Why are we eager to explore the Universe?

Unraveling the mysteries of the Universe 
Yes, it is because we want to find the aliens, well it is partially true. But, the reality is beyond the books (Wait, did I said books? Oops!). I am convinced that if all the space agencies were to disappear tomorrow, if we never put up another Hubble Space Telescope, never put another human being in space, people in this world would be profoundly distraught. 


When Charles Lindbergh was asked why he crossed the Atlantic, he never once answered that he wanted to win the $25,000 that New York City hotel owner Raymond Orteig offered for the first nonstop aircraft flight between New York and Paris. Burt Rutan and his backer, Paul Allen, certainly didn't develop a private spacecraft to win the Ansari X-Prize for the $10 million in prize money. They spent twice as much as they made. Sergei Korolev and the team that launched Sputnik were not tasked by their government to be the first to launch an artificial satellite; they had to fight for the honor and the resources to do it.

I think we all know why people strive to accomplish such things. They do so for reasons that are intuitive and compelling to all of us but that are not necessarily logical. They’re exactly the opposite of acceptable reasons, which are eminently logical but neither intuitive nor emotionally compelling.
First, most of us want to be, both as individuals and as societies, the first or the best in some activity. We want to stand out. This behavior is rooted in our genes. We are today the descendants of people who survived by outperforming others. Without question that drive can be carried to an unhealthy extreme- we've all seen more wars than we like. But just because the trait can be taken too far doesn't mean that we can do without it completely.
A second reason is curiosity. Who among us has not had the urge to know what’s over the next hill? What child has not been drawn to explore beyond the familiar streets of the neighborhood?
Finally, we humans have, since the earliest civilizations, built monuments. We want to leave something behind to show the next generation, or the generations after that, what we did with our time here. This is the impulse behind cathedrals and pyramids, art galleries and museums.
Hence, to just satisfy our curiosity, to live in the history books and to be known in this world or maybe beyond universe, we explore the universe and try to unravel it's mysteries.
Picture of the Day:-
Big Dipper Above and Below Chilean Volcanoes
 Image Credit & Copyright: Yuri Beletsky (Carnegie Las Campanas Observatory, TWAN)
About The PictureDo you see it? This common question frequently precedes the rediscovery of one of the most commonly recognized configurations of stars on the northern sky: the Big Dipper. This grouping of stars is one of the few things that has likely been seen, and will be seen, by every generation. The Big Dipper is not by itself a constellation. Although part of the constellation of the Great Bear (Ursa Major), the Big Dipper is an aster-ism that has been known by different names to different societies. Five of the Big Dipper stars are actually near each other in space and were likely formed at nearly the same time. Connecting two stars in the far part of the Big Dipper will lead one to Polaris, the North Star, which is part of the Little Dipper. Relative stellar motions will cause the Big Dipper to slowly change its configuration over the next 100,000 years. Pictured in late April, the Big Dipper was actually imaged twice -- above and below distant Chilean volcanoes, the later reflected from an unusually calm lagoon.
Wow, didn't knew we might be the last generation to see these seven stars forming the constellation in the sky - Ursa Major. 
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