Mars Settlement
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Mars One will take humanity to Mars in 2023, to establish the foundation of a permanent settlement from which we will prosper, learn, and grow. Before the first crew lands, Mars One will have established a habitable, sustainable settlement designed to receive new astronauts every two years. To accomplish this, Mars One has developed a precise, realistic plan based entirely upon existing technologies. It is both economically and logistically feasible, in motion through the aggregation of existing suppliers and experts in space exploration. We invite you to participate in this journey, by sharing our vision with your friends, by supporting our effort, and perhaps, by becoming the next Mars astronaut yourself.
Is this even realistic? 11 years?
Computers have been intelligent for a long time now. It just so happens that the program writers are about as effective as a room full of monkeys trying to crank out a copy of Hamlet.
Mars is several magnitudes more inhospitable than Antarctica. Maintaining a relatively simple facility there is complicated and requires a complex resupply effort. Three huge problems: 1) Radiation. Mars has no radiation belt and no magnetosphere. You'd have to build underground; you can't just put up an airtight hut. 2) Water. People need lots of it. While there is evidence of water on mars, we don't know how much there is. 3) Low gravity. Mars as 38% of the gravity of earth. So far the evidence is that this would be problematic in the short term and likely lethal over the medium to long term. (Then there are issues of the tilt, the orbit and so forth.)
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For NASA, yes, that is true. Mars One is a private enterprise. Interesting side note, the introductory video says that the astronauts will go there to live out the rest of their lives :~
Be The Noise
Karl Sanford wrote:
the introductory video says that the astronauts will go there to live out the rest of their lives
That counts me out (not that they'd ever count me in). I have a feeling the deer hunting on Mars isn't that great.
XAlan Burkhart
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It means the only thing that's stopping them is something that is definitely possible. Maybe not in 11 years, though, but I guess we'll see.
harold aptroot wrote:
It means the only thing that's stopping them is something that is definitely possible.
Not sure what that means but unless the cost comes down significantly, where 'down' means in relation to economies that might be willing to do it, it isn't going to happen.
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harold aptroot wrote:
It means the only thing that's stopping them is something that is definitely possible.
Not sure what that means but unless the cost comes down significantly, where 'down' means in relation to economies that might be willing to do it, it isn't going to happen.
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Quote:
Mars One will take humanity to Mars in 2023, to establish the foundation of a permanent settlement from which we will prosper, learn, and grow. Before the first crew lands, Mars One will have established a habitable, sustainable settlement designed to receive new astronauts every two years. To accomplish this, Mars One has developed a precise, realistic plan based entirely upon existing technologies. It is both economically and logistically feasible, in motion through the aggregation of existing suppliers and experts in space exploration. We invite you to participate in this journey, by sharing our vision with your friends, by supporting our effort, and perhaps, by becoming the next Mars astronaut yourself.
Is this even realistic? 11 years?
Computers have been intelligent for a long time now. It just so happens that the program writers are about as effective as a room full of monkeys trying to crank out a copy of Hamlet.
Wow, It's a planet just like our beautiful Earth.. Without the oceans, rainforests and life. What a great step forward. We lack the technology to live comfortably somewhere easy; like a desert or under the ocean. We are wiping out life. due to simple fundamental problems such as human population growth. Yet, the geniuses living in a box somewhere in 1950s NASA, think your future and mankinds' destiny is on a lifeless red hell-planet. Perhaps there will be a circa-eighties city there, and a woman with three breasts. I am ashamed of you all. yes it is a planet, but it is not earth. For many obvious reasons. Too many movies, not enough exercise, outside, in the fresh air.
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harold aptroot wrote:
it's just that no one paid for it.
Which is exactly why one should wonder how realistic it is.
Also, we don't have a president like Kennedy who vowed that by the end of the decade, we would have a man on the moon. I don't think Obama, Bush, or any future president will say that. We have more important internal troubles to get over. Damn politics.
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It means the only obstacle is not an insurmountable one. They would only need to wait until the donations + the expected value of the broadcasts are more than the costs. It's just a matter of time.
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harold aptroot wrote:
They would only need to wait until the donations + the expected value of the broadcasts are more than the costs. It's just a matter of time.
Again unless the costs come down that is not going to happen.
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Also, we don't have a president like Kennedy who vowed that by the end of the decade, we would have a man on the moon. I don't think Obama, Bush, or any future president will say that. We have more important internal troubles to get over. Damn politics.
James Lonero wrote:
Also, we don't have a president like Kennedy who vowed that by the end of the decade, we would have a man on the moon.
Which completely ignores the history of the time then and now. The reason that was possible then was mostly due to the cold war, the apparent success of the USSR and the very real fear of nuclear war. Fear is a great motivator. And of course the US was having a very successful economic boom and one that many people thought would last forever. If that had not been going on then the US would have probably gone to space and maybe the moon but certainly would not have kept going back.
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Wow, It's a planet just like our beautiful Earth.. Without the oceans, rainforests and life. What a great step forward. We lack the technology to live comfortably somewhere easy; like a desert or under the ocean. We are wiping out life. due to simple fundamental problems such as human population growth. Yet, the geniuses living in a box somewhere in 1950s NASA, think your future and mankinds' destiny is on a lifeless red hell-planet. Perhaps there will be a circa-eighties city there, and a woman with three breasts. I am ashamed of you all. yes it is a planet, but it is not earth. For many obvious reasons. Too many movies, not enough exercise, outside, in the fresh air.
penguinman573 wrote:
We are wiping out life. due to simple fundamental problems such as human population growth.
Population grow is a problem but we are not "wiping out life".
penguinman573 wrote:
Too many movies, not enough exercise, outside, in the fresh air.
Too simplistic in many ways. First of course there is the simple fact that economic growth is the only known solution to population growth. So one could hypothesize that an economic boom caused by a growing space presence (wherever) which is fed by raw resources being sent to earth and high end goods being shipped out could produce such a boom. And if it occurred it is hard to see how it would not be a long running one as well. Other than that your statement has an implicit suggestion that quality of life is somehow worse now which ignores the fact that when people did in fact get more "exercise, outside, in the fresh air" it was because the vast majority were dirt farmers living day to day and life for all humans was significantly worse in all aspects.
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Quote:
Mars One will take humanity to Mars in 2023, to establish the foundation of a permanent settlement from which we will prosper, learn, and grow. Before the first crew lands, Mars One will have established a habitable, sustainable settlement designed to receive new astronauts every two years. To accomplish this, Mars One has developed a precise, realistic plan based entirely upon existing technologies. It is both economically and logistically feasible, in motion through the aggregation of existing suppliers and experts in space exploration. We invite you to participate in this journey, by sharing our vision with your friends, by supporting our effort, and perhaps, by becoming the next Mars astronaut yourself.
Is this even realistic? 11 years?
Computers have been intelligent for a long time now. It just so happens that the program writers are about as effective as a room full of monkeys trying to crank out a copy of Hamlet.
A program to put people on mars in 10 years is so aggressively speculative as to border on fantasy. I'm sure it's possible given the will, but that will is not manifest. Mankind hasn't demonstrated the ability to do any part of the project; we don't know how to keep people strong and healthy for 9 months in space, we can't currently land 20 tons of stuff safely on mars, we don't know how to extract minerals and grow food on mars. We don't know how to return astronauts either, but mars-1 dispenses with that requirement. All this capability is to be developed in 10 years. This would rank as an unprecedented achievement in science, engineering and medicine. It's way more complicated than the moon landing. And it is proposed by a company whose primary business model is entertainment. All this science and engineering is just soooo geeky. Making it entertaining and glamorous would rank as the greatest contribution of the entertainment industry to the progress of civilization. Given their business model, perhaps this is the place where we should be most skeptical. After all, solving the engineering problems is just a matter of funding and of grinding it out. But making it interesting... The funding is itself an unprecedented challenge. NASA estimated 100 billion dollars to get to mars back during the Bush administration. Lets speculate that a private firm would be 10x as efficient, so it will only cost 10 billion. In the entertainment world, that's the profit eqauivalent of 50-100 blockbuster motion pictures. All about the same subject. Hard to believe the project could hold the world's interest that long. Expect to see a mars-themed reality show about selecting and training the astronauts, which can be done inexpensively, followed by a general loss of momentum around the whole endeavor, terminating with no sound at all when the end date passes unremarked. Realistically, training the astronauts is the smallest hurdle they have to jump. Maybe, hopefully before I die, a couple or three superpower governments will team up and get people on mars. After somebody develops an ion drive to cut the transit time to 30 days or so. (go NASA). After demonstrating safe entry of large payloads. Perhaps not until after the cost of launching stuff into space falls into the $100/kg range. (It was like $25k/kg for the shuttle). Remember the L5 Society, dreaming of a space station a la 2001 A Space Odyssey and collecting funds? All they actually accomplished was some political lobbying and production of a few newsletters
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I believe the original NASA estimate was to get boots on Mars around 2030. This seems a little ambitious but I wish them luck.
"If you think it's expensive to hire a professional to do the job, wait until you hire an amateur." Red Adair. nils illegitimus carborundum me, me, me
Note, that NASA wants to return the astronauts back while these guys plan to stay there forever. This greatly simplifies the job. I think their goal is feasible and definitely there are enough money on the World to achieve this. Perhaps going to Mars is 10 times cheaper than the USA budget deficit.
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penguinman573 wrote:
We are wiping out life. due to simple fundamental problems such as human population growth.
Population grow is a problem but we are not "wiping out life".
penguinman573 wrote:
Too many movies, not enough exercise, outside, in the fresh air.
Too simplistic in many ways. First of course there is the simple fact that economic growth is the only known solution to population growth. So one could hypothesize that an economic boom caused by a growing space presence (wherever) which is fed by raw resources being sent to earth and high end goods being shipped out could produce such a boom. And if it occurred it is hard to see how it would not be a long running one as well. Other than that your statement has an implicit suggestion that quality of life is somehow worse now which ignores the fact that when people did in fact get more "exercise, outside, in the fresh air" it was because the vast majority were dirt farmers living day to day and life for all humans was significantly worse in all aspects.
We are in the middle of a mass extinction event, worse than any on fossil record. If you live in a town or a city, you may be oblivious to that... Because you have lots of people, pigeons, domestic-dogs and cockroaches. Gross human population increase is 2 million per week.. Your fantastical idea that economic growth is the only solution to population growth is not so much simplistic as ridiculous. A nuclear powered rocket ship that goes to mars and digs up copper to make plasma televisions. I will put that on my list of solutions, underneath 'time-machine', and 'frozen seed-bank'.
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Quote:
Mars One will take humanity to Mars in 2023, to establish the foundation of a permanent settlement from which we will prosper, learn, and grow. Before the first crew lands, Mars One will have established a habitable, sustainable settlement designed to receive new astronauts every two years. To accomplish this, Mars One has developed a precise, realistic plan based entirely upon existing technologies. It is both economically and logistically feasible, in motion through the aggregation of existing suppliers and experts in space exploration. We invite you to participate in this journey, by sharing our vision with your friends, by supporting our effort, and perhaps, by becoming the next Mars astronaut yourself.
Is this even realistic? 11 years?
Computers have been intelligent for a long time now. It just so happens that the program writers are about as effective as a room full of monkeys trying to crank out a copy of Hamlet.
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What kind of policing will be done? Will there be guns sent also? What if someone goes crazy and starts breaking life support systems? A better idea, would be to start seeding life on that planet. Send some life starting algae. :-D
Terra-form or Colonize, that is the question. Honestly both avenues are good to go down. Would Mars be a better candidate for Terra-forming than others? Probably, but we are a long ways a way from being able to understand how to do it. A colony may in fact lead the way of tech to allow this. I said elsewhere, I do think our 'tech' is good enough to start a foothold of some sort on Mars. But a self providing colony is a different story. We do not have the tech to allow them to return and it takes certain types of people to be able to go on such a one way trip. Those type of people are not necessarily the same types of people that could maintain a colony. Sort of a catch 22.
Computers have been intelligent for a long time now. It just so happens that the program writers are about as effective as a room full of monkeys trying to crank out a copy of Hamlet.
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penguinman573 wrote:
We are wiping out life. due to simple fundamental problems such as human population growth.
Population grow is a problem but we are not "wiping out life".
penguinman573 wrote:
Too many movies, not enough exercise, outside, in the fresh air.
Too simplistic in many ways. First of course there is the simple fact that economic growth is the only known solution to population growth. So one could hypothesize that an economic boom caused by a growing space presence (wherever) which is fed by raw resources being sent to earth and high end goods being shipped out could produce such a boom. And if it occurred it is hard to see how it would not be a long running one as well. Other than that your statement has an implicit suggestion that quality of life is somehow worse now which ignores the fact that when people did in fact get more "exercise, outside, in the fresh air" it was because the vast majority were dirt farmers living day to day and life for all humans was significantly worse in all aspects.
That simple fact sounds like a 'made up not-fact' ? You can invent a tractor, make food cheaper. you can also add more people, and make food more valuable. Both of these have been happening simultaneously. The tractor improvements were winning, but not any more. Economic growth and population growth are separate. They are often confused by politicians, real estate agents and fools. First, you will realize that the value of fresh air and clean water is more than the value of a new TV. Then, you will realize that they aren't mutually exclusive. Technology doesn't need exponential population growth in order to flourish and improve. Population growth is an unnecessary by-product. First, at least try and live sustainably in the desert or Antarctica before moving to mars.