New Straits Times

FLY ME TO THE MOON

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Colonising the moon.

But there could be a solution in the poles. The Japanese spacecraft SELENE has identified four peaks near the lunar South Pole which receives sunlight more than 80 per cent of the time. Nasa’s Clementine orbiter has also discovered that the nearby Malapert Mountain receives sunlight nearly 90 per cent of the time. Similar peaks are found at the lunar North Pole. Perhaps solar energy can be gathered in those places and distribute­d to wherever the lunar colonies are.

The issue of extreme temperatur­es, intense radiation and regular meteor showers might be resolved by having the colonies stay inside lunar caves. Last October, Japan’s SELENE probe discovered a massive undergroun­d cave that was 100 metres wide and 50km long. The cave is believed to be a lava tube created by volcanic activity dating back 3.5 billion years. It’s situated just metres underneath volcanic domes called the Marius Hills.

Lava tubes “might be the best candidate sites for future lunar bases, because of their stable thermal conditions and potential to protect people and instrument­s from micrometeo­rites and cosmic ray radiation,” said Junichi Haruyama, a senior researcher at Japan’s space agency, Jaxa.

As for food, of course initially the colonists would have to rely on supplies sent from Earth. But eventually they’ll have to grow their own food. Nasa has done studies on this for some time now and in a 1991 paper, Lunar farming: achieving maximum yield for the exploratio­n of space, it concluded that just a quarter of a hectare of land can produce enough food to sustain 50 people.

Technology is also not that much of an issue. After all, astronauts have actually been to the moon and there are people already living on the Internatio­nal Space Station where the life support system is able to recycle the water and balance out the oxygen and carbon dioxide levels.

The advent of 3D printing could allow for small components that break down to be recreated on the spot rather than having to wait for replacemen­t parts to be sent from earth. But of course, there would still be a need for food and other essential supplies to be regularly sent from Earth, especially in the initial years. To do that affordably, reusable rockets would be needed.

Nasa doesn’t have those but there are some private initiative­s that could supply such technology. Elon Musk’s SpaceX has a Falcon 9 rocket that can be used to carry small payloads to the moon, and it has a Falcon Heavy rocket that could carry larger payloads.

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos is also bullish on the moon and has invested in a company called Blue Origin which is developing a rocket called New Glenn (named after the astronaut John Glenn) which will also be reusable. Blue Origin’s goal isn’t to send humans to the Moon but cargo — the equipment necessary to establish a human colony on the moon.

So, when is this all going to happen? Japan has said it wants to land a human on the Moon by 2030. Russia is also aiming to do so by 2030. China’s target date is 2036. So, it looks like perhaps a decade or so away, which sounds realistic.

The US hasn’t set a target date although Jeff Bezos.

it too has expressed interest in a lunar colony. That’s important because although China and Russia have made successful unmanned moon landings, it’s only the US that has actually put astronauts on the surface of the Moon. So far, 12 American astronauts have been there although the last time this happened was way back in 1972 with the Apollo 17 mission.

President Donald Trump recently formally ordered Nasa to focus on sending humans back to the Moon. “The directive I’m signing today will refocus America’s space programme on human exploratio­n and discovery,” said Trump during the signing of his space directive to Nasa last December. “It marks a first step in returning American astronauts to the Moon for the first time since 1972, for long-term exploratio­n and use. This time, we will not only plant our flag and leave our footprints, we will establish a foundation for an eventual mission to Mars, and perhaps someday, to many worlds beyond.”

 ?? IS A CONSULTANT WITH EXPERIENCE­S IN PRINT, ONLINE AND MOBILE MEDIA. REACH HIM AT OONYEOH@ GMAIL.COM PICTURE BY BLUE ORIGIN. ??
IS A CONSULTANT WITH EXPERIENCE­S IN PRINT, ONLINE AND MOBILE MEDIA. REACH HIM AT OONYEOH@ GMAIL.COM PICTURE BY BLUE ORIGIN.
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