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A**N
Very nice buy
Happy to get the book from Amazon.
A**L
How Space has become a frontier
All the Books of the Tim Marshall series is a good read, it tells about the land, water and space, how humans have eyed other's land for gold, and agriculture and now how they are eyeing space to claim their territory.
R**Y
Fascinating read on the space race and the future
A great read. I immediately bought another hardback copy for a friend who is also loving it.
I**N
New Space Race, New Cold War, New Actors with Big Hopes
Like the geopolitics of earth, there are places and spaces outside of earth’s atmosphere that are more strategic than others. In Tim Marshall’s “The Future of Geography”, politics on earth will continue to influence the race for strategic space access and exploitation.According to many experts, the globe is in the throes of another space race. But this one is different. In the first race, the Soviet Union and the US spent billions each in national projects, exchanging victories as each nation achieved success “firsts” in space exploration. Russia’s programs extended from scientific giants like Tsiolkovsky who’s calculations in rocket launching fuel-weight ratios still represent the prime hurdle to economical and sustainable space exploration. The Apollo program may have won the moon race but in the 1960s, the space race united a global passion and demonstrated a civility in competition that today’s geopolitics lacks.Marshall begins his latest book by recapping the joys and excitement of the first space race and highlighting its geopolitical influence and shared humanity even amidst the potential for nuclear catastrophe. We are in a second space race, Marshall argues, which happens to coincide with another brand of cold war. This new race has more players, more targets, more investors and even more-so than the first race, is in desperate need of space rules and norms to ensure the peaceful use of space. Peaceful, space, rules, norms, are all words that sadly have differing definitions between today’s biggest space competitors.Today’s space race is a competition for strategic orbits in cislunar space and promising real-estate on the moon’s surface. There is more to orbital dynamics than Low Earth Orbit (LEO), Geosynchronous Orbit and Geostationary Orbit (GEO). Lagrange orbit points represent strategic locations in relation to the sun, moon and earth’s gravity that allow for the most sustainable orbit in most conducive to space development potential. LEO is congested orbit space made worse by increasing space debris. GEO is perhaps a little less congested but requires a more expensive transportation service. In between, MEO, is an orbital expanse where with the right technology, all space players may get a little more elbow room.On earth, the most strategic launch pads are a combination of proximity to the equator, smaller populations with limited radio frequency zones and the presence of an east facing sea of empty space for safe rocket launches in the direction of our spinning orb for greatest thrust out of the atmosphere’s proverbial net.In a way, every corner of the earth can provide some advantage to space explorers and its accompanying technology. For instance, China took advantage of Djibouti’s proximity to the equator and its government’s strategy of hosting competing country outposts at lucrative prices to lease a small plot of Djiboutian land for Africa’s first space port. Australia, Namibia and South Africa are important space places due to their open skies and minimal radio frequency interference. South Africa is soon to host the world’s largest satellite receiving complex (SKA), a multibillion and multinational project.Unlike Sputnik and Apollo, today’s biggest space exploration programs require funding and collaboration from multiple contributors. Marshall digs in to the specifics of the US-led Artemis Project and accompanying Accords comparing it to the European Space Agency’s approach and China and Russia’s space aspirations. Each space program requires the economic, research and technology contributions of as many nations as possible. To be expected, the new space race also requests the political support of its contributors to influence the development of space norms, laws and expectations.While there have been attempts at developing space treaties, as Marshall explains, none has caught on or been fully ratified by all the space faring nations. Instead, the Artemis Accords is one effort to ensure the peaceful use of space in addition to existing space law from individual nations. As a matter of fact, China has yet to produce its own space law despite thousands of rocket launches, hundreds of satellites and its aggressive efforts to provide space launch services and satellite production for other countries. In contrast, Taiwan’s newly named Aerospace Agency (TASA), ensured that mere sounding rocket operations spurred Taiwan’s lawmakers to pass comprehensive space regulations just last year. China’s space technology is advanced, but its reticence to formalize its own space regulations is another data point in comparing not only government systems but development and safety norms.The new space race cold war borders may be less malleable between the US and China but countries like France and their space agency (CNES) claim to be able to de risk continued cooperation with China while signing on to the Artemis Accords. It gives France two paths to the moon and maybe even Mars. Marshall’s work is significant for its fair description of other space programs in India, Japan and the UK and their cooperation calculus. The constant across the spectrum is the increased contributions and funding from private companies like Space-X (US) and ispace (Japan). Space-X provided more than just communication terminals to Ukraine post Russian invasion. Space-X also became the indispensable alternative to Russian Soyuz-supported launches. Yet another example of how this new space race involves a diverse set of players and unexpected geopolitical impacts.The book ends where it begins, restating the need for global space norms and rules. The author engages the reader in an exercise envisioning the many ways in which the current race for space could trigger conflict inside and outside the earth’s atmosphere. Disrupting satellite operations not only spells disaster for economic output dependent on internet connectivity but disrupting early warning satellite feeds to any nuclear power directly impedes nuclear deterrence which makes nuclear conflict more likely.I enjoyed Marshall’s journey through ancient space enthusiasts from the Greeks and Romans to the Chinese and golden age of Islam. The heavens to most are a reflection of Someone’s handiwork. Giants of science like Isaac Newton overcame religious dogma to consider science as a celebration of creation. The vastness of the universe and the minuteness of matter each contain the clues to both space exploration and the pleasure of its Author.In this new space age, we can hope for the best (cooperation) but every nation appears to be planning for the worst which includes ensuring the defense of their space systems and coming up with some impressive laser weapons and satellite robots with claw arms in the process. Also, as many experts have noted, almost any space-related technology can be dual use which makes the need for rules and norms more prescient.
D**E
Insightful.
Clear. Easy to understand for the lay person. Interesting views on what could be achieved. Worth the read, I am a space novice and enjoyed it.
J**A
Good read
Bought for my husband and he loved it and lots of interesting conversation topics from it to discuss
M**L
Tim Marshall, una certezza, ma introduzione forse non necessaria
Per chi ha apprezzato i libri di Tim Marshall è una certezza. Sempre altamente leggibile anche da non gli addetti ai lavori.Ho trovato l'introuduzione storica un po' inutile e manieristica, ottima invece l'introduzione scientifica sul tema spazio.
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