.
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That was really the original poster's point though. Due to the thin atmosphere, you pretty much have to do a propulsive landing on Mars. There are some other options for small craft, but rockets are pretty much the only game in town for landing something big. I speculated that helicopter rotor blades might do it, but that's pretty iffy. Either that or having some sort of existing large infrastructure that can somehow "catch" the spacecraft. We're tallking about the first landings though, so no infrastructur
Captain Musk (Score:2, Troll)
I think the chances of success would be so much higher if Musk would captain the first ship they send to Mars.
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I think the chances of success would be so much higher if Musk would captain the first ship they send to Mars.
Even better, we could also send his preferred presidential candidate to be the first president of Mars Colony, and then we'll solve two problems.
Musk seeks publicity (Score:4, Informative)
However, since he has become more involved in politics, his public persona has become more provocative and extreme. He's said that rich tech bros like himself should have more votes the regular people, and he supports more radical and violent content on X/Twitter.
When he is challenged he engages in retaliation. He's suing the FAA over regulations, which is not very useful most of the time. And he's suing advertisers who are leaving X/Twitter because they don't want to be associated with the more radical content. That's just stupid. He can't win under any circumstances, and it alienates the remaining advertisers even more.
He's becoming more erratic. It's not good a good sign for him, and it's obviously bad for his business empire.
Re: Musk seeks publicity (Score:2)
"sending his personal Tesla to orbit the solar system"
It probably failed expensively and this was his way of hiding the evidence
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He's becoming more erratic. It's not good a good sign for him, and it's obviously bad for his business empire.
Rich guy syndrome. Surround one's self only with yes-men, nobody working for you dares to criticize because their job might end. And all those yes-men saying "that's brilliant, m'lord!" makes one start to believe it. Tack onto that a lot of fanboys posting gushingly on social media amplifies this. Eventually they end up completely removed from reality and common sense.
Musk haters (Score:5, Insightful)
Criticize all you want but SpaceX has done more for the space industry in its short existence than anyone could have imagined. Yes, Musk's timelines are rarely correct, but SpaceX does come through. I'm so happy I'll be alive to see people on Mars some day ... courtesy of SpaceX. Stop the hate and enjoy the show people, it's a great time to be alive.
Re: Musk haters (Score:2)
SpaceX going to Mars affects my life positively about as much as the DOW going up. Neither one trickles down to me.
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Humans (the tribe you belong to) are going to Mars. How does that not excite you? Just think, some day going to Mars will be as commonplace as taking a trip to another country. It will happen, sadly though after my life time. However, the moon may be somewhat colonized before I pass. I look forward to pointing my 90mm Meade at the Moon and seeing the lights from the settlements there. Amazing times!
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Humans (the tribe you belong to) are going to Mars. How does that not excite you?
It alarms me - that the first arrival of a human being (either personally or in spirit) would be a megalomaniac arsehole like Musk, one of the worst representatives of the human race you could find. If it is not Musk personally, it will be one of his idiot sychophants posing in his image.
I am as excited about Musk's Mars colony project as I would have been about the Jonestown colony [wikipedia.org] if I had heard about it back then. They do sound very similar, and worth a bag of popcorn perhaps while it lasts.
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Building a proper Mars colony would let us here on Earth upgrade from racism to planetism.
Re: Musk haters (Score:2)
Our lives are irrelevant (Score:1)
SpaceX going to Mars affects my life positively about as much as the DOW going up. Neither one trickles down to me.
No interest in keep the species of humanity alive at all?
When you care about nothing larger than yourself, you are nothing.
They do, you just lack the patience to think (Score:2)
ALL technological changes, and ALL large-scale financial changes in a modern society affect you, even if you do not understand how, or lack the patience or desire or ability to think stuff through enough to understand.
You might THINK the DOW has no effect on you, but it DOES and it does so on a daily basis. The fluctuations in the DOW affect the investor class (even if YOU foolishly choose not to invest) and THEY in-turn affect corporate policies, interest rates, lending and borrowing in the overall societ
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even if YOU foolishly choose not to invest
I can't afford to spend my money in a casino.
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Criticize all you want but SpaceX has done more for the space industry in its short existence than anyone could have imagined. Yes, Musk's timelines are rarely correct, but SpaceX does come through. I'm so happy I'll be alive to see people on Mars some day ... courtesy of SpaceX. Stop the hate and enjoy the show people, it's a great time to be alive.
The best thing to happen to SpaceX was Musk getting distracted by Tesla.
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SpaceX currently is just NASA without the interference, and with the money to actually do what they want to do ...
They have basically built what NASA should have been doing, but were prevented, by lack of funds and government interference
They currently are not ahead of what NASA could currently do if the breaks were taken off, but are starting to get near ...
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My counter-argument: SLS.
NASA designed a big ass rocket that has 20x the launch costs, with no reusability, and no increased capability whatsoever. And they are 100% dependent on SpaceX for human spaceflight because Russia isn't a very good partner any more, and Boeing shit the bed again.
There's absolutely no proof of what you claim.
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SLS exists because of government interference. Namely, pork-barrelling. It's NASA's best attempt at keeping the lights on by keeping the politicians happy enough to keep the money flowing.
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I agree. The best thing NASA could have done was tell the politicians a new Moon rocket couldn't be made with the budget and materials they had, but instead use the money they did have for further space exploration using robotic craft. It would not have been pleasing to porky the politician but would have been the truth.
That makes sense (Score:1)
But it's Elon .. (Score:3)
So expect it sometime in the next 10-15 years like real rocket scientists predict
Every single time based prediction of his has been delayed .... until it's when everyone else said they would probably do it ... or later ...
5 Starships returning from Mars? (Score:2)
This I wanna see! Maybe a simultaneous landing for show?
Mel Brooks (Score:2)
"I have 15 Starships landing, in just . . . err, I have 10 Starships landing, right after . . . oops, I have 5 Starships landing!"
The trick is to... (Score:3)
Send several, scheduled to arrive days/'weeks apart from each other, so that if one fails and crashes, software changes can be worked and uploaded to the following ones to try different changes. The Earth-Mars transfer window alters the normal manner of development. This is the true advantage to Musk's approach to mass-producing starships and super-heavies and will enable him to be far more successful and sooner than any traditional defense aerospace giant would manage; the traditional space vendors would make one attempt, using a one-off hand-built multi-billion-dollar vehicle within each transfer window and the first successful landing using THAT method might take multiple decades.