Terraform Mars Using Oasis Greenhouses 70
An anonymous reader writes "The Director of the Mex-Areohab project, Omar Diaz, is interviewed today on the feasibility of modifying the Martian climate and terraforming with mini-greenhouses. At higher than 5,000 meters above sea level, on the volcano Pico de Orizaba, the Mexican model can be compared to many oases in the desert and contrasts with industrial-scale terraforming by Zubrin and McKay, among others, who use fluorocarbons, orbital mirrors, polar melting and pollution machines. One planet's pollution is another planet's rain machine, but the thrust of the interview seems to maintain that micro-terraforming is just faster and more efficient."
Mars? First things first! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:5, Insightful)
You need to have something to work with before you can start terraforming. The moon has a lot of rock. So does Mars, but Mars has different kinds of rock, and it also has ice and CO2.
A planetoid needs a reasonable amount of gravity to retain a gaseous atmosphere before it bleeds off into space. Mars has a very thin atmosphere, the moon has none.
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:2)
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:2)
Re: Atmosphere vs Gravity (Score:2)
Venus has slightly less mass than Earth (about 90%), but Venus's atmosphere is over 90 times thicker than Earth's (around 9100%).
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:1)
A number of factors, including mass, determine the thickness of a planet's atmosphere. Others include composition and temperature, along with a whole host of more subtle effects.
Mars, in fact, could (and did, at one point) have an atmosphere as thick as the Earth's. Mars' atmosphere was literally blasted away by meteor impacts early in the solar system's history. Mass was definitely the main factor here: because
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:2)
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:2, Insightful)
You don't need so much mass to keep a thick atmosphere that far out in the solar system.
Paul
Re:Mars? First things first! (Score:2)
It seems to me that the reason some planets have an atmosphere and others don't is simply the availability of volitiles such as CH4, CO2, N2, O2, NH3, etc.
If Venus and Titan can both support such thick atmospheres, I don't see why the Moon can't.
No easy answer (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:No easy answer (Score:4, Funny)
Re:No easy answer (Score:1)
Remember that the main idea behind nuking a planet is to get cool things to watch on discovery channel.
Re:No easy answer (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No easy answer (Score:4, Interesting)
Bar: Not sure, but I think seeing Venus's atmosphere sent outwards a few hundred kilometres would look pretty cool.
Baz: Yeah, maybe they could have a pay-per view special to fund the costs.
Interestingly, I just listened to someone discuss the awesome power of a sight that fewer and fewer people have seen: nuking the Earth.
On NPR's Fresh Air [npr.org], former Secretary of the Air Force Thomas Reed talked about his new book, At the Abyss: An Insider's History of the Cold War. In addition to his policial role, he was for a while a "consultant to the director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, a well-known center for nuclear weapons research." As such, he helped design nuclear weapons, and was present during their testing.
He pointed out that witnessing an above-ground nuclear detonation was itself a life-changing event, and that the experience colored the decisions of all who saw and felt it. The light, he said of a Christmas Island [nuclearweaponarchive.org] blast, wasn't just bright -- it was all-enveloping, even through the way-beyond-dark goggles. And the instant blast of heat, that made you want to run away, anywhere, just to get away.
But nuke tests are now performed underground, where the awesome power is visible only as instrument ticks and a dimple [nuclearweaponarchive.org] in the ground. As the old scientists die, there are fewer and fewer people who have witnessed a nuclear blast as it would occur in the above-ground world.
The whole concept is so abstract, we can now discuss the idea of blowing one up on another planet, without even breaking into a sweat. Unfortunately, there are plenty of folks in the militaries of the world who can do the same sort of abstract thinking in reference to their own planet.
Damn, that got a lot deeper than I thought it would...
M.B.A. flash of brilliance (Score:4, Funny)
Benefits:
- Cheap Martian labor (They don't even USE money up there!)
- Lax environmental law
- Low taxes
- No import/export tarrifs
- Cheap raw materials (The whole planet is made of frikkin' iron!)
and after a few thousand years we'll have a brand new hospitable planet. Of course there are some drawbacks. For one, the commute is going to be hellish. But where else are we going to go after the labor market in China starts demanding decent pay and working conditions? We've got to think ahead, people!
Send Me!! (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Send Me!! (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Send Me!! (Score:2, Insightful)
A manned mission to Mars is estimated to be 55 million. Even with the inevitable over-spending it's a pittance in comparison.
And just to make my self sound cool: The mission to mars could probably be paid for with the profits the USians make from the production of land mines they have covered southeast Asia with.
The point is money is obviously not a problem, the prioritization is!
Re:Send Me!! (Score:1)
But on everything else i agree, it's a small price to pay.
I dont want to be a member of a temporary species.
You've got to be kidding me (Score:1)
Re:Send Me!! (Score:2)
Correction (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.cdi.org/issues/wme/spendersFY03.html
http://www.globalissues.org/Geopolitics/ArmsTrade / Spending.asp
It is much closer to 1:1 rather than 3:1. Though your point still holds - we could probably afford to cut military spending in order to increase spending on other activities, and (the cynic's view) spending on space is a good way to keep our military technical superiority even if it isn't directly weapons spending.
-Marcus
ps. Nor do
Re:Correction (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes the military has a combat use in mind or believes all the research could potentially benefit them, but
Re:Correction (Score:1, Flamebait)
The ratio of spending does vary wider than I expected depending on which source is used but I think 1.8:1 is average of a quick survey.
Average of a quick survey of world spending was just below 900 billion. So again the money is there if the priority was.
And as someone else pointed out DARPA funds research also.
SO all of this makes me feel like space must be militarized in order to attract funding (or sufficent interest)
Oasis? (Score:1)
Re:Oasis? (Score:2)
We have.
Count on them to somehow manage to fuck it all up, though.
Terraforming Mars (Score:2)
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:2)
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:4, Interesting)
We could take care of over-population-related problems on earth if people would just stop reproducing so much. I mean, really guys
Species-survival? Our sun's not going anywhere. Based on the usually-suggested timelines for evolution of mankind, we're just getting started, and have plenty of time to figure things out (so long as we don't wipe ourselves out first.) It would be far more in the interest of self-preservation to dismantle our nukes than to find new planets. We're a bigger danger to ourselves than the sun, or likely aliens.
No, I'd say we're thinking of terraforming Mars for other reasons:
- The hell of it. (No, really.)
- Research. (How does life develop? Were we an accident? Necessary?)
There's no reason to feel we need to rush it, just so we can "get down to business" using Mars for ores or habitation. We're comfortable here. We're rushing because we've watched enough sci-fi to have an idea of what might be possible -- and we want to see it happen.
Besides
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:5, Funny)
We interrupt this silly post to point out that this is slashdot, these people REALLY aren't part of the problem. Thank you.
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:2)
Not a problem (Score:2)
According to population experts (as opposed to the lay man...) the world population will peak about 2060. Perhaps in your lifetime! China and most of Europe already does not have enough births to maintain a study population, with Europe only seeing population increases because of immigration.
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:4, Interesting)
We could take care of over-population-related problems on earth if people would just stop reproducing so much. I mean, really guys
Actually that is a short-sighted solution to the problem. The european birth rate has been dropping for some time now, while universal health care has been increasing life expectancy. They are now realizing that they will be in a real jam in a couple decades when the average age of the population is 64.
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:2)
So, should we just let old people die? Refuse life-extending procedures? We're already trying to push back the age for retirement to get more "bang" out of a person, but that just doesn't seem like a great idea either.
Our average age is going to continue to be high unless we:
- let/make people die at a younger age
- have a significantly higher rate of birth than death, which means population growth
Wars could do some of that, but it seems like wars mostly kill the young, not the old. And a
Re:Terraforming Mars (Score:2)
Those dozens of extrasolar colonies full of humans won't just *POOF* into existence when you wait few years.
Few billion years is a frickin' *LONG* *LONG* *LONG* time. It's so long it's totally incomprehensible for simple mortals like us. Worrying about something happening after billion years and trying to plan for it without intermediary steps is nuts. Eukaryotes were only born 1.5 billion years ago, and life didn't crawl out of oceans until 1 billion years ago. Maybe they shou
this is interesting but lacking on details. (Score:2, Insightful)
However, as we get a decent foot hold established there, this will become more feasable. The article doesnt mention how many of the 'units' will be needed, but i would guess it will be a very large number. So we are probably talking about factories produceing the units from local materials.
It also seems that it would be a waste of resources
Re:this is interesting but lacking on details. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:this is interesting but lacking on details. (Score:1)
Notice that i said:
"...research into it could greatly benefit us here on earth."
and not "...Minimal Units of Terraforming could greatly benefit us here on earth."
But thanks for telling me about plants, someone mod obeythefist informative!
I for one... (Score:2)
Aren't we forgetting something? (Score:3, Interesting)
So... wouldn't that make terraforming Mars kind of like pouring water into a sieve?
Re:Aren't we forgetting something? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Aren't we forgetting something? (Score:1)
Perhaps I would have gone to see The Core [thecoremovie.com] if it had been about terraforming Mars by jumpstarting the core. I don't suppose it could have gotten any less plausible.
Re:Aren't we forgetting something? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Aren't we forgetting something? (Score:2)
Since terraforming is science fiction anyway... (Score:4, Interesting)
****SPOILER ALERT******
Eventually they smacked Mars with a series of comets in one locality. The impacts built a long, deep valley. They also released a pile of water vapor. Since the valley was the lowest area of topography around, most of the released vapor settled there. I forget how deep the valleys were, but in the bottoms they were able to achieve some decent partial pressures. Of course it wasn't O2, but water vapor, ammonia, and some other cometary traces. But correcting the gas mix is the 'easy' part of terraforming once you've got the right atoms in the right place.
Going for deep valleys either does away with the dome entirely, or possibly doming over the top of the valley.
Getting inhabitable valleys then looks more like the Mars of C.S. Lewis's "Out of the Silent Planet."
How about this (Score:2)
Why not? Cover a huge valley with a nice strong material, and then start pumping extra atmosphere into it. Maybe some derivative material of the space elevator cable.
It's not any more outlandish than other ideas I've read.
Re:How about this (Score:2, Informative)
You will need to seal the walls and floor of the valley/crater your using to prevent gas escapeing faster than you can pump it in.
You will also need to keep the cover in place and it will require a lot of force. Complex plants need a minimum of about 0.5PSI to survive, and the current martian atmospheric pressure is so small it can be a saftey/fudge factor.
100 square meters worth of cover need
Re: High-pressure working environment (Score:1)
my idea (Score:2)
use a mirror to concentrate light to warm an area with water and melt it. Introduce our best microbes to said area, giving them a fair amount of nutrients from earth, but at a controlled rate. The microbes reproduce, and gradually mutate, some of these traveling to the edge of the life zone, and becoming pioneers on the mars surface: surviving with less water, etc. The life zone continues to grow, with the m
Send our pollution to Mars (Score:2)
Hey, we've got plenty of extra pollution here on Earth. And Mars could use more pollution to help terraform. So why don't we just ship all our extra pollution to Mars?
Greenhouse gases (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Greenhouse gases (Score:3, Interesting)
CO2 is really weak too remember. Heating up the atmosphere will need to be done with a coctail of CO2, CFCs PFCs, amonia, water and methane.
See here [globalnet.co.uk]for a NASA study.
Green Mars (Score:2, Informative)
Terraforming What? (Score:2)