Return to the Moon [electronic resource] :Exploration, Enterprise, and Energy in the Human Settlement of Space / by Harrison H. Schmitt.
by Schmitt, Harrison H [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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MAIN LIBRARY | QB1-991 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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QR355-502 New Concepts of Antiviral Therapy | RC254-282 Oncology | QA273.A1-274.9 Introduction to Stochastic Integration | QB1-991 Return to the Moon | TK1-9971 Fault-Tolerance Techniques for SRAM-based FPGAs | R895-920 PACS | QA273.A1-274.9 Controlled Markov Processes and Viscosity Solutions |
Apollo: The Legacy -- Energy: The Global Future -- Booster: Moon Rocket Economics -- Fusion: Helium-3 Power Economics -- Resources: Lunar Helium-3 Economics -- Settlement: Helium-3 Production Economics -- Approaches: Organizatonal Options for a Return -- Management: Lessons from Apollo -- NASA: Restructuring for Deep Space -- Investors: The Best Approach -- Law: Space Resources -- Humans: Roles in Space -- Implications.
Former NASA Astronaut Harrison Schmitt advocates a private, investor-based approach to returning humans to the Moon—to extract Helium 3 for energy production, to use the Moon as a platform for science and manufacturing, and to establish permanent human colonies there in a kind of stepping stone community on the way to deeper space. With governments playing a supporting role—just as they have in the development of modern commercial aeronautics and agricultural production—Schmitt believes that a fundamentally private enterprise is the only type of organization capable of sustaining such an effort and, eventually, even making it pay off.
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