One day you may get something right.
Never give up fella![]()
Doubtful .... not that keen on the right tbh ... bunch of **** stains with very low IQ ... even collectively

One day you may get something right.
Never give up fella![]()

Probably made sense in your head mate but to most is just wine talkDoubtful .... not that keen on the right tbh ... bunch of **** stains with very low IQ ... even collectively![]()

Best thing I've seen about Mars is The Planets with Brian Cox. The episode comparing the life of Mars and Earth is nothing short of brilliant.
Mars had an atmosphere and an iron core which was spinning like the Earth creating magnetic poles, had its own aurora poles which shielded it from the extreme solar winds from the sun. It was lush.
Until the core stopped spinning, the magnetic poles disappeared, and with that those solar winds stripped it of its atmosphere and all its water, leaving it a scorching dustbowl.
What's so profound about all of that is the spinning outer iron core under us is all that's stopping us from going the same way.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p06qj2qg/the-planets-series-1-2-the-two-sisters-earth-mars
Watch from 36 mins if you cba to watch it all, though I would recommend it. It's an exceptional episode/series.
Fascinating stuff. It makes me realise that we are but a mere speck in a universe far greater than the imagination.

The total randomness of history... of it all, is what freaks me out. Imagine that happened to us and not Mars? Or better still, if none of it happened to either planet and right now there were two planets side by side (kind of) both with an atmosphere, water and possibly life. And us with the ability to travel between each like we are now. Wow!
Seems like we want to use Mars as a stepping stone further into the universe. I see with the helicopter now on Mars, it's not there to explore anything, it's merely to fly and capture the data to send back to Earth. This data will then be use with the foresight for future manned crafts. Ie what we can and can't do in that atmosphere.
I watched the first few mins of that helicopter video. You realise just how much they have to think about when designing that sort of stuff. Cubic feet of air in atmosphere fgs! Looks good though.
How long will it take to do the research with the helicopter and the rover? 10 years? Then probably build a base which will take years, then use it as launchpad to somewhere like Titan I'd guess (I think that's the moon around Jupiter iirc with water and ice).
When we have the ability to leave our solar system then it'll be another level of incredible. None of it will be in our lifetime though.
I think this is what Orion is all about, I assume that is going to be used as or for creating the space station. So the astronauts will go to there from Earth, and then on to the Moon or ultimately to Mars. I suppose by having docking stations, you have chance of preserving human life on these missions. Ie less risk. All safe house stepping stones in a way. Then onward into deeper space as time passes.
Is the point that someday we have to leave this rock so we best get good at this.?
Watching them land a rocket again standing up is a mad thing to see.I don't know enough about it but from the little I know, I'm guessing private companies will be involved. Spacex is one that's building rockets that'll be capable of travelling further than anything before them.
Yeh don't get the whole "its waste of money" attitude tbh.I think that's a good reason for having a contingency plan, at the very least.
But also because we can and it's a worthwhile endeavour and an adventure.
I hear people saying we should spend money on Earth based problems before spending it on space exploration.
But why not have the ambition to do both ?![]()
but YknowYeh don't get the whole "its waste of money" attitude tbh.
This planet will die one day, maybe sooner than we all think.
We just gonna die with it?
Obviously not usbut Yknow

Funny I know but absolutely true.Get prepped or die
But yeah, it would be negligent not to explore imo.

