Good news. Not only does Real clear Politics have an easily accessible  
section
( just scroll down their page ) for Religion, I just discovered  that they 
also have a
new Science section featuring hot new science articles from the world  
press.
Maybe Ernie would  wish to do a write up for the occasion, since  he knows 
far more
about the hard sciences than I ever will.
 
Billy
 
===================================================.
USA, India, Russia and China seek to get the Mars ASAP 
probably Europe in the mix also
 
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The Race to the Red Planet
By Jeremy A. Kaplan 
Published October 27, 2010 | FoxNews.com
 
A 50-million-mile target has been set, a straight spaceshot with a clear  
(though distant) goal. But who will make the first footprint on Mars? 
Though both Russia and China have put men in space and say they hope 
someday  to set foot on the moon, the United States remains the only country to 
do 
 so. Yet Russia and China and some other countries have also publicly  
articulated a vision for manned space exploration that includes a more distant  
target: Mars.  
Now reports of a new deep-space satellite suggest that China intends to  
launch toward Mars -- and as soon as 2013. It's too early to call it a race,  
says Henry Hertzfeld, research professor of space policy and international  
affairs in the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University. But  
China's Martian orbiter may indicate a second destination for the country's  
space program. 
"It's natural that if they are serious about space exploration (which, it 
is  clear, they are), Mars is a challenge beyond the Moon. Just as it is for 
us,"  Hertzfeld told FoxNews.com in an e-mail.  
The new project will make use of technologies  developed for China's first 
lunar satellite, launched in 2007, according to a  report from the _Xinhua 
news agency_ 
(http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/china/2010-10/22/c_13570443.htm) . The 
plan was based on research conducted  by the China Academy of 
Space Technology (CAST), said Huang Jiangchuan, an  expert at a forum on 
China's space technology. 
He described the technologies likely to be used -- including ones to boost  
the satellite's payload capability and exploration accuracy -- as "already 
quite  advanced," according to the report. 
Hertzfeld nevertheless cautioned that the differences between the 1960s and 
 the 21st century make for a very different competitive landscape. There 
are more  countries now with space capabilities and access to space; there is 
much more  cooperation among nations; and the costs are astronomical. 
"I think it's too early to tell if we will engage in a true 'race' to Mars 
as  we did with the USSR to the moon," he said.  
But the official messages from governments seem to tell a different story,  
with the U.S., India, China, and Russia all declaring that they hope to 
reach  Mars at around the same time.  
"By the mid-2030s, I believe we can send humans to  orbit Mars and return 
them safely to Earth," President Obama said this year when  he announced 
America's new goal's for _NASA_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/topics/scitech/space/nasa.htm#r_src=ramp) .  "And a 
landing on Mars will follow. And I expect to be 
around to see it." 
But will we be first? India has plans of its own for  the Red Planet. 
Indian Space Research Organization (_ISRO_ (http://www.isro.org/) ) chairman K. 
Radhakrishnan  said Monday that Mars was on its radar as well. 
"A mission to Mars, for several reasons, has become a priority for us,"  
Radhakrishnan said -- though he admitted that India would not build the lander 
 that would take its Chandrayan 2 program to the surface. That vehicle is 
being  developed by Russia, he explained, although a rover "is currently 
being  fabricated in Indian laboratories."  
Nevertheless, India has publicly stated that it intends to go to Mars by  
2030.  
So the race is on.Yet many rules and parameters governing the battle remain 
 unresolved, Hertzfeld said. 
"If there is a race, the major and minor players are yet to be determined," 
 he told FoxNews.com. "And unlike the Cold War space race, it may not be 
one to  show off technological superiority -- but one that is focused on 
partnerships  for resource needs (terrestrially, such as oil and food), and/or 
political  standing. Commercial interests on celestial bodies would be a 
possibility, but a  longer term one." 
Hertzfeld noted the key issue standing before the U.S. and NASA when it 
comes  to reaching Mars: money. And he asked: "Will either the U.S. or China 
(or  someone else) commit the large amount of capital over a long period of 
time to  these projects?" 
NASA is currently coordinating with a variety of commercial businesses to  
facilitate manned missions to Mars, including SpaceX, the United Launch 
Alliance  (a partnership that includes Boeing Corp.), Orbital Sciences Corp., 
and others.  Which one will successfully build our next-generation rocket for 
manned  spaceflight remains a much debated question -- and representatives 
from NASA did  not respond to multiple requests from FoxNews.com for comments 
for this  story. 
NASA isn't resting on its laurels, however, or  leaving the entire mission 
up to private enterprise. The space agency has given  the green light for 
development of a 2013 Mars orbiter mission to investigate  the mystery of how 
Mars lost much of its atmosphere, a program called the Mars  Atmosphere and 
Volatile Evolution (_Maven_ (http://www.nasa.gov/maven) ) mission. 
In addition, the space agency plans yet another in  its series of Martian 
rovers, this one a science laboratory called _Curiosity_ 
(http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/msl/building_curiosity.html)  intended to 
collect soil 
samples and rock cores and  analyze them for organic compounds. _NASA has just  
installed a webcam_ (http://marsprogram.jpl.nasa.gov/msl/index.cfm)  to let 
the public watch Curiosity's assembly and testing.  But months of work remain 
before the car-sized rover is ready for launch from  Cape Canaveral. 
"The launch period for Curiosity (the Mars Science Laboratory mission) is  
fall 2011. The specific launch period is Nov. 25 to Jan. 18, 2011," said Guy 
 Webster of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 
NASA has sent a half dozen probes to Mars already, including the well known 
 rovers Spirit and Opportunity that landed there in 2004 and have sent back 
a  wealth of data. In addition, the Phoenix lander hit the planet on May 
25, 2008,  on a mission to explore the planet's icy soil, and the 
Reconnaissance Orbiter  has been capturing pictures of Mars since 2006. Earlier 
craft 
Express and  Odyssey also gleaned knowledge of our distant neighbor. 
In fact, rather than a race, NASA characterizes  relations with China as 
friendly. NASA administrator _Charles  Bolden_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/topics/politics/charles-bolden.htm#r_src=ramp)  just 
returned from a trip to China 
that he credited with laying a  foundation for future dialogue and 
cooperation between the two space  programs. 
"Although my visit did not include consideration of any specific proposals  
for future cooperation, I believe that my delegation's visit to China 
increased  mutual understanding on the issue of human spaceflight and space 
exploration,  which can form the basis for further dialogue and cooperation in 
a 
manner that  is consistent with the national interests of both of our 
countries," Bolden said  in an Oct. 25 statement. 
If dates slip and none of these programs succeed in putting a man on Mars,  
the first footprint on the Red Planet may end up surprising everyone. 
Russia has  announced plans to return to space -- using monkeys to pilot its 
rockets. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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