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The
Vision for Space Exploration is the United States space policy
announced on January 14, 2004 by U.S. President George W. Bush. It
is seen as a response to the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, the
state of human spaceflight at NASA, and a way to regain public
enthusiasm for space exploration.
The Vision calls for the space program to:
-
Complete the International Space
Station by 2010
-
Retire the Space Shuttle by 2010
-
Develop the Orion spacecraft
(formerly known as the Crew Exploration Vehicle) by 2008,
and conduct its first human spaceflight mission by 2014
-
Develop Shuttle Derived Launch
Vehicles
-
Explore the Moon with robotic
spacecraft missions by 2008 and crewed missions by 2020
-
Explore Mars and other
destinations with robotic and crewed missions
When the Vision was announced in January
2004, the U.S. Congress and the scientific community gave it a mix
of positive and negative reviews. For example, Rep. Dave Weldon (R-Fla.)
said,
"I think this is the best thing that
has happened to the space program in decades," while physicist
and outspoken manned spaceflight opponent Robert L. Park said
that robotic spacecraft "are doing so well it's going to be hard
to justify sending a human."
Others, such as the Mars Society have
argued that it makes more sense to avoid going back to the Moon and
instead focus on going to Mars first.
In a position paper issued by the National Space Society (NSS),
a return to the Moon should be considered a high space program
priority, in order to begin development of the knowledge and
identification of the industries unique to the Moon. The NSS
believes that the Moon may be a repository of the history and
possible future of our planet, and that the six Apollo landings only
scratched the surface of that treasure.
According to NSS, the Moon's far side, permanently shielded from the
noisy Earth, is an ideal site for future radio astronomy. Unique
products may be producible in the nearly limitless extreme vacuum of
the lunar surface, and the Moon's remoteness is the ultimate
isolation for biologically hazardous experiments.
Lunar resources include most if not all raw materials available on
Earth. The Moon can serve as a proving ground for a wide range of
space operations and processes, including developments toward
In-Situ Resource Utilization or "living off the land" (i.e.,
self-sufficiency) for permanent human outposts. This has various
benefits.
Initial return missions as recently proposed by the U.S. President
and NASA can be done through space operations using the existing
launch infrastructure and assets developed by the shuttle and
International Space Station programs, plus existing expendable
launch vehicles, with a minimum of new research and development
programs. The lessons learned from international cooperation during
ISS construction and operations can be improved upon and extended to
human missions to the Moon, Mars and elsewhere.
Initial missions could place scientific equipment on the Moon and
return samples from areas never explored, such as the polar regions.
Extent of water and other volatiles important to lunar
industrialization could be determined. As future reusable launch
systems begin operations, reducing cost and enabling higher flight
rates, Earth-Moon traffic can become routine.
With humans on the
Moon again, NASA's space activities would take on new vigor and
public interest.
Throughout much of 2004, it was unclear whether the U.S. Congress
would be willing to approve and fund the Vision for Space
Exploration. However, in November 2004, Congress passed an omnibus
spending bill which gave NASA the $16.2 billion that President Bush
had sought to kick-start the Vision. According to then-NASA chief
Sean O'Keefe, that spending bill "was as strong an endorsement [of
the space exploration vision] as any of us could have imagined."
In
2005, Congress passed S.1281, the NASA Authorization act of 2005,
which explicitly endorses the Vision.
The current NASA Administrator, Michael Griffin, who took
office in April 2005, is a big supporter of the Vision, but has also
modified it somewhat, saying that he wants to reduce the four year
gap between the retirement of the Space Shuttle and the first manned
mission of the Crew Exploration Vehicle.
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