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Venus would be impossible to terraform anyways. You'd have better luck terraforming a gas giant like Jupiter imo.:| Off topic, but how tall is Mt. Everest? like two and a half miles or something? The tallest mountains on Venus are somewhere around 13 miles tall. Does anyone really want to live in such deep valleys? Oh and...I don't know how you can **** up a rusty desert planet with no atmosphere or a hellish world with daily forecasts of raining sulfphuric acid and 900 degree highs.
The Mars colonists would be f***ed. There wouldn't be any "army" left to launch a counter-offensive.New from teh future
How likely is this you think.
Oh my god that's hilarious.-- We have to defeat the Terra-ists in this War on Terra!![]()
No. We won't.or will we? IMO all you need to do is create 2 things genetically engineered.
1) super-fast growing grass that is highly cold resistant.
2) floater photosynthesizing bacteria that floats in the air.
1 would make the planet green and create o2
2 would build up more air. we could also change it to create o3 ozone and give mars an atmosphere.
total time? me thinks 15 years, but I'm an optimist.
hence what i said earlier. genetically engineer plants to make 03 rather then O2.
fixed.
plants can be engineered for anything imo. Just a thought, but it could work. Just add a gene telling the plant to create o3 along with 02. I think the do it already anyway. In any case, bacteria is another way. eat co2, spit out o2, then use giganorumous ionizers to make 03 out of the o2. nitrogen can be made through fission right? well that will be around in a decade or so.
1) requires the research to make those microbes, and also rockets or colonists to send those microbes to mars. It would cost several hundred billion dollars.
2) requires extreme amounts of energy. Either you detonate precisely the right amounts of nukes in the right places, or you find a way to successfully land several thousand ion thrusters on an asteroid. This would also cost trillions of dollars.
Why should contain ourselves to the earth? Why should we let some arbitrary moral obligations towards some ****ing rock be more important than the well-being and progress of the human race?Like one planet isn't enough for us. I dunno, I suppose we'd be improving the environment there by making it hospitable, but where would it stop? We've already seen that humans will live pretty much anywhere they can, wherever there's enough food etc, just like any other animal. Once we've seen that we can terraform Mars, will we then move on to Jupiter's moons? I just don't like the idea of every decent sized rock in our solar system being covered in humans. I'm all for terraforming Mars when Earth becomes uninhabitable, but in the meantime I'd rather leave the planets as they are. Come on, you know we'd just **** them up anyway.
Why should contain ourselves to the earth? Why should we let some arbitrary moral obligations towards some ****ing rock be more important than the well-being and progress of the human race?
He spreads out the northern skies over empty space; he suspends the earth over nothing.
By his breath the skies became fair
Job 26:13
-- We have to defeat the Terra-ists in this War on Terra!![]()
I dunno, maybe I'm more worried about us than the planets themselves. It just seems to me that humans tend to breed until there are as many of them as the environment can support, or more, which leads to mass starvation. I just don't equate population size with well-being or progress, and the idea that we'll always need more space doesn't appeal to me.
or will we? IMO all you need to do is create 2 things genetically engineered.
1) super-fast growing grass that is highly cold resistant.
2) floater photosynthesizing bacteria that floats in the air.
1 would make the planet green and create o2
2 would build up more air. we could also change it to create o3 ozone and give mars an atmosphere.
total time? me thinks 15 years, but I'm an optimist.
When I was younger, I had an idea on how to colonize Mars. It made sense at the time, so I'll post it here for lulzing.
Build a box-like structure in space, with all of the life support stuff.
Basically, make the segments of a hab on earth and truck them up to the box.
Truck up a bunch of pre-fabricated pieces of tarmac.
Truck up two shuttles and a disposable lander.
Get the thing to Mars orbit. Maybe that nuclear propulsion would work?
Drop down the supply pods with the tarmac and hab modules over a pre-decided flat area. Drop the lander around there as well.
Gather the supplies, and set up the hab. Then set up the landing strip for the shuttles to land. These shuttles take advantage of Mars' lower gravity to bring themselves back up to orbit. These shuttles drop supplies.
I had too much time as a kid.
also, Bacteria doesn't need byont gas to float, they do it on their own already.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16328625/
so basically, just genetically engineer them to eat the co2 and do photosynthesis and mass reproduce. then to make the planet hotter, you (purely hypothetically) use microwaving satellites to super-heat mars and reactivate it's core. A few nuclear blasts should get the 'ol baby turning. then you got your radioactive protection, and walah, you rebirth a planet.
ok, I'm a mentally deranged optimist.
Those contrails are made of water vapor. They're created when the thrust of the jet engine condenses the water vapor already in the air. There is almost no water vapor in the Martian atmosphere, and the atmosphere itself is so thin and devoid of oxygen that jet engines simply would not work.
And as for the bacteria... small particles like bacteria can float on earth because of our dense, nitrogen/oxygen atmosphere. While you could get bacteria to be airborne on Mars, especially with its low gravity, it would be difficult to keep them up there. I do concede though, that one could lace bacteria in the atmosphere during a dust storm.
But really the floating is not the issue, its the fact that the bacteria will have no water, will freeze during the cold temperatures, and would be instantly killed by solar radiation. It doesn't matter how much genetic engineering you do, there is simply no bacteria on earth, or within the reach of genetic engineering which could possibly survive in the Martian atmosphere. Bacteria could survive on Mars only if they were buried several feet into the soil, to protect against the radiation, and they could use the ice there as water.
That's not quite too far off how NASA actually plans mars colonization.
Two robotic cargo ships will go to mars first, and will drop off automated mining equipment and habitation construction equipment. While we wait for mars to come back around a third time, they will build up sufficient materials for the colonists to arrive. The colonists (4-10), will land at the surface, stay for 500 days in the prefabricated (possibly inflatable) structures, and then return on a liftoff vehicle very similar to the one used for the lunar missions.
Xerophiles.But really the floating is not the issue, its the fact that the bacteria will have no water,
Psychrophileswill freeze during the cold temperatures,
Radioresistant microbes.and would be instantly killed by solar radiation.
Some bacteria, but Archaea.It doesn't matter how much genetic engineering you do, there is simply no bacteria on earth, or within the reach of genetic engineering which could possibly survive in the Martian atmosphere.
Holy shit, that's awesome. Imagine in 1000 years time, there may be not one, but no "earths" left in the solar system.
Xerophiles.
Psychrophiles
Radioresistant microbes.
Some bacteria, but Archaea.
Deinococcus radiodurans wins.
I think that we could, eventually, figure out how to engineer such a bacteria, but would this even solve anything? Bacteria might fix carbon dioxide and turn it into oxygen via photosynthesis, but how fast can this reaction occur? How viable are genetically engineered bacteria when they have to spend so much of their resources on defending against cosmic radiation, existing with little water, and avoiding extreme temperatures?
no. in actuality, when it comes to thickness, mars is just earth's atmosphere, minus the nitrogen.
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it's got around 1/3 our atmosphere's size. it's in proportion to it's 1/3 size of our world.\
http://www.christa.org/marsearth.htm
it's alot less dense, but it's layers are about 1/3 ours