Archive for the ‘Virtual Festival’ Category

Boom We Are Going To The Moon!

Tuesday, July 16th, 2019

50 years ago three men Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Micheal Collins where propelled out of the Earth’s atmosphere and out of it’s gravitational embrace to start their journey to the Moon.

But where did the journey start?

Probably over 1000 years ago in China where the first primate rockets where used for decorative purposes i.e. firework displays at celebrations and used in warfare – I believe one of the early pioneers in this was a female general who was fighting for her peoples freedom. The rocket was born but it was a rather slow burn with communications slow to non existent and ancient China’s insular attitude meaning that things that might have been traded for just weren’t. As a result it took about 500-600 yrs for Europeans to cotton on to the technology and then we had some barely effective flint lock guns and of course our cannons which wreaked havoc in the Americas.

Rockets of course are not the only way to get up into the sky there are many other ways including balloons and wings. We have tried them all and some we are yet again revisiting such as balloons to space! But for the moon landings rockets were the thing.

Rockets and an unofficial-official arms race between the United States of America and the the Soviet Russian communists conglomerate of countries which was known at the time as the USSR. Both space faring nations based their technologies on the dire war works of the NAZI’s as many of the engineers sort escape during or with hindsight from the NAZI regime – there is a whole can of worms in this that will be addressed in much detail later on.

For centuries rockets where nothing more than fancy lights in the sky or the primitive for runner to guns but then the industrial revolution and victorian era happened and machines became something more and missile and tanks were born in time for the early 20th century.

But rockets were as such still a toy for the rich along with ballooning and those new fangled motorised carriages. There were rocket enthusiast clubs all over the place in the UK they could only really theorise due to our laws on explosives but the Americans got to play and the Germans…. well the Germans after World War 1 where banned from developing weapons except rockets were so… not considered a threat that they were not mentioned.

The Germans therefore poured all their resources into developing this avenue of potential weaponry – the US went for nuclear weapons with far reaching and devastating affects. Germany built rockets – rockets that were the V2 rockets that landed on London during the blitz. The lives lost there would cause anguish for those who later found themselves in the US working with the very man who had designed them, making larger versions in fact – giant ones to carry people to the moon.

SO a vile piece of weaponry was a stage in the evolution of technology that took a plaque of peace up and onto another planet where it declared it was for all mankind. There is a sort of beautifully harsh juxtaposition here – something that encapsulates the issues humanity has in many areas. This mix of the good and the bad and the shifting of those concepts and humanity striving – striving striving but sometimes in destructive spirals that none the less spit out something that becomes a savour or just a stepping stone to something that is not horrific but beneficial to all.

Most things are sadly birthed in blood – it is that origin of our new endeavours we need to change.

Humanity went to the moon and saw itself for the first truly for the first time.

First Steps…

Tuesday, July 16th, 2019

We have only just taken our first steps out of this cradle we call Earth, as Carl Sagan said (paraphrased) – we have just dipped our toe into the celestial seas and we are taking our own good time about it!

When I was born 1981 it was less than a decade since the last human had set foot on the moon, how they got there and the speed at which they achieved it, is a quiet astonishing story – one which I will be covering in detail over the next two weeks. But I will give you a spoiler – we almost didn’t make it and it has even been suggested that it all went too quickly and happened too soon – both us and our technology where not ready. A statement which is not in my opinion completely false.

The way we went may not have been the best but it was still amazing none the less and though I agree that most missions should be remote sensing, robots and general observations – I can’t help but dream of being up there, standing on a surface of smashed and pulverise moon rock and collecting my own samples. As a child I truly thought that I would get to walk on the moon and possibly even Mars, I would collect rocks and maybe find signs of aliens… as a kid these things seemed achievable and I wanted to go.

I wanted to go even though my first real memory of space flight was the Challenger Shuttle Explosion – I’m not sure but I think we may have been watching it live – I was certainly excited. I would have been about 5 years old and must have been following it from before the disaster as I knew all about Christa McAuliffe one of the astronauts on board. I was young but the disaster hit me hard – I knew they were dead and yet still I wanted to go, I still wanted to go and explore other worlds even knowing I might not get there.

This sentiment was echoed by my own child a few years ago at the Cheltenham Science Festival when at a talk with one of my old lectures from university the question was asked – who after hearing all the horrible stuff that could happen to you would still want to go to Mars? – she put her hand up. Fear is a very real thing to need to face in anything we do, as individuals and as communities and societies and even as a species. Not everyone has the same level of acceptable risk and this too is a good thing – if we were all dare devils then things would be bloody and chaotic and wasteful and if we were all cautious and weary about everything then we just simply would starve to death too scared to leave our nests to find food.

Life is a balance – space exploration also needs this balance – a fusion of caution and a thirst to GET OUT THERE.

And I think after a rocky ride of ups and downs that is actually where the space exploration and industry and governments are at. And yes there are many things to discuss about the hows and whys – should it be governments, corporations, individuals or charities/foundations that lead the way?

These are all thorny questions which I hope to go into more depth in during Moon Mania.

For now though I think on the fact that we took our first steps into the unknown and have just kept going and now… not only do we have people floating around in orbit around us but we have sent robots to act as are arms and legs and eyes to other WORLDS – yes plural for though we have not returned to the Moon we have still been watching and recording and we have set our sites further with landers scouring the Martian surface and Voyager having left our solar system all together.

Space… here we come!

The Moon Last Night

Tuesday, July 16th, 2019

How often do we look at the moon – I mean really look at the moon?

It is always there, handing in the sky invidious states of completion. A finger nail slither or a baleful eye – luminous.

As part of MoonMania we have been playing with photographing the moon. And as it so happens this virtual festival of all things Lunar is starting off with a beautiful ripe moon hanging in the sky.

Last night’s sky was hung with wisps of cloud but still the moon peeped through to look at us and us to look at it.

This is one of the photos.

Moon on the 15-16 of July 2019

Moon Mania Virtual Festival

Friday, June 21st, 2019

Craters taken with Celestia

2019 is the 50th anniversary of Apollo 11 when people set foot on another planet for the first time – that planet was our moon, our closet neighbour. As part of Moon Mania I shall be running a bit of a virtual festival over the 8 days that the mission took place, starting on the 16th and ending on the 24th of July.

There is a facebook event and the twitter hashtag is moonmania.

I will also be launching a new MoonMania Pinterest board along with introducing some of the fabulous poems and art works that people have sent me about the moon!