racingfoki.blogg.se

Nuclear time mars
Nuclear time mars













nuclear time mars

We'll, tell you how to subscribe to that as well. It usually comes out a week after Casey's. I'll save talking about my newsletter, which is also monthly. So if you can't get enough space policy, have it show up in your email inbox and I can tell you, it's terrific. One of my favorite parts is when people write back and interact with me on the topic of the time, that's always great to be pushed and challenged and really explore some of these issues. There's a link there to sign up or we will put a link in the show notes of this very podcast. It comes about the second week of every month. I'd love for people to sign up, and it kind of comes paired with this podcast. I highlight some important pieces of space policy or politics and it's got a great readership already. It's a monthly newsletter where I write a little bit about what's going on. I realized we haven't been plugging this enough in my own show, our own show, the Space Advocate Newsletter. How do people read it? How do they find out more about it? Yours is out and so it's appropriate to mention that during the Space Policy Edition. Casey, something that we have not regularly talked about, we both have newsletters. We do have some other things to talk about. I used to watch those old videos they showed us in elementary school about too cheap to meet her.

nuclear time mars

So we will go into the details with that with Bhavya.Ītoms for peace. So really fascinating stuff happening and very exciting potential future related to that. Something that The Planetary Society is getting very interested in and how that could be used, not just for frankly getting humans to Mars, but where else in the solar system can we benefit from that type of power and propulsion. Really interesting discussion, really interesting stuff happening behind the scenes for a lot of us. Not at the polls, but to get there faster and more efficiently. The nuclear option at Mars, just not the one that's been. You're going to talk with her today just to tease here about nuclear propulsion or other forms of nuclear energy and how handy those would be out there beyond Earth. We have a number of things to get to before we get to a terrific second appearance by the great, Bhavya Lal on the Space Policy Edition.

nuclear time mars

Joined as always for this monthly installment of SPE by the senior space policy advisor for The Planetary Society, he is also our chief advocate, welcome, Casey Dreier. I'm Mat Kaplan, the host of the weekly show at Planetary Radio. Welcome back, everybody to the Space Policy Edition of Planetary Radio.















Nuclear time mars