Category Archives: Space

Why space will be Chinese

The first lunar base, the first Martian colony, first mining of the asteroids… And not just because many scifi writers already are predicting it. But because the American political class will keep American companies grounded.

“Here’s the deal: SpaceX, as you may know, is making good on its promise to make access to space cheaper and more reliable. Their Falcon 9 rocket is putting payloads into orbit for less money than the big government contractors charge.

“As one might expect, [politicians] who have such contractors in their own districts and states are unhappy with this. And apparently some are willing to smear SpaceX as retribution.”

The Greens? Not yet. These are Republicans—the supposed champions of market capitalism. So, about that supposedly coming SpaceX spaceport near Brownsville in South Texas? It may never launch anything but red tape.

Via Instapundit.

Explosions photo from space is a sham

German astronaut Alexander Gerst, with the European Space Agency, “who is in orbit around the earth, posted a tweet that read ‘My saddest photo yet. From the International Space Station we can actually see explosions and rockets flying over Gaza and Israel.'”

Gerst’s little bit of politics (he tweeted no similar photo of fighting in Syria, for instance) backfired when Utah Valley University professor Michael Harper tweeted a reply, with a link to a pre-war nighttime space photo whose details and contours match Gerst’s.

Harper said they showed “the lights mainly of Tel Aviv, and as far away as Beersheba in Israel’s south.”

“Speaking to The Times of Israel, Harper said that it wasn’t necessarily the politics of the thing that bothered him – but the inaccuracy and ignorance it highlighted.”

No kidding. Next time, NASA, how about sending up an astronaut who can interpret space photos correctly. That would seem to be a minimum requirement.

Via Times of Israel.

This Dragon ain’t draggin’

SpaceX has rolled out it’s new 7-crew Dragon V2 capsule with smoke and lights but apparently no mirrors. It looks like an old Apollo capsule but it’s designed to land upright on the ground instead of splash down into the ocean.

Then, if all goes well, Dragon V2 would be refueled, reloaded and launched back into near Earth orbit—the dream of cost-efficient, reusable space hardware realized, as it never was with the space shuttle.

Meanwhile, a Gulf of Mexico launch site near Brownsville on the southeastern tip of Texas has finished jumping through one of the critical federal regulatory hoops in the way of any commercial flight op. Especially one that (gadzooks) potentially harms already endangered plants and animals.

Still to be heard from, however: the almighty Environmental Protection Agency, boy toy of the anti-capitalist Greens. So there’s still time to bring all this science and engineering dreaming to a screeching and demoralizing halt.

Solar System Development

It’s interesting to see the way hard science fiction writers have largely retreated from star travel, finally wising up to how dubious is the notion of faster-than-light space ships and cryogenic suspension for travel to distant stars with habitable planets.

Mercifully they’ve also backed away from the we’re-all-going-to-hell ecosystem destruction tales of the past decade or so. The ones that touted global warming look particularly stupid as there hasn’t been any warming for seventeen years now.

Instead, they’ve turned to a more optimistic, more plausible tomorrow by far, near-future development of towns and cities on (and under) the moon and Mars and far-future expansion into the asteroid belt and the icy moons of Jupiter, and Saturn. Even, eventually, into the outer dark of the Kuiper Belt.

The travel problem, of course, gets harder the further out, so to speak, their stories go, from the days it takes chemical rockets to get to the moon and the months to travel to Mars to the years to fly to Jupiter and beyond.

Ion engines are slow but available and fission rockets are fastest, of course, and so they’re dreaming of assembling them in Earth orbit where there’s plenty solar radiation now, and beyond the reach of the First Church of Environmentalism, but they’re also daydreaming of fusion propulsion which is a lot more plausible than physics-busting faster-than-light.

It’s a refreshing change and if you like science fiction you need to hunt down some of these new tales which are a lot more believable ( and a lot more fun to imagine) than the old ones. Cool as they could be sometimes.

Jane Austen meets Ghengis Khan

That’s a cute title for a book review that no longer seems to inhabit the Web.

It’s about a four-parter (or three-parter depending on how you look at it) SF novel I flew through over the past week which is, I guess you would have to say, strong-and-intelligent women’s fiction (the Jane Austin bit), though the men are both as well and a lot nicer than Ghengis Khan, or at least the way he’s portrayed in most histories. They do tend to kill their enemies without remorse, but that comes off as practical rather than blood-thirsty.

It’s author Kate Elliott’s (apparently her real name is Alis A. Rasmussen) Jaran novels we’re talking about and I recommend them if you like horses, sabers, cavalry battles and a nevermind-physics space opera subplot. Sometimes I get tired of all the hard science and just like wave-of-the-hand technology. It works, got it? I got it.

I like these four (or three) novels so much that I probably won’t go on and read any of her other novels which tend to alternate-history, sword-and-sorcery fantasy. That kind of thing never interested me. She has spoken of as many as four more Jaran novels (though not since 2009) and even then with caveats:

“Let me again be blunt. Having just bought a house, having several children in college, living in a region with higher-than-average cost of living because this is where my spouse was offered a job, I can’t actually afford to write the Jaran novels at the moment because there is less demand for them in comparison to my other work. In other words, because I have to make decisions based on a number of factors, it makes more sense economically for me to write fantasy.”

Alas. But she’s young, so I’ll hope they appear before too much longer and, meanwhile, move on to something else.

P.S. I did enjoy another of her SF novel series, The Highroad Trilogy, which I also recommend. In some ways it’s better than the Jaran. More space.

Those solar power satellites

SPS09 You may recall the concept, but you may not have realized that it would entail the creation of a major American industry, employing thousands of astronauts in geosynchronous orbit around the earth and many thousands more people on the ground. NASA, of course, has studied it in detail.

There’s even a pretty good scifi novel about the rigors of the orbital work on something similar. Not that we should expect the First Church of Environmentalism  and their political cronies to support it. On that score, the greenie weenies are in bed with the oil & gas companies who would almost certainly oppose it as well.

A target in a shooting gallery

That’s where we live, on one of the targets in the shooting gallery referred to as the solar system. Fortunately we’re a very small target. Nevertheless:

“The sensor readings show that 26 explosions more powerful than a kiloton of TNT have been detected since 2001, ‘all of which are due to asteroid impacts,’ said former astronaut Ed Lu, the foundation’s CEO.”

Meanwhile, our political hacks mainly work on stuff for which they can collect get-rich-quick bribes. And they whack the space budget because the rube-preoccupied masses ain’t much interested in space anymore. So, one of these days…

UPDATE:  Those 26 together didn’t come close to equaling this one, which would get everyone’s attention. If anyone was left to pay attention.

MORE: Russia seems to be seeing more than most countries and Lu & Co. plan to build and launch a telescope for advance warning.