From Footprints to Blueprints
Development of the Moon, and Private Enterprise
by
Book Details
About the Book
The famed Apollo flight program (1961-1972) landed men on the Moon. The notion of a return to the Moon would include new concepts, such as the economic development of the Moon in commercial enterprises, with as importantly, the notion of such projects undertaken now by private enterprise on its own entirely or in some collaboration with Government interests. In this conundrum of complex effort, starting small, progressing in incremental stages, would be the need for early present-day planning and preparation. From Footprints to Blueprints examines, in its broadest spectrum of colors, the scope of achieving such a return to the Moon, with designs and arrangements to be made, resources required, in a return to the Moon, this time to stay.
About the Author
Manned private enterprise in Space is here. In 2004, the spacecraft called SpaceShipOne was carried by a mother craft to 14,000 m above California’s Mojave Desert. Detaching, it soared vertically under rocket power to 100 km before returning. Immediately, plans were concerted to commercialize the achievement into carrying of fare-paying passengers on excursions to Space.
From there will come flights fully orbiting the Earth, and from there, inns in Earth orbit —portending in this century, commercial flights to the Moon, in tourist and commercial activities.
In examining the flights to the Moon in From Footprints to Blueprints, Michael
Michael