Not really. I mean people want to go to Mars but there is really no real reason to other than being the first.
The minerals are all on easy to get to asteroids. Its damn hard to get to mars and land let alone return witch is 100 times harder. Why deal with that when you can just mine a rock already in space? They never will.
As for living on another planet you can forget about that too. The surface of mars is hard to land on because of the atmosphere but offers none of the benefits atmospheres should. The radiation is the same as being in deep space pretty much and the gravity isn't much more that the moon. Way to low to live on permanently.
Were gonna live inside giant rotating cylinders if we ever live anywhere else but earth. Only way to simulate Earth. They can even build them on the moon which does make sense to live on since its so close to earth and you can catapult back/ actually mine.
I think his goal with space colonization is more in line with jump starting the centuries long process of terraforming planets like mars, Venus etc and colonizing space.
There certainly is a long term need for it in my mind. It won’t be completed in any of our life times but the start is just getting there.
There will be no terraforming. It takes too long and too much energy. Its easier to do much greater works in way less time. Venus we would have to remove most of the atmosphere and somehow cool it way down. Mars will never have a magnetic field required to keep an atmosphere from blowing away and to keep you safe from radiation and will never be a good place to live or harvest for resources.
Yea, as of today this is true. It’s a process that will take centuries. We already have theoretical formulations in chemistry and materials science to terraform The Venetian or Martian atmosphere. The biggest issue is getting the technology scaled up and transporting it there in a large enough scale.
With centuries of time and advancement in automation and space travel, I do think we can terraform a planet. It’s really the only viable option for a long term, self sustaining ecosystem other than earth. We may have to solve the terraforming problem to save earth it self in light of some future hypothetical calamity, anyways.
Even though Venus’ atmosphere is some 90 times as dense as earths, it is still the more viable candidate for long term, self sustaining habitation if terraformed, IMO. It has nearly the same gravity as earth as well as an active core. Everyone is fixated on Mars right now, and as a base or short term solution, it is viable, but the effects of low gravity on life would be great in the long term, and life may not exist as we know it, or at all there.. A fully manifested atmosphere would take millions of years to strip away by solar winds, even with no magnetosphere, and there are artificial solutions, as well. Again, the biggest issue is scaling up and getting the equipment there.
Given centuries of time and advancement though, I do believe we will see terraforming of one or both in the next several hundred years or millennia.
No one knows for sure though, and anyone saying anything with certainty is just being short sighted.
That is the ultimate goal… and the Minerals on Mars.
Not really. I mean people want to go to Mars but there is really no real reason to other than being the first.
The minerals are all on easy to get to asteroids. Its damn hard to get to mars and land let alone return witch is 100 times harder. Why deal with that when you can just mine a rock already in space? They never will. As for living on another planet you can forget about that too. The surface of mars is hard to land on because of the atmosphere but offers none of the benefits atmospheres should. The radiation is the same as being in deep space pretty much and the gravity isn't much more that the moon. Way to low to live on permanently.
Were gonna live inside giant rotating cylinders if we ever live anywhere else but earth. Only way to simulate Earth. They can even build them on the moon which does make sense to live on since its so close to earth and you can catapult back/ actually mine.
I think his goal with space colonization is more in line with jump starting the centuries long process of terraforming planets like mars, Venus etc and colonizing space.
There certainly is a long term need for it in my mind. It won’t be completed in any of our life times but the start is just getting there.
There will be no terraforming. It takes too long and too much energy. Its easier to do much greater works in way less time. Venus we would have to remove most of the atmosphere and somehow cool it way down. Mars will never have a magnetic field required to keep an atmosphere from blowing away and to keep you safe from radiation and will never be a good place to live or harvest for resources.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kmFOBoy2MZ8&t=427s
This channel is amazing btw
Yea, as of today this is true. It’s a process that will take centuries. We already have theoretical formulations in chemistry and materials science to terraform The Venetian or Martian atmosphere. The biggest issue is getting the technology scaled up and transporting it there in a large enough scale.
With centuries of time and advancement in automation and space travel, I do think we can terraform a planet. It’s really the only viable option for a long term, self sustaining ecosystem other than earth. We may have to solve the terraforming problem to save earth it self in light of some future hypothetical calamity, anyways.
Even though Venus’ atmosphere is some 90 times as dense as earths, it is still the more viable candidate for long term, self sustaining habitation if terraformed, IMO. It has nearly the same gravity as earth as well as an active core. Everyone is fixated on Mars right now, and as a base or short term solution, it is viable, but the effects of low gravity on life would be great in the long term, and life may not exist as we know it, or at all there.. A fully manifested atmosphere would take millions of years to strip away by solar winds, even with no magnetosphere, and there are artificial solutions, as well. Again, the biggest issue is scaling up and getting the equipment there.
Given centuries of time and advancement though, I do believe we will see terraforming of one or both in the next several hundred years or millennia.
No one knows for sure though, and anyone saying anything with certainty is just being short sighted.