MIT predicts Mars1 human settlement to suffocate in 68 days
Posted by freedomforall 10 years, 10 months ago to Technology
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While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
As I see it: Mars firsr, which opens the belt, which provides the mass for tether relays to be built, which then provides the means for rapid and safe travel from Mars orbit to Luna and earth orbit. Hell, call it the Galt Line for snickering.
Then from there you can build shipyards at Mars Planitia as well as mass haulers and more tether cyclers to build orbital infrastructure. Mass is cheapest from the belt to orbit.
And that is where the honest money is to be made. Personally my goal is to build the first pre-fab Martian colony company. :-D. Let Musk get us there and I'll get your colony setup.
As I like to say "commence sense isn't always common or correct".
Now I believe we should have been on Mars by now. You can understand, I'm sure, you can understand how a tyro like me would assume that the closer would be easier. Like many other things I've discovered, the obvious isn't always so obvious.
Second, getting to orbit is pretty much 90-95% of the fuel to get anywhere in the solar system. Climbing out of the gravity well is the main hurdle.
Third, Mars' atmosphere again helps once there. With hydrogen feedstock we can make all the air and water we want, and do it before we even arrive. Also, the difference between a near-absolute vacuum on the moon and op the thin one on Mars means less read shielding required adpnd your suits are much, much thinner, lighter and more maneuverable.
Fourth, look at the moon footage. That hop they do isn't just for show. It happens to be the way to move around in the very small amount of gravity on the moon. On Mars your gait would be much easier and less ungainly - virtually normal compared to Luna. As CircuitGuy and DriveTrain refeenced, Zubrin's book goes into great detail on the specifics. It even includes a deeper explanation with tables on the delta-v for cruising various points in our solar system. Mars is the gateway to the stars for mankind barring some miracle breakthrough that cuts through known laws of physics or technology.
Our planet has few areas left to spread to: polar regions, deserts, ocean bottoms, mountaintops. Not the most hospitable places, though still easier to get to than Mars. Terra-forming Earth to be fit for human life will, of course, find objection from climate crazies and gaia gurus.
Governments tend to be lenient with pioneers into new frontiers at first, until enough work and progress has been done for looters to be attracted. Even building the internet followed that formula. Just watch the current attempts to milk it.
"First steps down new roads"...and the herd soon follows. In today's world, the frontiers are internal, intellectual, psycho-epistemological. Winning individual liberty in action, not just lip service, is that frontier. Let's hope to achieve it by persuasion, not violence.
Yes, low tech is the way to go. We use gas-lifht era technology and chemical reactions to extract O2 from Mars' atmosphere. We take a feedstock of hydrogen and produce water and oxygen from the CO2 laden atmosphere. If we aren't needing water as much we can recycle nearly all of the hydrogen used to extract oxygen from the atmo.
Enough so that we really won't be concerned with venting some oxygen. It will be cheaper and easier to extract more than to compress and store any excess.
Easy to feed, can control their growth, and they'll transform oxygen to carbon dioxide.
In addition - you don't want to VENT the oxygen - that's oxygen you need in the system and the plants aren't creating NEW oxygen - they're transforming CO2 into carbon and oxygen - so getting rid of it is just silly - you need to trap excess oxygen - not toss it out of the system. Same for excess CO2 (consider shellfish as a way).
Regardless, there are low tech ways to solve these problems, aren't there?
Getting sidetracked on building a Moon base as an intermediary step (instead of a completely separate endeavor,) would be a waste for several reasons, not the least of which is the fact that it's a more harsh place even than Mars. The Moon's only advantage is proximity - but the inexpensive craft Zubrin details for his Mars transit would render radiation shielding over long time periods the single biggest obstacle. Everything else would be more difficult to do on the Moon than on Mars.
Not that it wouldn't be cool to have a Moon base - and we almost certainly will at some point - just that it's unnecessary for going to Mars. And as in every case of new exploration in human history, the drive to space exploration will not truly take off (pun if you want one,) until private enterprises a.) see a ton of money to be made in space and b.) governments have sufficiently unshackled private enterprises to allow them to go after it.
http://www.amazon.com/Martian-Andy-Weir-...
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