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What interesting shit do you think we will learn from or about Mars during our lifetime ??
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We will learn nothing but any thing we invent to get us there.
But the scientists and media will make a big song and dance about bad pictures and samples of rocks and sand. There's nothing on Mars or the Moon to justify the cost of going there and bringing back. |
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Pretty sure i read that just recently... |
Humans move into empty areas, always have, always will. Learning to live on Mars etc is just the first step
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Is the consensus that Mars did at one point in time have an atmosphere and that atmosphere allowed it to have water? And if there's water there could have been life?
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https://www.irishtimes.com/polopoly_...1200/image.jpg
I have already learnt that eating 20 Mars Bars a day doesn't make me slim... :( |
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https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-02751-1 https://www.nbcnews.com/science/spac...lakes-n1241234 |
Aliens created humans
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We know it may could be, but we are not sure yet, but i think we will find out that mars was once a planet like the earth, blue and green.
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Personally I don't to know anything about Bruno Mars. :(
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We could discover water of Earth for less and save lives. |
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The red planet may fascinate some but I prefer the red girls from Pattaya who are more easily accessible ... :stoned
https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-CyG5g3qFk...s1600/009A.jpg |
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The more we look.. its pointing to that every planet/moon in our system has life... snot life. Venus and Pluto are now being investigated Venus https://earthsky.org/space/life-on-v...-biosignatures Pluto https://earthsky.org/space/life-insi...internal-ocean |
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At $1400 per gram, one hundred kilograms (220 pounds) of helium-3 would be worth about $140 million. One hundred kilograms constitutes more than enough fuel to potentially power a 1000 megawatt electric plant for a year when fused with deuterium, the terrestrially abundant heavy isotope of hydrogen. So if they can mine, extract, bring back a ton of helium-3 they can't break even. Like I said, what's on Mars to justify spending 4-6 $billion a trip? |
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Originally Posted by Paul Markham There's nothing on the Moon to justify the cost of going there and bringing back. |
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3 |
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Apparently the only thing that grows there is potatoes. I think I could get the Mars experience on the moon for half the money and half the time.
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I still believe that there is ancient alien tech on Mars, just waiting for someone like Douglas Quaid to activate it :)
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We could begin to terraform mars to have an additional place for humans and some other animals and plants trees etc to live. That alone is worth it in terms of insurance.
It is 100% likely that by going there we will find and invent countless new helpful devices and procedures that will impact millions or more lives here on Earth. A whole new economy could end up forming around some of those inventions. Keep in mind that before too long, we will see harvesting of asteroids etc, likely to be brought to the moon first. processed, waste material easily buried and sealed. Final material back to Earth. Economies will change. |
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I'm more interested in Venus these days
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We haven't even explored our own ocean. If Mars had a breathable atmosphere and was 21C it would be awesome, but it doesn't. The gravity is 38% which would completely fuck over human physiology.
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