• stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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    15 hours ago

    What did you expect would happen when we became a space faring species? This is a good thing, we might not have as good of pictures for a while but honestly earth based telescopes were never going to match space based telescopes and commercialized space travel is how well get there.

    TLDR: This is a good thing.

    • BruceTwarzen@lemm.ee
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      14 hours ago

      Hey we are a land dweller species, why don’t we dry out the ocean to make more room, eventually we figure it out.

      • sleep_deprived@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Kessler syndrome isn’t really that much of a risk specifically with Starlink (for now at least), as SpaceX seems to be doing things right despite Musk. They’re in such low orbits that even with a catastrophic loss of control, they’ll deorbit very quickly. The real risk comes as more companies and countries try to get a piece of the megaconstellation pie. Starlink in its own seems to be fairly safe and sustainable on its own, but that may quickly change when communication for collision avoidance maneuvers needs to be international.

        Despite Musk’s well-earned reputation for being a shithead, SpaceX has this far been doing the right thing far more often than most other space companies, and while it’s certainly possible that will change, the Starlink constellation will entirely disappear very quickly without constant replenishment, so it’s not as if we’d have no chance to act if they begin to show signs of concerning behavior. What’s far more worrying to me in terms of Kessler syndrome is the recent escalation around space warfare, as tensions between Russia, China, and the US continue to boil and nobody seems willing to really commit to making space a neutral zone. Even with space historically being an area of strong international cooperation despite politics (just look at the ISS), that unfortunately seems to be rapidly changing.

      • stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Ok, so this is a risk, that changes nothing, we have a choice either we use space or we don’t, if we don’t we gain nothing if we do we gain something, ergo we should use space.

        What is the point of looking at the pretty lights in the sky if we have no plans on ever going there? You might as well generate images with Ai.

      • burble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 hours ago

        We’re in a new space race.

        There are too many rocket companies to list. This commercialization drives down launch costs and increases capacity, which benefits private companies and public research institutions.

        There was just a record number of people in orbit (19) that’ll get broken again in the coming years. The ISS will get new modules. Tiangong has been expanding. The Lunar Gateway station is under construction. Several private space stations are under construction. And multiple companies and countries are working on new crewed vehicles.

        • 0x0@programming.dev
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          10 hours ago

          The ISS will get new modules.

          You serious?

          And yet no one thought about skipping the gravity well and mine/process asteroids… baby steps i guess.

          • burble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            9 hours ago

            Yeah, Axiom is working on a private space station that would bud off the ISS when it deorbits. Although they have some money problems right now.

            For asteroid mining, look up AstroForge. They’re working on mining platinum group metals from near Earth m-type asteroids. They launched a forge demo sat and soon will launch an asteroid RPO demo sat.