The Prague Post - Why go back to the Moon?

EUR -
AED 4.315759
AFN 76.965077
ALL 96.421519
AMD 445.478764
ANG 2.103625
AOA 1077.61949
ARS 1679.594294
AUD 1.715559
AWG 2.117046
AZN 2.000594
BAM 1.963615
BBD 2.357426
BDT 143.722031
BGN 1.973524
BHD 0.443108
BIF 3466.288337
BMD 1.175157
BND 1.502348
BOB 8.135967
BRL 6.21072
BSD 1.170461
BTN 107.571281
BWP 15.558472
BYN 3.310639
BYR 23033.082408
BZD 2.354125
CAD 1.620483
CDF 2561.843319
CHF 0.92848
CLF 0.025945
CLP 1024.443328
CNY 8.195081
CNH 8.178684
COP 4230.566156
CRC 577.628912
CUC 1.175157
CUP 31.141668
CVE 110.64143
CZK 24.267325
DJF 208.436518
DKK 7.468592
DOP 73.736456
DZD 152.376764
EGP 55.298077
ERN 17.627359
ETB 182.646662
FJD 2.644455
FKP 0.87519
GBP 0.870606
GEL 3.160849
GGP 0.87519
GHS 12.779841
GIP 0.87519
GMD 85.786204
GNF 10253.331912
GTQ 9.011329
GYD 245.792597
HKD 9.16407
HNL 30.874891
HRK 7.535228
HTG 153.335525
HUF 381.925961
IDR 19774.37131
ILS 3.683748
IMP 0.87519
INR 107.636887
IQD 1533.342204
IRR 49503.500002
ISK 146.001417
JEP 0.87519
JMD 184.301131
JOD 0.833175
JPY 186.381121
KES 151.595713
KGS 102.767747
KHR 4711.091487
KMF 493.565918
KPW 1057.54907
KRW 1722.234156
KWD 0.361137
KYD 0.975518
KZT 592.282183
LAK 25291.644462
LBP 104817.092552
LKR 362.590921
LRD 217.933554
LSL 18.982736
LTL 3.469934
LVL 0.710841
LYD 7.449663
MAD 10.782105
MDL 19.980459
MGA 5401.205414
MKD 61.599434
MMK 2467.80175
MNT 4191.723753
MOP 9.401198
MRU 46.390748
MUR 53.951308
MVR 18.15605
MWK 2029.652968
MXN 20.495512
MYR 4.703563
MZN 75.104133
NAD 18.982736
NGN 1666.560574
NIO 43.069795
NOK 11.570892
NPR 171.47827
NZD 1.987766
OMR 0.451849
PAB 1.174816
PEN 3.943243
PGK 5.004138
PHP 69.31254
PKR 327.50209
PLN 4.199953
PYG 7887.760351
QAR 4.279041
RON 5.091597
RSD 117.397054
RUB 89.307453
RWF 1707.181
SAR 4.406683
SBD 9.54652
SCR 17.709322
SDG 706.85906
SEK 10.582826
SGD 1.502574
SHP 0.881672
SLE 28.67503
SLL 24642.459422
SOS 667.749025
SRD 44.909791
STD 24323.382767
STN 24.505573
SVC 10.241286
SYP 12996.739793
SZL 18.978235
THB 36.594986
TJS 10.961221
TMT 4.11305
TND 3.375933
TOP 2.829496
TRY 50.971665
TTD 7.945773
TWD 37.055999
TZS 2990.775318
UAH 50.577888
UGX 4106.098173
USD 1.175157
UYU 44.91859
UZS 14260.533324
VES 413.967262
VND 30845.52791
VUV 141.614195
WST 3.251485
XAF 656.103426
XAG 0.011858
XAU 0.000237
XCD 3.175921
XCG 2.109471
XDR 0.815982
XOF 656.103426
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.041533
ZAR 18.917443
ZMK 10577.825977
ZMW 23.380218
ZWL 378.40016
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.82

    -0.89%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BTI

    0.5100

    58.22

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.65

    +0.17%

  • GSK

    0.5800

    48.65

    +1.19%

  • AZN

    1.1500

    91.69

    +1.25%

  • NGG

    -0.6700

    80.18

    -0.84%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    13.94

    +2.44%

  • RIO

    -1.5400

    87.3

    -1.76%

  • BP

    -0.4900

    35.43

    -1.38%

  • RELX

    -0.4800

    39.84

    -1.2%

  • BCE

    0.2000

    24.71

    +0.81%

  • CMSD

    0.0400

    24.04

    +0.17%

  • BCC

    0.5000

    85.51

    +0.58%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.67

    -0.37%

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