English, asked by debadritabanerjee66, 1 year ago

"Imagine space exploration after 50 years from now"

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

The Future Of Space


America is changing its focus once again. Largely as a result of the 2003 Columbia disaster, the agency has been directed by the Bush administration to finish the space station and retire the shuttle by the end of 2010. At the same time, NASA has been ordered to build new rockets and more modest manned spacecraft to ferry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit and, eventually, back to the moon.


But the administration did not give NASA significant new money to pay for the moon program - the funds will come primarily from money that currently goes to shuttle/station operations - and as things now stand, there will be at least a five-year gap between the end of shuttle flights in 2010 and the maiden flight of the shuttle's replacement, a wingless capsule known as Orion.


During that five years - for the first time in the history of the U.S. space program - American astronauts will be forced to buy seats on Russian Soyuz capsules to reach the very space station American taxpayers financed. The irony of America's dependence on its former Cold War rival is not lost on NASA Administrator Mike Griffin.


"I think that's a concern," he told CBS in a recent interview. "I think it's an unseemly position for the United States to be in, quite honestly, and I think we will come to regret it."


But Griffin also believes space exploration will endure. So does Arthur C. Clarke, the British science fiction writer and visionary who came up with the idea for communications satellites in 1945 and who wrote the short story that inspired "2001: A Space Odyssey."


Writing in 1999, Clarke predicted the 100th anniversary of Sputnik in

2057 will be "celebrated by humans on Earth, the Moon, Mars, Europa, Ganymede and Titan, and in orbit around Venus, Neptune and Pluto."


If that prediction seems overly optimistic, remember that Americans landed on the moon just eight years after NASA's first sub-orbital 15-minute Mercury flight. Regardless of how the history of space exploration plays out in the 21st century, one thing is certain: It will always begin with Sputnik.

Answered by rishabhgusain11
3
After 50 years from today space exploration will be at much of a highest peak likely the following things will be able to happen:
1.Much of the richer people will be able to go to the space
2.There will be more advancement in space travelling technology
3.There must be many of the colonies to be able to set at space as planned by NASA
4.People will be able to look things closely and settle there
5.There will be much more availability of many of the things
6.It will be even more comfortable and affordable
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