I realize that do-it-yourself is far from a complete solution to the problem of 
"how to colonize space".  However, I do believe the next trip to Mars will owe 
more to ground-up innovation like this than the top-down efforts of the first 
moon launch.

-- Ernie P.

http://radar.oreilly.com/2010/11/make-24---open-sourcing-space.html
Open sourcing space

The current issue of MAKE magazine might be called SPACE: The DIY Frontier. We 
look at how a variety of makers are exploring space and doing work that once 
required large budgets and a team of NASA scientists. Now with off-the-shelf 
components and your own initiative, you can build and launch your own satellite 
or weather balloon. This science-oriented issue of MAKE shows you how to roll 
your own space program. My introduction to the issue is posted below

With one exception, Silicon Valley lacks monumental landmarks that signify its 
importance as a world capital of technology innovation. That exception is 
Hangar One at Moffett Field in Mountain View, Calif., which is the home of NASA 
Ames Research Center.

Hangar One stands out like a Great Pyramid visible from Highway 101. Built to 
house airships called dirigibles or zeppelins, Hangar One opened in 1933. The 
floor inside this freestanding structure covers eight acres, and its enormous 
clamshell doors were designed for the passage of these airships. The hangar 
reputedly creates its own climate inside, bringing rain unexpectedly to parties 
that were organized there, back before it was closed.

Today, the future of this historic structure depends on NASA and various groups 
debating whether to restore it or tear it down. (Its walls are covered with 
siding that contains asbestos and PCBs.) Those who would preserve it recognize 
its power as a cultural symbol. While the days of airships are mostly gone — 
Airship Ventures now runs zeppelin tours from Moffett Field — Hangar One 
remains an inspiration.

Inspiration was a by-product of the space race in the United States. Many, like 
me, thought of themselves as part of the space program, following the Mercury 
and Apollo missions, even if our role was limited to watching TV. The goal of a 
moon landing inspired young men and women to become scientists and engineers. 
They entered NASA with great enthusiasm to become part of something as big as 
they could imagine.

Many had satisfactory careers inside NASA, while others grew frustrated as NASA 
became a slow-moving bureaucracy. Increasingly, NASA made it harder (and more 
costly) to do anything. So, like the age of dirigibles, the U.S. space program 
that I grew up with is gone, and like Hangar One, its future is uncertain. Yet 
our fascination with space is not.

One cause for hope is that the future of space exploration doesn't depend 
solely on NASA. Bruce Pittman, who works in the Space Portal group at NASA 
Ames, calls this future "Space 2.0." If Space 1.0 was a "one-size-fits-all" 
approach with NASA controlling everything, Pittman says, then Space 2.0 depends 
upon "massive participation," harnessing enthusiasm and expertise in places 
around the globe.

Space 2.0 represents the open sourcing of space exploration, a new model that 
could lead to faster, cheaper ways to develop space technologies.

It's also a call for makers to participate in research and development. Just as 
we're seeing amateurs play a role in astronomy and other fields, amateurs will 
be undertaking projects in support of a next-generation space program. For 
example, Lynn Harper of NASA Ames points out that the commercialization of 
space will mean a huge increase in suborbital flights, and a growing field of 
research in microgravity. She says this research requires "not just hundreds of 
experiments to send into space, but hundreds of thousands."

In this "DIY Space" issue of MAKE, you'll meet all kinds of makers, some inside 
NASA but many more outside the agency. We look at how to build your own 
homebrew satellites that take payloads into near-space and even into orbit. We 
show you how to build fast, cheap gadgets to analyze galactic spectra or 
eavesdrop on the space station. We also look at a variety of space-related 
projects seeking the participation of makers like you, from smartphone 
satellites to lunar mining robots.

For his report "Rocket Men," Charles Platt interviewed the makers of a new 
private space industry. He also visited the Mojave Air and Space Port, where 
individuals and small companies set up to do space research. Spaceport manager 
Stuart Witt says, "I offer people the freedom to experiment." That's all you 
really need. The future, if you're so inspired, is up to you.

You can find MAKE: DIY Space Projects on newsstands and at Maker SHED.


Related:

Space IT, the final frontier
Can open source guide a moon mission?
Tracking the signal of emerging technologies

-- 
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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