Mon, 02 Mar 2009
Titan, by Stephen Baxter describes a near-future manned mission to Titan, Saturn's moon, by Space Shuttle, no less.
This is the first book i've read by Stephen Baxter, and will probably not be the last. It's well written, the most science-based outer planets mission story i've read in since Arthur C. Clarke, though with a pessimistic edge. The story turns on a waning NASA using its remaining hardware on one big mission, to Titan, where life may have been discovered.
§ Most of the book concentrates naturally enough on getting to Titan, rather than what they found when they get there, but Baxters ammonia-based chemistry is intriguing. The physics of what it would be like to walk on the moon are a little underdone, though. Its an understatement to say that Titan is cold: serious work on insulation would be needed to stop your base melting the "permafrost" and sinking. While we don't know what life might be present, it would be good to imagine the real tasks involved in being there.
But it's his idea that NASA and others really don't want space that is most interesting. That the military want space as their baliwick, and would rather frustrate the development of technologies so that no other nations or groups interfere is well worth thinking about. To a degree, I would agree: frustrate, but not he puts it, stop. Sooner or later the technology has other uses on Earth to the point where even amateurs would launch their own satellites. The vast bulk of technology development for future space use will be done not only on Earth but for Earth use: the minaturization that NASA and the military did for the space race in the 1960's now happens for consumer electronics. 3 D fabricators are being built for prototyping, and the prospect of getting a self-contained space mission together (not reliant on Earth) draws closer. I fully expect private groups, rather than national efforts, will be the first to colonise outer space, assembling pre-existing technologies.