Monday, March 17, 2014

Moontalkers

This week I'm attending the 45th Lunar and Planetary Science Conference in Houston, which is basically an annual gathering of the world's biggest space geeks. And today we were treated to some space geek royalty. Not one, but two, of the 12 Apollo 'moonwalkers' spoke to captivated audiences over the lunchtime period.

First, Harrison 'Jack' Schmitt (the only geologist to have walked on another planet) talked about the scientific discoveries that his mission, Apollo 17, has yielded in the subsequent 30+ years. 

Jack Schmitt sampling conducting fieldwork on the Moon during Apollo 17. Credit: NASA/Eugene Cernan
And then we were treated to a fascinating planetary travelogue as Dave Scott, the commander of Apollo 15, challenged the scientists in the room to go forth and work with the engineering community in a synergistic way to design more capable, exciting, and scientifically meaningful lunar (and martian) missions for a new century.

Commander of Apollo 15, Dave Scott, saluting the American flag in 1971. Credit: NASA
So today, instead of choosing a rock from Earth to send forth into the cosmos, I'm including two quotes with which Dave Scott ended his presentation: 

"Man must rise above the Earthto the top of the atmosphere and beyondfor only then will he fully understand the world in which he lives."
Socrates 469–399 BC

"What was most significant about the lunar voyage was not that man set foot on the moon but that they set eye on the earth." 
Norman Cousins, Cosmic Search magazine, volume 1, number 1, January 1979

These beautifully encapsulate the reason why the hundreds of scientists in the audiences today (including myself) do what we do. For a few years back in the 1960s and 1970s Dave Scott, Jack Schmitt, and all the other Apollo astronauts were our very own human interplanetary messengers. They were sent forth to explore another world, and to bring back pieces of it so that we can learn about our home and its place in the universe. Their mission was not chosen for its ease, but because it was hard. Because that goal served to organize and measure the best of humankind's energies and skills. I think we are more than overdue a renewal of quests such as these. It's time to inspire a whole new generation of scientists and engineers.

A slightly blurry Dave Scott and me in Houston, 17 March 2014.
Today I got to meet one of my heroes. And he reminded us all that our Earth is a beautiful and special place. More wonderful, dare I say, than can ever be represented by one rock.

"The blue marble", taken from Apollo 17. Credit: NASA