Yesterday,
I spent my evening watching television programs featuring stories about
Mars.
Some stories were about the trials
and tribulations the rovers,
Spirit & Opportunity
had to overcome.
NASA's
newest rover,
Curiosity
and what science it has been doing on
Mars.
And a program called
Mars: The Secret Science.
I love the explanations given of what it takes to get to
Mars,
the science behind it,
and what was important once these rovers got to the
Red Planet.
What I got out of it,
First & Foremost,
everyone wants to find out if there was any kind of life on
Mars,
ever.
We are not just talking about multi-celled creatures,
but even a hint of any bacterial organisms.
Second,
that
Man
is going to
Mars
by hook
or crook.
Either
NASA
will be sending a team
or
Private Firms
will be footing the bills.
It takes nine months of travel time to reach the planet with today's technology,
so it is pretty obvious to me that it will likely be a one way trip for the first
Explorers.
The only question I have for these future
Mars Expeditions
is,
if the first,
second,
or both missions fail,
with either
or both crews perishing,
will there be more missions?
Unlike the explorers
and colonists of the
Fifteenth,
Sixteenth,
and
Seventeenth Centuries,
where complete colonies disappeared,
public sentiment still ran high,
asking for more explorers to colonies the new land?
Will it be the same with
Mars?
One thing for sure,
they will need water once they get there.
An Ice Sheet the Size of New Mexico Hidden in Martian Crater.
By for The New York Times.com
"An ice sheet with more water than Lake Superior may slake the thirst of future astronauts living on Mars. Using radar soundings from NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft, scientists probed what lies in Utopia Planitia, a 2,000-mile-wide basin within an ancient impact crater. For decades, the region looked intriguing because of polygonal cracking and scalloped depressions in the landscape. In places on Earth like the Canadian Arctic, patterns like these arise from ice beneath the surface. The ground cracks as ice underneath expands and contracts with the changing temperatures; the scallops, as if carved by an ice cream scoop, are places where the surface sinks as the ice melts. Ms. Stuurman, the lead author of an article in the journal Geophysical Research Letters that described the findings, said the radar reflections revealed that the ice sheet, ranging in thickness from 260 to 560 feet, covered an area larger than New Mexico."
Now scientists will have to find a way to bring drilling equipment along with
Habitats,
Hydroponics,
Supplies,
and
Recycling Equipment.
It will be the first planet that
Man
will be living on where he will reuse everything.
Nothing going to waste!
Instead of the
Red Planet,
we will be calling it the
Green Planet.
This is,
Hurry Up Already,
I Want To Witness Man Going To Mars,
Jim Hauenstein,
And,
“Problem is (follow me closely here, the science is pretty complicated), if I cut a hole in the Habitat, the air won't stay inside anymore.”
- Andy Weir, -
- Andy Weir, -
That is my story and I am sticking to it!
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