Bill Sardi See book keywords and concepts | NASA's space exploration budget. A 2001 initiative only called for policymakers to streamline and accelerate approval of more and more ineffective drugs. Meanwhile, effective cancer prevention programs are almost nonexistent. Organizations intended to fight cancer also deserve some criticism. For the most part, donations to cancer treatment groups only fill the bank accounts of probably what are the wealthiest of disease clubs. It has been said there are so many people employed in the cancer industry that a bona fide cure would produce an unacceptable amount of unemployment. | Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts | There have, of course, since that time been multiple other attempts at space exploration and at pushing the American empire's boundaries in skirmishes across the globe, but many have failed and none have extended the frontier farther than Neil Armstrong did. (Alternatively, one could argue that the door to the Frontier was finally slammed shut with the January 28, 1986, explosion of the Space Shuttle Challenger that killed all seven astronauts on board.) Somewhere in the last few decades, American forward movement has gotten stuck. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | REPPED: Here is a real whopper in the history of stupid space exploration tricks. The spacecraft that recently arrived on Titan was supposed to transmit images and experimental data on two data channels: channels A and B. But as it turns out, someone forgot to turn on channel A and so only channel B was available. And channel B was the least reliable channel of the two. It had slower transmission speed and was not designed to be the primary data channel.
As a result, some experiments were entirely destroyed. | Brian O'Leary See book keywords and concepts | I instead had chosen the path of space by reading everything I could get ahold of in space exploration concepts, from Werner von Braun's visions in Collier's magazine to Arthur C. Clarke's writings about space satellites. Nearly everybody thought I was crazy to harbor such futuristic ideas, because there was no space exploration program then. Of course, I turned out to be vindicated on that one. What if my career path were instead to have been an ecological one? It certainly is now as I move into my sixties, a late career shift. | Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts | The decline of the dinos shows that we live in a dangerous solar system, but unlike the dinosaurs, we can see trouble coming and, perhaps, avert it—if we're wise enough to look, jc
¦¦1 RESOURCE
Entering Space: Creating a Spacefaring
Civilization by Robert Zubrin
(Jeremy R Tarcher/Putnam, 1999)
Entering Space is engineer-visionary Robert Zubrin's manifesto for a new age of space exploration. "This is a book about creating a spacefaring civilizationthe next step in the development of human society. | | For now, the experiments conducted at Concordia serve multiple purposes: providing information for future space exploration; building our knowledge of the only relatively unspoiled area left on the planet; and establishing the requirements for life in extreme environmental conditions. | | Turning our backs on space exploration means cutting ourselves off from a chance to really know Earth.
A space program with a planetary focus would combine current research into our planet's climate and geography (much of which can only be done from orbit) with expanded research into the workings of the rest of our solar system. Plenty of big questions about our planetary neighbors remain unanswered. Venus, Earth, and Mars all orbit within our sun's "habitable belt," and there is some preliminary research suggesting that each may have started out with similar potential for life. | | White, a pioneer of space exploration, takes an "orbital stroll" outside of his spacecraft in zero gravity.
Author Robert Zimmerman referred to this emerging era as a "space renaissance"—a revolution in the way people on earth see and use space resources. The following are some tools that may help create that renaissance:
Microsatellites: Sending things into space will always be easier, and cheaper, than sending people into space. | | But the biggest prize—and the greatest challenge—of space exploration would be to send satellites or even landers to other planets in our solar system. We may first have to build an elevator to reduce the energy costs of getting to high orbit (and, potentially, to serve as a launch "slingshot"). Even without interplanetary satellites, our understanding of how planets function may be on the verge of a revolution. Mars will undoubtedly get the most attention, given the intriguing evidence concerning life there. | | Space Elevator
¦¦¦¦¦ Quite possibly the wildest idea for promoting space exploration is the Earth-to-orbit elevator.
This is one of those notions that, at first blush, sounds almost too ludicrous to be real. After all, we're accustomed to thinking of rockets as our only way into space —mixing danger and adventure. Taking an elevator into space sounds almost boring. It turns out, however, that a space elevator is not only plausible, it's potentially revolutionary. | Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts | So why don't we take some capable people and put them in charge of space exploration? Why don't we offer the job to Burt Rutan, the builder of Spaceship One, the first privately funded craft that has actually reached outer space. This guy knows how to get things done. And his designs actually fly!
Or why don't we invite Jeff Bezos to be in charge of NASA? The guy sure knows how to run a large organization with efficiency, and he's more than a little bit intrigued with space travel. In fact, he's launching his own company to help make long term space travel possible. | | I realize that space exploration is not a simple thing, and it is easy to be a critic when you're a back seat driver. There are a million things that can go wrong on any mission, and it may be unfair to pick out one problem and focus on that as a mission failure. But the reasons these missions are failing are laughable. It's not that the complex things are going wrong, it's the simple things. And if they could just cover the simple things from the get go, it seems like they've got the complex issues mastered. | Richard P. Brown, M.D., and Patricia L. Gerbarg, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | Although the stresses of space exploration are more extreme than the stresses of our earthbound existence, they have many similarities and therefore can provide valuable insights into the physical and psychological implications of stress. Many of the physical changes that occur in space, such as loss of bone density and muscle mass as well as declines in the neuroendocrine system, are similar to those that occur with aging. If adaptogen formulas containing Rhodiola rosea are powerful enough to help astronauts overcome stress, imagine what they could do for you. | Brian O'Leary See book keywords and concepts | Nearly everybody thought I was crazy to harbor such futuristic ideas, because there was no space exploration program then. Of course, I turned out to be vindicated on that one. What if my career path were instead to have been an ecological one? It certainly is now as I move into my sixties, a late career shift. But as this book will show, I trust technology more than many traditional ecologists such as E.F. Schumacher, Paul Ehrlich and Amory Lovins, who turn away from new energy and other novel sustainable concepts that could be compatible with our expanding population. | Richard P. Brown, M.D., and Patricia L. Gerbarg, M.D. See book keywords and concepts | The Search for Spock
Anecdotes like these from the annals of space exploration convey the intensity of the physical, mental, and emotional stress that await us on the journey to the final frontier. The ideal astronaut would be mentally alert at all times and completely unaffected by stress or emotion—in other words, Mr. Spock. But alas, we humans are not as unflappable as the Vulcans of Star Trek. | | We don't know for sure, but we suspect that in the former Soviet Union—where the government controlled all the scientific research—the priority was to improve physical and mental performance, especially in competitive fields such as science, space exploration, and military development. Mental illness simply wasn't on the radar screen. So despite the very promising results of early studies, scientists didn't pursue this aspect of research until after the collapse of the communist regime. | | Research on Rhodiola rosea and other medicinal herbs was part of the Soviet Union's great push to compete with the West in military development, the arms race, space exploration, Olympic sports, science, medicine, and industry. During World War II, the Soviet government drafted scientists to work on projects for the military, with a focus on physical and mental performance. The Soviets were determined to find substances that would help their soldiers overcome combat fatigue and win on the battlefield. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | Kennedy's domestic policies were called the New Frontier; he strongly supported space exploration and the civil rights movement. His presidency ended with his assassination on November 22, 1963, apparently by Lee Harvey Oswald, who allegedly shot Kennedy as the president rode in an open car through Dallas. Kennedy's death was mourned throughout the world. j*- At age forty-three, Kennedy was the youngest person to be elected president in American history. | E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) An agency of the United States government, charged with directing civilian programs in aeronautics research and space exploration. NASA maintains several facilities, most notably the Johnson Space Center in Houston (which selects space crew personnel and is responsible for ground direction of space flights), and the launching pads at Cape Canaveral in Florida.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) An organization that promotes the rights and welfare of black people. | | Kennedy's domestic policies were called the New Frontier; he strongly supported space exploration and the civil rights movement. His presidency ended with his assassination on November 22, 1963, apparently by Lee Harvey Oswald, who allegedly shot Kennedy as the president rode in an open car through Dallas. Kennedy's death was mourned throughout the world.
At age forty-three, Kennedy was the youngest person to be elected president in American history. | James Trefil See book keywords and concepts | Called the Discovery program, this new generation of spacecraft will hark back to the early days of space exploration, when small, single-purpose satellites were launched regularly. Of course, "cheap" is a relative term. The probes NASA has in mind will cost no more that $150 million, which isn't exactly chicken feed. They will be much smaller than current probes. Galileo, for example, weighs about three tons, but the Mars Pathfinder, to be launched at the end of 1996, weighs only about nine hundred pounds (not counting fuel). | | If it's possible to do this, it may be done, but with the new lean, cheap approach to space exploration, it may not be. And if those probes don't come back with pictures of this mesa, the cries of "coverup" will start all over again.
Biology
(Mostly Molecular)
How Are Genes Controlled? here's one of the most baffling riddles in biology: every cell in an organism, for example a human being, contains the same DNA. Cells in your brain and intestines all contain the gene for making insulin, but none of these cells actually makes insulin ?that task is reserved for cells in your pancreas. | James Trefil, Joseph F. Kett, and E. D. Hirsch See book keywords and concepts | National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) An agency of the United States government, charged with directing civilian programs in aeronautics research and space exploration. NASA maintains several facilities, most notably the Johnson Space Center in Houston (which selects space crew personnel and is responsible for ground direction of space flights), and the launching pads at Cape Canaveral in Florida.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) An organization that promotes the rights and welfare of black people. |
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