Saturday, November 12, 2011

SpaceX Travel

Last week I watched a TV series Brave New World on C4 presented by Steven Hawkins. It was good to hear him making perfect sense without finding myself getting too lost in curved space or multi-dimensional universes. In this episode he was talking about a brave new world of technology. What caught my attention was the creation of the zero-carbon Mazda city near to Abu Dhabi where people will be travelling by electric car under ground with no drivers! The pedestrians will get to enjoy strolling safely at ground level through the car-free, low-rise and beautifully designed city streets. It looked amazing.

Another brave new world technology talked on the program was about a space rocket company called SpaceX happening and expanding right now. Elon Musk, co-founder of PayPal, has created the first private company to successfully make reusable space rockets Falcon 1, Falcon 9 and the Dragon space capsule.  Musk’s goal is to considerably reduce the costs of space flight and there are planned private and funded launches over the nest 7 years. NASA is proposing to fund a Mars mission utilizing Falcon Heavy as the launch vehicle and the Dragon capsule to enter the Martian atmosphere. The concept called ‘Red Dragon’ is planned to launch in 2018 and arrive at Mars a few months later. The science objectives of this NASA Discovery mission would be to find evidence of life such as DNA or bio molecules that might be lurking in pools of water ice known to exist 1m below the surface of Mars.
Dragon Spacecraft with Solar Panels deployed

It’s very exciting to read about such missions to Mars. As well as looking for evidence of life what if we had a mission to start creating life on Mars?! If we can build amazing zero-carbon cities like Mazda in the desert I wonder what it would take to build a city on Mars or on the Moon.

Take a look at www.spacex.com for info about SpaceX including past and future missions.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Thought experiments come true

THANK YOU whoever gave me the Christmas present 'The Pig that Wants to be Eaten' by Julian Baggini. How rude of me not to remember who gave me the book and only start reading it now! 99 thought experiments is just what I want to read right now. Coming from my new context of us living on the Moon within 20 years some of the more out of this world thought experiments might well become true.

Thought experiments are short scenarios that make present a philosophical problem in a vivid and distinct way. In 'The veil of ignorance' twenty civilians, selected to live on a Mars colony, are given the unusual task of deciding, before they set off, what would be the fairest way of distributing good, accommodation, food and luxury items. What if some colonists refuse to work or participate? Does fairness mean giving everyone the same?
The-Columbia Hills on Mars as seen from the Spirit Rover
According to political philosopher John Rawls, the colonist are in an ideal position to decide what is fair as they are behind a veil of ignorance.  He thinks if we want to know what fairness is on Earth, we should imagine ourselves in a similar position. Imaging not knowing if we are smart or stupid, dextrous or clumsy, fit or sickly. That way we can come up with rules for distributing goods fairly without discriminating.

The thought experiment made me wonder what lunar colonists might consider to be valuable luxury items. Would they be the same as on Earth or would new non-material luxury items start to become more valuable? Maybe the gifts of loving life, generosity, joy and creative arts would be considered more valuable.

In another thought experiment 'A Byte on the Side' Dick has been married for several years and is bored with his relationship. There was no passion left and he and his wife rarely slept together. But Dick had no intention of leaving his wife. He loved her and she was an excellent mother of their children. So rather than having an affair, Dick finds a company called A Byte on the Side Inc which offers the perfect solution: A complete computer simulation of sex with all the experience and excitement of an affair with no third person.

What's useful about this thought experiment is the wife's reaction to Dick's virtual affair. If she has no objection then it indicates what matters to her is that there is no other person. Their monogamous bond of affection is what matters. If she does object to the virtual affair then it indicates what matters and hurts is that Dick has turned away from her and to something else to express his sexuality.

This thought experiment made me wonder if within a small lunar colony infidelity might become an important issue. It would be an opportunity for the colonists to be clear about the difference between sex and love. It would be important not to let bonds of affection be broken by the biologically driven act of copulation. Wouldn't it be great if sex could be one of those non-material luxuries we can give to each other without damaging our bonds of affection. Safely!

Friday, September 16, 2011

Transit of the International Space Station

So great to look at photographs from the Astronomy Photographer of The Year 2011 run by the Royal Observatory and the Sky at Night Magazine.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-14792580
All images subject to copyright. Music courtesy KPM Music. Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. 




Here' an astonishing image of the International Space Station flying across the disc of the Sun. It crossed the surface in half a second so the photographer had to be very skillful to capture the image. The Space Shuttle Endeavour can be seen docking with the ISS.





Saturday, September 10, 2011

Colonel Catherine Coleman is as free as her hair!

On the August Bank holiday I was working from home with the radio on in the background.  I suddenly stopped everything when I heard Space Station and was instantly back in touch with my passion for space travel. It was a special programme about Women in Aviation where a NASA astronaut was being interviewed after spending 5 months on board the International Space Station. http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b013ptf4

Catherine ‘Cady’ Coleman shared what it was like to be the only women in space with 5 male astronauts. By accepting her team as colleagues and being open she had different relationships than expected with everyone, all for the better.  She missed conversations with girl friends and family but had a weekly video conference call. Cady also loved going into the space station's observatory deck, the Cupola. See loved seeing Cape Cod and her home in Massachusetts coming towards her and thinking about her family. Then is a few minutes it would be gone. But in an hour and a half she would be back to see her home again!     

   
Tracy Caldwell Dyson in the Cupola

I could hear Cady is a stand for women to travel into space and to see it as something not just for other people who are specially chosen. She see’s women very much part of us going back to the Moon and to Mars.

The programme also made me wonder about music in space. Would instruments sound any different? Cady performed the first ever earth-space flute duet with Ian Anderson from Jethro Tull. She said the music sounded the same but holding the instrument took some getting used to.

Presenter Jenni Murray asked Cady why she didn't tie her hair back while the duet was filmed. She said she normally would when working or with people but she liked to let her hair be free. It reminded her what a special place she was in.

What a stand Catherine Coleman is for women going into space. Being as free as her hair and inspiring women to be who they really wants to be.
Uh huh uh huh !

Sunday, August 28, 2011

New project - 'Back to the Moon'

Having completed 'Being On the Moon' I'm starting to write a prequel called 'Back to the Moon.'
It will be about what it would take to create a lunar settlement. For us to go back and live on the Moon. Wouldn't it be great if we actually do that over the next 20 years? By 2032. I'm selfish - I want to be there when it happens!

But it will take more than writing a book. It will take a team of people believing it will happen and completing all the critical actions needed. It will take people willing to lead groups of people on this project.
There are many resource issues to put in place first, like:
- How to produce Oxygen without transporting it into space
- How to get into Earth orbit most efficiently
- How to raise funds now and future income opportunities
- How to generate power on the Moon efficiently
- How to train and prepare people for the low gravity environment
- How to identify the best landing sites
- Many more how to's

Do you know anyone who wants to be part of this Living on the Moon project? Without NASA it's going to take something new. It's going to take some new thinking. I'm inspired but as Money Magnet author Marie-Claire Carlyle says 'to get really inspired you need to take on something bigger than yourself'. And as Lady Gaga says 'Honour your vomit' (Gagavision no. 43) which I'm taking to mean stay present to the short creative process of a big project. The possibility of a project that inspires and empowers team members intro action.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Should we go to the Moon?

Tranquility Base


People who think too much about the moon used to be called lunatics. Is that what I’ve become? Maybe J F Kennedy was a lunatic when he gave his “we choose to go to the moon” speech in 1962...

"We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.”

Neil Armstrong
Neil Armstrong
There were other reasons too. What about now? With NASA’s 30 year space mission at an end should we choose to go to the moon or should we choose to stop thinking about it any more?  I say we should go there, but then I’m biased. I was a teenager at the time of the Apollo missions and was convinced that by now there would be space colonies, settlements on the moon and on mars.

In my short story Being on the Moon, set 100 years in the future, a community of settlers create an extraordinary and exciting life on the moon. Here’s some of the things they love about their life:

  • We get to see the night sky at any time without clouds or atmospheric distortion with huge telescopes which are much better than those on Earth.  What’s more we get to see the Earth in its full glory every day. We have the best views of the other planets both within our Solar System and around our neighbouring stars.
  • We really enjoy the low gravity. Imagine playing tennis, football, golf, skiing and crater climbing when you are 1/6th of your weight. In the story we host the first ever Olympic Games on the moon and use Newton’s laws to work out how far the athletes can jump and throw things.
  • We’ve created a successful care centre called ‘Old Town’ which is a kind of heaven for elderly people with mobile disabilities. As well as loving the low gravity they get to re-live life when they were 30 years younger and recreate long lost actions, feelings, emotions. They love it here!
  • Creating a new community from scratch was fun. We were guided from the past but continued to invent new possibilities. We have created sustainable well-being, treat crime as an integrity breakdown and have have done away with money replacing it with a reward system.
  • We are in open communication with Earth people and communicate fully with love and affinity at all times.
  • We have become a port and ‘mission control’ for spaceships on route to other planets providing rest and resources.
  • We have become the leading research centre for solar energy generation from cosmic rays using a Dyson-Harrop satellite.
  • We are a big mineral exporter and importer from other planets.
  • Best of all we don’t get caught up in all those Earth scandals and conflicts.


Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Being on the Moon extract

INTRODUCTION

Imagine being on the Moon. Every day you see the beautiful coloured Earth fixed in a black sky amongst the stars. The Sun is dazzling the sky for two hot weeks then gone for two weeks throughout a bitterly cold night. No clouds, no wind and no sound.
 Imagine being in a community of passionate people enjoying every moment and seeing their children having fun exploring the low gravity world. They decide to put on a Lunar Olympics event in the year 2112 to challenge and entertain all those heavy Earth dwellers. Those lucky enough to get tickets arrive and really love playing tennis, skiing and just have fun. And then the Moon gets a visit from a group of aliens…
This story is about how a team of people produce extraordinary results by creating a new way of thinking for the human civilization. It’s about seeing that anything can be made possible with complete communication, love and affinity.  



Space Flight

Seeing the Earth shrinking in the sky made me feel uncomfortable. Of course, I knew this was a normal reaction not being very accustomed to space trips. I looked ahead and saw the half-shadowed Moon much smaller than Earth but slowing becoming larger in the sky. For the first time in my life I felt a connection with the Earth, some kind of relationship with that beautiful blue and white object. Maybe I could start a new relationship with the less attractive looking Moon I was about to meet.

“Hey Andy,” I called on my communicator, “that’s going to be our home for the next few days.”

“Yes, they say it’s very peaceful up there. So quiet and such a slow pace of life. Each day lasts a whole month and the Earth looks down at you all the time.” Andy had been working for 3 years on Lunar Olympics 2112 but this was my first visit to the Moon.

“That’s true and there’ll be no clouds even to hide it. I’m going to check out the weather conditions.” The Olympic village was situated 5km west of Tranquillity Base named by Neil Armstrong on his Apollo 11 landing in 1969. The Sun would be about 45 degrees high the day we land and by the end of the week it will have almost set. The surface temperature will plummet as soon as it gets dark. Then the Sun won’t return again for two weeks.

I decided to call Pauline, my partner in Auckland, New Zealand. “Hi Pauline, I’m going to get some sleep now, still 24 hours to go before landing.”

“Ok. Have a fantastic trip, I’m thinking of you up there,” replied Pauline.
“They are letting visitors use the ski slopes tomorrow. I’m looking forward to it,” I said.
I saw Pauline on my screen. She smiled and blew me a kiss. Then I watched her send a message “I’m going to miss you. I can’t stop thinking what might happen to you up there. Not sure I like you going on Moon trips.”

Pauline knew I love space trips. She suspected I would like to live on the Moon for ever and set up home there.

“Don’t worry, I’ll be extra careful. It’s hard to hurt yourself up here with such low gravity. Speak tomorrow, good night,” I replied.

Andy has been my friend for many years. Before working on Lunar Olympics he was the owner of Green Stations, a company set up by his father years before. He owned a fleet of service stations for electric cars. They were powered by renewable energy and customers could replace their car batteries and stop there for leisure breaks. The business started to take off at the time of the air flight ban and Green Stations became a kind of cult thing. All over the world people used it as a way of networking and a great way to meet between trips. Car trips started becoming popular again.

After a few years in the business Andy was ready for his next project and that’s when he was asked to project manage Lunar Olympics 2112. The idea came from the first lunar settlers. Back in 2090 there was a party on the Moon to celebrate the birth of the first settler. The party guest list was huge and a stadium was donated as a present to celebrate the achievements of lunar settlers. The party was of course a huge reality event for people back on Earth and everything that happened was watched by billions of people. What the guests seemed to enjoy most about going to the Moon was the low gravity. Everyone had an excuse to play and explore and be kids again. Many ideas for games and activities were thought up and the Moon was seen as a huge wonderful leisure park.

Ideas later came from the settler children themselves who grew up in low gravity. They wanted to use the stadium to host a games event and asked if it would be feasible for them to host an Olympic Games. Andy was asked to project manage the event and the first one was scheduled for 2112. Now the day had come and he had two days to make final preparations before the opening ceremony.

When I woke up I couldn’t believe my eyes. We were only a few miles from the lunar surface and soon about to land. We floated over two large overlapping craters, Cyrillus and Theophilus, then towards the much flatter Sea of Tranquillity.  Just to the west of this double crater I saw the perfectly bowl shaped Schmidt crater where the ski dome had been constructed. 

“Thanks for not waking me earlier. Must have needed the sleep I guess,” I said to Andy.
“That’s ok. I’ll show you the landing room,” he said.

I slowly got up and followed Andy to a room designed like a padded cell to protect passengers when landing and taking off. I put on my spacesuit and helmet, and watched the descent on a screen inside it. We were about to land on a short runway towards the north edge of the Sea of Tranquillity.  I started to make out the main stadium surrounded by large domes interconnected by transparent tubes. There were other buildings and towers, all part of a colourful glittering village.

The landing was quick and smooth. We had a short walk in our spacesuits to a tunnel entrance. Then we walked to a changing room where we changed into clothes we were carrying in our backpacks. It was nice to breathe air again without spacesuits. We followed signs for the hotel where Andy and I were sharing a twin room.  I was getting excited about the week to come. Once in our room I read the itinerary.

Day 1
Welcome presentation
Science film
Evening party
Day 2
Village tour and observatory visit
Moon skiing trip
Day 3
Opening ceremony
Day 4
Competition heats
Day 5
Complete heats and award ceremony
Day 6
Rest day

“I’m looking forward to Moon skiing. I’ve heard it’s quite fun. How about you?” I asked as he passed me some fruit for our breakfast.

“Me too. I’m also looking forward to trying out those slopes. Just watching the athletes run will be interesting. The settlers have come up with their own style of running on all fours!” said Andy. “This is going to be such an amazing event Richard, not the same as the others.”

Andy recalled some of the many events he had been asked to lead. They were usually over an entire weekend for groups of between 100 and 200 people. He told me the earlier ones were on climate change and how to live happier, greener lives. Recently they were to do with values and beliefs and what motivates societies to grow and shift away from material desires. “What I like about these events is they all have the same structure but all turn out different!”

“Because people are different?” I said.

“Yes, and groups are even more different,” said Andy laughing as he opened a second cereal bar. They all start with my prep-talk to the crew assistants running the event.”

“I’m looking forward to hearing your creation meeting. Do they really always have the same structure?” I asked.

“Yes, kind of. I start with ground rules until all the assistants get it. Then go over what works and what doesn’t work. Then we talk about service and about being fully on purpose and available to the guests.” He said events set up by children are a real privilege to run. “As soon as they see that the event is not about them but about the guests they really go for it. They run smoother than ones with adult assistants.”

As one of the crew members, I was looking forward to the prep-talk. My job was ‘meet and greet’ but it sounded like there was more to it than I had imagined.

“I’m looking forward to Moon skiing. I’ve heard it’s quite fun. How about you?” I asked as he passed me some fruit for our breakfast.

“Me too. I’m also looking forward to trying out those slopes. Just watching the athletes run will be interesting. The settlers have come up with their own style of running on all fours!” said Andy. “This is going to be such an amazing event Richard, not the same as the others.”

Andy recalled some of the many events he had been asked to lead. They were usually over an entire weekend for groups of between 100 and 200 people. He told me the earlier ones were on climate change and how to live happier, greener lives. Recently they were to do with values and beliefs and what motivates societies to grow and shift away from material desires. “What I like about these events is they all have the same structure but all turn out different!”

“Because people are different?” I said.

“Yes, and groups are even more different,” said Andy laughing as he opened a second cereal bar. They all start with my prep-talk to the crew assistants running the event.”

“I’m looking forward to hearing your creation meeting. Do they really always have the same structure?” I asked.

“Yes, kind of. I start with ground rules until all the assistants get it. Then go over what works and what doesn’t work. Then we talk about service and about being fully on purpose and available to the guests.” He said events set up by children are a real privilege to run. “As soon as they see that the event is not about them but about the guests they really go for it. They run smoother than ones with adult assistants.”

As one of the crew members, I was looking forward to the prep-talk. My job was ‘meet and greet’ but it sounded like there was more to it than I had imagined....

Read on?


Monday, July 25, 2011

Why blog about the Moon?

Why start a blog about the moon? Surely there are more important things to write about - reducing climate change, improving human nutrition, creating more green spaces, helping the elderly. These are all important and amazing things are happening in these areas and many others. People are looking beyond fixing, changing and improving and starting to think about what is really possible.

What inspires and excites me about living on the moon is that it will take new thinking and new possibilities. We are lucky to have our spaceship moon. No other rocky planet has a moon like ours. It's a perfect place to observe the universe, explore low gravity and launch space probes to other planets.

A year ago I had a thought: What would it be like to host an Olympic Games on the moon? I decided to write a short story called 'Being on the Moon' set to take place 100 year from now. I really enjoyed thinking what it would be like to live up there and had fun basing characters in the story on the team mates I worked with over the past year on Landmark Education’s Team, Management and Leadership Program.Then after completing the story I had another thought: Why 2112? Why not 2032? What was I waiting for? Maybe I could get to visit the moon myself.

What would it take to have a settlement on the moon in the next 20 years?. Astronomers, science fiction writers, entrepreneurs, please post your thoughts! Is my idea of a care home on the moon so far-fetched? Where elderly people can enjoy easy mobility and have some fun in their lives. Following the hugely successful Hubble Telescope wouldn't the moon be a perfect place to build a new large telescope to observe new planets outside our solar system? Then if we did encounter extra terrestrial life we might be better able to get into communication. Any thoughts, any ideas?