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Should Mars be Terraformed?

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  • #46
    Difficult to say, if it should be terraformed.

    As a Biologist I would like it to first be fully explored for fossils of lifeforms (for example bacteriae).
    Due to the close proximity of the habitability zones of mars to earth and the former presence of water on the planet, it could be interesting to conduct extensive surveys.

    There is also the mysterie of those possible Bacteria fossils in ALH 94001 where it AFAIK up to date couldn´t be definitely proven or disproven if the residues are remnants from Mars-microbae.

    So I would chose to first conduct extensive biological research on Mars before making a decision wehter terraform Mars or not (I fearexisting fossils could be destroyed if as a result of terraforming the climate gets more humid and the atmospheric pressure rises).
    Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
    Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"

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    • #47
      Originally posted by JohnT
      can't look it up right now, but I'm pretty sure that UN moderate projections for population growth put the globe capping around 10 billion in 2050.
      Well as the UN forecasts have consistantly overestimated population growth (except, strangely, in europe where they have consistantly underestimated it) I think an average of the Medium and Low foreacasts should be used.

      That put's world population peaking at around 8.2bn in the mid 2050's - that's the same number of extra people as was added between 1980 and now, and the same percentage rinse between 1985 and now.
      19th Century Liberal, 21st Century European

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      • #48
        I think it will be more than that. If the US gets to be as dense as China or Europe, you are looking at more than 10b.
        To us, it is the BEAST.

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        • #49
          Mars=Chinese territory
          Curse your sudden but inevitable betrayal!

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          • #50
            About all we could do with today's tech and economy would be develop a lichen that could survive the radiation and feed on oxides etc to release O2 and N2. Seed the planet remotely until they thrive, then wait a few millennia…

            That would only happen as a side-effect to building a sustained colony on the Moon and economic uses for Earth orbit.
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            • #51
              I'm sorry, is anyone listening? Life cannot survive on Mars without a magnetic field, AFAIK.
              http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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              • #52
                ANy idea on how the magnetic field could be fixed, Ned ?
                "I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident
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                • #53
                  Spiffor, None. Ned
                  http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                  • #54
                    sava's US is population is barely growing if u discount immigration. I don't see any reason for us to chase down europe's population density.

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                    • #55
                      The loss of Mars magnetic field caused it to lose its atmoshere. But that was eons before all life was killed by solar radiation. I will try to find a link to the effects of radiation on humans without the protection of a magnetic field. However, it looks like Earth will very soon lose its own magnetic field. See below.

                      Ouch!


                      Sun's rays to roast Earth as poles flip

                      Robin McKie, science editor
                      Sunday November 10, 2002
                      The Observer

                      Earth's magnetic field - the force that protects us from deadly radiation bursts from outer space - is weakening dramatically.
                      Scientists have discovered that its strength has dropped precipitously over the past two centuries and could disappear over the next 1,000 years.

                      The effects could be catastrophic. Powerful radiation bursts, which normally never touch the atmosphere, would heat up its upper layers, triggering climatic disruption. Navigation and communication satellites, Earth's eyes and ears, would be destroyed and migrating animals left unable to navigate.

                      'Earth's magnetic field has disappeared many times before - as a prelude to our magnetic poles flipping over, when north becomes south and vice versa,' said Dr Alan Thomson of the British Geological Survey in Edinburgh.

                      'Reversals happen every 250,000 years or so, and as there has not been one for almost a million years, we are due one soon.'

                      For more than 100 years, scientists have noted the strength of Earth's magnetic field has been declining, but have disagreed about interpretations. Some said its drop was a precursor to reversal, others argued it merely indicated some temporary variation in field strength has been occurring.

                      But now Gauthier Hulot of the Paris Geophysical Institute has discovered Earth's magnetic field seems to be disappearing most alarmingly near the poles, a clear sign that a flip may soon take place.

                      Using satellite measurements of field variations over the past 20 years, Hulot plotted the currents of molten iron that generate Earth's magnetism deep underground and spotted huge whorls near the poles.

                      Hulot believes these vortices rotate in a direction that reinforces a reverse magnetic field, and as they grow and proliferate these eddies will weaken the dominant field: the first steps toward a new polarity, he says.

                      And as Scientific American reports this week, this interpretation has now been backed up by computer simulation studies.

                      How long a reversal might last is a matter of scientific controversy, however. Records of past events, embedded in iron minerals in ancient lava beds, show some can last for thousands of years - during which time the planet will have been exposed to batterings from solar radiation. On the other hand, other researchers say some flips may have lasted only a few weeks.

                      Exactly what will happen when Earth's magnetic field disappears prior to its re-emergence in a reversed orientation is also difficult to assess. Compasses would point to the wrong pole - a minor inconvenience. More importantly, low-orbiting satellites would be exposed to electromagnetic batterings, wrecking them.

                      In addition, many species of migrating animals and birds - from swallows to wildebeests - rely on innate abilities to track Earth's magnetic field. Their fates are impossible to gauge.

                      As to humans, our greatest risk would come from intense solar radiation bursts. Normally these are contained by the planet's magnetic field in space. However, if it disappears, particle storms will start to batter the atmosphere.

                      'These solar particles can have profound effects,' said Dr Paul Murdin, of the Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge. 'On Mars, when its magnetic field failed permanently billions of years ago, it led to its atmosphere being boiled off. On Earth, it will heat up the upper atmosphere and send ripples round the world with enormous, unpredictable effects on the climate.'

                      It is unlikely that humans could do much. Burrowing thousands of miles into solid rock to set things right would stretch the technological prowess of our descendants to bursting point, though such limitations do not worry film scriptwriters. Paramount's latest sci-fi thriller, The Core - directed by Englishman Jon Amiel, and starring Hilary S**** and Aaron Eckhart - depicts a world beset by just such a polar reversal, with radiation sweeping the planet.

                      The solution, according to the film, to be released next year, involves scientists drilling into Earth's mantle to set off a nuclear blast that will halt the reversal.

                      Given that temperatures at such depths rival those of the Sun's surface, such a task would seem impossible - except, of course, in Hollywood.
                      http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                      • #56
                        Ned does it make u the least bit suspicious that they say it happens every 250k years or so and then say it hasn't happened in a million? seems like they have some parts of the mechanism left to explain.

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                        • #57
                          Here is a recent article that speculates that human visits of 1.5 years are tolerable.




                          AP Falsely Reports Mars Radiation Data
                          March 14, 2003

                          The Associated Press yesterday issued a wire article claiming that "the radiation on the surface of Mars is so intense that it could endanger astronauts sent to explore the Red Planet." The AP claimed that these were the findings of the MARIE instrument currently operating on the Mars Odyssey spacecraft, and ascribed the view that such radiation doses were too high to allow human explorers to Dr. Cary Zeitlin of the National Space Biomedical Institute in Houston. Dr. Zeitlin is the Principal Investigator for the MARIE radiation detection instrument.

                          In fact, however, the MARIE data, which is publicly available at the MARIE website at marie.jsc.nasa.gov/Results.html, show exactly the opposite. Currently posted data for January 2003 show radiation levels in low Mars orbit of 25 millirads/day, or 9 rads/year. While this level is slightly less than twice the regulatory dose for persons employed in the nuclear industry, it represents no significant threat. According the conservative "linear hypothesis" for dealing with low doses accepted in the radiation health physics community, a dose of 13 rads delivered over a 1.5 year Mars mission surface stay would represent a statistical increase in likelihood of cancer (at some point later in life) of about one quarter of one percent. In contrast, the average American smoker receives a 20 percent increase in cancer risk. The Mars radiation risk is thus only about 1/100th as dangerous as smoking.

                          The MARIE radiation measurements were taken in Mars orbit. Doses on the surface would be even lower.

                          Thus far from proving that radiation is a showstopper for human Mars missions, the MARIE data show that radiation is NOT a major obstacle to human exploration.

                          The AP misreportage of the MARIE results is particularly disturbing because it directly contradicts the points that Dr. Zeitlin made at the Mars Odyssey press conference. Subsequent to the publication of the AP article, Dr. Zeitlin sent the following email to Mars Society president Robert Zubrin to set the record straight:



                          --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                          Bob,
                          Saw your quote in a version of the AP article that's making the rounds tonight about radiation risks on a Mars mission. Unfortunately your quote is set up as if it were in opposition to my statements, when in fact we are in agreement: the radiation is not a show-stopper. I said this quite explicitly in the press conference and in fact you can see in another (more soberly-written) article that I called the risk "manageable." I am not sure whether Mr. Bridges didn't understand what I was saying or chose to sensationalize it; I prefer to give him the benefit of the doubt and assume he misunderstood. However, not everyone did, as you can see in this article: https://www.space.com/missionlaunche...on_030313.html

                          The AP misreportage of the MARIE results is a major disservice to the American public and space program. The Mars Society calls on the Associated Press to issue a retraction and correction of its erroneous article.

                          --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

                          Full and accurate discussion of the Mars Odyssey results will be presented at the Sixth International Mars Society convention, which will be held at the Hilton Hotel in Eugene Oregon, August 14-17, 2003. Registration is now open at www.marssociety.org.
                          http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                          • #58
                            Originally posted by yavoon
                            Ned does it make u the least bit suspicious that they say it happens every 250k years or so and then say it hasn't happened in a million? seems like they have some parts of the mechanism left to explain.
                            Yeah, maybe it collapsing for its last time and we will share the fate of Mars.

                            I think science needs to take a hard look at what's going on to happen and see whether we can do anything about it.

                            BTW, I liked the movie Core. But I don't see how we could send a craft to the center of the earth.
                            http://tools.wikimedia.de/~gmaxwell/jorbis/JOrbisPlayer.php?path=John+Williams+The+Imperial+M arch+from+The+Empire+Strikes+Back.ogg&wiki=en

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                            • #59
                              The "radiation threat" is very overblown, The level of radiation on the martian surface (about 10 REM per year I think, I can't remember exactly) will only raise the risk of cancer by about 5% over a lifetime.

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                              • #60
                                Ned, I don't see how the lack of a magnetic field would be so dangerous. I mean, we have astronauts that do spacewalks in Earth orbit, as well as astronauts that have been to the moon. The lack of a magnetic field in those environments didn't affect them.

                                That article about Earth only having 1,000 years left sounds bogus. How's your foil hat coming?
                                To us, it is the BEAST.

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