Moon Math

Jul. 1st, 2002 01:08 pm
infrogmation: (Default)
[personal profile] infrogmation
Let's see...

Have I got this right? Mathematics never was my strong point...

Cost of Apollo program: $25.4 billion

Amount of moon material brought back by Apollo program: 381.7 kg

25,400,000,000 / 381,700

Works out to about $60,540 spent per gram of moon brought back, no?


Going rate for Apollo moon rock on open market: almost $5million per gram

So if that value held, NASA would have a stockpile of moon with an estimated street value of some $19085 Billion...

(Yes yes, scarcity; I know that if there was more on the market the price would go down... I was just pondering...)

Date: 2002-07-01 02:26 pm (UTC)
jjjiii: It's pug! (Default)
From: [personal profile] jjjiii
That logic assumes that the only value of the Apollo missions and the entire space program was to get moon rock. That's just ludicrous.

Obviously, a lot of the research and development that made the moon shot possible made other valuable stuff possible, like killing millions of people with satellite-based lasers, and nuclear powered flying cars, and the memory of shouting "In your face!" and "We're number one" and the "U-S-A" chant at those commie bastards from the old Evil Empire. Things that we couldn't imagine our civilization without today.

Besides, you CAN'T know if moon rock is really worth it until you've shot up with some; it's surprizingly good.

Mooooon!

Date: 2002-07-01 04:16 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] infrogmation.livejournal.com
Funny stuff.

"Besides, you CAN'T know if moon rock is really worth it until you've shot up with some; it's surprizingly good."

And if the cops catch you with Moon rock, they don't arrest you, they arrest the rock (http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4451764,00.html).

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