Piccolo Posted January 31, 2003 Posted January 31, 2003 Are we anywere near in having the technology to live on mars?
Mastermold Posted January 31, 2003 Posted January 31, 2003 Maybe, but first we would have to transport supplies and people. That will need to be practical first. And the question remains... what purpose would it serve humanity to populate another planet. I mean overpopulation is a problem that has no end in expansion.... only control. We could, in theory, populate all physical space... and we would still reproduce. The answer to overpopulation is control, not colonizing another planet. Otherwise there isn't any practical reason to "move" to Mars.
PogoC7 Posted January 31, 2003 Posted January 31, 2003 Yes. One way would be to start pumping Carbon-Dioxide to create a atmoshepe is about five-hundred years. Another way we could colonize Mars would be if we lived under the surface. If Mars had volcanic activity at one point (and water). Then underground tunnels (large cave structures; can not thing of the real name. *like one's found in Tenneesse*) should be many and large as FUCK.
Piccolo Posted January 31, 2003 Author Posted January 31, 2003 Yes but it would actually help us to colonize such a huge planet. its so much bigger than.
Piccolo Posted January 31, 2003 Author Posted January 31, 2003 Or we can always find the reactor from total recall and create an atmosphere from that hehehe
PogoC7 Posted January 31, 2003 Posted January 31, 2003 Yea, I think I know were one is on Mars. Near the spector Delta tri-rainman mountains. *the secreat is INSIDE*
fafalone Posted January 31, 2003 Posted January 31, 2003 I believe the current figures if we applied all our resources that we could teraform Mars to a habitable environment in about 100 years...
NSX Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 Well, this is fairly dangerous. I mean, we need to fully analyze the repurcuttions [pardon my spelling] of populating Mars. By taking resources from Earth onto Mars, we're depleting Earth of its natural resources.
JaKiri Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 Originally posted by PogoC7 Yes. One way would be to start pumping Carbon-Dioxide to create a atmoshepe is about five-hundred years. Another way we could colonize Mars would be if we lived under the surface. If Mars had volcanic activity at one point (and water). Then underground tunnels (large cave structures; can not thing of the real name. *like one's found in Tenneesse*) should be many and large as FUCK. I believe that this wouldn't work, as the atmosphere would be stripped off by the solar wind, as mars doesn't have a large enough magnetic field to divert it.
fafalone Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 One would think that its magnetic field would be constant over time, so why would it be that in the past, it would have had an atmosphere, but its impossible to create one now?
JaKiri Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 Originally posted by fafalone One would think that its magnetic field would be constant over time, so why would it be that in the past, it would have had an atmosphere, but its impossible to create one now? Well, it doesn't have much of one now, does it? Things can happen to magnetic fields....
Radical Edward Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 what magnetic field... heh. oh and transporting goods from earth would be stupid when there is a good supply of everything you need in the apollo amor carbonaceous chondrites. faf: what current figures? I'd be interested in seeing any proposed techniques.
aman Posted February 10, 2003 Posted February 10, 2003 We just need to send a rocket full of cockroaches and crabgrass to Mars. In ten years it will look just like Florida. Just aman
Aardvark Posted February 11, 2003 Posted February 11, 2003 I believe we could make Mars habitable if we really wanted to. Its more a question of having the will. Do we have the grit, vision and determination to spend vast sums of money, years of labour and intellectual effort to do it. Considering that the effort would probably take centuries, or at the least, decades i rather doubt our species has what it takes.
PogoC7 Posted February 11, 2003 Posted February 11, 2003 The Possibilities of Colonizing Mars to Sustain Life. http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mawong/Mars-homepage.html
Sayonara Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 We still haven't got around the problem of keeping the atmosphere in place. Without a stable magnetic field sufficient to deflect the solar wind it will be torn away faster than we can produce it. BTW - why is this in pseudoscience? Surely it's Astophysics?
Aardvark Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 On the Nasa terraforming websites there is no mention of the problem of a magnetic field. Recommend any sources of info?
Sayonara Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 If space.com have forums there may be bright sparks there who have thought of it. Remember NASA is the agency that suggested a moon base without micrometeor defences.
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