The Prague Post - Why go back to the Moon?

EUR -
AED 4.276468
AFN 77.564756
ALL 96.73099
AMD 446.112326
ANG 2.084356
AOA 1067.806274
ARS 1715.826253
AUD 1.764715
AWG 2.098932
AZN 1.972147
BAM 1.955416
BBD 2.347839
BDT 142.561982
BGN 1.955291
BHD 0.438995
BIF 3437.324467
BMD 1.164456
BND 1.50961
BOB 8.054417
BRL 6.240908
BSD 1.165671
BTN 102.831791
BWP 16.571743
BYN 3.972719
BYR 22823.340557
BZD 2.344439
CAD 1.622727
CDF 2590.914871
CHF 0.924246
CLF 0.027945
CLP 1096.277375
CNY 8.266765
CNH 8.265199
COP 4528.826151
CRC 584.385152
CUC 1.164456
CUP 30.858088
CVE 110.243334
CZK 24.315127
DJF 207.579205
DKK 7.468158
DOP 74.59534
DZD 151.274066
EGP 55.158889
ERN 17.466842
ETB 176.627988
FJD 2.631612
FKP 0.873664
GBP 0.878174
GEL 3.167362
GGP 0.873664
GHS 12.647514
GIP 0.873664
GMD 85.004564
GNF 10118.01152
GTQ 8.929245
GYD 243.88207
HKD 9.047935
HNL 30.672972
HRK 7.533218
HTG 152.590667
HUF 388.093455
IDR 19354.425684
ILS 3.792983
IMP 0.873664
INR 102.806748
IQD 1526.999901
IRR 48994.492778
ISK 143.39085
JEP 0.873664
JMD 186.873274
JOD 0.825622
JPY 176.9744
KES 150.610772
KGS 101.8319
KHR 4691.098207
KMF 491.400339
KPW 1047.988124
KRW 1668.900525
KWD 0.357162
KYD 0.971409
KZT 621.477862
LAK 25308.026245
LBP 104386.984956
LKR 354.720287
LRD 213.318077
LSL 20.120346
LTL 3.438337
LVL 0.704368
LYD 6.327756
MAD 10.756086
MDL 19.805108
MGA 5190.979823
MKD 61.631412
MMK 2444.625686
MNT 4178.719158
MOP 9.329267
MRU 46.580846
MUR 52.784763
MVR 17.817384
MWK 2021.302756
MXN 21.470417
MYR 4.878496
MZN 74.406177
NAD 20.120346
NGN 1695.41285
NIO 42.901569
NOK 11.631071
NPR 164.530665
NZD 2.013432
OMR 0.447727
PAB 1.165671
PEN 3.946424
PGK 4.911035
PHP 68.879925
PKR 330.121622
PLN 4.232723
PYG 8269.37483
QAR 4.248965
RON 5.084245
RSD 117.179696
RUB 92.284314
RWF 1693.167244
SAR 4.366898
SBD 9.576282
SCR 16.44424
SDG 700.419769
SEK 10.927036
SGD 1.507598
SHP 0.873644
SLE 27.026961
SLL 24418.062708
SOS 666.169079
SRD 46.052496
STD 24101.891296
STN 24.495186
SVC 10.199995
SYP 12875.188204
SZL 20.115047
THB 37.70444
TJS 10.765084
TMT 4.075597
TND 3.419328
TOP 2.72727
TRY 48.858482
TTD 7.912445
TWD 35.587878
TZS 2864.561958
UAH 49.041162
UGX 4053.203429
USD 1.164456
UYU 46.540853
UZS 14050.238724
VES 253.731793
VND 30657.80154
VUV 142.010861
WST 3.258149
XAF 655.828111
XAG 0.024528
XAU 0.000294
XCD 3.147001
XCG 2.100887
XDR 0.81564
XOF 655.828111
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.840183
ZAR 19.977794
ZMK 10481.500517
ZMW 25.586971
ZWL 374.954405
  • RBGPF

    -0.0900

    79

    -0.11%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    24.64

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    0.2700

    15.18

    +1.78%

  • BCC

    -0.6500

    72.37

    -0.9%

  • CMSC

    -0.0550

    24.26

    -0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.1000

    43.7

    -0.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    14.05

    -0.21%

  • AZN

    -1.4500

    82.61

    -1.76%

  • NGG

    -0.5200

    76.65

    -0.68%

  • VOD

    0.3350

    12.235

    +2.74%

  • BTI

    0.3700

    52.46

    +0.71%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    46.23

    -0.89%

  • SCS

    0.0500

    16.68

    +0.3%

  • BP

    -0.3100

    34.46

    -0.9%

  • RIO

    1.0600

    71.99

    +1.47%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    23.57

    +0.38%

Why go back to the Moon?
Why go back to the Moon? / Photo: Filippo MONTEFORTE - AFP

Why go back to the Moon?

On September 12, 1962, then US president John F Kennedy informed the public of his plan to put a man on the Moon by the end of the decade.

Text size:

It was the height of the Cold War and America needed a big victory to demonstrate its space superiority after the Soviet Union had launched the first satellite and put the first man in orbit.

"We choose to go to the Moon," Kennedy told 40,000 people at Rice University, "because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win."

Sixty years on, the United States is about to launch the first mission of its return program to the Moon, Artemis. But why repeat what has already been done?

Criticism has risen in recent years, for example from Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins, and the Mars Society founder Robert Zubrin, who have long advocated for America to go directly to Mars.

But NASA argues re-conquering the Moon is a must before a trip to the Red Planet. Here's why.

- Long space missions -

NASA wants to develop a sustainable human presence on the Moon, with missions lasting several weeks –- compared to just a few days for Apollo.

The goal: to better understand how to prepare for a multi-year round trip to Mars.

In deep space, radiation is much more intense and poses a real threat to health.

Low Earth Orbit, where the International Space Station (ISS) operates, is partly shielded from radiation by the Earth's magnetic field, which isn't the case on the Moon.

From the first Artemis mission, many experiments are planned to study the impact of this radiation on living organisms, and to assess the effectiveness of an anti-radiation vest.

What's more, while the ISS can often be resupplied, trips to the Moon -- a thousand times further -- are much more complex.

To avoid having to take everything with them, and to save costs, NASA wants to learn how to use the resources present on the surface.

In particular, water in the form of ice, which has been confirmed to exist on the lunar south pole, could be transformed into rocket fuel by cracking it into its separate hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

- Testing new gear -

NASA also wants to pilot on the Moon the technologies that will continue to evolve on Mars. First, new spacesuits for spacewalks.

Their design was entrusted to the company Axiom Space for the first mission which will land on the Moon, in 2025 at the earliest.

Other needs: vehicles -- both pressurized and unpressurized -- so that the astronauts can move around, as well as habitats.

Finally, for sustainable access to an energy source, NASA is working on the development of portable nuclear fission systems.

Solving any problems that arise will be much easier on the Moon, only a few days away, than on Mars, which can only be reached in at least several months.

- Establishing a waypoint -

A major pillar of the Artemis program is the construction of a space station in orbit around the Moon, called Gateway, which will serve as a relay before the trip to Mars.

All the necessary equipment can be sent there in "multiple launches," before finally being joined by the crew to set off on the long voyage, Sean Fuller, responsible for the Gateway program, told AFP.

"Kind of like you're stopping at your gas station to make sure you get all the stuff, and then you're off on your way."

- Maintaining leadership over China -

Apart from Mars, another reason put forward by the Americans for settling on the Moon is to do so before the Chinese, who plan to send taikonauts by the year 2030.

China is the United States' main competition today as the once proud Russian space program has withered.

"We don't want China suddenly getting there and saying, "This is our exclusive territory,'" NASA boss Bill Nelson said in a recent interview.

- For the sake of science -

While the Apollo missions brought back to Earth nearly 400 kilograms of lunar rock, new samples will make it possible to further deepen our knowledge of this celestial object and its formation.

"The samples that we collected during the Apollo missions changed the way we view our solar system," astronaut Jessica Meir told AFP. "I think we can expect that from the Artemis program as well."

She expects further scientific and technological breakthroughs too, just like during the Apollo era.

F.Prochazka--TPP