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Eakinomics: Get Ready
for Liftoff
The final mission of the Apollo program, Apollo 17, took place from December
7–19, 1972. Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt (the only professional geologist
to travel to the moon) set foot on the moon. It was the last time humans
visited the moon or traveled outside of low-Earth orbit. All that is expected
to change this morning when the uncrewed Artemis I mission lifts off between
8:30–10:30 a.m. The Artemis program aims to return to the moon and,
ultimately, travel to Mars.
Eakinomics is a soulless policy calculator, yet has just enough free
testosterone to love a big rocket. But beyond the pyrotechnic display, what
are the policy issues in play?
Looking forward, the threshold issue is usually framed as the value of human
space flight beyond low-Earth orbit (e.g., to the space station) versus
devoting those dollars to unmanned science missions. That would include the
value of returning to the moon for the first time in 50 years. Framing it
that way is not quite right, however. There is no reason why the Space Launch
System (SLS) rocket could not be used for life science payloads as well as
the Orion crew capsule, so the issue in the future is the exact mix of
science and manned flights.
The second issue is how one gets to Mars. In most scenarios, the Mars vehicle
is assembled in space. Using a heavy lifter like an SLS rocket can have a
much larger payload than the Space X or Blue Horizon rockets. That means the
assembly could be accomplished in many fewer trips. Without knowledge of the
cost structures of these options, one cannot know for sure what makes the
most sense, but this is the issue at hand.
That’s what is at stake for space policy. Get ready for liftoff.
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