u/bloomberg

Why Everyone Is Heading Back to the Moon
🔥 Hot ▲ 92 r/Futurology+1 crossposts

Why Everyone Is Heading Back to the Moon

More from Bloomberg News reporters Loren Grush, Bruce Einhorn and Kate Duffy:

More than 50 years after the last human set foot on the moon, the US and China are competing to repeat the achievement. America’s National Aeronautics and Space Administration hopes to launch a crew of four on a trip around the moon as early as April 1 in a mission known as Artemis II. They would be the first astronauts since the 1970s to travel beyond so-called low-Earth orbit, the domain of the discontinued US Space Shuttle program and the International Space Station, which is still operating. Artemis I sent an uncrewed capsule around the moon in 2022. Missions II and III are meant to be preludes to the program’s first human moon landing, Artemis IV, which NASA is targeting for early 2028. Chinese officials have said their goal is a crewed lunar touchdown by 2030.

A handful of other countries have their own lunar programs, as does the European Union. Through 2030, governments and private entities have planned more than 400 missions in the next two decades to fly past or circle the moon or to land crewed or uncrewed spacecraft there, according to a count by the European Space Agency.

Unlike the last moon race, between the US and what was then the Soviet Union, the objective goes beyond leaving so-called flags and footprints on the lunar surface. The aim this time is to stick around for a while, using the moon as a proving ground and staging base for a much more ambitious project: travel to Mars, which is 200 times farther away.

The US is the only country to have put humans on the surface of the moon—12 of them between 1969 and 1972, in the Apollo program. The Artemis effort is named for the goddess in Greek mythology who was Apollo’s twin. The program’s overarching goal is to have moon travelers create a sustainable human presence there. The idea is to learn how to survive on another world before sending astronauts deeper into the solar system.

bloomberg.com
u/bloomberg — 4 days ago
What Urban Planning’s Past Says About Tomorrow’s Cities

What Urban Planning’s Past Says About Tomorrow’s Cities

A new book from Harvard University scholar Bruno Carvalho marks the milestones and missteps that have shaped urbanization patterns around the world.

bloomberg.com
u/bloomberg — 6 days ago
In Parks and on Rooftops, Urban Beekeeping Takes Flight

In Parks and on Rooftops, Urban Beekeeping Takes Flight

Raising honeybees in the city has emerged as a popular sustainability practice — and a big business. But hives can also leave native pollinators in a sticky fix.

bloomberg.com
u/bloomberg — 7 days ago
▲ 18 r/history

The Chaotic Week When the World Cup Went Missing

Gangsters, spies and an international security agency. There was far more to the March 1966 disappearance of the Jules Rimet trophy than Pickles the dog.

Jonathan Wilson for Bloomberg News

London’s Westminster Hall was quiet on the morning of Sunday, March 20, 1966. A Methodist service was taking place on the ground floor, but a stamp exhibition upstairs was closed and the only people around were cleaners and security guards. At around 11 a.m., according to several news reports, one of the security guards checked the exhibition space: Everything was in order. About 70 minutes later, another guard checked again. To his horror, he saw that the prize exhibit — the Jules Rimet Trophy, to be awarded at that year’s World Cup in England — was gone.

What followed is one of the best-known stories in World Cup history.

reddit.com
u/bloomberg — 15 days ago
Welcome to Paris, the City That Said No to Cars
🔥 Hot ▲ 179 r/sustainability

Welcome to Paris, the City That Said No to Cars

Outgoing Mayor Anne Hidalgo championed a car-free agenda, leaving Paris greener, cleaner and better for walking and biking. Take a journey through the city to see how it's changed.

bloomberg.com
u/bloomberg — 15 days ago