It's cheaper to send robots to the moon, which the USA, China and European Union has done within the last 10 years, than to send people. As an astronomy teacher once explained to me; if there was a huge stack of gold bricks on the surface of the moon it would cost more to send people to get them than the gold would be worth.
3 reasons why NASA hasn't sent people to the moon yet:
1. Costs are more expensive
after 1972, the program stopped in a sudden month, some said it was due to a cost problem, The 2005 report, NASA estimates to return to the moon will cost around USD 104 billion. If calculated for this year, it would take US $ 133 billion.
2. Political problems
NASA spent $ 9 billion over five years to design, build and test aircraft for the space program. But after Barack Obama came to power and the Government Accountability Office released a report on NASA's inability to estimate Constellation costs, finally Obama canceled the program and signed the Space Launch (SLS) rocket instead.
3. Technical problems
Madhu Thangavelu, an aeronautics engineer at the University of Southern California, wrote in 2014 that the moon was covered in "fine layers of moon dust, like a few inches in some areas, electrostatically which can damage space, vehicles and systems very quickly. "
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Because there is a sun we've not gone to , i think its time to try a new thing. Just my opinion
It's cheaper to send robots to the moon, which the USA, China and European Union has done within the last 10 years, than to send people. As an astronomy teacher once explained to me; if there was a huge stack of gold bricks on the surface of the moon it would cost more to send people to get them than the gold would be worth.
3 reasons why NASA hasn't sent people to the moon yet:
1. Costs are more expensive
after 1972, the program stopped in a sudden month, some said it was due to a cost problem, The 2005 report, NASA estimates to return to the moon will cost around USD 104 billion. If calculated for this year, it would take US $ 133 billion.
2. Political problems
NASA spent $ 9 billion over five years to design, build and test aircraft for the space program. But after Barack Obama came to power and the Government Accountability Office released a report on NASA's inability to estimate Constellation costs, finally Obama canceled the program and signed the Space Launch (SLS) rocket instead.
3. Technical problems
Madhu Thangavelu, an aeronautics engineer at the University of Southern California, wrote in 2014 that the moon was covered in "fine layers of moon dust, like a few inches in some areas, electrostatically which can damage space, vehicles and systems very quickly. "
View this answer on Musing.io