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Mars Space

Elon Musk is Highly Confident SpaceX Will Land Humans on Mars by 2026 (cnbc.com) 229

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk remains highly confident that his company will land humans on Mars by 2026, saying on Tuesday that it's an achievable goal "about six years from now." From a report: "If we get lucky, maybe four years," Musk said, speaking on an award show webcast from Berlin, Germany. "We want to send an uncrewed vehicle there in two years." The ambitious 2026 goal matches with what Musk outlined at the International Astronautical Congress in September 2016, when he said that "if things go super well," landing people on Mars "might be kind of in the 10-year timeframe." "I don't want to say that's when it will occur -- there's a huge amount of risk," Musk said in 2016.
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Elon Musk is Highly Confident SpaceX Will Land Humans on Mars by 2026

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  • But.. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by r2kordmaa ( 1163933 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @09:09AM (#60785470)
    Who in their right mind is highly confident in Elon's timetables?
    • Re:But.. (Score:5, Funny)

      by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:13AM (#60785674)
      Yep, that's crazy talk. I for one believe that the SLS will land people on the Moon in 2024.
      • Hah, I get your joke, itâ(TM)s worth noting though that none of the three lunar lander candidates involve the SLS. Lunar Starship would be launched on the Super Heavy booster (but thatâ(TM)s also on Elon time). Blue Moon would launch on New Glenn. ALPACA would be launched on a Vulkan.

        The SLS truest would be a boondoggle if they end up launching astronauts on it to fly to the moon and then transfer them to a lunar starship that has all the hardware to take them there anyway!

        • I didn't mean that the SLS *itself* will land people on the Moon, but unless Orion is cancelled, to my knowledge all "official" plans expect to use it to get to the LOP-G. Of course Starship could manage without it (not so much the other two options).
      • Yep, that's crazy talk. I for one believe that the SLS will land people on the Moon in 2024.

        Well... The Senate Launch System [competitivespace.org] does seem pretty on-track to keep landing money in constituents' pockets, so you never know...

    • An engineer pads their time, usually in multiples of either x3 or x6 on what they think it would really take. This isn't because they are lazy or trying to be a hero, like TOS Scotty. But because they have experience the reality that there are unforeseen compilations on the way. A CEO like to show fast progress, so they will often round down engineering time scale a bit.
      Elon Musk having been an engineer and now is a CEO I think is advertising the engineers pre-padded time then multiplying it by 1.5.

      This

  • by JoshuaZ ( 1134087 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @09:17AM (#60785490) Homepage
    The general rule for Musk is that his predictions are rarely on time for when something happens, but it does happen. The classic example of this is the Falcon Heavy which was delayed for multiple years. By 2011, the basic design had set and it was supposed to launch in 2013. But it didn't end up launching until 2018 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falcon_Heavy#Conception_and_funding [wikipedia.org]. In that case, the delay was mainly for two major reasons. First, the Falcon 9 was upgraded a lot so many payloads intended to be launched on the Falcon Heavy could be launched on the smaller Falcon 9. Second, they massively underestimated the difficulty in the Falcon Heavy, which they naively thought would be essentially just strapping three Falcon 9s together. But the Falcon Heavy did fly, and it was glorious. One expects the same thing will probably happen here. He isn't likely to land people on Mars by 2026, but it will happen, and it will happen sooner than most pessimists will estimate.
    • by fermion ( 181285 )
      There is a theory that ideas commercialize when someone is able to put together all pre ious research into a product. It is like the TV where two main products were developed simultaneously. Or the COVID vaccine where decades of public ally funded has lead to fast development of largely identical products.

      With space flight, we have had 80 years of publicly funded research and development. What musk has done so far is apply the knowledge to a commercial product. What he has to do on his own, is figure out

    • I'd love to see people land on Mars and I think SpaceX has done well with their rocket program but I'd honestly hate to see this become a corporate achievement.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    So it is fairly trivial to land humans on Mars. Simply take some cadavers and ask their relatives to pay to send them for space burial. Crash land them on Mars. Done! Humans landed on Mars. Now, it is harder if you want them to get there alive. Even harder to return them home alive.
    • Even harder to return them home alive.

      Musk has always said Mars is a one way trip for the first crew.

      • Does that mean he thinks round-trips are out of reach for the next 30+ years? (The lifetime of those on the first mission?)
        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          I think he is mostly banking on the hope that Mars law will be Musk law, thus leaving them for dead is heroic rather than negligent homicide.
          • I don't see why they would be left for dead instead of sending resupply drones. The International Space Station has been continuously manned for over 20 years now.
            • They should send the ISS to Mars instead of dumping it into the ocean. Yes you would need to replace all the seals and tubes, it's still paid for mass.
        • Does that mean he thinks round-trips are out of reach for the next 30+ years? (The lifetime of those on the first mission?)

          Yes, the correct implication is that it isn't going to actually happen, ie, they're out of reach.

          As with other absurd statements, the implication isn't that the absurdity will happen, but merely that it would be absurd. That's true even when it is phrased as something expected to happen. Good luck getting them to stop.

          He phrases it in a way that leaves empty space; it would be a one-way trip. That doesn't imply it will be a one-way trip; it implies that trips won't be happening in the time frame during whic

    • by burtosis ( 1124179 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:07AM (#60785650)
      Hmmm, when they said it could be done with a skeleton crew, this wasn’t the first thing on my mind.
    • So it is fairly trivial to land humans on Mars. Simply take some cadavers and ask their relatives to pay to send them for space burial. Crash land them on Mars. Done! Humans landed on Mars.

      OK, so this is a good start but cadavers don't help with the "first" bit, because details.

      So how about, we use patients who the doctors say are brain dead, but whose families are keeping their bodies alive. We can get past the regulatory problems with the lack of ability to survive or return by emphasizing that legally this patient is brain dead and can't be harmed or made to suffer by the procedure. But they're not yet legally deceased, so they count for purposes of "first." You'll have to "land" a tomb bu

  • Hopefully 2024 (Score:4, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @09:43AM (#60785568)

    If it happens in 2026, it might be during Trumpâ(TM)s second term and he will take credit.

    • by drnb ( 2434720 )

      If it happens in 2026, it might be during Trumpâ(TM)s second term and he will take credit.

      To be fair his support of manned spaceflight and exploration from 2016-20 would have supported the effort. Sort of like Kennedy's support for going to the moon from 1960-63. :-)

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      it might be during Trumpâ(TM)s second term

      Trump will NEVER run again. He will make a million excuses. But his ego won't let him take a chance of losing a second time. Instead he will keep running his mouth and using it extract billions from his followers.

    • If it happens in 2026, it might be during Trump's second term and he will take credit.

      No way, Trump will definitely still be on his first term. Wait, you didn't mean prison term, did you? ;)

  • I wonder if NASA would actually be involved with this (since Starlink would be providing the money, they may not need NASA?), and if NASA was not involved, if SpaceX would have less red tape and certification / testing to go through to launch humans into space? Or would the FAA or whatever regulatory bodies require NASA approval for any humans launching from the US, even if it was 100% private?

    • Or would the FAA or whatever regulatory bodies require NASA approval for any humans launching from the US, even if it was 100% private?

      Crew Dragon's launch to the ISS last month was solely FAA-approved. NASA's certification of Crew Dragon and its launch system were one time things for the vehicle and do not have to be repeated for every launch. Crew Dragon and the Falcon 9 it flew on were owned by SpaceX, not NASA. NASA was a paying passenger, not owner/operator. It's pretty significantly different. Starship will operate the same way, when it finally flies to orbit.

  • one-way trip (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jaegs ( 645749 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:14AM (#60785686) Homepage Journal

    IIRC, Musk's plan is for a one-way trip, which reminds me of one of my favorite episodes of From the Earth to the Moon, "Spider:"

    ENGINEER 1: "We put a man on the moon as soon as possible."
    ENGINEER 2: "Just get him there."
    ENGINEER 1: "We can keep sending supply ships."
    ENGINEER 2: "Until we figure a way to get him back!"

    LEAD ENGINEER: "Well. That's... That's... No. I'm sorry, gentlemen. There is no way on God's green Earth we would ever do anything like that."

  • How did you get so many mod points here, Elon??
  • by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:31AM (#60785768)

    The Problem with this timeline is that travel time is significant and we haven't even solved all the transit problems like radiation. The only thing that would show up on Mars is a vehicle full of corpses. I can absolutely see SpaceX sending a probe/rover to Mars in a test run of sorts but sending people? No way.

  • Musk (Score:4, Informative)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @10:45AM (#60785826) Homepage

    Musk said in 2013 that, within a few years, all of Tesla's Supercharger stations would be equipped with solar panels and battery packs. He said the process was still underway in 2017.

    In 2015, Musk said "I think we will have complete autonomy in approximately two years." He has pushed that timeline back to 2019.

    Musk in 2016 said Tesla would produce 500,000 vehicles in 2018. Tesla made 254,530 vehicles during 2018.

    Musk said in 2016 that a fully autonomous Tesla vehicle would be ready to drive cross-country by the end of 2017.

    In June 2018, Musk said that Tesla was cutting 9% of its workforce so that "we never have to do this again." In January 2019, Tesla cut another 7%.

    In August 2018, Musk famously tweeted he has "Funding secured" to take Tesla private. The SEC later charged Musk with fraud.

    In January 2019, Musk said the company would be "profitable in Q1 and all quarters going forward." The company reported a loss in the first quarter.

    In February 2019, Musk said Tesla would be "winding down many of our stores." Tesla later said it would only close about half the 378 stores it intended to.

    So, to be honest, I'd be very dubious of ANYTHING that Musk claims will ever happen, let alone when he says it will.

    Source: https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

  • by Sleeping Kirby ( 919817 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @11:08AM (#60785930)
    Apparently, the fastest time a man-made object was launched and reached mars was 128 days. And there's only a window once every 26 months. So he has 2~3 windows between now and the end of 2026. Looking up the launch windows, the last launch window prior to 2026 would be 2024-11-30 through 2024-12-15. So he has 4 years - 12 days to launch (not counting leap days).
  • What IS he talking about, we can land a human on Mars right now if we had to.

    .... Oh, you meant a live one.
    • The big problem is how long do they live when they get there.

      • Send the supplies first, then have robots assemble the base and bury it under regolith for radiation shielding. Once everything works you send people. We can do that now, no new tech required.
  • It's completely easy to do. But wait, do they have to be LIVE humans?

  • Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @01:44PM (#60786606)
    So in the next 4 years SpaceX will have developed, manufactured and tested a spaceship capable of travelling to Mars, the rockets necessary to put the ship in space, the means to assemble / fuel & supply / man the ship in space if it is not one single piece on Earth, the technology necessary to land it on Mars, the habitation modules required on the surface of Mars, the means to take off again, the life support, avionics, communications, solar & propulsion systems, the flightplan (including any advanced landings of supplies), the selected landing site, and crew training in four years?

    Bullshit. Musk needs to be called out on it for once.

  • That's very different from what his Mars plans have been in the past. Musk has said that he wants to have a permanent colony on Mars with 10M people in 10 years too. I think that putting a single person on Mars for a very short stay is possible in 6 years. Colony, no way.

  • When explorers first made their way across the ocean, the journey alone killed many.

    And that's here on earth, where there's oxygen to breathe.

    I expect that the mortality rate for the first mars astronauts to be very nearly a hundred percent for decades to come.

  • Musk has a chance of putting humans on Mars sooner than many critics would imagine possible, but it'll be some time after 2026.

    Musk's virtue as a corporate leader is a willingness to "fail faster", to build organizations willing to endure and learn from setbacks that competitors focused on quarterly profits wouldn't tolerate. But there's a lots more potential setbacks on the road to mars than anything Musk has attempted before.

    Mars, to coin a phrase, is one giant leap for a man.

  • by 14erCleaner ( 745600 ) <FourteenerCleaner@yahoo.com> on Wednesday December 02, 2020 @05:11PM (#60787356) Homepage Journal
    Do cremation ashes count?

As you will see, I told them, in no uncertain terms, to see Figure one. -- Dave "First Strike" Pare

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