Diskussion:Mars to Stay

Letzter Kommentar: vor 9 Jahren von Palitzsch250 in Abschnitt Erste Vorschläge

Erste Vorschläge

Bearbeiten

Über z.B. diesen Post: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/one-way-ticket-to-mars.439913/#post-2943007

zu diesem: http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/showpost.php?p=1282849&postcount=7

„..."The One-Way Manned Space Mission," IAS 62-131, John M. Cord and Leonard M. Seale; paper presented at the Institute of the Aerospace Sciences National Summer Meeting in Los Angeles, California, June 19-22, 1962.

...Cord & Seales look briefly at one-way Venus and Mars missions, pointing out that "whether it is based on a one-man mission, a two- or three-man mission it will be possible to send a one-way mission probably years in advance of missions with return capabilities. . ." They then predict that the one-way approach will be applied "to other planets and out of the solar system." (Cord & Seale’s concept was, by the way, the basis for Hank Searl’s novel The Pilgrim Project, which was filmed as the 1968 thriller Countdown starring James Caan and Robert Duvall.) (For another desperate bid to seize the U.S. lead in space)...“

„..."One-Way to Mars," AAS 96-322, George William Herbert, The Case for Mars IV: Making Mars an Affordable Destination, Kelly R. McMillen, editor, 1996, pp. 235-244; paper presented at the Case for Mars VI conference, Boulder, Colorado, July 17-20, 1996.

This paper updates Cord & Seale's classic 1962 paper, but is motivated by eagerness to explore and settle Mars, not by Cold War desperation. Herbert advocates placing 35-year-old "pioneers" on Mars with no means of return to Earth. They would travel to Mars intent on spending the rest of their lives exploring. In addition to abundant exploration time, this approach provides "a natural first step in an ongoing colonization should we choose to do so." Herbert proposes a three-phase program...“

aber auch NASA selbst: http://www.hq.nasa.gov/pao/History/SP-4205/ch3-2.html und

https://web.archive.org/web/20000831021330/http://spot.colorado.edu/~marscase/cfm/abs.html --   Palitzsch250  20:35, 24. Apr. 2015 (CEST)Beantworten