volcanopele
Member

Registered: Jul 2001
Location: Tucson, AZ
Posts: 366 |
quote: Originally posted by miradu2000
NO WAY! You get to work with those babies?!?! awesome..
sorry to hear about it. Hopefully the evil governemtn of the USA will increase NASA's budget 10 fold, and descrease the militarys 10 fold..
Well I don't really work with them. I just make suggestions like, "Maybe we should point the camera on that observation a little bit farther north to capture that really active volcano?"
Actually, how about neither on your suggestion? If you give NASA TOO much money, they will just waste on some stupid project like the International Space Station. You need to gradually increase the budget and make it gets allocated to the office of space science, and not to the ISS. Even at the Office of Sapce Science, priorities need to be reevaluated. Right now they have plans to send a 1.2 billion dollar probe to Europa. Now Europa is interesting with its ocean and possibility for life, but its too narrow in what it plans to do. Its main scientific objective is to determine if Europa has an ocean and if so, how thick is it? We already know from Galileo magnetospheric data that it does have an ocean and based on theoretical modeling, its ice crust (which overlays its ocean) is on the order of 5-20 km thick, too thick for "cryobot" to melt its way down to it. So while Europa is an interesting world, its not 1.2 billion dollars interesting. Maybe they can send that probe to Io? Something is always happening and I would love to watch vidoes of lava flows flowing in real time. Can't get that kind of thing anywhere except for on earth. Volcanic eruptions on earth, on average, are puny. The average lava breakout on Io is the size of Kilauea's flows.
As for the military, my dad is retired military and he could use a higher pension.
Jason
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