Μύ Μύ Μύ Μύ Μύ Μύ The documentary Mission Control: The Unsung Heroes of Apollo, is now available in theatres and on demand. Thatβs what a Facebook ad told me this evening as I sit down to type.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Thatβs quite interesting, since earlier in the day as I folded clothes, I listened to the audiobook of A Man on the Moon: The Voyages of the Apollo Astronauts by Andrew Chaikin. Iβm still early in the book, and just got through the part where Apollo 8 made mankindβs first venture to lunar orbit.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ This book comes on the heels of Failure Is Not an Option, by Gene Kranz. Kranz was a key member of mission control in the early days of space exploration. In the movie Apollo 13, heβs played by Ed Harris. Heβs one of the key players featured in Mission Control. Itβs hard not to notice that the people in that documentary are, well, very old.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ And as I crawled out of bed this holiday weekend, my son was watching The Martian, the recent sci-fi flick about an astronaut played by Matt Damon being accidentally left on Mars for over a year before being rescued.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Through all of this, I kept thinking to myself that man last set foot on the moon before I was born, and who knows if I will live long enough to see it happen again? All my life, experts have said we were 30 years from visiting Mars. Well over 30 years later, weβre still likely 30 years away.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ In 2011, at the Williston Basin Conference in Regina, I had the privilege of talking to and shaking the hand of Dr. Harrison Schmitt, the only geologist to walk on the moon, and one of only 12 men to do the same.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Schmitt was part of Apollo 17, the last manned mission to the moon, and technically the second last man to walk on it. Thatβs semantics, really, since itβs just the order of who scaled the ladder last to get into the lunar module.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ As a geology conference, attracting him was quite a score. For me, meeting Schmitt was on par with meeting Donald Trump. Maybe higher, upon reflection. Trump didnβt walk on the moon.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ But along the lines of Kranz being old, the astronauts he helped get to the moon are also old. And of the 12 who actually landed, half are now dead.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ One of the things that keeps being mentioned in the books Iβve been listening to was President John F. Kennedyβs 1961 invocation to reach the moon before the end of the decade, not because it was easy, because it was hard. His words were inspirational to, well, everyone, it seems.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ But once that was accomplished, it seems like things just went downhill, especially the impetus to actually get it done.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ The space shuttle program has come and gone, and all the remaining shuttles are now museum pieces.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ The new Orion spacecraft, meant to bring Americans (and hopefully a few Canadians) back into space, looks an awful lot like Apollo, except that itβs over 40 years late. On May 12, NASA announced it intends on launching the Orion in Exploration Mission-1 (EM-1), but will be doing so without a crew. Oh, and it now wonβt happen until 2019.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ The last flight of the space shuttle took place in 2011, but hey, thereβs no rush, here.
Elon Musk keeps trying to land rockets for their eventual re-use. Various ventures are trying to commercialize space travel. Musk wants to send people to Mars, eventually. Given how slow NASA have become, letβs hope Musk leaves them in the dust.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Hereβs what I donβt get β why is this so hard? Compared to what it took to get the Apollo program together, when every mission had to figure out some set of unknowns, weβve been going to space for a long time now. Most of the unknowns are now known.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Thereβs more computing power in my office than in all of NASA in the 1960s. Itβs common to have CNC machining capabilities now in most machine shops. There is so much we can do now that is far beyond what was βspace ageβ back then. So why donβt we just do it?
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ The Space Launch System, which carries the Orion, is NASAβs project to get back in the game. Canadaβs training its newest class of astronauts. Whether any of them will actually fly or not is another story.
ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Iβm not holding my breath.
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ΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύΜύ Brian Zinchuk is editor of Pipeline News. He can be reached at [email protected].