UO astronomer expects NASA to skip moon walk.Byline: Greg Bolt The Register-Guard Rather than another visit to the next-door neighbor, America should drop in on someone new when it takes its next big trip into space, University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities. astronomer Greg Bothun says. President Bush may propose next week a return to the moon as a steppingstone step·ping·stone n. 1. A stone that provides a place to step, as in crossing a stream. 2. An advantageous position for advancement toward a goal. for a trip to Mars, but Bothun says it would make more sense to head straight for Mars. After all, why waste time and money going back to a lifeless life·less adj. 1. Having no life; inanimate. 2. Having lost life; dead. See Synonyms at dead. 3. Not inhabited by living beings; not capable of sustaining life. 4. moon when you could go to the Red Planet, a whole world with tantalizing tan·ta·lize tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach. hints that it might once have harbored life? That's why he doubts that the road to Mars will include a pit stop on the moon, regardless of what President Bush has to say in his upcoming space policy speech. "If this ever materializes on the NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. mission time line, I'm quite confident we will skip the part about going to the moon, because that's not necessary to achieve the main scientific objective of a manned mission to Mars You can assist by [ editing it] now. ," he said. "That's an incredibly expensive side trip." Bothun thinks NASA privately has been steering a course for a Mars mission for a while and would get there in the next 20 years or so even without a presidential push. But unlike America's history-making race to be the first nation on the moon, he doesn't think putting people on Mars would be a one-country event. Given the cost of such an undertaking and the conservative fiscal environment in Washington, a multinational collaboration is more likely, he said. That's bolstered by the fact that other nations recently have shown as much interest in space as the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . "I think it's politically naive in the real world today to believe this is a U.S.-only mission," he said. "And at the rate the Europeans and Japanese and Chinese are investing in their space programs, there's plenty of assets to collaborate with." Mars fills the bill for the next great space objective for one reason: life. Bothun said a base on the moon won't bring people any closer to answering the greatest scientific question of the age, which is whether it's possible for life to form anywhere other than Earth. He said that's a question that ultimately overrides budgets and politics and cross-border relations. The answer is so important that finding it might provide the same kind of thrust to a manned Mars mission that the America-Soviet rivalry gave to the moon race. "Humanity needs to know scientifically whether the conditions for life occur here or whether they're more ubiquitous," Bothun said. "That's a pretty big question. I don't think you can put a price tag on tag on Verb to add at the end of something: a throwaway remark, tagged on at the end of a casual conversation Verb 1. answering that question." |
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