Foreword

     
       

Nearly a century ago, the Wright brothers set in motion the age of flight. Just 30 years ago, humans landed on the Moon. Today, NASA launches a new space mission every 11 weeks. With the technologies developed to go to the Moon, Mars, and beyond, we also have improved the quality of life here on Earth.

The generation that will lead us into the new millennium will build the highway of the future. The highway of the future will send astronauts beyond Earth's orbit safely, take business ventures to space cheaply, and help America explore the cosmos confidently.

The interplanetary highway, like today's highway, will have destinations. It will reach laboratories to harvest new technologies in biomed, biotech, robotics, advanced materials and sensors, to name a few. Its on-ramps will be open to everyone, not just NASA astronauts and Russian cosmonauts. It will even have its own communication system, an interplanetary internet. It will go well beyond Earth's orbit and the Moon, and reach other planetary bodies, asteroids, comets, and other solar systems. It may even help us answer the question: Are we alone? Along the way it will also bring new technologies we haven't even dreamed about yet.

We almost take for granted the returns on NASA's past investments: global communications, TV satellite broadcasts, extended weather forecasting, digital imaging, fire retardant materials, smoke detectors, computer barcoding, disposable diapers, the pacemaker, scratch resistant glasses, cordless power tools, remote monitoring devices for intensive care patients, and countless contributions to commercial aircraft engines and air traffic systems.

One person who certainly does not take NASA's work for granted is a young Alabama boy. He has a rare genetic disorder that prevents him from going into the daylight without experiencing nerve inflammation, severe blistering, and other serious effects. Recently, he was able to play outside during daylight, for the first time, wearing a protective suit developed from the same technology that protects our astronauts from ultraviolet radiation in space.

This is what NASA is about opening up the space frontier, solving the mysteries of the universe, and bringing the discoveries into our homes. Spinoff 1999 is a tribute to the spirit of the men and women who dare to dream everyday about building the highway of the future.

Daniel S. Goldin
Administrator
National Aeronautics and Space Administration


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