Let's say you, of all people, were contacted by NASA and asked if you'd like to give it a shot at being the first man on Mars.
Conditions are as follows:
1) You'd have to pack up immediately and begin your training, which will last for 18 months. You'd have to give up your job/education and leave your family and friends behind.
2) Launch of the spaceship, with you in it, would be on 1 December 2006, and the mission would be carried out with present day technology, nothing futuristic about it, just what we have today.
3) You'll have to go all by yourself, so that would mean no human contact for the 16 months that the mission will last. It would take you 7 months to get there, you'd get to spend 2-3 weeks on Mars, and then another 7 months for the return flight. Plus there's the quarantine of 1 month, if you manage to return, because...
4) ...they emphasize that the mission assessment analysts have come to the conclusion there's a 50% chance that something goes terribly wrong that will either kill you right there or leave you stranded on Mars or flying in space with no hope of returning to Earth.
With all this in mind, would you do it?
I'd go, provided they allow smoking on the spaceship (negotiable), and set up an internet connection for me.
Conditions are as follows:
1) You'd have to pack up immediately and begin your training, which will last for 18 months. You'd have to give up your job/education and leave your family and friends behind.
2) Launch of the spaceship, with you in it, would be on 1 December 2006, and the mission would be carried out with present day technology, nothing futuristic about it, just what we have today.
3) You'll have to go all by yourself, so that would mean no human contact for the 16 months that the mission will last. It would take you 7 months to get there, you'd get to spend 2-3 weeks on Mars, and then another 7 months for the return flight. Plus there's the quarantine of 1 month, if you manage to return, because...
4) ...they emphasize that the mission assessment analysts have come to the conclusion there's a 50% chance that something goes terribly wrong that will either kill you right there or leave you stranded on Mars or flying in space with no hope of returning to Earth.
With all this in mind, would you do it?
I'd go, provided they allow smoking on the spaceship (negotiable), and set up an internet connection for me.
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