Thousands of people are going to settle at Mars. And Mr. Stephen Petranek is saying you that they're going to do this in less time. Some might end up doing their professions and some of your children may live there.
That probably sounds ridiculous, But by his(Stephen Petranek) presentations, I will share with you how this will probably happen.
To begin with, I would like to share some captivating facts about the planet Mars. This image below actually shows the true size of Mars when compared to Earth. Also, It is far less in size about half the size of the Earth, and yet inspite of the reality that it is smaller, the surface area of the Mars which you can observe is identical to the surface area of the Earth that we are living, obviously, because the Earth is covered by water with large quantity. The atmosphere on Mars is considerably thin approximately 100 times thinner than on Earth. Furthermore it is not breathable because it has 96 % carbon dioxide. It is very cold there. The average temperature is - 81 degrees, despite quite a range of temperature. A day on Mars is almost a day on the Earth, but with 39 minutes extra. Seasons and years on Mars are two times they are on Earth. Mars has got not much gravity than on Earth.
There are large group of communities that are planning to settle at Mars. And Mr. Stephen Petranek is saying you that they're going to do this in less time. Some might end up doing their professions and some of your children may live there.
That probably sounds ridiculous, but by his (Stephen Petranek) presentations, I will share with you how this will probably happen.
To begin with, I would like to share some captivating facts about the planet Mars. This image below actually shows the true size of Mars when compared to Earth. Also, It is far less in size about half the size of the Earth, and yet inspite of the reality that it is smaller, the surface area of the Mars which you can observe is identical to the surface area of the Earth that we are living, obviously, because the Earth is covered by water with large quantity. The atmosphere on Mars is considerably thin approximately 100 times thinner than on Earth. Furthermore it is not breathable because it has 96 % carbon dioxide. It is very cold there. The average temperature is - 81 degrees, despite quite a range of temperature. A day on Mars is almost a day on the Earth, but with 39 minutes extra. Seasons and years on Mars are two times they are on Earth. Mars has got not much gravity than on Earth.
The major problem could be Mars is very far from us, a 1000 times farther away from earth than our own moon. The Moon is 402336 KMs far away from earth and it took approximately Apollo astronauts 3 days to arrive in Mars. Mars is 250 million miles far and it will probably take us 8 months to arrive there that is 240 days. And that is only possible if we launch on a particular day, at a particular time, that comes once every two years, when Mars and the Earth are lined up then the distance that the rocket could have to travel can be the shortest that is 240 days.
What we need to survive on Earth: the main things we need are food, water, shelter and clothing. So take a look at the most significant thing on this list. Water is the basic thing of all life as we know it, and it's so heavy for robots to carry water from the Earth to Mars, so we need to find water if our life will prosper on Mars. The soil itself on Mars contains up to 60% water. This is a device invented at the University of Washington back in 1998. It's actually a low-tech dehumidifier. And it will change the atmosphere in Mars. This machine can take all the water out that humans needed from the atmosphere of Mars. Next the thing we breathe. A scientist at MIT named Michael Hecht developed the machine, Moxie. It is a reverse fuel cell, fundamentally, that draws in the Martian atmosphere and leave oxygen out and it has an ability to produce sufficient oxygen to keep one person alive.
Next, what are we going to eat? We can use hydroponics to grow food, but we are not going to be able to generate more than 15 to 20 % of our food there, and we basically have the probability and the capability of growing crops. In the meantime, large quantity of our food will get from Earth but with little modifications I suppose. And then we want some shelter. In the beginning we can use inflatable, pressurized structures.
But this basically works only during the daytime. There is so much solar radiation and so much radiation coming from cosmic rays. Therefore, we really have to look or underground structures.
And finally there we need clothing. On Mars there is barely any atmospheric pressure. So Dava Newman, a scientist at MIT, has invented the sleek space suit. It will block radiation and keeps us warm all the time.
So are you ready to get there??