Why haven't humans been back to the moon in over 50 years?

(cnn.com)

5 points | by ablaba 13 hours ago ago

7 comments

  • Bender 6 hours ago ago

    Living off world has a cost and requires continuous resources from Earth. What are the financial incentives and perceived gains?

  • _wire_ 13 hours ago ago

    Because its rocks and you don't need people on the ground to survey a big ball of rocks

  • nwhnwh 8 hours ago ago

    What is the proof they did in the first place? Matthew McConaughey being mad at someone who doesn't believe in it in Interstellar?

    • gus_massa 37 minutes ago ago

      Mythbuster said that with 1969 technology, it was easier to go to the Moon than make the fake videos.

  • anovikov 12 hours ago ago

    Because they only got there first time around because of Kennedy's promise after he was shot.

    It didn't take a moon landing to win the Space Race - by that point Soviets already exhausted their potential gained by surprise and trophy German tech, and stopped trying.

    It didn't solve any scientific or exploration goals because by 1969 it was abundantly clear (unlike in 1961) that there's nothing to do for people in the Solar System - U.S. Mariner and Soviet Venera probes proved that it was sterile and incapable of supporting life. And lunar flights were seen as a precursor and ways to debug tech for future missions to Mars and Venus - that were not to happen.

    Progress in computers, automation and sensors turned out to be so much faster than anticipated that by 1969, while it wasn't yet possible, it was clear that tech that will enable same or better scientific results on the moon but without people, was just a few years away - it never happened on the Moon simply because that job was done by Apollo - just at much higher cost and risk.

    CCD camera was invented in 1969 and it was the final nail in the coffin of Lunar exploration, making the "Lunar telescope" a totally laughable plan. Just imagine, in 1961 they anticipated people flying there and back to collect photographic plates or film from the automated telescope - which as they presumed, had to be there because stabilisation of attitude in orbit with precision necessary to make astrophotos, was impossible and it had to stand at firm ground! Needless to say, by 1969, it was possible and sensors to replace film existed too, and Hubble Space Telescope project started in 1969 itself.

    Manned spaceflight is a waste of resources and only continues to exist because of institutional inertia.

  • malvislight 12 hours ago ago

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  • onetokeoverthe 12 hours ago ago

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