Date: 15/10/2020 19:46:49
From: dv
ID: 1633816
Subject: Artemis Accords

Nations sign on to NASA’s Artemis Accords for peaceful space exploration

With space exploration becoming more accessible to more countries, cooperation will be key to making sure everything goes to plan. NASA has outlined the principles for that peaceful future in the Artemis Accords, and now a group of founding member nations has signed them.

During the space race of the 1950s and 60s, it soon became apparent that new international laws were needed regarding who could do what beyond the confines of Earth. In response, the Outer Space Treaty was enacted in 1967, which ensured that space remained free for exploration and use by all nations, for peaceful purposes only. Further, it forbids any government from claiming sovereignty over a celestial body, and prohibits weapons of mass destruction being placed in outer space.

The brand new Artemis Accords build on that foundation. They’re named for NASA’s major Artemis Plan, which intends to return humans – including the first woman – to the Moon in 2024. This time it’ll be a permanent presence, with deep space outposts setting the stage for eventual crewed missions to Mars. And NASA has similarly lofty ambitions for the Accords.

“Fundamentally, the Artemis Accords will help to avoid conflict in space and on Earth by strengthening mutual understanding and reducing misperceptions,” says Mike Gold, acting associate administrator for international and interagency relations at NASA. “Transparency, public registration, deconflicting operations – these are the principles that will preserve peace. The Artemis journey is to the Moon, but the destination of the Accords is a peaceful and prosperous future.”

https://newatlas.com/space/nations-sign-artemis-accords-nasa/

Reply Quote

Date: 15/10/2020 23:07:50
From: Neophyte
ID: 1633861
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

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Date: 15/10/2020 23:11:03
From: JudgeMental
ID: 1633862
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

Neophyte said:


Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

2 million km from earth

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Date: 15/10/2020 23:22:17
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1633864
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

Neophyte said:


Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

I think it means not orbiting the Earth.

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Date: 15/10/2020 23:38:02
From: btm
ID: 1633866
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

mollwollfumble said:


Neophyte said:

Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

I think it means not orbiting the Earth.

The “dictionary” definition (first defined by E. E. “Doc” Smith) is out of the Earth’s gravitational influence, but that’s so vague that JudgeMental’s 2Gm is not unreasonable.

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Date: 16/10/2020 06:21:27
From: sibeen
ID: 1633879
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

btm said:


mollwollfumble said:

Neophyte said:

Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

I think it means not orbiting the Earth.

The “dictionary” definition (first defined by E. E. “Doc” Smith) is out of the Earth’s gravitational influence, but that’s so vague that JudgeMental’s 2Gm is not unreasonable.

Viewed through a latter lens. It makes it less gray.

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Date: 16/10/2020 13:18:41
From: dv
ID: 1634072
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

Neophyte said:


Just out of curiosity, at what point does pace become deep space?

Deep Space is a colloquial term with no formal definition and a broad range of meanings. Sometimes it is used to mean interstellar space, sometimes everything above low earth orbit. Although this journalist has chosen to use the term in this article, it’s not a term that appears in the Artemis Accords.

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Date: 16/10/2020 14:09:55
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1634113
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

dv said:


Neophyte said:

Just out of curiosity, at what point does space become deep space?

Deep Space is a colloquial term with no formal definition and a broad range of meanings. Sometimes it is used to mean interstellar space, sometimes everything above low earth orbit. Although this journalist has chosen to use the term in this article, it’s not a term that appears in the Artemis Accords.

I disagree. The ambit of NASA’s Deep Space Network is very specific. And has a very specific meaning.

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Date: 16/10/2020 14:11:06
From: dv
ID: 1634116
Subject: re: Artemis Accords

mollwollfumble said:


dv said:

Neophyte said:

Just out of curiosity, at what point does space become deep space?

Deep Space is a colloquial term with no formal definition and a broad range of meanings. Sometimes it is used to mean interstellar space, sometimes everything above low earth orbit. Although this journalist has chosen to use the term in this article, it’s not a term that appears in the Artemis Accords.

I disagree. The ambit of NASA’s Deep Space Network is very specific. And has a very specific meaning.

That is exactly one (1) use of the term.

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