Annalee Newitz's
Stop pretending we aren't living in the Space Age
is a magnificent rant on the incredibly achievements of modern space
programs, and a savage indictment of the lack of imagination
underpinning complaints about the failure of humans to return to the
moon in force.
More importantly, humans have continued the project that our
grandparents and great-grandparents started in the 1950s when the Space
Age began. Remember how that project got off the ground with
remote-controlled satellites? Want to know why? Because that is how
smart explorers do it. Believe it or not, we are actually clever enough
monkeys that we are carefully doing a little reconnaissance in distant,
dangerous places before we send people there. Which is why we have sent
probes to Mars, the asteroid belt, Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, Uranus,
Pluto, and even to several moons and comets.
We currently have two robots on the surface of Mars that we are actually
driving around. They are equipped with instruments that can do pretty
sophisticated science experiments. We also have a satellite orbiting
Mars, the MRO, which can take incredibly granular images of the planet's
surface and do climate analysis. Using these robots and the MRO, we
have discovered important things like the fact that Mars has underground
ice, and once had seas on its surface. This is precisely the kind of
information we need to know before we get to the planet ourselves.
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