Occasionally natural calamities remind us of precisely how fragile human beings actually are, and then after we realize how tough humans can be, as we find inspiration to reconstruct and not give up – it's just amazing to me actually. Though they may not seem so at the time, natural catastrophes here on Earth are not the end of civilization. If you happen to have got a few moments I want to discuss this with you from a philosophical perspective, and offer some steerage on what we will be able to learn by studying and doing research on these things for the future.
You see, after the giant Japanese Earthquake, I\’d written an interesting piece titled; \”We should observe the radiation results of the Japanese Tremor/Tsunami Fukishima Nuclear Power Plant Disaster and Apply What We Learn for Future Space Missions.\” Why you ask? Simple really, in space our astronauts and travelers will be subject to a massive amount of space radiation.
An individual reading that article gave me some positive feedback for which I thanked them profusely and I added that; indeed, I would say that our discussion on this topic is more than apropos to the existing solar flares which are happening, and the biological effects for those at the global space station. Our astronauts will be the subject of space radiation, and the X-Flares which ensue during the solar maximum period. We ought to be studying these things, and understanding the biological effects.
One thing that people are not talking about is the difficulties to human eyesight. In reality we'd sometime discover that folks who've gone on space missions have serious challenges with their vision when they get back from the radiation of space. Long term spaceflight is quite heavy, especially inside our solar system near our Sun, outside of our solar system we don't know yet what sort of space radiation there will be, we won't presume that it is going to be void of such radiation, actually it might be worse, and there might be challenges to severe cosmic frequency bombardment.
Humans returning to Earth may end up blind when they get here. Living inside a space capsule, they may ultimately know where everything is, and even if they do go blind they can possibly deal with it. They may need to have special goggles which they're going to have to wear all the time to protect their vision, and perhaps other types of protective clothing to guard other sensitive organs. These are things we must study for the future if we are to resolutely go. Please consider all this and think on it.
Buford Cravens is sales manager from a badges manufacturer,he writes many articles about military cap badges.
VN:F [1.9.16_1159]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.9.16_1159]