Remember the scenes early in "2001: Space Odyssey" when the fictional troubleshooter sent to the moon encounters Russians along the way? Any contemporary update to that movie would have to encounter Chinese in space.
Why are they there and what does it mean for us? Here is a good article in today's New York Times with one answer. It need not be the only answer.
Big science is expensive. Nations will have differing priorities for their scientific endeavors, but be assured of one thing: their first priority will not be to compete in markets. It will be to gain a security advantage.
There are different ways to accomplish this. When the Space Station project became too expensive for an increasingly parsimonious America, we turned it into the International Space Station. Today, without Russian participation, we wouldn't be able to get astronauts to the station.
In the early 1990's as the Superconducting Super Collider was running into problems with Congressional appropriations, an effort was made to internationalize the project. The effort proved too little and too late.
It might be better to think "international" at the outset. Now, at the Large Hadron Collider, we are the tail instead of the dog.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Big Science And National Security
Topic Tags:
government,
international,
research,
science
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