For starters, a moon base would be an ideal place for a telescope. If such a telescope spots a rogue asteroid on a collision course with Earth and permits launching a mission to deflect it on time, that mich be a fairly good advantage to mankind.
It would be a good location for a laboratory to develop new alloys and new pharmaceuticals, even those that need zero G preparation as lofting someting in orbit from the moon is much easier than doing it from Earth.
And, of course, we cannot envision all the new stuff that will be developped in the future, that can make use of the moon unique location and environment.
2006-12-13 23:39:47
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answer #1
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answered by Vincent G 7
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All NASA programs have technology advances that move out of the realm of space travel and into civilian usage. A prime example is the Internet you are using to read this message. Some of the compression algorithms used to send messages around the Internet came from the need to compress data for transmission from space probes. Many of the safety features of the cars you drive came from safety features built into space vehicles. Probably the most important is miniaturization of electronics. Your laptop and ipod are a direct result of NASA minimizing the size and weight of items that it has to lob into space out of Earth's gravity.
There will be many advances made in setting up a moon base that will have uses back here on Earth.
2006-12-15 04:45:58
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answer #2
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answered by California Bear 6
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They did, Ares/Orion yet investment grew to grow to be into decrease lower back. Now the plan is to bypass to an asteroid. be huge unsleeping, they have discovered water on the moon and on mars. in my opinion, i pick the unique challenge Orion from the previous due 50's. no longer some thing like launching a spaceship the size of a Marriott hotel with a collection of two hundred for an afternoon out of Saturn's moons. in elementary words takes one thousand or so atomic bombs to do it.
2016-12-30 09:42:59
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Well there would mines on the moon some day, mining both Helium3 and various mineral ores, in the long run we could see smelting operations on the moon. The low gravity of the moon would be perfect for building shipyards to build bigger and better spacecraft. Low gravity would be good for medical research as well.
2006-12-14 14:10:08
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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We never know what sort of things we'll learn or find when we study, experiment, or explore. That's why we do them -- to learn, observe, and find.
The previous moon program produced so many technological and medical advances that it really cost the taxpayers nothing at all. Among those advances are kidney dialysis, remote medical monitoring, kevlar, the entire semiconductor industry, amazing strides in metallurgy, and more things than anyone can mention.
""We do these things not because they are easy, but because they are hard."
-- JFK
2006-12-14 00:25:21
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answer #5
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answered by Otis F 7
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The advantages will be in the form of greater corporate profits and well funded campaigns of those politicians who aggressively support such projects in the legislature. One hand washes the other. Just like corporate wars for profit, a slice of such profits go back to fund those politicians who funneled the money to such participating corporations.
2006-12-13 23:34:36
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answer #6
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answered by MIKE D 3
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If it's anything like Apollo - which it probably won't be - it'll definitely create a bunch of jobs here on earth.
2006-12-13 23:40:58
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answer #7
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answered by Gene 7
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