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・ Vision Crew Unlimited
・ Vision Critical
・ Vision d'Etat
・ Vision dans le cristal. Oniromancie obsessionelle. Et neuf graphomanies entoptiques.
・ Vision disorder
・ Vision Divine
・ Vision Divine (album)
・ Vision document
・ Vision electronic recording apparatus
・ Vision Engraving & Routing Systems
・ Vision Express
・ Vision F.C.
・ Vision Festival
・ Vision for Europe Award
・ Vision for perception and vision for action
Vision for Space Exploration
・ Vision Forum
・ Vision Forum (art organisation)
・ Vision Four
・ Vision Four 5
・ Vision Guided Robotic Systems
・ Vision hypothesis
・ Vision III Imaging, Inc.
・ Vision in fishes
・ Vision in toads
・ Vision in White
・ Vision Inspired by the People
・ Vision Institute
・ Vision Interfaith Satellite Network
・ Vision International College


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Vision for Space Exploration : ウィキペディア英語版
Vision for Space Exploration

The Vision for Space Exploration (VSE) was a plan for space exploration announced on January 14, 2004 by President George W. Bush. It was conceived as a response to the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster, the state of human spaceflight at NASA, and as a way to regain public enthusiasm for space exploration. It was replaced by the Space policy of the Barack Obama administration in June 2010.
== Outline ==
The Vision for Space Exploration sought to implement a sustained and affordable human and robotic program to explore the solar system and beyond; extend human presence across the solar system, starting with a human return to the Moon by the year 2020, in preparation for human exploration of Mars and other destinations; develop the innovative technologies, knowledge, and infrastructures both to explore and to support decisions about the destinations for human exploration; and to promote international and commercial participation in exploration to further U.S. scientific, security, and economic interests.
In pursuit of these goals, the Vision called for the space program to complete the International Space Station by 2010; retire the Space Shuttle by 2010; develop a new Crew Exploration Vehicle (later renamed Orion) by 2008, and conduct its first human spaceflight mission by 2014; explore the Moon with robotic spacecraft missions by 2008 and crewed missions by 2020, and use lunar exploration to develop and test new approaches and technologies useful for supporting sustained exploration of Mars and beyond; explore Mars and other destinations with robotic and crewed missions; pursue commercial transportation to support the International Space Station and missions beyond low Earth orbit.〔
Outlining some of the advantages, U.S. President George W. Bush addressed the following:〔
One of the stated goals for the Constellation program is to gain significant experience in operating away from Earth's environment, as the White House contended, to embody a "sustainable course of long-term exploration."〔 The Ares boosters are a cost-effective approach — entailing the Ares V's enormous, unprecedented cargo-carrying capacity〔Creech, Steve and Phil Sumrall. ("Ares V: Refining a New Heavy Lift Capability" ). NASA.〕 — transporting future space exploration resources to the Moon's〔 weaker gravity field. While simultaneously serving as a proving ground for a wide range of space operations and processes, the Moon may serve as a cost-effective construction, launching and fueling site for future space exploration missions. For example, future Ares V missions could cost-effectively〔 deliver raw materials for future spacecraft and missions to a Moon-based〔 space dock positioned as a counterweight to a Moon-based space elevator.
NASA has also outlined plans for manned missions to the far side of the Moon. All of the Apollo missions have landed on the near side. Unique products may be producible in the nearly limitless extreme vacuum of the lunar surface, and the Moon's remoteness is the ultimate isolation for biologically hazardous experiments. The Moon would become a proving ground also toward the development of In-Situ Resource Utilization, or "living off the land" (i.e., self-sufficiency) for permanent human outposts.
In a position paper issued by the National Space Society (NSS), a return to the Moon should be considered a high space program priority, to begin development of the knowledge and identification of the industries unique to the Moon. The NSS believes that the Moon may be a repository of the history and possible future of our planet, and that the six Apollo landings only scratched the surface of that 'treasure'. According to NSS, the Moon's far side, permanently shielded from the noisy Earth, is an ideal site for future radio astronomy (for example, signals in the 1-10 MHz range cannot be detected on Earth because of ionosphere interference.〔(LIFE on Moon )〕)
When the Vision was announced in January 2004, the U.S. Congress and the scientific community gave it a mix of positive and negative reviews. For example, Rep. Dave Weldon (R-Fla.) said, "I think this is the best thing that has happened to the space program in decades." Though physicist and outspoken manned spaceflight opponent Robert L. Park stated that robotic spacecraft "are doing so well it's going to be hard to justify sending a human," the vision announced by the President states that ''"robotic missions will serve as trailblazers — the advanced guard to the unknown."''〔 Others, such as the Mars Society, have argued that it makes more sense to avoid going back to the Moon and instead focus on going to Mars first.
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Throughout much of 2004, it was unclear whether the U.S. Congress would be willing to approve and fund the Vision for Space Exploration. However, in November 2004, Congress passed a spending bill which gave NASA the $16.2 billion that President Bush had sought to kick-start the Vision. According to then-NASA chief Sean O'Keefe, that spending bill “was as strong an endorsement of the space exploration vision, as any of us could have imagined.”〔 〕 In 2005, Congress passed S.1281, the NASA Authorization Act of 2005, which explicitly endorses the Vision.
Former NASA Administrator Michael Griffin is a big supporter of the Vision, but modified it somewhat, saying that he wants to reduce the four-year gap between the retirement of the Space Shuttle and the first manned mission of the Crew Exploration Vehicle.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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