- cross-posted to:
- science@beehaw.org
- cross-posted to:
- science@beehaw.org
cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/546668
If so, this should not preclude us from cleaning up our own planet first!
cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/546668
If so, this should not preclude us from cleaning up our own planet first!
I dont think it’ll ever happen. Mars doesnt have a magnetosphere and as a result solar winds would erode away the added gasses and water vapor we manage to add into the system. Even if we were able to manage to get a breathable replenishing atmosphere I imagine the solar radiation would do bad things to us. We’d need like science fiction levels of shielding to keep it livable and we’d need to reach far off sci-fi levels of technology.
I imagine since there is an atmosphere that a pressurized dome city would be less fragile than say a structure on the moon since little holes and leaks wouldnt lead to dramatic explosive decompression. So colonization might be pretty doable but I think a green mars is unlikely.
My dream is covered canyons with cliff dwellings. But I would settle for a dome+tunnel city.
Yeah, I figured Mars would be an underground territory since that seems to be where any nutrients might be anyway. Trying to form an atmosphere there suitable for life is likely impossible, but cave cities would be theoretically doable.
Although I don’t know how I feel about terraforming other planets in general. Humans have destroyed this one so much that I feel like giving us another is akin to not teaching a child not to destroy their stuff. On the other hand, it would just be cool to see what humans have accomplished.
Dome cities would be much more achievable, but still incredibly difficult unfortunately. It’s cool to think it may be feasible in the next generation or two.
The atmosphere erosion is not really an issue. It take 100s of millions of year to erode the atmosphere so at humanity scale it’s not really a problem.