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A Bigger Accomplishment Than Landing On Moon?

Everything that is sub-orbital or beyond.
 

AndesSMF (Founding Member) 26 Mar 12, 16:59Post
James Cameron Now at Ocean's Deepest Point

Explorer-filmmaker reaches Mariana Trench on deepest ever solo sub dive.


http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news ... sc20120325

12 people have made it to the moon, but James Cameron is only the third person to make it to the bottom of the Earth.

Since I really dislike him as a human being, it is difficult for me to salute him for such a great achievement. {thumbsup}
Einstein said two things were infinite; the universe, and stupidity. He wasn't sure about the first, but he was certain about the second.
miamiair (netAirspace FAA) 26 Mar 12, 17:04Post
AndesSMF wrote:12 people have made it to the moon, but James Cameron is only the third person to make it to the bottom of the Earth ocean.



FIFY
And let's get one thing straight. There's a big difference between a pilot and an aviator. One is a technician; the other is an artist in love with flight. — E. B. Jeppesen
Allstarflyer (Database Editor & Founding Member) 26 Mar 12, 17:23Post
The next big accomplishment after the Moon landing will be a (faster than) light speed engine.
GQfluffy (Database Editor & Founding Member) 26 Mar 12, 17:50Post
There will never be a faster than light engine (or an engine that propels you faster than light)...teleportation is the next step. {thumbsup}
Teller of no, fixer of everything, friend of the unimportant and all around good guy; the CAD Monkey
DXing 27 Mar 12, 17:28Post
AndesSMF wrote:
James Cameron Now at Ocean's Deepest Point

Explorer-filmmaker reaches Mariana Trench on deepest ever solo sub dive.



James Cameron, the next Amelia Earhart or Steve Fossett.
What's the point of an open door policy if inside the open door sits a closed mind?
graphic 02 Apr 12, 02:38Post
GQfluffy wrote:There will never be a faster than light engine (or an engine that propels you faster than light)...teleportation is the next step. {thumbsup}


Following Einstein's theories, wouldn't these be the same thing?
JeffSFO (Photo Quality Screener & Founding Member) 02 Apr 12, 03:59Post
A Bigger Accomplishment Than Landing On Moon?


Definitely not. It's exponentially more difficult and expensive to get a man to the moon (and back) than it is to get to the bottom of the Marianas Trench.

Just think of the difference in man hours and personnel needed to develop, build, and run the Apollo program compared to Piccard's bathyscaphe and Cameron's submersible. At its height, the Apollo program had 400,000 people involved and consumed more than 4% of the federal budget.

http://historical.whatitcosts.com/facts-apollo-space-program-pg3.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budget_of_NASA
AndesSMF (Founding Member) 02 Apr 12, 04:28Post
OK, that's a pretty good comparison. Though I guess the reason why so few have gone down to the bottom is because relatively speaking little money has been spent on this program.
Einstein said two things were infinite; the universe, and stupidity. He wasn't sure about the first, but he was certain about the second.
GQfluffy (Database Editor & Founding Member) 02 Apr 12, 04:33Post
graphic wrote:
GQfluffy wrote:There will never be a faster than light engine (or an engine that propels you faster than light)...teleportation is the next step. {thumbsup}


Following Einstein's theories, wouldn't these be the same thing?

Touche. ;)
Teller of no, fixer of everything, friend of the unimportant and all around good guy; the CAD Monkey
JeffSFO (Photo Quality Screener & Founding Member) 02 Apr 12, 04:45Post
AndesSMF wrote:Though I guess the reason why so few have gone down to the bottom is because relatively speaking little money has been spent on this program.


Agreed.
Fumanchewd 08 Apr 12, 06:46Post
It's not exploration, but IMO viable Fusion to produce energy will be the next great scientific accomplishment.
"Give us a kiss, big tits."
Arniepie 28 Apr 12, 01:16Post
Fumanchewd wrote:It's not exploration, but IMO viable Fusion to produce energy will be the next great scientific accomplishment.


Agreed,

Personally I think the Germans are on to something with their newest Stellarator , the Wendelstein 7-X, under construction in Greifswald near Peenemunde (where the V weapons originated from), under the supervision of the Max Planck institute.

It will be the worlds first model of a useable fusion reactor if all works as planned (and by the sound of it , it really looks very promissing).
-a beta value of about 5%,
-a 30 minute runtime (and longer later on) which means a full working stationary running reactor
-an efficient and very compact heath exchange system
-economical to build and easy to maintain while running.
-etc....

http://www.ipp.mpg.de/ippcms/de/for/pro ... index.html
Image

I guess it helps having a Chancellor (Frau Merkel) who is so well versed in
all things scientific (Drs in Quantum physics)
MD11Engineer 28 Apr 12, 13:49Post
Well, we are also involved in the Tokamak type fusion reactor ITER, which is currently being built in southern France (There exist two design philosophies concerning fusion reactors, the Tokamak and the Stellerator, which differ mostly in the way the magnetic fields for the plasma containment are generated).

ITER is supposed to deliver ten times more energy output than input and will be used to tweak the basic design. The next step then will be a commercial reactor to be connected to the power grid.

Jan
 

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