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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!ames!network.ucsd.edu!lutherlab.ucsd.edu!rabjab
- From: rabjab@golem.ucsd.edu (rabjab)
- Newsgroups: sci.space
- Subject: future space travel
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1993 00:00:45 GMT
- Organization: ucsd
- Lines: 31
- Message-ID: <rabjab.7.726624045@golem.ucsd.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: lutherlab.ucsd.edu
-
- If they don't find water on the moon, I have a hard time believing that
- there will ever be large colonies there. Maybe small stations devoted
- to running astronomical instrumentation.
-
- Mars will be the only real place for a large colony, but then again,
- if there isn't anything there that's very interesting (like life or
- fossils) I can't see large colonies being placed up there.
-
- Seems like the future will see expanding development of robotic systems
- that will be used to explore every planet and moon, at a vastly
- reduced cost over sending humans.
-
- Maybe in the next 100-200 years biology will advance to the point
- where Venus could be altered with microbes. Change the atmosphere
- so SOMETHING could live there. It would be interesting to see what
- could live there if the temperature was reduced.
-
- I think science fiction has given people a false sense of the possible.
- The space travel fiction of over 100 years ago neglected things like
- radio and computer electronics, and required a travelling human.
- TEchnology has superseded the human, and the information can be
- returned much more efficiently.
-
- The urge to colonize the universe seems to come from an urge for
- terretorial conquest that has been with us for a long time. It is
- interesting how old themes are constantly repeated in the present.
- It's too bad we can't interest some of our race (Serbians, Saddam, etc.)
- in coveting lunar instead of earthly real estate.
-
- -rabjab
-
-