Kshartle wrote:
It makes no sense that a moon landing would be acheivable 45 years ago and not be relatively simple now. At least it makes no sense to me. If anyone subscribes to the theory that it's as difficult or nearly as difficult now can you explain why perhaps?
I'll take a shot.
The process of getting to the moon began about 20 years before the first manned moon landing.
Newtonian Physics and Planetary motion were well understood 200 years before that. A decade or so before that, WWII refined rocket technology. What happened in the 50's and 60s was the development of the culture and ecosystem that would support such a project.
The science as written in the books is not nearly enough to pull off a manned space launch. 20 years to grow a Master engineer or scientist. A handful of Journeyman engineers and scientists. A plethora of a apprentices.
Add to that the moneymen, the political supporters, the logisticians, the communications infrastructure, the incubation of specialized suppliers... And the list could go on. Private personal relationships between scientists and lunches over beer between governmental agencies. Friends you knew that you could trust with your life and that you knew had dealt with the same problems you had.
All of that eco-system withered away over the last few decades. Yes, there are still a few old no bullshit masters around - but it is no more than the last speakers of a dying language.
Today, to rebuild that entire ecosystem would take no less than 10 years. The knowledge in the white papers don't contain the 20 years of experience (technology, deal brokering, PR, materials providers, vendors, etc.) Any new attempt would require between 3 and 10 trial efforts of increasing complexity before you had a strong enough foundation behind you to really go for the moon. There would be new geniuses, new journeymen, new apprentices. New political relationships. New vendors incubated.
The effort would be equal or greater than the original attempt.
Something completely different - and equally novel and wonderful might be pulled off by one of the private space endeavors. Even today, though, with most of them having 5+ years of startup history, I think they are all ~10 years away from a manned moon landing.