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Mars United States Technology

DARPA Is Already Working On Designer Organisms To Terraform Mars 136

MarkWhittington writes: Space visionaries dream of a time when human beings will not only settle Mars, but will terraform the Red Planet into something more Earth-like, with a breathable atmosphere, running water, and a functioning biosphere. Evidence exists that Mars was more or less Earth-like billions of years ago before the atmosphere leached away into space and the water became frozen under the ground and at the poles. Terraforming Mars is decades away from the beginning and probably centuries away from the end. But DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, is already genetically engineering organisms that will help turn the Red Planet blue, according to a story in Motherboard.
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DARPA Is Already Working On Designer Organisms To Terraform Mars

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  • root problem (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:16PM (#49990867)

    Thought the whole atmosphere issue was due to Mars not having a functioning magnetic field anymore?

    • Re:root problem (Score:4, Informative)

      by ScienceofSpock ( 637158 ) <keith.greeneNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:30PM (#49990959) Homepage
      I thought so too. I was under the impression that Mars has no spinning iron core anymore, so terraforming is all but impossible since there isn't a strong enough magnetic field to prevent the solar winds from stripping away any potential atmosphere beyond what is currently there. What am I missing here?
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Venus does not have a magnetic field either. It's got a bit too much atmosphere, though. Earth, Mars, and Venus are now all thought to lose atmosphere to solar wind stripping at the sane approximate rate.

      • I thought so too. I was under the impression that Mars has no spinning iron core anymore, so terraforming is all but impossible since there isn't a strong enough magnetic field to prevent the solar winds from stripping away any potential atmosphere beyond what is currently there. What am I missing here?

        People who approve funding for DARPA (and others) aren't usually interested in the scientific reality, just the hype.

    • Re:root problem (Score:5, Interesting)

      by garyisabusyguy ( 732330 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:32PM (#49990975)

      That has an effect over hundreds of thousands or millions of years, it is possible that an artificial atmosphere would remain usable to us in human timescales without leaching away

      High energy particles from the Sun would be another matter.

      Without magnetic fields to prevent them from hitting the surface they would continue to be a threat to us an our electronics

      • Re:root problem (Score:4, Informative)

        by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:46PM (#49991075) Homepage Journal

        Without magnetic fields to prevent them from hitting the surface they would continue to be a threat to us an our electronics

        In Kim Stanley Robinson's books they solved this by living underground until they could get shielded buildings built aboveground. Their vehicles were also shielded. Presumably one would use hardened electronics.

        • Re:root problem (Score:5, Interesting)

          by The Real Dr John ( 716876 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @08:39PM (#49991453) Homepage

          From a biological perspective, the major problem is that there is no low hanging fruit in terms of biological energy sources on mars, and not enough water for any type of surface colonization with methane and CO2 generating microbes. So you couldn't harvest the limited sunlight on the surface. You'd need to hope tor subsurface water where you would be limited to slow metabolizing extremophiles that eat rock and produce gas. They would not generate enough atmosphere over any kind of reasonable time frame, and then on top of that thestripping effect from the solar wind and lack of magnetic field would negate most of the outgassing that occurred from the microbes. If it could have been done by living microbes, it probably already would have by Martian microbes. If they couldn't do it, we probably can't either.

          • Re:root problem (Score:5, Interesting)

            by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday June 25, 2015 @09:03PM (#49991591) Homepage Journal

            If it could have been done by living microbes, it probably already would have by Martian microbes. If they couldn't do it, we probably can't either.

            I largely agree with you. The energy would have to come from somewhere else. In the Mars trilogy, they achieve the most early success by deliberate greenhouse gas production. Engineered bacteria have little effect. So even science-fiction agrees with you... and has for a long time.

      • So here is an idea... no idea of effectiveness, though that could be tested in a lab. Implementation like any terraforming or atmosphere creation scheme is all pretty fantastical. Anyway I know from reading various sources that water, specifically tanks of water can be used as effective shielding against radiation. What if when they are designing what the atmosphere is to be consisted of, they attempt to make it at certain levels pretty soupy with suspended water vapor. A couple km thickness of the stuff mi

        • Then again, perhaps the water would absorb the radiation, creating "Rad Rain", which can't be good.

          Mars prospector: "A Rad Rain is commin' sonny, I can feel it in me bones. Best take cover in a local vault until it passes through I reckon."

    • Re:root problem (Score:4, Interesting)

      by narf0708 ( 2751563 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @08:36PM (#49991427)
      Yes it is the major issue. Which always brings to mind my favorite proposed solution: Mine neodymium from asteroids, use it to construct a massive rare earth magnet ring around Mars, and watch as Mars' solid metal core once again becomes magnetized and creates a planetary magnetic field. Sure, it would be a truly massive project, but it would be easier by orders of magnitude as compared to trying to restart the magnetic field by liquefying the mantle and outer core of Mars. Plus, we wouldn't have to worry restarting Olympus Mons.
      • I reckoned you could do the equivalent with a superconducting cable around Mars' equator carrying about 500 amps. This sounds more do-able than it perhaps is, because the magnetic field has an enormous amount of energy so it would take years to establish the magnetic field; and all the energy would all come out if the cable is broken.
    • I thought it was a size issue. Well, a mass issue anyhow. Mars not having enough of it (so not enough gravity) to retain an atmosphere for very long.

      One of the reasons I think Venus is a better planet to terraform. It has an atmosphere, we just need something that will break down carbon and sulphur dioxides. The first is easy, and I bet we could engineer something to do the second.

  • I always thought the main issue with life on mars was the lack of a magnetic field
    On earth we have a big lump of metal spinning at the core, this generates the field needed to protect us from the solar wind
    but in the case of mars it's theorised that this isn't the case

    without a magnetic field, this means more solar wind
    lots of radiation goodness and thinner atmosphere since the solar wind blasts the edge of the atmosphere away from the planet, similar to constantly thinning it out
    also less pressure equals l

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      "see all the fallout style mutations"

      Cue the "Total Recall" references.
    • Re:Magnetic Field? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by rmdingler ( 1955220 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:47PM (#49991089) Journal
      Sure, but that's everyone's new go-to criticism of exploring (and maybe settling) the World with the second best human habitation probability in our solar system.

      Start with caves and bunkers. Terraform and generate anthropogenic atmosphere. See what happens: if we don't get off this orb, we are destined for extinction.

      28,000 workers died to bring you the Panama Canal. What is an acceptable human sacrifice for a whole frigging planet?

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Tablizer ( 95088 )

        if we don't get off this orb, we are destined for extinction.

        What ever dooms us on Earth would likely also doom us on Mars. For example, if a mad invader wanted to take over everything, he/she would come to take Mars also. If run-away AI takes over, it will also likely infect Mars colonies.

        I suppose certain mistakes like LHC producing run-away black-holes, or one-off suicidal acts are less likely to spread to Mars, but Mars is so close that most human-created maladies would also put it at risk.

        An interstel

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Megavolcanoes, global drought, nuclear winter, large asteroid impact. It is unlikely that any of these occurences on Earth would reach Mars (if Mars already has a self-sustaining colony).

          • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

            I'm pretty sure our biggest risks are human-based. The frequency of natural mega-disasters is roughly about once per 50 million years. Yet Cold War mistakes almost triggered a nuke winter multiple times in the past 60 or so years. Humans are still stupid, with ever bigger weapons. The ability of small groups to cause big destruction is on an upward trend.

            And a global drought is unlikely to wipe out every human (unless it's part of some other problem).

            Our biggest risk is us.

            A Mars colony will improve our od

          • You know what's interesting about the threats you listed? They'd ALL leave Earth more habitable than Mars, even if more than one happened. At this point, having some Mars-specific technology around might be useful, but not that there'd be people on Mars.

            Now, suppose Earth was instead eaten by a giant mutant space goat. At that point, human life on Mars lasts a bit longer, then dies. The only way to save the species on a planet that requires high tech just to live is to have a large population (100K *

        • if we don't get off this orb, we are destined for extinction.

          What ever dooms us on Earth would likely also doom us on Mars. For example, if a mad invader wanted to take over everything, he/she would come to take Mars also. If run-away AI takes over, it will also likely infect Mars colonies.

          I suppose certain mistakes like LHC producing run-away black-holes, or one-off suicidal acts are less likely to spread to Mars, but Mars is so close that most human-created maladies would also put it at risk.

          An interstellar or extra-solar colony or ship would have a better chance. Just don't tell The Borg where you are going because they'll probably be able to move faster than us.

          Agreed, but even an extra-terrestrial settlement on our rather generically labelled moon would be a head start to figuring out the learning curve for preserving human life off of this planet.

          • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

            No, because the technologies for Earth-to-Mars travel versus interstellar travel are too different to have significant cross-usage. For example, a multi-generational interstellar ship will probably have to rotate (portions) to provide gravity to the inhabitants and thus the zero-gravity survival issues of a Mars trip are mostly moot.

            I agree there are some lessons that are usable from a Mars mission, but it's spending a heck of a lot for marginal trickle. If we could have both, great, but given an either/or

        • In order to be abled to say "a small step for a man ... etc" you have to be abled to walk. If we don't know how to set foot on another planet in our own neighbourhood, how should we accomplish this light years away, after hundreds or even thousands of years of travel?

          • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

            Perhaps I'm not explaining the tradeoffs I perceive well. We should put our humans-in-space research toward interstellar ships similar to the original Orion project (early 60's), for reasons given in nearby replies.

            I'm not convinced going to Mars is the best way to get such research and experience. We need more experience with spin-based gravity ships and NON-chemical propulsion. Doing a slightly-bigger Apollo-to-Mars is not in that direction.

      • I agree, get off the earth as soon as possible. All kinds of bad things can happen to life on a single planet (Fermi's Paradox?) and we shouldn't expect to have free rein for ever.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by PPH ( 736903 )

      Simple. We'll make our own.

      I figure it will take a loop around Mars equator carrying 850 million Amperes to get something similar to Earth's magnetic field strength. Figuring a Niobium-Tin superconductor (200,000 A/cm^2 critical curent density) that would take a superconductor of about 70 cm across.

      See how easy an engineering solution is. I'll leave the details to the subcontractors to work out.*

      *I used to work for Boeing. How did you guess?

      • But you don't need to shield the whole planet, just the part where humans live.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          You have to shield everything you want to cover with an atmosphere. If you are happy living under a dome, then a much smaller magnetic field will protect against the solar winf impinging on the dome. But if you want to terraform the entire planet, you have to keep the solar wind from 'boiling off' the atmosphere even from the parts you are not living on.

          • I was under the impression that the loss of atmosphere was extremely slow, and that any technology that could terraform the planet could easily keep pace with the loss.

            I was just talking about keeping the cosmic rays from mutating people and breaking electronics.

      • Let's see, so that's effectively a cylinder of 70cm diameter and 21,344km length. Give or take, that's 8,214,134 cubic meters of niobium-tin.

        In a ratio of 75% niobium to 25% tin as you'll be wanting for your superconductor [americanelements.com], you'll be needing about 6.2 million cubic meters (53.1 million metric tonnes) of niobium and 2.1 million cubic meters (15.5 million metric tonnes) of tin, presuming you don't have too much wastage. (I've already given you a little wiggle room with my rounding of both numbers. You're we
        • That's what the asteroid mining projects are for, right? I'm sure those will take care of it, no problem. Especially if we just make a bunch of them hit Mars and then scavenge the remains. /s
  • Surely if we have the technology to turn a dead worl into a living one, we must have the technology to properly maintain an already living one.

    I'm no saying we shouldn't explore other worlds,just that we should start our explorations from secure footings...
    • by Anonymous Coward

      A variation of "we should fix our problems at home first!" There will always be problems at home. There will always be environmental issues on earth. 6 billion+ humans on earth, we can do 2, maybe even 3 things at once just fine.

    • Surely if we have the technology to turn a dead worl into a living one, we must have the technology to properly maintain an already living one.

      Well yeah, the earth is 97% terraformed, we just need to get it a few degrees cooler. :-)

      We can't have a technological solution to global warming, we can't have climate engineering, that doesn't forward the political agendas of centralization of authority and redistribution of wealth. Only political/social solutions to global warming are acceptable. We can't just keep using science and engineering to escape malthusian(-like) catastrophes.

      • The consequences of a mistake in re-engineering Earth's climate are considerably higher than on Mars.

        • The consequences of a mistake in re-engineering Earth's climate are considerably higher than on Mars.

          Yes, that's why you do small scale things first. Things that are transitory like cloud seeding to reflect sunlight. It takes a substantial effort to screw things ups. We didn't get to the current situation through a few small or medium scale experiments.

          Plus there is really no alternative. Greening the economy/industry won't happen in time. Demand for power will increase as billions enter the middle class and demand their little luxuries and status symbols. You can wish and wish and wish that solar and w

    • Re:Wasted effort? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:44PM (#49991061)

      You'll be happy to hear that is part of the plan:

      "DARPA’s Biological Technologies Office is working on designer organisms that will not only help to terraform Mars, but will clean up environmentally ravaged areas on Earth. Such organisms would be used to clean up toxic waste and oil spills, for example. Hardy organisms could be tailored to make the deserts bloom. Other organisms could remove carbon dioxide, considered by many to be a greenhouse gas, from the atmosphere more quickly"

    • Surely if we have the technology to turn a dead worl into a living one, we must have the technology to properly maintain an already living one.

      Oh, we do... it's called a "bullet".

    • Re:Wasted effort? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Your.Master ( 1088569 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @10:40PM (#49992061)

      That's an interesting point, but it's not necessarily true. We can take bigger risks on a dead world, or even perform actions that poison in one way and improve it in another, and worry about cleaning up the poisoning later. The current world must not go through an intermediate "dead world" state.

      The risks can even help us prove concepts for the earth.

      Also, the timescale for terraforming Mars is surely much longer than the timescale for improving Earth. It's an interesting idea at least.

  • are the back to the 90's style?

  • Designer Orgasms (Score:2, Interesting)

    on Mars would be awesome! Then I reread the headline more closely...

  • by Jonathan Mann ( 3481921 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @07:49PM (#49991099)
    It seems to me that it would be far easier to adapt ourselves to Mars by modifying our genetics than to change the characteristics of an entire planet.
    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      It seems to me that it would be far easier to adapt ourselves to Mars by modifying our genetics than to change the characteristics of an entire planet.

      The point is not having mars support some sort of life. The point is so that we (literally us, or our descendants) can go there. Given a sufficient amount of genetic tinkering and you have something that is not "us", and mars would seem to require quite a bit of tinkering.

    • If we ever do get around to a project this large in scale, both efforts will probably occur. Mars will be modified toward human habitability, and a human species "fork" will be engineered to meet it halfway. Because of this we wouldn't want to use the term terraforming, exactly. How about 'bioforming'?

      Best of all: Nobody who is anti-GMO would want any part of this, and good riddance. Less woo will mean more progress in every field.

    • I think the whole point is the environment on Mars is so hostile to life you, if you were to make that approach work the leap you would need to make would be like the one made in the movie Transcendence....

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

      ,,, turn us into machines that don't need breathable air, water etc etc.... Just solar energy to power our circuits. Actually wait we've already made that leap and its called the Mars Rover.

    • by moeinvt ( 851793 )

      Technically feasible, politically impossible. We can't even get the paranoid reactionaries on this planet to support the idea of using our knowledge to cure genetic diseases. I'm sure you've heard all the arguments. Any proposal that suggests use of science and technology to select or de-select specific genetic traits generates screams of protest. You get all the "master race" bullshit and hear about how rich people will give their kids genetic advantages and blah, blah, blah.
      I'd like nothing better tha

      • Technically feasible? Exactly what do you want to create by fiddling with the human genome? You're going to make it able to survive by breathing carbon dioxide at very low pressures? Able to subsist with approximately no water? What's the new human supposed to eat? Mars is far beyond survivable just by fiddling with our genome.

  • Can we at least learn all about the planet in detail before we go destroyi... i mean "modifying" it?

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      Can we at least learn all about the planet in detail before we go destroyi... i mean "modifying" it?

      Terraforming will most likely take centuries. There's plenty of time to study the barren rocks and their chemistry.

      Now if they are not barren, some delay for additional study time may be warranted.

      Personally I think we'll see habitats on moons and asteroids before we see planet wide terraforming. The economics of various activities and industries may prefer low G / micro G. There will probably be plenty of time for scientific expeditions to the gravity wells during all this.

  • by blackanvil ( 1147329 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @08:50PM (#49991539)
    As I understand it, while there's oxygen aplenty bound up in the soil, and some carbon dioxide just lying there frozen on the ground, and even water if you look under the surface, there's a serious nitrogen deficiency. 78% of our atmosphere is nitrogen, and it's one of the building blocks of life, not to mention it's what makes it thick enough to breathe, but Mars's atmosphere only has about 2% nitrogen, and that's pretty much a vacuum by earth standards anyway. There's some fossilized fixed nitrogen in the soil, but most of it blew away in the solar wind long ago, and its not coming back unless someone finds a comet of frozen N2 and crashes it into the red planet. WIthout it, you're just not getting a viable biosphere.
    • When you say "bound up in the soil" do you mean chemically combined in oxides?

      Because when you extract the oxygen from an whatever-it-is oxide it a) takes a lot of energy, and b) the remaining whatever-it-is tends to have a literally burning desire to get its oxygen back.

  • by frank249 ( 100528 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @09:52PM (#49991843)

    The surface gravity on Mars is 38% of that on Earth [wikipedia.org]. The lower gravity of Mars requires 2.6 times Earth’s column airmass to obtain 100 kPa pressure at the surface. Mars also lacks a magnetosphere, which poses challenges for mitigating solar radiation and retaining atmosphere. The lack of a magnetosphere is thought to be one reason for Mars's thin atmosphere. Solar-wind-induced ejection of Martian atmospheric atoms has been detected by Mars-orbiting probes. Earth abounds with water because its ionosphere is permeated with a magnetosphere. The hydrogen ions present in its ionosphere move very fast due to their small mass, but they cannot escape to outer space because their trajectories are deflected by the magnetic field. Venus has a dense atmosphere, but only traces of water vapor (20 ppm) because it has no magnetic field. The Martian atmosphere also loses water to space. Earth's ozone layer provides additional protection. Ultraviolet light is blocked before it can dissociate water into hydrogen and oxygen. Because little water vapor rises above the troposphere and the ozone layer is in the upper stratosphere, little water is dissociated into hydrogen and oxygen

  • Mars is stupid (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rahvin112 ( 446269 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @10:06PM (#49991943)

    Mars presents untold challenges because it's so bloody cold, it's atmosphere is so thin and it's magnetic field is non-existent. We should be FAR more interested in Venus. I'd love to see what would happen if we dumped a canister of extremeophile bacteria into Venus. They could remove the sulfur from the atmosphere in time and actually allow the heat that makes Venus a hell to escape into space. And it would be FAR easier to manipulate Venus into loosing atmosphere than it would be to gain atmosphere on Mars. Venus also has a strong magnetic field like the earth. We'd also have the advantage on Venus of being able to live in the clouds. Normal earth air and earth pressures would float in the Venusian atmosphere. Not only that but if we can learn to slow the runaway greenhouse effect on Venus it would only help us on earth.

    We like mars because we can land on it without problems but it's devoid of life for a reason. Venus is far more interesting in my opinion. We have microbes on earth right now that could easily survive on Venus. This isn't true with mars because the UV on mars will kill even microbial life.

    • Mars has water, Venus doesn't.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Venus has far more water than mars. Its all sulfuric acid, but it routinly rains on venus in the upper atmosphere where the temperatures are low enough for liquid water to exist. The only trick with venus is neutralizing the sulfer. It's what makes the planet take up heat so easilly and keep that heat. Thats what extremeophile bacteria do, they neutralize sulfer and extract the energy from the reaction to live. Its actually one if the theories for how life on earth evolved, that the extremeophiles were firs

    • All very good points, but let's consider that colonization may involve a bit of compromise. Maybe in the best case we continue to need respirators and good shelters. Is that unacceptable? Doesn't mean it's not useful to increase the surface temperature, release certain gases, start some form of food production.

      The stability and accessibility of Mars remains very important at our present stage of technology. We aren't going to wait for terraforming to complete before we start colonizing. It's a major ad

    • I wholeheartedly agree! Venus is a much, much better target for terraforming. Mars can't even hold an atmosphere, Venus already has one. We just need to fix it.

      Although it would really stink for the first colonists.

    • We have microbes on earth right now that could easily survive on Venus.

      Eh? We have microbes that could survive as long as they stayed aloft in the Venusian atmosphere. At the surface of Venus, all life as we know it would die from the extreme heat. 400+ Celsius is no picnic for DNA and all life that we are aware of is based on DNA.

      According to the summary of this paper: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu... [nih.gov]

      DNA begins to completely break down at 190C (in dry conditions).

      Floating them in the atmosphere is quite doable and is a great idea. You are absolutely correct that we should co

  • Really, why don't we put some effort into unfucking Earth before we start fucking with another planet? Should be much easier as Earth is still very hospitable.
    • We can't do both? Mightn't researching how to terraform an uninhabitable planet lead to valuable insights into how to "unfuck" ours?
  • Without a magnetosphere to hold the atmosphere on the planet, the sun's solar wind will keep stripping mars's atmosphere off the planet.

  • Did all those martian cars cause their global warming?

  • And I have some good "ranch land" in Wyoming to sell DARPA and their believers.

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