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Why Is The World Rushing Back To The Moon? 

PBS Space Time
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The Moon has been one of the most important theoretical stepping stones to our understanding of the universe. We’ve long understood that it could also be our literal stepping stone: humanity’s first destination beyond our atmosphere.
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17 апр 2024

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Комментарии : 1,8 тыс.   
@NeonVisual
@NeonVisual 29 дней назад
Because we're running low on cheese.
@joshuagohres7902
@joshuagohres7902 29 дней назад
Best answer
@theremoteman4504
@theremoteman4504 29 дней назад
Swiss cheese to be exact
@hashfors
@hashfors 29 дней назад
I prefer cows over humans..
@bmxerkrantz
@bmxerkrantz 29 дней назад
the 1.2 billion pounds of cheese in US caves would like to have a word with you
@lorenzoblum868
@lorenzoblum868 29 дней назад
Where shall we go the day we run low on crackers?
@markmuller7962
@markmuller7962 29 дней назад
"We could only pretend that we are the center of the universe for so long when we can literally see the detailed surface of another world with naked eyes" *quote of the decade*
@erric288
@erric288 29 дней назад
I mean to be fair to scientists of the past observing the heavenly bodies, it does appear as if everything is orbiting around us at first glance.
@ObjectsInMotion
@ObjectsInMotion 29 дней назад
@@erric288 Not just that, but if the stars were infinitely far away, then it is impossible to tell which is the real center without a third object outside the system. Until we had telescopes able to measure stellar parallax and see the stars do indeed shift as we move around the sun, it literally was an unanswerable question. And you cant be faulted for being wrong on something it was impossible for you to prove one way or another anyway. Pre-renaissance astronomers were not ignorant they were just limited.
@aguywithanopinion8912
@aguywithanopinion8912 29 дней назад
Well we are all at the centre of our own observational universe. So they were kind of right
@markmuller7962
@markmuller7962 29 дней назад
@B0tch0 You guys ain't getting the quote, he doesn't mean that they had to have all figured out but that the process was inevitable and inevitably quick
@gavinriley5232
@gavinriley5232 28 дней назад
Counterpoint. I am the center of my light cone and therefore the center of the universe from my perspective.
@darrennew8211
@darrennew8211 29 дней назад
I read a sci-fi short story once in which many of the people watching the eclipse were disguised aliens here to just go "Wow, that's crazy!"
@GreenPixel-Moosie
@GreenPixel-Moosie 28 дней назад
Name?
@sevex9
@sevex9 28 дней назад
Oh my Glorp! Do you see that Worm Monkey!? Not in 10 trillion parsects can such a spectacle beheld by the naked photosensitive organ!
@darrennew8211
@darrennew8211 28 дней назад
@@GreenPixel-Moosie I'd have said if I remembered. It was just one of thousands of short stories I've read over the decades.
@yanina.korolko
@yanina.korolko 28 дней назад
🤣😂 wow, that's crazy!😂
@JustinMShaw
@JustinMShaw 28 дней назад
That would be a huge improvement on silly doomsday invasion stories if, instead of wanting any resource we have, they just wanted our great views.
@DanielSolis
@DanielSolis 28 дней назад
"Okay, boss. We finished building your lunar base!" "Why is it shaped like that?" "You wanted a **checks notes** crude lunar base." "I wanted a CREWED lunar base."
@AgentFire0
@AgentFire0 27 дней назад
My eyes kept swinging to the subtitles to confirm that no, he did NOT say crude.
@laconicscout7555
@laconicscout7555 23 дня назад
If Spinal Tap went to the Moon...
@luayuahmed
@luayuahmed 29 дней назад
I think Mars is interesting from a scientific perspective, but from an engineering perspective for a society who is looking to expand beyond Earth, the Moon is the easiest way to develop technology and procedures for continued expansion.
@AnthemUnanthemed
@AnthemUnanthemed 28 дней назад
we already got to mars, people dont need to go to mars, there are planned sample recovery missions that got their budgets continually cut overtime, sending people would be so much more expensive than a robot that is objectively better for taking measurements because it eliminates human error, the biggest issue in human led testing.
@jtjames79
@jtjames79 28 дней назад
LoL. I keep hearing people say that, none of them have a business plan, and half of them are Communists. I'm going to Mars, not "we", I don't identify as a waste of oxygen earthling. I'm just a temporarily embarrassed multi-planetary trucker.
@luayuahmed
@luayuahmed 28 дней назад
@@jtjames79 you don't hear people when they speak.
@maxwellsimon4538
@maxwellsimon4538 28 дней назад
@@jtjames79 I, a venture capitalist and ore processing tycoon, wish to go to the moon for the much closer and much less EPA regulated moon rocks.
@skycloud4802
@skycloud4802 28 дней назад
I think Moon would be a great place to practice before moving on to bigger things. If astronauts get seriously hurt, ill or things go wrong on the moon, then people on Earth can render aid from not too far away. But planets are too far away for those on Earth tondo much to help.
@O.M.G.Puppies
@O.M.G.Puppies 28 дней назад
China was not the first unmanned probe to return rock samples. The Soviets did it with Luna-16 and 20 returned rocks,. and Luna-24 drilled and returned a two-meter core sample.
@iamgroot4080
@iamgroot4080 15 дней назад
If You believe everything that soviets or russians tell you, they even have an unicorn, builded the moon, Putin was first to carry those heavy bricks there.... Shirtless... On a bear.... One hand driving the bear, no joke!
@lilith3953
@lilith3953 14 дней назад
@@iamgroot4080 The Russians have a long history of either telling the truth or saying nothing. Unlike the US who lies and or has lied about absolutely everything you could possibly lie about. If the Russians said that they had put a man on the moon, then I would believe that the US probably had too. But when it's something that only the United states of liars claims, I have no reason to believe it.
@akakakakakak3084
@akakakakakak3084 6 дней назад
Wow, curiously to know the weight of the 2 meter core?
@O.M.G.Puppies
@O.M.G.Puppies 6 дней назад
@@akakakakakak3084 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luna_24
@christopherbrand5360
@christopherbrand5360 28 дней назад
I kept hearing 'crewed' as 'crude' and thought that was a pretty bold comment on the sophistication of those missions
@josem1419
@josem1419 28 дней назад
always cc activated for me because I keep mishearing things :(
@yitzakIr
@yitzakIr 27 дней назад
They ate with their hands
@michaelpettersson4919
@michaelpettersson4919 27 дней назад
Any space faring vessel we can build with our current technology are doomed to be crude in comparison what we will need to really explore and colonise our own neighbourhood.
@christopherbrand5360
@christopherbrand5360 27 дней назад
@@yitzakIr 😂
@michaelporzio7384
@michaelporzio7384 29 дней назад
Correction 9:38 The Soviet Luna 16 (in 1970) was the first robotic probe to land on the Moon and return a sample to Earth and represented the first lunar sample return mission by the Soviet Union and the third overall.
@B0tch0
@B0tch0 29 дней назад
Too bad Russians are more interested in washing machines and toilets these days
@KuK137
@KuK137 28 дней назад
You're of course right, but with recent rabid Russophobia (bordering on 30s antisemitism levels) we'll soon read Vanguard was the first artificial satellite of Earth...
@Rivulets048
@Rivulets048 28 дней назад
🤓actually
@thorr18BEM
@thorr18BEM 28 дней назад
Crazy to think that until there hadn't been a single lunar sample returned since 1976. The entire Luna program brought back only a total of 326 g compared to 382000 g brought back by Apollo program which was even longer ago. Chang'e5 brought 1731 g in 2020.
@B0tch0
@B0tch0 28 дней назад
Russia will never make it back to the moon. If they have a washing machine in Russian homes by the end of the decade, it's already a win for them.
@whophd
@whophd 28 дней назад
“that PARTICULAR Cold War” 😬
@Nphen
@Nphen 27 дней назад
I've been referring to it as "The First Cold War" for years now. I consider the proxy wars against Russia & China to be one unified "Second Cold War" but some scholars are saying they're 2 different new Cold Wars.
@SpellMenderDev
@SpellMenderDev 27 дней назад
@@Nphen Instead of "Cold War II" It's "Cold War IIa" and "Cold War IIb" 🤣🤦‍♀
@melonlord1414
@melonlord1414 27 дней назад
So I wasn't the only one who tripped over that sentence
@pennyandluckpokerclub
@pennyandluckpokerclub 25 дней назад
Chilling.
@3zzzTyle
@3zzzTyle 23 дня назад
@@pennyandluckpokerclub Bing.
@catchphase
@catchphase 28 дней назад
I love the book, Artemis, written by Andy Weir. At the end of this century, we've colonised the moon and discovered rich aluminium oxide deposits. Andy Weir is the one that wrote The Martian, and Artemis is definitely as worthy of a read.
@chiron9948
@chiron9948 25 дней назад
'We'? The U.S., a shareholder company, a billionaire, or the World, as defined in the space treaty? Or is the space treaty toppled with the Artemis treaty, that supersedes the UN one, and makes basically the U.S. the sole owner?
@catchphase
@catchphase 24 дня назад
@@chiron9948 in my comment, I meant 'We' as in, the human race. I don't really recall that any politics were involved in the story. It was just about a space-age street urchin getting dragged into a conspiracy about factions vying for control of the aluminium supply. I think the organisations involved may have been privately owned. Read the book :P
@dkennell998
@dkennell998 21 день назад
Just wrapping up Hail Mary! I was skeptical about Artemis from the reviews, but I'll give it a shot now based on this comment. Thanks!
@MusabAksakal
@MusabAksakal 17 дней назад
After so many years, being 31 now, I was worried we've truly given up on space, felt like this quote hit too hard: "We used to look up at the sky and wonder at our place in the stars. Now we just look down, and worry about our place in the dirt" - Interstellar, but now seeing this gives me hope 🙂
@shmookins
@shmookins 28 дней назад
Crazy to think that one day soon, we'll have a 4k live feed from the Lunar surface.
@Kier_1
@Kier_1 28 дней назад
With a 2+ second delay
@eternisedDragon7
@eternisedDragon7 27 дней назад
I'm making sure that we'll never settle on the moon.
@plSzq1
@plSzq1 27 дней назад
@@eternisedDragon7 I hope you are not some kind of powerful super villain casually sharing his great plans with us npcs.
@eternisedDragon7
@eternisedDragon7 27 дней назад
@@plSzq1 1. Not villain but utilitarian, there's a big difference, it's me that has the moral high grounds here, and several Professors that I reached out to already agree with that. 2. Knowledge isn't power (or otherwise power would be knowledge, and that certainly isn't true), but it enables it. 3. Yes.
@plSzq1
@plSzq1 27 дней назад
@@eternisedDragon7 It's an honor to meet such superior being. I might not have a moral high ground here where I stand but yours is so high that I can see it from here. It's very impressive. I am happy that you acquired contact with certified entitled people. I hope you will succeed with your quest traveler. I used to be an adventurer like you one day but then I realized that I am the one that is deceiving myself. I hope that I spoke with sufficient regard and manners. Cheers
@Breakemoff2
@Breakemoff2 29 дней назад
Always a great day when PBSST posts 🎉
@pierfrancescopeperoni
@pierfrancescopeperoni 28 дней назад
14:09 time on the moon ticks a little bit faster (weaker gravitational field), not slower.
@abxorb
@abxorb 28 дней назад
Maybe they meant slower because the Moon orbits the Earth at speed, so moving faster relative to us, and therefor experiences slower time?
@pierfrancescopeperoni
@pierfrancescopeperoni 28 дней назад
@@abxorb Knowing that for GPS to work general relativity corrections on the satellite clocks count more than special relativity, this should also be the case but even amplified, since the difference in gravitational field, compared to the Earth surface, is even larger on the moon than on the satellite, and the moon is slower than the satellite.
@kindlin
@kindlin 27 дней назад
I had to think about this for a second to be sure, but yes, the moon's surface is a lesser gravity well than the Earth, and the moon itself is further from Earth's gravity well itself, so it must have less total gravity than the surface of the Earth.
@netjeff314
@netjeff314 27 дней назад
Yes. "To an observer on the Moon, an Earth-based clock will appear to lose on average 58.7 microseconds per Earth-day with additional periodic variations." This is an excerpt from the recommendation for Coordinated Lunar Time (LTC) from the US Office of Science & Technology, see page 2 of www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Celestial-Time-Standardization-Policy.pdf
@marciusnhasty
@marciusnhasty 25 дней назад
For each 1. 5 billion Earth seconds the Moon expiriences extra 1 second for observer down on Earth. That's one second faster per 47 and a halfish Earth years.
@CH-mp8eu
@CH-mp8eu 28 дней назад
Excellent! Finally, and episode I understood from start to finish!
@SanderHollebrand
@SanderHollebrand 28 дней назад
Well, Charon probably doesn’t count anymore because Pluto is a dwarf planet these days…but Charon is crazy big compared to Pluto…
@michs342
@michs342 28 дней назад
Probably also because I have seen more and more astronomers calling it the Pluto-Charon system. So it seems that it is slowly tilting towards being considered a bi-planetary system instead of dwarf planet and moon. While it officially (as far as I know at least) is still classified as a planet and moon system that might change at some point in the near future. Which does make sense as the gravitational center of that system is somewhere between the two bodies instead of inside the bigger one as it is in all other planet-moon systems.
@terdragontra8900
@terdragontra8900 28 дней назад
@@michs342 That definition of binary system always seemed weird to me, because if you moved Charon closer it wouldn’t be true anymore, but the system wouldn’t feel less “binaryish”, I would think only the ratio of masses ought to matter
@gabor6259
@gabor6259 27 дней назад
Will it be called a bi-dwarf-planetary system?
@SpellMenderDev
@SpellMenderDev 27 дней назад
@@michs342 Pluto is "Bi" confirmed.
@lewis7315
@lewis7315 27 дней назад
Mercury and Pluto are the same size, (+- 300 miles) so there are really only seven planets :)>
@Menthix
@Menthix 28 дней назад
Wow those predictions are extremely optimistic to say the least.
@normalmighty
@normalmighty 14 дней назад
Each country wants to claim with their plans that they'll have a base sooner than the others.
@whophd
@whophd 28 дней назад
Lunar Time - needs its own episode surely!
@peepohappy6309
@peepohappy6309 29 дней назад
Just when im about to sleep, perfect timing
@LordBrittish
@LordBrittish 29 дней назад
No sleep. There is only scrolling on your phone. 📱 Is your phone still on? Go to sleep!!! 😜
@hasithmalika
@hasithmalika 29 дней назад
Me too.
@AnotherOddTree
@AnotherOddTree 29 дней назад
Glad I'm not the only one. Lol.
@Nova_Afterglow
@Nova_Afterglow 28 дней назад
spacetime makes me a happy peepo too!
@CarletonTorpin
@CarletonTorpin 29 дней назад
0:52 - That intro moon-shot. Beautiful work, PBS Space Time crew.
@Sekyra865
@Sekyra865 29 дней назад
I am really glad that you created an informative video about the moon's importance in our near future and how we can expect thing to unfold with future missions. Surprisingly, approximately 43% of the oxygen is trapped in the lunar soil in form of minerals, which means that there is a plentiful supply. I am proud to support this cause and be part of the research team that is exploring the extraction of oxygen using hydrogen, which will help in generating water on the moon and sustain life. Excellent work as always PBS!
@scottymoondogjakubin4766
@scottymoondogjakubin4766 29 дней назад
Would be wild to see artificial lighting on the moon from all the moonbases ! Like all the lighting from cities on earth !
@CybersteelEx
@CybersteelEx 28 дней назад
neon signs
@mallninja9805
@mallninja9805 28 дней назад
@@CybersteelEx Selling us crap
@estp23010
@estp23010 28 дней назад
I figure most of the infrastructure would be underground and that few lights would be outside, but maybe!
@death_parade
@death_parade 28 дней назад
The Expanse intro theme intensifies.
@TeddyRumble
@TeddyRumble 28 дней назад
Yup, that would be very cool!
@el_grace
@el_grace 24 дня назад
3 minutes in, and you're blowing my mind more than any physics by putting the moon's significance into context. no wonder this channel is GOAT
@barthpaleologue
@barthpaleologue 29 дней назад
This gives me a lot of hope for the future! Thanks for that
@kevinpotts123
@kevinpotts123 28 дней назад
My wife and I went to southern Illinois to see the eclipse and it was perfect. One of the highlights of our lives.
@TeddyRumble
@TeddyRumble 28 дней назад
They are beautiful. I've seen two. 1979 and 2017, both in Oregon.
@uthor707
@uthor707 28 дней назад
You're the best science communicator I'm aware of, thanks Matt.
@jakefromstatefarm1405
@jakefromstatefarm1405 27 дней назад
Go watch Kyle Hill too 👍
@hilliard665
@hilliard665 28 дней назад
Ahh matt ive had a bad week mate, your videos are so chill its helping lol Fact full to keep me entertained but chill so i dont get reactive
@p3t3mit
@p3t3mit 21 день назад
One of my favorite topics. Thanks for covering it.
@theydisintegrate
@theydisintegrate 29 дней назад
I saw the shadow of the eclipse a couple dozen times through a colander ... light is so trippy
@christophermullins7163
@christophermullins7163 29 дней назад
I have 100s of pictures of the C shaped unshadows of trees and bushes.
@christophermullins7163
@christophermullins7163 29 дней назад
Antishadows?
@melaniabladeofmiquella
@melaniabladeofmiquella 29 дней назад
​@@christophermullins7163 Ashadow
@Merennulli
@Merennulli 28 дней назад
Careful with that. If you look through the colander, you'll strain your eyes. 🙂
@theydisintegrate
@theydisintegrate 28 дней назад
@@Merennulli lol, to clarify, the eclipse went through the colander. My eyes were on the ground (to clarify again, looking at a piece of paper on the sidewalk). Seeing so many of them, each per hole, reminded me of looking through a kaleidoscope, and it's weird that if you joined any adjacent holes, they would become one larger eclipse per joined holes, or maybe not? after all if you joined all the holes you wouldn't see anything ..hence trippy
@tbsq1114
@tbsq1114 29 дней назад
2:05 this is terrifying
@7heHorror
@7heHorror 29 дней назад
I'm still rewatching that part.
@pacotaco1246
@pacotaco1246 29 дней назад
big history has lots of spooky moments
@jamesmnguyen
@jamesmnguyen 28 дней назад
Luckily, it wasn't that fast in real life. I think.....
@mvmlego1212
@mvmlego1212 28 дней назад
I think you'd be fascinated (and terrified) by the animations on a channel called "Aleksey__n".
@rofl0rblades
@rofl0rblades 28 дней назад
@@jamesmnguyen not even remotely. Which makes it even more terrifying in a way. Earth wasn't habitable at that time but if you stood there, the whole ground would be shaking and deforming from tidal forces probably hours before the actual impact.
@KeithCooper-Albuquerque
@KeithCooper-Albuquerque 29 дней назад
Great episode, Matt! I hope the world's future space endeavors are peaceful!
@zacharywong483
@zacharywong483 26 дней назад
Fantastic video, as always!
@kevincronk7981
@kevincronk7981 29 дней назад
Yeah that eclipse was so great, I really loved the cloud cover so thick I couldn't even tell where the sun was
@LuisSierra42
@LuisSierra42 28 дней назад
RIP
@landonian1223
@landonian1223 28 дней назад
time is faster on the moon, not slower. awesome video!
@stazeII
@stazeII 27 дней назад
Was coming to say this. Maybe he meant it’s slower on earth than moon.
@day3455
@day3455 27 дней назад
How fascinating! This was one of your best videos I think!!! 🙏🙏🙏
@AvangionQ
@AvangionQ 29 дней назад
Recommended followup, Metal Ball Studios, 3D animation, All successful and failed missions to the Moon 🚀🌙 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-sZ2RMWvOj-U.html
@RakeshSamaddar
@RakeshSamaddar 29 дней назад
14:08 Doesn't time tick a tiny bit slower on earth compared to moon's surface?
@AthAthanasius
@AthAthanasius 29 дней назад
Yeah, this. 1) The Moon is further out of the Earth's gravity well than when you're on the surface of the Earth, so time will tick slower closer to the Earth, *especially* if you're following an Earth geodesic at the further distance, rather than resisting it as on the surface. 2) The Moon is following a geodesic with respect to the Earth, so shouldn't have any GR time dilation with respect to the Earth, right ? 3) If you're on the surface of the Moon, and thus not following a geodesic with respect to it you'll have GR time dilation there, but less than if on the surface of the Earth. And if we trust Wikipedia to have been well sourced, and those sources correctly interpreted: "The two main differences to timekeeping on Earth is the length of a day on the Moon, being the lunar day or lunar month, observable from Earth as the lunar phases, and the differences between Earth and the Moon of how differently fast time progresses, with 24 hours on the Moon being 58.7 microseconds faster," en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timekeeping_on_the_Moon (the citation is www.theguardian.com/science/2024/apr/02/moon-nasa-coordinated-lunar-time which says "ecause there’s less gravity on the moon, time there moves a tad more quickly - 58.7 microseconds every day - compared with on Earth.", which should perhaps be taken with a pinch of salt, given the source).
@landonian1223
@landonian1223 28 дней назад
i thought i had relativity all wrong for a moment!
@belledetector
@belledetector 28 дней назад
The Lower gravity on the Moon makes time tick slightly faster - 58.7 microseconds faster than on Earth - every day!
@SmogandBlack
@SmogandBlack 28 дней назад
So I'm not the only one who got discombobulated hearing that... happy to read confirmation that among the inner planets we got the slowest time on surface 💪🏆
@greensteve9307
@greensteve9307 27 дней назад
The measurement of time is nominal, and it was created on Earth, so Earth-time is the default.
@EresTremulent
@EresTremulent 28 дней назад
Artemis III has already been postponed to 2027
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 28 дней назад
i bet the next us president is just going to cancel it happens every time.
@v0ldy54
@v0ldy54 28 дней назад
And It will probably be postponed even more because the way the project is being handled is an absolute joke
@mikeguilmette776
@mikeguilmette776 28 дней назад
@@v0ldy54 No doubt. There is no urgency, and I swear NASA is trying to re-invent the wheel while forgetting that they went to the moon before . . . in just six years.
@TeddyRumble
@TeddyRumble 28 дней назад
​@@belstar1128Obama certainly screwed space up totally.
@GalacticNovaOverlord
@GalacticNovaOverlord 26 дней назад
​@@mikeguilmette776cut the education budget for decades and privatize it and we get this
@Jiraton
@Jiraton 28 дней назад
What is abundant in this video is the expression "stepping stone".
@mrsmiastef
@mrsmiastef 29 дней назад
Absolutely love your videos! Thank you so very much!
@cavemanpretzel9520
@cavemanpretzel9520 29 дней назад
0:31 black hole sun wont you come
@Xeridanus
@Xeridanus 26 дней назад
And wash away the pain
@RhynoD2
@RhynoD2 28 дней назад
8:46 Um, actually - it's stillsuit, not stimsuit.
@Chaisz3r0
@Chaisz3r0 28 дней назад
Thank you! That ticked me off, too.
@DMTrance87
@DMTrance87 27 дней назад
Was looking for this comment. It's even more flabbergasting because the host seems like the kinda dude that should KNOW these things.
@davidemelia6296
@davidemelia6296 26 дней назад
@@DMTrance87 He's a working astrophysicist, not a nitpicking loser obsessively watching YT videos to point out irrelevant mistakes
@DMTrance87
@DMTrance87 25 дней назад
@@davidemelia6296 You should probably smoke a joint and eat a ice cream sandwich dude, you might be a happier person for it 🤣
@RhynoD2
@RhynoD2 22 дня назад
@@davidemelia6296 Matt also seems like the kind of guy that is too friendly to call other people losers.
@mungurk18
@mungurk18 28 дней назад
Just discovered this channel and I've been watching some of the older videos, this new intro animation👌
@Chon2052
@Chon2052 27 дней назад
GREAT EPISODE! Feels so Sci-Fi, but the way Matt presents it, it seems really possible! Thank you for the explanation, and let's hope we can see soon astronauts back in the moon!
@juneguts
@juneguts 29 дней назад
no wars on the moon please, signed me
@mallninja9805
@mallninja9805 28 дней назад
Nah, it'll all be advertising
@SuperMarioOddity
@SuperMarioOddity 28 дней назад
no >:( - America, probably
@susannehartl3067
@susannehartl3067 28 дней назад
Wherever mankind goes, war follows at its heels.
@death_parade
@death_parade 28 дней назад
What is happening in our global commons on the Earth, i.e. the oceans and Antarctica, is an accurate reflection of what will happen between the Great Powers on the Moon. Whatever happens on the Moon, even if it is war, it will help humanity grow.
@oleksiyalkhazov9201
@oleksiyalkhazov9201 28 дней назад
ruzzians should be banned in space then. That'd be great.
@Nuovoswiss
@Nuovoswiss 28 дней назад
That mechanism of solar wind hydrogen reacting with oxides on the lunar surface also explains why phosphine might be found in Venus's atmosphere. It has gaseous phosphorus oxides, which could react with enough solar wind to form PH3 and H2O.
@jo_crespo11235
@jo_crespo11235 26 дней назад
Excellent video, congrats.
@lh4394
@lh4394 29 дней назад
Can't wait 🖖 exultant vid again
@amit53shukla
@amit53shukla 28 дней назад
I was already pretty convinced on "rare earth hypothesis" of fermi paradox but after watching this video I am 100% sure we are way ahead of any aliens. It looks like it's designed to help humans develop faster.
@theslay66
@theslay66 28 дней назад
Yes. Maybe we don't see alien empires colonizing the whole galaxy because none of them could figure out there was something to colonize up there in the first place. Would we have figured out that the planets of our solar system are more than just moving stars in the sky, if we didn't had our moon as an example of such object ? Would we have built tools to magnify these objects, if we didn't know there was actually something of interest to observe ? And then, how do you get to the idea of gravity, without these observations ? How do you get to relativity without a concept of gravity, and no way to test it without access to space ? How do you understand nuclear reactions without E=mc² ? How do you get from there to quantum physics, to electronics and the wide set of technological advancements those theories provided us with ? It may be that most alien societies in the galaxy are at best stuck at an industrial level, for the sole reason that they don't have such object in the sky to drive their curiosity. And it even may be that those societies, without access to space, wouldn't even realize the damage their activity do to their own environment, and are stuck in a cycle of societies rising and self-destructing.
@AlekThunder47
@AlekThunder47 28 дней назад
Imo Fermi Paradox is simple, you don't get to have FTL travel. At least as far as we know, this seems pretty fundamental to our reality. And rare earth is also something that looks very much plausible.
@TeddyRumble
@TeddyRumble 28 дней назад
We are alone. It is our duty to populate the galaxy. At the least.
@sighfly2928
@sighfly2928 27 дней назад
If you do a little more digging, Zoo Hypothesis also makes a lot of sense. Our cage is on the edge of the oort cloud.
@ldbarthel
@ldbarthel 26 дней назад
My take is that we are not alone: we are isolated. While planets with all the prerequisites for a space-faring technological society may be rare, there are enough galaxies for even low-probability situations to abound. But with ever-increasing distances between galaxies, we'll never be pen-pals, let alone actually meet. (Even the Star Trek warp drives couldn't put a dent in the distance to Andromeda - and it's part of our local group!)
@Lukesab3r
@Lukesab3r 29 дней назад
My favorite show. Hooked for life!!
@DanG-xl5op
@DanG-xl5op 16 дней назад
I really appreciate the focus on the moon and just how unique it is. Nobody ever really talks about it. I never realized that our moon and its size relative to our planet is such a rare occurrence. Super cool!
@PPYTAO
@PPYTAO 27 дней назад
I'm in awe of the moon every time I see it, I may not clap, but I am humbled and appreciative of its beauty. I happen to have a tattoo of the moon so perhaps I'm biased
@ozzymandius666
@ozzymandius666 29 дней назад
To expect warfare not to follow where humans go is the height of folly.
@shaider1982
@shaider1982 29 дней назад
I think there were plans om how to wage one during the 1950's.
@LuisSierra42
@LuisSierra42 28 дней назад
War never changes
@Archgeek0
@Archgeek0 28 дней назад
So.... 'moon's not haunted yet, but it's gonna be?
@ecogreen123
@ecogreen123 28 дней назад
i would also argue that presuming people wouldn't be there to oppose it would also be quite folly.
@sisko89
@sisko89 28 дней назад
Muslims will never reach the moon so it's going to be fine
@jonathansykes4986
@jonathansykes4986 29 дней назад
We’re late on some books we checked out.
@LordBrittish
@LordBrittish 29 дней назад
I still owe a $2.00 late fee on a library book from 2001. The police are on their way to arrest me.
@karmasutra4774
@karmasutra4774 29 дней назад
@@LordBrittishThere was a news story the other day where a lady was arrested for not returning a book from years ago
@martinjohnson2549
@martinjohnson2549 28 дней назад
3:22 Quite cool to make this realisation.
@WilliamFord972
@WilliamFord972 28 дней назад
Hey-o! Appreciate the Dune analogy!
@demondoggy1825
@demondoggy1825 29 дней назад
Small correction, Falcon heavy will launch Dragon XL, a new larger cargo dragon.
@samuelprice538
@samuelprice538 29 дней назад
It's not clear at this point that dragon XL will ever be built or that FH will have any part to play in Artemis..one thing that is clear and omitted by Matt is that starship is needed and will be used for early human moon landings.
@gh0stcassette
@gh0stcassette 29 дней назад
Unless I'm missing something, aren't the Artemis missions using the SLS and the Orion craft, which are both NASA-developed?
@samuelprice538
@samuelprice538 29 дней назад
@@gh0stcassette Orion is not a lander.
@demondoggy1825
@demondoggy1825 28 дней назад
@@samuelprice538 Falcon heavy will launch Dragon XL, Unless Starship replaces it wholesale. Better? :V
@samuelprice538
@samuelprice538 28 дней назад
@@demondoggy1825 yeah I guess. That "unless" is doing more lifting than FH though🤣 I'm pretty sure dragonxl has been dropped. Once SS is flying reliably falcon will only be used for meat, and then only until SS is human rated.
@SecretRaginMan
@SecretRaginMan 23 дня назад
11:00 Major correction: Falcon Heavy will not launch Crew Dragon to the Moon. It will only launch Dragon XL, a specialized cargo spacecraft, to Gateway. That is after it launches a few elements of Gateway to the Moon. Lunar Starship, NASA's first choice for HLS (Human Lander System), will deliver crew to the Moon.
@redveinborneo4673
@redveinborneo4673 27 дней назад
All i want is some hd footage from the trip to and from the moon. I would watch that on a loop.
@piarasdonnachaidh2540
@piarasdonnachaidh2540 27 дней назад
Caption correction suggestion: @5:09 - 5:11 Matt: "Please continue your regular activities", Caption: "Please continue your regular duties"
@ToddTheMetalGod
@ToddTheMetalGod 29 дней назад
I already knew h2o could be used to make rocket fuel, not because I'm smart, but because i watched breaking bad.
@obijuanperoni
@obijuanperoni 28 дней назад
Really it's because with every year that passes where we haven't gone back conspiracy theorists have even more ammunition to say we've never been 😂
@windlessoriginals1150
@windlessoriginals1150 27 дней назад
Thank you
@Clover-qz8nl
@Clover-qz8nl 11 дней назад
🫶 amazing content 🍀 thank you for sharing it and for doing such a wonderful work
@quercus11
@quercus11 29 дней назад
Hang on, what's this about no humans on the moon for 50 years ? Wallace and Gromit went for a holiday to the moon not so long ago.
@robertstuckey6407
@robertstuckey6407 29 дней назад
That was more than 30 years ago
@Skylancer727
@Skylancer727 29 дней назад
Yeah and I saw a documentary called "Regular Show" where our two "cast members" went to the moon with a xylophone. "A bunch of baby ducks, send them to the moon".
@justalex4214
@justalex4214 28 дней назад
Didn't Gru steal the moon? That does count, right?
@zemorph42
@zemorph42 28 дней назад
Wasn't there a secret Nazi base on the moon too?
@justforplaylists
@justforplaylists 28 дней назад
Human "s"
@ShawnDrymen
@ShawnDrymen 29 дней назад
I'd have thought we would be doing Mario kart on the moon at this stage seen as they were driving on it back in the day 🫤
@markmartin5555
@markmartin5555 26 дней назад
I would have thought we would have been launching missions from the moon or a space elevator to an ISS, type station that we launch from.
@kidheadcase
@kidheadcase 12 дней назад
Why’s he looking so emotional in this one? Sparkly eyes… dude needs a hug!
@danieljensen2626
@danieljensen2626 27 дней назад
The human landing system does not involve falcon heavy or the dragon capsule. It's based on Starship (the new one).
@gecho194
@gecho194 28 дней назад
Dragon XL cargo craft. Though potentially Starship might fulfill that roll for an order of magnitude more capability instead if it becomes operational in time. NASA has been pretty quiet about Dragon Lunar Gateway progress.
@user-bb2ei1rw3v
@user-bb2ei1rw3v 28 дней назад
Spacex's Dragon will not be involved in Artemis. Starship will. It's a pretty wierd mistake to make...
@Vidya-dk5is
@Vidya-dk5is 22 дня назад
This was fun!
@CaryTheEagle
@CaryTheEagle 27 дней назад
You should do a video on mars sample return. It would be great to go over some of the issues NASA is facing with the current plan and talk about past mars sample return mission concepts + potential new ideas on reducing cost and complexity.
@brianbb177
@brianbb177 28 дней назад
When he said the space station would be crude and the lander would be crude I was thinking they should spend a little more and make it sophisticated.
@theves3040
@theves3040 28 дней назад
Why does time tick slower on the moon? Isn't it that time ticks slower the stronger the gravity is? So on earth time would be slower than on the moon?
@thomascerise1076
@thomascerise1076 24 дня назад
The way he said "The rest" had me rolling. We'll get there.
@charlesbrightman4237
@charlesbrightman4237 27 дней назад
'BATTERYLESS BATTERIES': To help power equipment in outer space: Potential endless energy source basically anywhere in this universe: a. Small aluminum cones with an electrical wire running through the center of the cones, cones spaced apart (not touching I'm thinking) but end to end. b. Electromagentic radiation energy in the atmosphere interacts with the aluminum cones. c. Jostled atoms and molecules in the cone eventually have some electrons try to get away from other electrons of which those electrons gather at the larger end of the cone, of which also creates an area of positive charge at the smaller end of the cone. d. The electron's in the wire are attracted to the positive end of the cone and the positive 'end' in the wire are attracted to the negatively charged end of the cone. e. Basically a 'battery' has been created inside the electrical wire itself, different areas of electrical potential. Basically a 'wire battery' or a 'batteryless battery', however one wanted to call it. f. Numerous cones placed end to end increases the number of 'batteries' in the wire. (In series to increase voltage, in parallel to increase amperage). * Via QED (Quantum Electro Dynamics) whereby electromagnetism interacts with electrons in atoms and molecules, one would have to find the correct 'em' frequency for the correct material being utilized for the cones. The shape of the cones could also come into play. The type and size of the wire as well as the type and thickness of the insulation between the cones and the wire would also be factors. * Of course also, possibly 2D triangles made up of certain materials with a conductor going down through the center of the triangle could possible achieve the same 'batteryless' battery system. * Plus possibly with the 2D concept, layered 2D's that absorb different energy frequencies, thereby increasing the net output.
@hansolo1571
@hansolo1571 28 дней назад
The World is more rushing towards WW3 rather then colonizing Moon. Almost willingly rushing.
@TheAltieresdelsent
@TheAltieresdelsent 28 дней назад
Not the world, the governments in Russia, France, Germany, Israel and USA are rushing to WW3, the world is watching in horror and everyone is complaining openly to how inhumane and reckless is what they are doing.
@justforplaylists
@justforplaylists 28 дней назад
WWIII or Cold War II? Also, some people think the Cold War was WWIII.
@lukepowers4749
@lukepowers4749 28 дней назад
War breeds innovation. Maybe people want better technology, as a lot of things we have today are results of inventions from WWII. Take radar, for example.
@mqb3gofjzkko7nzx38
@mqb3gofjzkko7nzx38 27 дней назад
​@@lukepowers4749 "Take radar, for example." False. Radar was discovered in 1922. Radar stations were being built in 1936. World war II started in 1939.
@lilith3953
@lilith3953 14 дней назад
The world or the US?
@pocketcork9530
@pocketcork9530 29 дней назад
Time ticks faster on the moon not slower
@GalacticNovaOverlord
@GalacticNovaOverlord 26 дней назад
Well faster from an earthing's perspective
@196cupcake
@196cupcake 28 дней назад
I'm on board with the modeling of the terminal part of the collision that lead to the earth/moon. Now, the part I'm most interested in is how it got to that point. I would have expected the earth/mood to be a single combined object. What was different here? If the two parts were in the same general orbital zone of the protoplanetary disk, then why were they not combined from the start? If one part - realistically there were many, many parts - came from much closer or much further away from the sun, then how did it end up around our area? Outside, or very eccentric orbit, seems most plausible, but then I would have expected Jupiter or Saturn to have soaked up those sorts of objects. Whatever happened, it seems to have been unusual and big. Venus and Uranus spin in the wrong direction. Something happened. Now it's a question of what happened.
@burtvanheel128
@burtvanheel128 28 дней назад
I would love to have an episode about orbital elevators; while we do not as of yet have a material strong enough to build one to geostationary orbit here on the planet, we do have materials of sufficient strength needed to build one on the moon. It would also be a way to get cost effective transport around the solar system, if slow, as described by Dr. Charles Sheffield : A system of momentum transfer satellites positioned at certain points in our system would serve very nicely.
@mattp1337
@mattp1337 25 дней назад
National and international programs visiting the Moon are a win for humanity as a whole. Private missions take us a step deeper into dystopia.
@KlaunFuhrer-du7fr
@KlaunFuhrer-du7fr 22 дня назад
Exactly... well said...
@LA-MJ
@LA-MJ 29 дней назад
None of this has answered WHY we need a CREWED mission on the Moon
@christophermullins7163
@christophermullins7163 29 дней назад
We dont. He better served contacting the under ocean and under glacier aliens for some new tech stuffs. They're everywhere.
@gh0stcassette
@gh0stcassette 29 дней назад
Well, with recent developments in fusion, fusion reactors are likely to become viable for large scale energy production in the coming decades, and the moon has a shitload of helium-3, which is an ideal fuel for fusion. So landing on the moon isn't the goal, establishing a base (which would eventually grow into a mining colony) is. A lunar base would also serve as a launching point for asteroid mining, and any given asteroid is likely to have literal trillions of dollars worth of various metals.
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 28 дней назад
because its hard. jfk 1962
@LA-MJ
@LA-MJ 28 дней назад
​@@gh0stcassetteflying robots should be cheaper. They have done it for 50y
@mikeguilmette776
@mikeguilmette776 28 дней назад
I'll admit, I've long wanted to see crewed missions throughout the solar system, but those thoughts are holdovers of my childhood fantasies of myself going to space. In recent years, I've come to realize that space exploration is going to gradually drop off and be approached much like ocean exploration is now - by a relative handful of people with niche interests.
@psychoedge
@psychoedge 29 дней назад
Love that we're getting back to our big night light. Hope we keep fair play up in space, even when companies and rivaling superpowers are at work.
@cenred4821
@cenred4821 26 дней назад
You misspoke Matt. You said time moves slower on the moon. It moves faster. Love your show.
@VladTchompalov
@VladTchompalov 29 дней назад
It's an incredible time to be alive
@MrDino1953
@MrDino1953 21 день назад
It’s always an incredible time to be alive, whenever that time happens to be.
@okankyoto
@okankyoto 29 дней назад
An important thing about the Gateway is that the NRHO orbit it is in has the lowest ∆V requirements to enter and exit from interplanetary space. So its an ideal location from which to launch and receive anything from samples to a full Mars transfer vehicle (parts of which are to be prototyped on Gateway) which are also much easier to re-use. All thanks to how big our moon is!
@firexgodx980
@firexgodx980 28 дней назад
Starship is the only rocket capable of bringing humans to Mars and back, and it won't use gateway. Starship makes so much of what NASA is doing obsolete.
@fwiffo
@fwiffo 28 дней назад
@@firexgodx980 Starship can't do any of those things.
@theovanelsberg1937
@theovanelsberg1937 28 дней назад
​@@fwiffo What makes you think this? NASA's SLS (soon obsolete) is only capable of bringing people to the moon in NHRO. From there SpaceX Starship (and maybe others) will land them on the Moon and back. Starship (which is fully reusable) also will be the only solution to get huge amounts of resources needed into orbit. And it is designed to eventually take people to Mars.
@linecraftman3907
@linecraftman3907 28 дней назад
It also has to do with maintaining communication with earth at all times and heat management
@shanent5793
@shanent5793 28 дней назад
Lowest compared to what. A distant orbit about the lagrange points has an even lower Earth access delta-v, which is relevant because departures should have their periapsis as close to Earth as possible to convert all that potential energy into velocity
@jorelc6
@jorelc6 28 дней назад
needing to get just to the moon and refueling from there fixes a lot of problems tbf! "the next" bigger space ship could be waiting for the crew at the moon and we just need a "light" rocket to get them there. I like all this :D
@TorbenAnderson
@TorbenAnderson 17 дней назад
Great show, thank you! You mentioned the role of private space companies, but curious if more details can be shared. Blue Origin and SpaceX are both, parts of the plans for the moon. I think there are a bunch of other smaller providers for habs and suits, etc. that are also emerging.
@DekuScrubby
@DekuScrubby 29 дней назад
SPACE RACE is the type of COMPETITION and RIVALRY we need. Not War for territories here on this rock.
@filonin2
@filonin2 29 дней назад
So war for territory on a different rock.
@belstar1128
@belstar1128 28 дней назад
mister Putin i challenge you to a race !
@charlethemagne5466
@charlethemagne5466 28 дней назад
@@filonin2 still better than this shitty rock that everyone ever has had to die on. Im not interested in being like our primitive and uninformed ancestors.
@osmotreno
@osmotreno 28 дней назад
No, we need the cooperation of all humanity, but I’m afraid this is impossible now and will only happen after some catastrophic event with billions of deaths.
@MarioXcore1
@MarioXcore1 28 дней назад
@@filonin2yes
@markovcd
@markovcd 29 дней назад
When I was like 10 or 9 I was thinking about the moon and figuring out we can have space station on it to have launching pad to the universe. How proud I was of myself when I saw the same exact idea few years later on some documentary show.
@Skylancer727
@Skylancer727 29 дней назад
The issue is it's reliant on the idea we can make fuel on the moon. That's a pretty rough ask. At best we've made methods to make fuel on Mars or Venus. But the moon has no atmosphere. We'd have to process rocks to make fuel which is way more costly than on earth.
@Starchaser38
@Starchaser38 28 дней назад
​@@Skylancer727 Wouldn't it be severely damaging to the Moon, too?
@Howtheheckarehandleswit
@Howtheheckarehandleswit 28 дней назад
@@Starchaser38 Not really. The moon isn't Earth sized, but it's still absolutely enormous on a human scale, we couldn't realistically damage the moon in any meaningful way even if we tried.
@NameUnknownz
@NameUnknownz 28 дней назад
​@@Skylancer727Moon has a very thin weak atmosphere technically 🤓
@Howtheheckarehandleswit
@Howtheheckarehandleswit 28 дней назад
@@Skylancer727 No one was ever suggesting using the Martian atmosphere to make fuel (I don't know about Venus, that might be viable), the plan was always to electrolyze water from it's polar ice caps, which is pretty much exactly the same thing being suggested for use on the Moon here, with the added benefit that the Moon has much less intense surface gravity and doesn't have dust storms to cover up the solar panels powering the whole thing, and it's close enough to Earth that the people running the whole operation can be cycled out regularly and have halfway decent communication with Earth while they're there.
@xymaryai8283
@xymaryai8283 7 дней назад
the reason why Gateway is controversial is not because its in orbit, but which orbit it is in. it has much higher and more complicated orbit which achieves constant communication, but with such large tradeoff that its considered by some (and me) to be nearly infeasible for a gateway station. another of the main reasons it was chosen is because the rocket and capsule aren't actually capable of getting into more useful, low lunar orbit. which frankly, should call for a redesign.
@SnowySleet
@SnowySleet 25 дней назад
Imagine the benefits to science and our species development if the nations of the world could overcome their differences and work together to achieve these huge milestones. Our potential for development would almost be limitless ✌️
@JS-fd5oh
@JS-fd5oh 29 дней назад
It's all fun and games until bone loss enters the chat.
@ryanb9749
@ryanb9749 28 дней назад
It's probably much better on the moon than zero g
@alazarbisrat1978
@alazarbisrat1978 27 дней назад
they're not gonna spend their whole life there, just some short and long trips
@LoLaSn
@LoLaSn 26 дней назад
@@ryanb9749 Unlikely, the lunar gravity is only about 1/6th of the Earth's It's better, sure, but not by much Mars sits at about 1/3rd, so still nowhere near ideal
@STho205
@STho205 23 дня назад
And sharp, seal cutting, regolith dust
@ryanb9749
@ryanb9749 23 дня назад
@@STho205 idk how we can fix that one. Artificial rivers prior to settlement?
@aliali-ce3yf
@aliali-ce3yf 29 дней назад
resources and control - that is what motivates any country
@ciarancullen9703
@ciarancullen9703 29 дней назад
theres no resources on the moon and nothing to control once you are up there
@benjaminmeusburger4254
@benjaminmeusburger4254 28 дней назад
it is not any more most countries on the world had their last conflict with change of the actual border some ~80 years ago at WW2 the rest was civil wars and the 'cold war bullshit' between USA/sovjet union by provoking proxy wars in the middle east Your statement is 100% true for the time when countries were controlled by nobility / monarchs resources are exploited by private companies and they can not influence a democracy as easily as indiviuals (kings etc) to unprovoked attack/war - at least that is not the case outside of the US
@theslay66
@theslay66 28 дней назад
To be true : it's what motivates any life form.
@Jokers_Yugioh666
@Jokers_Yugioh666 29 дней назад
Resources could be a huge reason!
@velvet_bass
@velvet_bass 28 дней назад
Saw you at texas eclipse! Pleasure to meet you!
@STho205
@STho205 23 дня назад
Did he fly there and rent a car to get around?
@jeffallen3382
@jeffallen3382 29 дней назад
Maybe they figured the last 50+ years they wasted that it was about time to get going again?
@garysnider5342
@garysnider5342 29 дней назад
We know more exponentially more about Mars than 50+ years ago. But yeah, they wasted all that time eh?
@numbdigger9552
@numbdigger9552 29 дней назад
They realized that creating a moon base is exponentially easier than even landing a human on mars.
@chrimony
@chrimony 28 дней назад
It's only because China is going that all of a sudden it's now become a priority again. And China is only going to prove themselves. The whole thing is a boondoggle.
@dionysusbacchus4321
@dionysusbacchus4321 28 дней назад
It is rather simple, really: Soviet Union started the entire competitive race thing, with the demise of the former the US lost any interest and motivation for doing meaningful things in space exploration. The only reason that the race is likely be renewed now is: China :) Simple as that.
@dionysusbacchus4321
@dionysusbacchus4321 28 дней назад
@@garysnider5342 It is true, it terms of space exploration the time has absolutely been wasted. Thank the bing bang theory and religious institutions for the imaging technology (telescopes) being still developed. Otherwise - there is no interested parties to pay for any of this. Until now, when the military may get involved :(
@adriank8792
@adriank8792 29 дней назад
Because it's always been our dream to set up a permanent Moon base and then go to Mars to do the same. Luckily with SpaceX's Starship this is finally possible. Previous rockets couldn't take the amount of mass needed to set up an actual outpost so all we could do is visit for a few days
@NeinStein
@NeinStein 29 дней назад
That is: with SpaceX's Starship this might perhaps be possible in some undetermined future.
@Wrociem
@Wrociem 29 дней назад
Starship has a long way to go, it is not a functioning rocket and who knows when it will be. People should stop thinking in fantasies especially when it comes to musk
@oBCHANo
@oBCHANo 29 дней назад
If you think Starship makes this possible then you haven't paid any attention what so ever to Starship, lmao.
@filonin2
@filonin2 29 дней назад
@@NeinStein It didn't take them that long to develop the move successful rocket ever.
@SahasaV
@SahasaV 28 дней назад
@@oBCHANo Last test only failed on re-entry tho, right? Don't really need re-entry capabilities to plop some junk on the moon. Like, if they quit now, that's still a perfectly good orbital delivery vehicle.
@bazpearce9993
@bazpearce9993 27 дней назад
I was imaging the Moon on a few nights (and days) this week. :)
@christeanaz
@christeanaz 28 дней назад
I hope one day in the future, all the nations can work together in the pursuit of space travel.
@gh0stcassette
@gh0stcassette 28 дней назад
You should watch For All Mankind, it's set in an alternate history where the USSR beat the US to the moon, which caused the space race to continue escalating for decades, they had moon bases in the 70s, lunar mining operations in the 80s, and a Mars base in the 90s
@dionysusbacchus4321
@dionysusbacchus4321 28 дней назад
@@gh0stcassette The premise is slightly flawed: the space race stopped, not because someone landed on the Moon, but because the USSR fell apart. E.g. right before its end, the USSR produced a mind-blowing Buran spacecraft.
@davestier6247
@davestier6247 28 дней назад
​@dionysusbacchus4321 it's hard to separate the two, the space race and massive military build up definitely played a part in the disintegration of the USSR
@CaptainXJ
@CaptainXJ 28 дней назад
Not until religion is finally relegated to history where it belongs.
@TeddyRumble
@TeddyRumble 28 дней назад
Never going to happen. Something about competition for things. Water, food, women.
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