A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
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A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
Richard Branson thinks so --- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/09/2 ... 03924.html
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- Bella Fortuna
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
Can we pick who to send there? 

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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
I have little doubt. 

- klr
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
Let's start a Ratz Colony near Pavonis Mons
... the ideal spot for a space elevator.
... the ideal spot for a space elevator.

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- Gawdzilla Sama
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
What's wrong with Olympus Mons, it's already out of the atmosphere. No drag.klr wrote:Let's start a Ratz Colony near Pavonis Mons
... the ideal spot for a space elevator.
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
I'd like to see the Olympus Mons Veneris.Gawdzilla Sama wrote:What's wrong with Olympus Mons, it's already out of the atmosphere. No drag.klr wrote:Let's start a Ratz Colony near Pavonis Mons
... the ideal spot for a space elevator.
Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
I actually looked up what klr said, and he's correct. Pavonis Mons is right at the Martian equator, whereas Olympus Mons is about 20 degrees north. I'm a nerd.
Of course, we still ought to build a space elevator here on Earth if we intend to have a colony on Mars big enough to build another one there...
Of course, we still ought to build a space elevator here on Earth if we intend to have a colony on Mars big enough to build another one there...
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
I am very pro-space elevator. One or more here. One or more on Mars. A space station here, and a space station around Mars. A large spaceship goes back and forth from the Earth to Mars regularly. A small shuttle can carry humans from the space stations to the elevators. Elevators take humans and materials to the surface. Then we start making regular trips. Mine stuf f on Mars and ship it back here.Ian wrote:I actually looked up what klr said, and he's correct. Pavonis Mons is right at the Martian equator, whereas Olympus Mons is about 20 degrees north. I'm a nerd.
Of course, we still ought to build a space elevator here on Earth if we intend to have a colony on Mars big enough to build another one there...
Other ships and machines, probably mostly robotic, could go from Mars and/or Earth to asteroids. Once we start harvesting minerals and other elements from Mars and asteroids, we'll be off and running. Another station at Jupiter or one of its Moons, and so on.
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
No.
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
Would the length saved and atmospheric resistance lost make O.M. better than P.M. or not?
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
What if we fly St. George's Cross on Mars? Would that help?Clinton Huxley wrote:No.
Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
Until we run into the Klingons. Then we'll have to transfer some resources from pure exploration & expansion to weaponized starships and military R&D.Coito ergo sum wrote:I am very pro-space elevator. One or more here. One or more on Mars. A space station here, and a space station around Mars. A large spaceship goes back and forth from the Earth to Mars regularly. A small shuttle can carry humans from the space stations to the elevators. Elevators take humans and materials to the surface. Then we start making regular trips. Mine stuf f on Mars and ship it back here.Ian wrote:I actually looked up what klr said, and he's correct. Pavonis Mons is right at the Martian equator, whereas Olympus Mons is about 20 degrees north. I'm a nerd.
Of course, we still ought to build a space elevator here on Earth if we intend to have a colony on Mars big enough to build another one there...
Other ships and machines, probably mostly robotic, could go from Mars and/or Earth to asteroids. Once we start harvesting minerals and other elements from Mars and asteroids, we'll be off and running. Another station at Jupiter or one of its Moons, and so on.
- Tyrannical
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
A Mars colony would be simple, with an Orion class nuclear powered ship. Chemical rockets going from Earth to Earth orbit is just too inefficient.
A rational skeptic should be able to discuss and debate anything, no matter how much they may personally disagree with that point of view. Discussing a subject is not agreeing with it, but understanding it.
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
It's a techno-utopia fantasy. It's not happening any time soon.Coito ergo sum wrote:What if we fly St. George's Cross on Mars? Would that help?Clinton Huxley wrote:No.
"I grow old … I grow old …
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
http://25kv.co.uk/date_counter.php?date ... 20counting!!![/img-sig]
I shall wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled"
AND MERRY XMAS TO ONE AND All!
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Re: A Mars Colony in Our Lifetimes?
But, Branson is a Limey, right? So, his space program will most certainly be far superior to.....Clinton Huxley wrote:It's a techno-utopia fantasy. It's not happening any time soon.Coito ergo sum wrote:What if we fly St. George's Cross on Mars? Would that help?Clinton Huxley wrote:No.

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