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Space

People on Mars in 30 Years? 412

lucabrasi999 writes "Yahoo is running a Reuters story in which Arthur Thompson, the head of the NASA 'rover' missions, says that people could be landing on Mars in the next twenty or thirty years. If that is true, I estimate that within 50 years, Mars will need women."
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People on Mars in 30 Years?

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  • About time. (Score:5, Funny)

    by American AC in Paris ( 230456 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:09PM (#10267938) Homepage
    Mars still needs women...
  • by The I Shing ( 700142 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:09PM (#10267944) Journal
    I predict we will arrive on Mars in tentacled tripod ships and fire death rays at the inhabitants until we are driven from the planet by microorganisms.
  • Men on Mars (Score:4, Funny)

    by jolyonr ( 560227 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:09PM (#10267946) Homepage
    Won't the Women go to Venus?
    • by thewiz ( 24994 ) *
      You're right, Men are from Mars and Women are from Venus. But just think of the business opportunity of setting up a shuttle service between the two planets! Now, were can I get a stretch-shuttle....?
  • by chill ( 34294 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:10PM (#10267953) Journal
    Leather Goddesses of Phobos
  • Not Bloody Likely (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cephyn ( 461066 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:11PM (#10267959) Homepage
    Arthur Thompson, mission manager for MER surface operations, told Reuters in an interview in Lima, "My best guess is 20 to 30 years, if that becomes our primary priority."

    In other words, Notgonnahappen. 8(
    • by CodeWanker ( 534624 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:31PM (#10268248) Journal
      It's a tough call. We all know a biosphere-killing rock is headed our way sometime soon (at least in geological terms.) We also know that Mars is our best shot at terraforming an emergency fallback position quickly (100-200 years, less than an eyeblink in geologic terms.) We also all know that Wernher von Braun (a guy whose judgement I trust on such things) drew up realistic Mars exploration plans [amazon.com] based on early 1950's technology.

      So, why haven't we done it yet? The short-circuited race to the moon and the space shuttle? an anti-imperialistic self-loathing? This is a starker choice than guns vs. butter; it's a bon-bons versus houses kind of thing. It looks like we've got a hillbilly mentality: when it's raining, we can't work on the roof and when it's not raining, the roof doesn't leak.
      • by EvilTwinSkippy ( 112490 ) <yoda@nOSpAM.etoyoc.com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:05PM (#10269439) Homepage Journal
        Skip mars. If you needed to move civilization in a hurry a much better bet would be to simply construct a large fleet of space platforms. We would require sealed environments to live in on Mars. We would have less access to sunlight on Mars because of it's orbit.

        A better use of the energy required to evacuate the Earth would be to simply keep it in orbit and move there. If Earth's particular location is bad, strap on some engines and you can move our "Super Platform (or better yet a couple of them)" somewhere else.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • We all know a biosphere-killing rock is headed our way sometime soon

        Earth after a global-extinction level asteroid hit is still a more habitable place than Mars right now.

        If you're really afraid of an asteroid wiping out humanity, then build a dozen self-sustaining Vaults [mikesrpgcenter.com]. The'd be done in 3 years, at a fraction of the cost of "terraforming" Mars.
  • by bughunter ( 10093 ) <bughunter.earthlink@net> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:11PM (#10267969) Journal
    Getting them back will take another 20 or 30 years.
    • Re:Problem is... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by dykofone ( 787059 )
      Nah, we'll just treat them like we did the past two rovers. Give them the resources to last an "expected" lifetime, then just keep expanding the mission parameters until they completely breakdown or the funding stops.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:40PM (#10268372)
        then just keep expanding the mission parameters until they completely breakdown or the funding stops.

        Listen buddy, if you want to talk about the War in Iraq, then go over to the "politics" section.

  • by Goronmon ( 652094 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:12PM (#10267970)
    Of course, thats assuming that no short-sighted leaders come about in the future that see space exploration as a waste of money. I for one am all for stuff like this. It brings out the best in us.
  • Detail left out (Score:5, Informative)

    by StevenHenderson ( 806391 ) <stevehenderson@NOspam.gmail.com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:12PM (#10267974)
    There was a detail left out of the submission. The FA reads:

    Asked how long it could be before astronauts land on Mars, Arthur Thompson, mission manager for MER surface operations, told Reuters in an interview in Lima, "My best guess is 20 to 30 years, if that becomes our primary priority."

    If it is primary priority. Which I doubt it will be. And depending on who is our next president might affect how much funding NASA gets.

    • Re:Detail left out (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Goronmon ( 652094 ) * on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:18PM (#10268053)
      I really wish it would become a primary priority.

      People forget how much we need to support programs like this in order to advance mankind. I mean, look at all the innovation that came about during the times leading up to putting a man on the Moon. Its challenges like this that push the brightest minds of the world towards something other than who can build the best weapon.
      • Its challenges like this that push the brightest minds of the world towards something other than who can build the best weapon.

        True, but it is failures like the Genesis crash that stick in the public's mind and make people cry out to cut NASA funding.

      • Re:Detail left out (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Paulrothrock ( 685079 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:32PM (#10268251) Homepage Journal
        For the price of the war in Iraq ($100 billion) we could have gone to mars 10 times over 15 years, according to Zubrin's calculation of $50 billion for R&D and 5 flights using Mars Direct. Take out cost-plus accounting and bureaucratic waste, and that means at *least* three trips, plus development of all of the hardware, software, and wetware (experience) we need to survive on the red planet.

        And 1,000 US soldiers and 10,000 Iraqis still alive.

        Think about it.

        • by mcmonkey ( 96054 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:48PM (#10268477) Homepage
          For the price of the war in Iraq ($100 billion) we could have gone to mars 10 times over 15 years

          Yeah, but how does Halliburton make money off of us sending people to Mars?

        • The Human Costs (Score:4, Insightful)

          by WombatControl ( 74685 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:57PM (#10268598)

          I know this is off topic, but I cannot stand when people make such arguments as the one you just made.

          The war in Iraq was not a dichotomy in which we got to war and Iraqi civilians die or we don't and Iraqi civilians live. It was a choice between going to war and risking the lives of thousands of Iraqis or not and leaving 25 million to the whims of Saddam. Even the most conservative estimates had Saddam killing tens of thousands of Iraqis every year. Amnesty International estimated 24,000 dead Iraqis every year from a combination of Saddam Hussein and crippling sanctions.

          So, we could go to Mars and leave 25 million people in abject tyranny at the hands of a crazed madman with ambitions to become the next Saladin, or we could remove that dictator and give the Iraqi people a chance at freedom and save far more lives than were lost.

          This sort of simplistic dichotomy on the war is exceptionally disgusting, akin to Holocaust denial. I've met Iraqis who have suffered under Saddam Hussein, and they will all tell you that as bad as Iraq is now, the horror of living under Saddam's totalitarianism was far worse.

          Besides, who knows - in 30 years we could be launching Mars missions from the Baghdad Cosmodrome thanks to an Iraqi scientist who beforehand would have been working on designs for dirty bombs or chemical munitions.

          • Re:The Human Costs (Score:4, Insightful)

            by at_18 ( 224304 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:40PM (#10269088) Journal
            Amnesty International estimated 24,000 dead Iraqis every year from a combination of Saddam Hussein and crippling sanctions.

            Amnesty International also estimated about 500,000 iraq children dead from international sanctions, a figure that Rice said it was "worth it". So, instead of removing the sanctions, I guess the right solution is to start bombing the country. Funny how at the start of the war no one was talking about saving Iraqis, but only about making America safe from WMDs.
          • Re:The Human Costs (Score:4, Insightful)

            by Qwavel ( 733416 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:53PM (#10269288)
            > This sort of simplistic dichotomy on the war is exceptionally disgusting, akin to Holocaust denial.

            Hummm. Aren't you going a bit far with that one?

            After all, if you just try, you can see his point: he is giving the US perspective.

            Bush, and most supports of the war, did not go because of the Amnesty International reports that you mention. If you think that then please do a little reading of recent history or foreign policy. For example read about the obstacles that people like Gore had to overcome to get action in Yugoslavia.

            The fact that Iraqi's were being tortured was relevant to the Iraqi's themselves, to a few bleeding heart liberals in the US and around the world, to Christopher Hitchens, and maybe a bit to Tony Blair. But it was irrelevant to the US supporters of the war until after their other motivations fell apart.

            If you have $100 billion to spend on good deeds, you could easily save 1000's of times more people without invading a country.
          • Re:The Human Costs (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Rei ( 128717 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:10PM (#10269503) Homepage
            Sigh, I wasn't going to get involved with this one, but I can't resist.

            1) Amnesty International assessed no such thing as a "saddam and sanctions" count. Amnesty did assess that the *sanctions* killed about 1 1/2 million people, of which about 500,000 were children. However, the US continually called this number way too high when we were supporting the sanctions - do you suddenly believe it?

            Furthermore, the hospitals are *still* devastated, some even worse due to postwar looting. The water system is still in shambles. There's more military waste scattering the country. Consequently, people are still dying like they were before.

            2) "Even the most conservative estimates had Saddam killing tens of thousands of Iraqis every year". Completely wrong - and, has been demonstrated thusfar. The mass graves found in Iraq contain 3-4 thousand bodies. The largest of them - over thousand bodies - was from the shia uprising. Most of the other graves were either from the shia uprising or the Iran-Iraq war. Some bodies did show signs of summary execution, but it's nothing near like what you described.

            Are we just not finding the graves? Doubtful. We're not only locating them from local testimony, but by doing satellite spectral analysis of the soil. Disturbed soil exposes gypsum, so you can see where people have dug.

            Most of the inflated counts were arrived at due to including the people killed and missing during the Iran-Iraq war - a war which, might I add, the US supported.

            > at the hands of a crazed madman

            Please, by all means, demonstrate that he is a "crazed madman". Offer us your diagnosis. Meanwhile, please diagnose Islam Karimov and the other brutal dictators who we're not simply ignoring, but actually supporting. Karimov's security services put to shame the sort of generic middle-eastern torture centers that we found in Iraq; his actually *boiled people to death* (the bodies have been autopsied).

            > or we could remove that dictator and give the Iraqi people a chance at freedom

            Yeah, they're really grateful, aren't they? Perhaps I should put you in touch with a few Iraqis, and let them tell you how truly grateful they are. I'll have to warn you, one of them was just carjacked a few weeks ago, another had a cousin's husband kidnapped and ransomed earlier this year, and another had a good friend of his almost killed by US forces while reporting about a US convoy for the Guardian (everyone who took shelter from the helicopters that returned in the place that he sheltered were all killed - an al-Arabiya journalist, a man trying to save his kid brother, etc) - so they may not take too kindly to your rosy assessments.

            > I've met Iraqis who have suffered under Saddam Hussein

            Imagine, expats supporting regime change in their parent country! No way! I guess Costa Rica should overthrow the US government, because when I was down there, all the expat Americans I knew hated Bush and wanted him kicked out.

            BTW, when was the last time that you talked to them, and do they have family over there right now?

            > in 30 years we could be launching Mars missions from the Baghdad Cosmodrome

            Yes - people who daily get to see their countrymen fragged, are going to welcome us with open arms. Sure.

            > who beforehand would have been working on designs for dirty bombs or chemical munitions

            Yeah! That's it, nations build "dirty bombs". Ok, you just proudly displayed your ignorance there. And as for the chemical munitions - where are these vast stockpiles that Saddam had the country teeming with? The whole zero scientists working on them would do a great job building zero rockets.

            You know, in the middle ages, when people set out to find a witch, they usually found one.
        • Re:Detail left out (Score:5, Interesting)

          by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:02PM (#10268659) Homepage Journal
          I think a lot of historians would argue that warfare has driven technological advancement more than anything else. And some, including myself, would say that the space race was part of a warfare effort - the cold war against the Soviet Union.

          If not created solely for warfare, many of our technological advances (metalugry, steel, plastic, computers, the internet, jet aviation, canned food) were promoted and mass produced to support a war effort.

    • Re:Detail left out (Score:5, Insightful)

      by east coast ( 590680 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:25PM (#10268155)
      And depending on who is our next president might affect how much funding NASA gets.

      I doubt that. Even with Bush's desire for NASA funding congress shot it down [chron.com]. So even a president in the same party as the majority of congress isn't going to have his way on this. The current consensus of the American people is that space is a waste and they want more tax dollars thrown at ghetto waste and trailer trash in the hopes that it makes for a brighter future... As if.

      Until Joe Taxpayer accepts that money is not the solution to every social ill I doubt we will have a serious tax-payer funded space program. Which will be never by my calendar.
      • by mbessey ( 304651 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @03:31PM (#10270682) Homepage Journal
        Not a popular sentiment with the Slashdot crowd, I'm sure, but "because it would be cool" isn't a good reason to send people to Mars. Learning more about the universe we live in is a noble goal, but sending a small group of people to Mars as primarily a publicity stunt is a colossal waste of money.

        Neither is it reasonable to suggest that a colony on Mars would be good "insurance" against a global catastrophe, as one loony did above. We are so far away from being able to build a self-supporting colony on Mars that it's laughable.

        Nearly all of the money that NASA has spent on "human exploration" programs since the 1970's has been wasted. Some of the research on the effects of micro-gravity on human physiology are worthwhile, and need to be done IF long-term manned space missions are going to be considered. Unfortunately, the USSR (and later Russian) government was doing essentially the same research at the same time, for orders of magnitude less money.

        The choice isn't necessarily between space research and social programs, although I'd argue that investing in affordable higher education for all qualified students would do much more to advance the state of human knowledge than a mission to Mars ever would.

        The choice is between spending billions of dollars on keeping "astronauts" in space for PR reasons, rather than focussing NASA on basic research into the "hard problems" of space exploration.

        NASA needs to focus more on basic research into self-contained environmental systems, better telerobotics/telepresence, more-sophisticated onboard intelligence for robotic spacecraft & rovers, automated materials processing, etc. All these things are prerequisites to getting people "out there" for a period of time where they might actually be able to accomplish something useful.

        If they dropped support for the International Space Station and just de-orbited it into the sea, they could USE the money they saved on maintaining that albatross, and on re-fitting the Shuttle fleet, to increase basic research activity by several orders of magnitude.

        There's nothing that would be accomplished by sending humans to Mars that couldn't be achieved more simply and vastly cheaper by a flotilla of robots.

        -Mark
    • I agree it's unlikely, but it's not absolutely impossible. Nobody here seems to be considering the P.R. aspect of manned spaceflight.

      It's very useful to US foreign policy to be well-regarded by the rest of the planet. For most of the late 20th Century, its role as "leader" in the Cold War helped maintain goodwill in Western Europe and parts of Asia. You can argue about whether that goodwill was deserved, but that's really beside the point. It's gone.

      The US (by which I mean its government and policies, n

  • Mars needs men! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Malc ( 1751 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:16PM (#10268027)
    The way primary and secondary education is going these days, women will be leading the mission to Mars. Quite a role reversal from the times when that movie was made.
  • people could be landing on Mars in the next twenty or thirty years. If that is true, I estimate that within 50 years, Mars will need women.

    Maybe Mars could find some women before 50 years amongst that pool of "people".

    • If you're a guy, you've almost figured out how to get a girl's heart. It's a bit too sensitive, though. We like to know our men are still men.

      If you're a girl: You go on with your bad self! We'll teach these guys some manners one of these days.
  • Mars sounds like a dreamy undisclosed location to me!
  • *I* need women.

    As do most /.'ers.

    Are there any women even READING this stuff, let alone posting?

    • Are there any women even READING this stuff, let alone posting?

      Uh, yes...

      Fuck. Now I have to go look through yet another discussion to find stuff to blow my mod points on... *grumble*

    • by underpar ( 792569 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:23PM (#10268134) Homepage
      Are there any women even READING this stuff, let alone posting?

      Yes we read this stuff. You should really mind your manners if you want a woman, love.

      You might try pretending to be offended by the way women are being spoken of. We're suckers for that kind of stuff.
      • I'm really offended by the way women are being spoken of here, it's really sexist and primitive. Besides, what make you think that women would not be there first anyhow?

        A guy...
      • by Jakhel ( 808204 )
        Irony galore. A woman posts on slashdot about the shortage of women on slashdot, actually gives advice on getting women (to those who don't already know how), and is consequently modded down to flamebait.
    • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:29PM (#10268213)
      > Fuck Mars
      >
      > *I* need women.
      >
      > As do most /.'ers.

      I don't know about you, but I don't need women badly enough to fuck a clump of rust at -50F. Major shrink factor there, bud.

  • Sad (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:17PM (#10268052) Journal
    As a teen in the early 70's, I heard that we would be on Mars by the end of the '90's. So we would be there in only 20 years into the future. During poppa Bushs term, it was within 25 years.
    Now it 40 years later, and it will by in less than 30 years. Hell, by 2100, it will be only 50 years if we keep up with leaders like these.
    • I still have an old copy of Analog magazine from the late-seventies or early eighties with the cover story, "Mars by 1994?" Hell we can't even get to low earth orbit right now, ten years after that.
  • Cause when the imps come I want to see em...
  • by scotay ( 195240 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:18PM (#10268060)
    I think the Mars people will get very tired of all that masturbation and gay sex well before 20 years.
  • by MightyPez ( 734706 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:19PM (#10268075)
    I'm hoping they really plan ahead. Make sure the residents have plenty of lockers full of weapons and ammunition just in case personnel become demonic flesh eating zombies, or disembodied flaming heads.

    Oh, and don't forget to hide little closets all over the facility. Who knows when hidden closets large enough for a full sized human will come in handy?
  • by PhysicsGenius ( 565228 ) <physics_seeker.yahoo@com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:20PM (#10268081)
    I wonder if there will be people on *Earth* in 30 years.
  • by 00Sovereign ( 106393 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:21PM (#10268093)
    Of course, I remember growing up in the early '80s and hearing about how we would be on Mars soon after the turn of the millenium. Well, my ship never did arrive. I would rate this up there with the "fusion power is just around the corner" mantra.
  • wow... looks like doom 3's life in mars story line is comin to be true.. three cheers to Union Aerospace Corporation... that jus leaves one question.. who frags the demons ?
  • I'm goin' to Venus...
  • While a man on the moon happened for folks before us, nothing of that magnitude has happened for us, space wise. we need an ark type of craft (like in Authur C Clarke's "Rendevous with Rama") that can slowly shuttle large groups of ppl over there for exploration and settlements. If we're looking 30 years in the future, I think we'll be ready for that by then.

    Just don't name any of the onboard computers HAL...

    CB$#@)(*&^
    • The mooon flight happened for ME. I was 13 then, and glued to the TV that whole day watching the coverage. Position the rapid progress of the Lunar mission against the-pop culture like "2001: ASO," and I actually thought I might, as an ordinary person, be able to make an admittedly expensive vacation into orbit during my lifetime.

      YOU want it during YOUR lifetime? I'd like to see us not have dropped the ball completely, during MY lifetime, which is about half-over. Hopes for middle-class-afordable orbital a
  • Mars will need women.

    Not to mention, more specifically, mars will need lesbians [imdb.com].

  • Marvin (Score:2, Funny)

    by Suit_N_Tie ( 128024 )
    Just hope that we can get there before Marvin the Martin blows up the Earth with his Uranium Pew-36 Explosive Space Modulator.
    Where's Duck Dodgers when you need him?!
  • by AltGrendel ( 175092 ) <`su.0tixe' `ta' `todhsals-ga'> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:26PM (#10268169) Homepage
    At least not America, they couldn't afford the effort. Way too costly with that defecit they've got.
  • Will some little green Martian, post on a Martian sci/tech Blog...

    I for one, welcome our new alien overlords!
  • No (Score:3, Insightful)

    by cubicledrone ( 681598 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:28PM (#10268190)
    people could be landing on Mars in the next twenty or thirty years.

    Sure, if we can make a "business case" for it. Otherwise people will say "what do we need that for?" and go back to their reality shows and home improvement projects.

    Some people would say this is a stagnant society. The phrase "unwiped ass" is a better description of a society obsessed with suburban paradise at the expense of every last shred of dignity and wisdom.
  • 35 Years Ago (Score:5, Insightful)

    by turgid ( 580780 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @12:28PM (#10268199) Journal
    35 years ago person-kind first set foot on the Moon. They were saying exactly the same thing about going to Mars back then.

    Until we have some political will, or an oscenely rich private explorer (Bill here's a hint: do something cool with all that booty you've plundered from the hard-of-thinking PeeCee users over they years) to start the process, I'll remain skeptical.

  • Mars doesn't need women.

    Slashdot needs women.
  • Given the typical short lived duration of marriage these days they ought to start sending the divorce lawyers right around the time they start sending the women. Or better yet, just send all the lawyers. Now there's a science fiction horror story if ever there was one: "Attack of the intellectual property lawyers from Mars."
  • twenty, thirty years? How long did it take us to get to the moon? And what have we done since then? It's quite possible, if we really want it done, give NASA a decent budget for a while, etc. However, thats got about the odds of a snowball in hell. Space just isn't sexy any more, and it's unlikely any president will give any more than nominal support. I predict space progress will be slow and relatively unspectacular for at least twenty years. Its a damn shame, too.
  • Yvonne Craig [imdb.com] [insert slavering sound here] was in Mars Needs Women [imdb.com] in 1967. That same year, she debuted as Batgirl [imdb.com] in Batman [imdb.com]. She was 30 years old.

    THIRTY!

    Wow.

    Do you suppose she was America's first faux MILF?
  • In 1970, NASA was talking about putting people on Mars by 1980. Now they want 20 to 30 years.

    This is as bad as fusion power, which has been twenty years away since 1955 or so. Worse, actually; the fusion people are making some progress.

  • by Jtheletter ( 686279 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:02PM (#10268654)
    Seriously. There were also glorious predictions for the International Space Station. It was actually going to be a massive sprawling habitat of modules and panels and experiments - I drolled over "artist's rendition" paintings as a kid growing up. Now, in reality, we have a half assed understaffed flying crapshoot that doesn't even have oxygen producers with a living engineering support staff.

    And why? Among other reasons, one of the biggest in terms of setbacks has been relying on Russia for technology, manpower, and funding. This is not a let's-bash-Russia troll, I think this points to directly to serious project management issues at NASA, and if we can't get a sealed stable environment orbiting our planet, how do we expect to pack a crew into a ship and send it 36 million miles away and be anything other than an extraterrestrial coffin?

    I love space exploration, I want people on Mars, I want habitats on the moon, I want shuttles flying weekly between the ISS and MoonPod 1, but it's never gonna happen if NASA can't get its act together enough to do something as obvious and QA process basic as asking "Gee, Yakov, I've never seen an oxygen system like this before, do we have the specs on that?"
    Granted, in space just about every system is critical, but I'd put O2 scrubbers pretty damn high on my list of priorities, why wasn't it on theirs?

    We need to do this thing smart, and to do that we've got to do it incrementally. Speaking as a software engineer for complex automated systems, if you skip design phases you're guaranteed to have problems down the line. So let's not skip phases, let's fix the shuttle fleet, to fix the space station and get it on track. Let's go back to the moon and run some long term sorties, build a moon base, shuttle between base and station. We need real world (moon) experience with extraterrestrial habitation before we pick 6 of our country's finest minds to asphyxiate in the cold black of interplanetary space.

  • Mars Direct (Score:3, Interesting)

    by schnarff ( 557058 ) <alex@@@schnarff...com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:45PM (#10269151) Homepage Journal
    It's been said once in this thread, but I'll say it again: we can do this faster -- i.e. in 10 years -- with the Mars Direct program, on a pretty reasonable budget (closer to $30B than the $50B mentioned elsewhere, actually). That's a snap, considering that NASA's annual budget is currently $15B -- we'd be talking about 1/5 of current funding levels (not to mention only 16% of pre-Columbia shuttle launch capacity, given 2 flights every 2 years).

    Get out there and pester your Congresscritters on this. Mars in 1/3 of this time is acheivable if enough people press for it!
  • Nuclear Propulsion (Score:3, Informative)

    by frank249 ( 100528 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @01:47PM (#10269176)
    The smallest feasible Mars expedition requires 150 or so tons in Earth orbit, which takes 5 trips on the most powerful rocket flying today, the Space Shuttle. A large nuclear powered booster could put six times that mass in orbit in one flight. According to this article [nuclearspace.com], an Apollo size rocket with gas core [nuclearspace.com] engines would be safe, economical and would even get rid of excess nuclear waste [nuclearspace.com].

    This is not new. NASA tested Nuke engines [wikipedia.org] in the 60's. If we are serious about going to Mars, we have to start building nuke engines.
  • by catherder_finleyd ( 322974 ) on Thursday September 16, 2004 @02:10PM (#10269504)
    Congress-critters are unlikely to fund NASA enough to support that timeline unless we get some serious competition. We need a space race! By someone who will scare the constituents into demanding Congressional action and funding! Mars Needs China!
  • Great idea (Score:3, Funny)

    by SlayerDave ( 555409 ) <elddm1NO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday September 16, 2004 @03:31PM (#10270687) Homepage
    Didn't Doom3 teach us anything about the folly of living on Mars?

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