Mars

Status
Not open for further replies.
If we can find that martian oxygen plant it will make colonisation so much easier <laugh>

Find the water - ice - and you've found the oxygen. A kid with a chemistry set could do the rest. The job will be hauling up the equipment up there. This is where the Aldrin Conveyer Belt will come into play. I'll let you look that up, or I could bore everyone a bit further on just how brilliant those Apollo astronauts really were? :emoticon-0145-shake
 
  • Like
Reactions: brb and Diego
Find the water - ice - and you've found the oxygen. A kid with a chemistry set could do the rest. The job will be hauling up the equipment up there. This is where the Aldrin Conveyer Belt will come into play. I'll let you look that up, or I could bore everyone a bit further on just how brilliant those Apollo astronauts really were? :emoticon-0145-shake

I posted about a Brian Cox documentary earlier on Mars history. What you've said is true to an extent but without a natural magnetic field we'd need to find an artificial way of keeping the atmosphere or it'll quickly be stripped away again by the sun.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ivan Dobsky
i like to look at the moon and the sun.

i've never once felt the urge to look any closer.

they are like snow, nice to look at.

Wouldn't look at the sun too long: even at 93m miles away, you'll end up with a squint like Lee Majors. <eek>
 
Funny you should say that, the thought had crossed my mind <laugh>

I assume the capsules holding the samples will only be opened under strict conditions. What's that you say, Wuhan...I raise you the Kent strain. :cheesy:

We're just far too incompetent or self-destructive as a species to contain it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: brb and Diego
this populating another planet sounds a piece of piss..

what can possibly go wrong?

People will die going there: people will die when they get there. Bit like how the South Sea Islanders populated the Pacific over the milennia in little rafts. Nothing gets nothing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: brb
People will die going there: people will die when they get there. Bit like how the South Sea Islanders populated the Pacific over the milennia in little rafts. Nothing gets nothing.
yeah i get you, no difference in sailing the seas to travelling up into space.
 
  • Like
Reactions: brb
I posted about a Brian Cox documentary earlier on Mars history. What you've said is true to an extent but without a natural magnetic field we'd need to find an artificial way of keeping the atmosphere or it'll quickly be stripped away again by the sun.

Oh yes. I meant oxygen for power, and we'd have to live underground and in bubbles for centuries. Terra forming is generations away. But pumping carbon into the atmosphere, believe it or not, will be part of the equation.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Treble
Oh yes. I meant oxygen for power, and we'd have to live underground and in bubbles for centuries. Terra forming is generations away. But pumping carbon into the atmosphere, believe it or not, will be part of the equation.

It will at least also enable ppl to have enough oxygen for space suits etc when they venture above ground as well.

It's amazing to think the surface is a scorched hell, but a lot of it is solidified volcanic lava which happened after the planet died and underneath it all it's so cold there could be millions of tonnes of frozen water.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Ivan Dobsky
Good shout. Comm mentioned Aliens but Prometheus may be more appropriate.

I watched a programme about it some time ago

It is thought that the Martians would evolve in a different way to the people left on Earth, would still be identifiable as human but would be almost a seperate species

The really interesting point raised was that if conditions worsened on Earth and greatly improved on Mars would the Martians allow migrants from Earth to move to Mars

Probably not was the conclusion
 
  • Like
Reactions: Treble
Status
Not open for further replies.