Slashdot Mirror


Manned Mars Mission Some Way Off

10,9,8,7... Count Down Aborted writes "The BBC brings some perspective to the manned mission to Mars debate recently reinvigorated by the discovery of vast H2O ice reserves on Mars. Basically, they list many of the reasons (e.g. psychological, political, monetary, and technological) why we must proceed very carefully and slowly despite the significance of such a mission if it were successful. They also raised the interesting question, "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?"" Update: 05/28 14:28 GMT by H : Another good link is on USA Today.

355 comments

  1. Crew Members by desolation+angel · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Me!

    --
    This time I could be arsed.
    1. Re:Crew Members by Lozzer · · Score: 1, Funny

      I vote for John Katz and Bill Gates.

      --
      Special Relativity: The person in the other queue thinks yours is moving faster.
    2. Re:Crew Members by Salsaman · · Score: 1
      And RMS :-)

  2. Well.... by HiQ · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?""
    Well, what about me, a large stack of books and my laptop?
    I don't think I would hesitate when asked!

    1. Re:Well.... by moonbender · · Score: 2, Funny

      Actually, the first human to set a foot on Mars is called John Boone. =)
      Oh and if you haven't y'all should read Red Mars (and the other two books of the series). They're extremely interesting, an awesome mix of Sci-Fi and politics that is not too unreal too ever happen.

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    2. Re:Well.... by forged · · Score: 1
      It rocks !! And it's just so real that sometimes it scares me some of the things depicted will actually happen.

      I'm in the middle of Green Mars and progressing slowly... as much as times allow ;(

    3. Re:Well.... by chadm1967 · · Score: 1

      I agree!!!!! The series of books that you mentioned are great!

    4. Re:Well.... by frozenray · · Score: 1

      "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?""
      Well, what about me, a large stack of books and my laptop?


      Wouldn't the crew of Starship Enterprise be vastly more qualified than you? My vote goes to Kirk, Spock, McCoy, Scotty, Uhura and Chapel, with the possible addition of Seven of Nine if it's feasible.

      --
      "There are already a million monkeys on a million typewriters, and Usenet is NOTHING like Shakespeare." - Blair Houghton
    5. Re:Well.... by HiQ · · Score: 1

      No, they are just actors. At least I know a thing or two about computers 'n stuff.

    6. Re:Well.... by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

      Just don't include any 'Stephen King' books, or any X-Files videos, otherwise we will have problems before we even land. I've probably seen too many episodes of 'the outer limits'.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    7. Re:Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually John Carter was first on Mars, or Barsoom as it's known by it's inhabitants. Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote a whole series about Carter on Mars.

      A Princess of Mars
      The Gods of Mars
      The Warlord of Mars
      Thuvia, Maid of Mars
      The Chessmen of Mars
      The Master Mind of Mars
      A Fighting Man of Mars
      Swords of Mars
      Synthetic Men of Mars
      Llana of Gathol
      John Carter of Mars

      go see http://www.tarzan.org/barsoom.html

    8. Re:Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would suggest Bill Gates and George Warlord Bush, Ariel Sharon, Saddam Hussein and Uzamah ben Laden (if available) just to name a few. This would be an interesting sociological experiment, and it would be very fortunate for the world to get rid of them for some time ;-)

    9. Re:Well.... by DegenerateMatter · · Score: 1

      Better yet, let's have someone viable land on Mars, and have your crew land on Jupiter *cough*

    10. Re:Well.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and I bet you think that makes you somehow useful, don't you?

    11. Re:Well.... by neocon · · Score: 1

      Hmm, yes. George Bush and Ariel Sharon are just like Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden. Whoops, no, sorry they're not at all.

      What were you thinking?

  3. Mars mission some ways off... by G-funk · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...In other news, Richard Stallman and Santa Clause are fat guys with beards.

    Film at 11.

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    1. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by ndogg · · Score: 1

      Did NASA verify that? Did they send probes to try to detect hair particles on their facial surfaces? I won't believe it until there are probes that can provide undeniable proof of their beards.

      --
      // file: mice.h
      #include "frickin_lasers.h"
    2. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, did you meet Santa personally, huh? Please back up your statements if you want to be taken seriously.

    3. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by KosovoYankee · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Fuck your .sig, man.

      --
      - If This Peace Is Fictious, I Shall Destroy It
    4. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by G-funk · · Score: 1

      Well we shouldn't have much trouble with santa clause, but we could be shit outta luck wrt landing a probe on RMS ;-)

      --
      Send lawyers, guns, and money!
    5. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck you and your sig, bitch

    6. Re:Mars mission some ways off... by FreeUser · · Score: 2

      In other news, Richard Stallman and Santa Clause are fat guys with beards.

      Both of whome bring you gifts, often of such mangifiscence that, once you've recovered from the initial surprise and delight, you find yourself wondering how you ever did without.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  4. Send the Survivors teams by cholokoy · · Score: 2, Funny

    I vote to send the Survivors teams as they are experienced in survival techniques as shown on TV. ;)

    --
    Return the bells of Balangiga.
    1. Re:Send the Survivors teams by hplasm · · Score: 0

      Anywhere into deep space...

      --
      ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
    2. Re:Send the Survivors teams by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 2

      This week's reward challenge will require your tribe to successfully unpack, assemble and erect your habitat module. Wanna know what you're playing for? Show them.

      Yes, that's right, the winners will receive space suits with breathing aparatus.

      Survivors ready? Go!!!

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    3. Re:Send the Survivors teams by Lumpy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Bah, survivor contestants are pussies.. Let's see them do a show on an island where they are NOT the top of the food chain.... import a group of head hunters... may put a few really hungry tigers on the island..

      any wuss can survive on a non-dangerous island/location.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  5. preparedness by tps12 · · Score: 1

    I agree.

    Basically, we don't know what we'll find on Mars. Maybe nothing. Maybe a desert.

    But we just don't know.

    In the past half decade, an overwhelming amount of evidence pointing to life on Mars has accumulated. Anyone who denies the possibility of an intelligent force (not necessarily humanoid!) inhabiting Mars is living in a dreamworld.

    We don't know what we'll find, so we need to be very, very cautious. This could signal a new era in the progress of humanity. Or it could herald the beginning of the end. It's a thrilling, frightening time to be alive.

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:preparedness by Bohnanza · · Score: 1, Interesting

      "Anyone who denies the possibility of an intelligent force (not necessarily humanoid!) inhabiting Mars is living in a dreamworld." If there is an "intelligent force" on Mars they don't seem to do very much. But of course they're humanoid, just with funny bumps on their heads.

      --

      -----

      Sorry, I'm only a 1336 h4x0r.

    2. Re:preparedness by term8or · · Score: 2, Funny

      I'm not even sure I've found any "intelligent force" in Europe, let alone expecting to find it on Mars.

      --



      "As a writer / novelist you might want to spellcheck your sig. :) " - AC
    3. Re:preparedness by NixterAg · · Score: 1
      "Anyone who denies the possibility of an intelligent force (not necessarily humanoid!) inhabiting Mars is living in a dreamworld."


      If only an intelligent force had been responsible for your post.

    4. Re:preparedness by linatux · · Score: 0

      The odds of finding intelligent life on mars ...
      are a million to one

      or so the song goes

      and I agree.

    5. Re:preparedness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If there is an "intelligent force" on Mars they don't seem to do very much.

      maybe it's a sign of their intelligence that we don't see anything of them.

    6. Re:preparedness by n9hmg · · Score: 1

      I'm going to be charitable, and assume you don't think we have any evidence that there is intelligent (or any) life on Mars. Like you, I don't deny the possibility, any more than I deny the possiblilty that there really is an "energy vortex" near Sonoma, that charges rocks with its energy and gives people magic powers, or that placing furniture in the northeast corner of your house weighs down your "wealth corner" and keeps you from making money. The rational assumption, however, would be negative on all three of these ideas, pending actual evidence, and to discount the intelligence of anyone who allows his wishful thinking to guide his beliefs.

    7. Re:preparedness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I haven't read anything so ignorant, even on /., for a long time. We already have a VERY good idea of what we will find on Mars (sand and rocks). We have landed probes on Mars, and currently have an orbiter busily making better and better maps. The recent water finding are interesting, and future robot probes will give us even more details on the Martian environment.


      We are NOT going to find inteligent life on Mars. I would be amazed if any life at all is found. Anyone who thinks there is a good chance of finding inteligent life on Mars is watching too much X-Files.

  6. Should it be all women? by Cpt_Corelli · · Score: 5, Funny



    From the article: "The crew will have to be specially selected to be able to cope. Should it be a mixed crew or all men, or all women? "

    For some reason I think that it shouldn't be all women... Maybe one geek guy and the rest of the crew women?

    1. Re:Should it be all women? by HiQ · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, I could picture that: "Go away, you women, I'm hacking the kernel here!"

    2. Re:Should it be all women? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For physical and psychological reasons, the obvious answer would be to send an all male crew. Unfortunately, due to the degeneration of our society, it's not the "politically correct" crew.

      *Sigh* I wonder what the next great empire will be like after America disintegrates in a few decades?...

    3. Re:Should it be all women? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they will have killed off all those blasted women and blacks and jews and non-christians and non-whites and gays and everyone who isn't exactly like them. Maybe it'll be just like that. All this damned open-mindedness is getting to you, isn't it? Those foolish Founding Fathers and their "equality" ... someone oughta show em, right?

      Go back to fucking Russia, moron.

    4. Re:Should it be all women? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you for helping prove why Slashdot nerds can't get laid: They're all sexist misogynists.

  7. I would suggest 6 married crew members by Hairy_Potter · · Score: 1

    of a scientific bent. Make sure one couple is named Smith, too.

    1. Re:I would suggest 6 married crew members by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I grok you.

  8. Reason for doing it by ch-chuck · · Score: 2

    Is to add to the global knowledge base / historical experience that will be necessary to achieve interstellar space travel before sol turns into a red giant. For the masses, it will be for 'gold' minerals, settling the question of life on mars, or, for most tabloid readers, just to check out the face of Elvis.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    1. Re:Reason for doing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, screw Sol... life will be wiped off the face of the Earth a long time before that happens by a planet-killer asteroid. We have millions or billions of years of fuel left in the Sun but I would wager less than 10,000 years before a huge asteroid destroys life. Let's get to it people! We need to colonize other worlds to ensure that this tiny spark of life on this planet isn't destroyed. That's what humans have been doing since they first walked the land. Moving around to ensure the existence of the species.

    2. Re:Reason for doing it by Iron+Sun · · Score: 1

      I would wager less than 10,000 years before a huge asteroid destroys life.

      Err...yeah. Like the one 10,000 years ago when humanity was in the Mesolithic. Or the one 20,000 year ago when we were painting on cave walls. Or 30,000 years ago..

      I think you'll find that mass extinction events occur on the order of tens of millions of years apart, not millennia. Every 10,000 years we might get one that would give us a bit of an economic downturn, to put it mildly, but not a global catastrophe like the KT event.

    3. Re:Reason for doing it by ch-chuck · · Score: 5, Funny

      Also, the U.S. needs to establish a base before the Communist Chinese, space race style. We don't want Mars to become a Red planet.

      --
      try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
    4. Re:Reason for doing it by Hellkitten · · Score: 1

      I would wager less than 10,000 years before a huge asteroid destroys life

      I would wager less than that before humans destroy life on earth

      Crew members for any permanent base on Mars should be selected to have absolutely no agressive tendenscies. Then humanity might live on when the earth erupts into a ball of mushroom clouds

      --
      - We are the slashdot. Resistance is futile. Prepare to be moderated -
    5. Re:Reason for doing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the 21st century! Global thermonuclear war is sooooo 80's. Global warming was the big threat to life in the 90's and now TERRORISM is the threat of this decade. We need to eradicate all those pesky suit-case nuke carrying arabs.

    6. Re:Reason for doing it by Zarquon · · Score: 1
      Crew members for any permanent base on Mars should be selected to have absolutely no agressive tendenscies. Then humanity might live on when the earth erupts into a ball of mushroom clouds.


      Except they'll probably be dead on their own.. Meek / passive people don't make the best pioneers, aggression is a survival trait in primitive situations. It's only lately that it has become a drawback...
      --
      "'Tis great confidence in a friend to tell him your faults, greater to tell him his." --Poor Richard's Almanac
    7. Re:Reason for doing it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Is to add to the global knowledge base / historical experience that will be necessary to achieve interstellar space travel before sol turns into a red giant.

      I think that given the timeframe involved (several hundred million years) we'll be well on our way out when The Big Red occurs.

      You make it sound like that red giant phase is a reasonably short time away - not so. Not by any human standard of time.

    8. Re:Reason for doing it by Hellkitten · · Score: 1

      Haven't been watching the news lately have we? Does the words Pakistan and India mean anything to you. And Nuclear Capability, thats a big word, can you say Nuclear Capability?

      The point is we have countries that have recently been at war showing off their rokets. At least US and Soviet had never been (directly) at war with each other, which explains why we're not all glowing in the dark by now

      pesky suit-case nuke carrying arabs

      That's racism. And anyway I wouldn't worry too much about them, although any information I would need to make a nuke is publicly available the equipment amd raw materials are not. Also I would probably die from poisoning or radiation long before I managed to finish one, if I tried to build a nuke in my basement.

      This means that those suit-case nukes has to come pre built and should be easy enough to stop at the border.

      Remember Oklahoma? Americans can be crazy too, what if one dropped a little plutonium (very poisonous plus the added fear in the public because its the stuff of nuclear bombs) or a biological agent in a water supply? How long could the investigation go before your Mr Bush has to have someone to blame? Maybe drop a few bombs on a country that looks a little guilty?

      And do you remember the end of WW2 ? When a so called civilized country dropped the big one on civilians? twice. When a few nukes in the sea or an uninhabited area probably would have scared the japanese into surrender

      One of the biggest dangers to the world lies not in "pesky suit-case nuke carrying arabs" but in big countries (no names mentioned) that think that because they have the most bombs they should be allowed to do whatever they want

      --
      - We are the slashdot. Resistance is futile. Prepare to be moderated -
  9. Mars needs women!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, I just couldn't resist. >^..^

    1. Re:Mars needs women!! by Cpt_Corelli · · Score: 1



      But aren't women from Venus?

  10. �Who should be the members of such a crew" by tplayford · · Score: 0
    "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?""


    Me and a select group of friends, obviously.

  11. Married Couples? by pjdoland · · Score: 1

    Go read Stranger in a Strange Land by Heinlein for an interesting discussion of crew selection for a Mars mission.

    --
    -- "The reward of suffering is experience." - Aeschylus
    1. Re:Married Couples? by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      But that didn't work out quite like they planned either did it?

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    2. Re:Married Couples? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think they should all be porn stars. 3 years of zero gravity streaming porn could pay for the mission.

  12. Send spammers to Mars by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

    Lets send all the spammers to Mars. That'll teach em.

    1. Re:Send spammers to Mars by forged · · Score: 1

      Are you mad?? Not only will they find ways to continue sending their crap thru whatever satellite link they are provided with, but in addition they will be (physically) unreachable for assault when caught!!!

    2. Re:Send spammers to Mars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent idea, just block .mars and all troubles will be solved.

    3. Re:Send spammers to Mars by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May i suggest mercury instead..

  13. Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?


    I imagine the ideal crew would be all Americans. In today's cloudy political climate I imagine it'll be some multinational crew and require a $15 billion larger budget because the Russian and Japanese crew members insist on having everything labelled in their native language as well.

    Oh yea, don't forget at least 2 of the boosters must be made in Japan, the habitat module must be made in Europe, and the nuclear propulsion module must be made in Russia at a cost of 5 times more than it would have been to make it here. Afterall, we don't want those Russian nuclear scientists going and working for terrorists do we? We have to keep them employed.

    1. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I imagine the ideal crew would be all Americans

      Eh? Unless you're one of the 98% of the world's population that isn't yankee.
    2. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The socialist, eurotrash can't even launch a man into orbit, so forget them. I think it should be Russians and Americans.

    3. Re:Who? by tubs · · Score: 1

      Would that be the same Americans who spent untold millions on creating a ballpoint pen that can be used in zero gravity?

      And the same Russians that used a pencil?

      --

      try to make ends meet, you're a slave to money, then you die

    4. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The pen was created to avoid lead dust from floating around when using a pencil.

    5. Re:Who? by AsnFkr · · Score: 1

      well we are an equal oportunity employer, after all.

    6. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Official debunk on Snopes.com

    7. Re:Who? by tubs · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, I consider myself debunked.

      --

      try to make ends meet, you're a slave to money, then you die

    8. Re:Who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      graphite - pencils are made of graphite not lead.

  14. Death Row Inmates by simetra · · Score: 1

    Hey, they're going to die anyway. They may as well be put to good use.

    --

    "Would it kill you to put down the toilet seat?" -- Maya Angelou
    1. Re:Death Row Inmates by Verteiron · · Score: 2, Funny

      Sending prisoners to populate another world probably isn't a good idea. I mean, sure, Australia turned out ok, but have you read Arthur C. Clark's Rama series?

      --
      End of lesson. You may press the button.
    2. Re:Death Row Inmates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> Hey, they're going to die anyway. They may as well be put to good use.

      Hey, they did it before when America was "discovered".

      And look at the results... Not again, please.

    3. Re:Death Row Inmates by base2op · · Score: 1

      Hey, they're going to die anyway. They may as well be put to good use.

      And exactly how does this differentiate them from anyone else?

  15. One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by shawnseat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There is serious questions on whether humans could touch down safely on Mars in any case. People who have spent extended time on Mir, for example, need hospitalization and cardiovascular rehab to teach their hearts to pump blood against a gravity well again. And when these astronauts land on the Martian surface, there will obviously not be a vast, healthy medical staff awaiting them.

    --
    Religion is the opiate of the masses. The wealthy smoke the real stuff.
    1. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the Mir ones where done that way because it was Soviet policy not because thier was an actual need, you can also see the Soviets doing this for short trips, and US not doing this on long trips. However any trip this long(1 year thier 1 year back) would require it.

      However pumping blood is not the realy problem, the problem is the bones and lack of calcuim. At the zero gravity environment the body does not put the calcium in the bones like it does under gravity. From what I have read at around 2 years the calcium would be totally deplented from the bones and the person would not beable to stand the earths gravity. So until this is fixed, any trip would be one way.

    2. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Fyz · · Score: 1

      Oh, c'mon! All this "they'll die from radiation exposure", "they can't stand up when they touch down", "they'll kill each other because of space madness", "space food doesn't taste so good" is all redundant nonsense. They're minor obstacles that can easily be overcome with a little ingenuity and hard work. If I, for one, was on the team to make it happen, these thing would be just problems, work, but not impossibilities.

    3. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Ed+Avis · · Score: 2

      Couldn't they live in a giant spinning thing in space during the voyage? That's the standard sci-fi answer to low gravity isn't it? At least, you could spend a few hours each day inside some kind of violently spinning chamber so that the centrifugual force would give your heart something to pump against.

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    4. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by phayes · · Score: 1

      The visitors to Mir spent extended time in microgravity. Visitors to Mars will not.

      All recent mission plans to Mars have used a means of generating "artificial gravity" during the extended coast phase between Earth & Mars. The most common method is splitting the the spacecraft into 2 major assemblies which are connected by cables & then spinning the assembly up to Mars level G forces.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    5. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by krswan · · Score: 1

      The gravity issue can be solved by attaching the crew module to a supply module by a long cable and "orbiting" them around each other, creating a simulated gravity. Mars Gravity is about 1/3 of Earth's and they would probably spin the modules fast enough to simulate Mars on the trip there, and faster on the trip back to get the astronauts ready for Earth.

      Many of the technical questions being raised have proposed answers to them in Robert Zubrin's "Mars Direct" Plan. Many questions remain, but it is a good start, and interesting reading.

    6. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by forged · · Score: 1

      Very true, and in fact why not extend the concept a bit and design living quarters the same way ? A little weird to get used to the idea at first, but I don't think there is an alternative on the surface.

    7. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      Oh cripes.... creating artifical gravity and keeping the astronauts healthy for a landing is easy, we've been doing expierments on it for decades and as soon as they get the next module up for the ISS it's no longer an issue. Mir was a box of spare parts from a local junkyard... no Duh that life abord it was hell. the ISS is at least being engineered for long term life aboard.

      Myself... I still ask WHY we aren't building the double spinning rings from 2001..

      i guess that the human race is still incapable of building anything really useful in space..

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    8. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe Dr. Zubrin, leader of the mars foundation, observed that the only reason why astronauts are suffering muscle breakdown in space is because they were neglecting their exercise programs.

      The American woman, who's name I forget, that spent a considerable amount of time on mir had no difficulties once re-entering earths gravity, because, unlike all the astronauts prior to her, she adhered strictly to the exercise regiment.

      As to calcium depletion in the bones, I was unaware of this zero-g side effect.

    9. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Fyz · · Score: 1

      well, you know that two giant spinning wheels have a substantial metric ton weight. How many million dollars a pound does it cost to put things into space?

    10. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Iron+Sun · · Score: 2, Interesting

      as soon as they get the next module up for the ISS it's no longer an issue.

      I assume you mean the centrifuge module, which was actually going to be the last module to be installed, not the next, and may not be launched at all thanks to the cutbacks. It was also not intended for human use: they'd find it a bit crowded. It's meant for samples that can be spun up to varying partial g-forces for experimental purposes. While it's neat, it ain't exactly the orbital Hilton.

      Myself... I still ask WHY we aren't building the double spinning rings from 2001..

      Oh, please. We can barely muster the political will to build the orbiting sixpack that we have now.

    11. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by mshiltonj · · Score: 2

      There is serious questions on whether humans could touch down safely on Mars in any case. People who have spent extended time on Mir, for example, need hospitalization and cardiovascular rehab to teach their hearts to pump blood against a gravity well again. And when these astronauts land on the Martian surface, there will obviously not be a vast, healthy medical staff awaiting them.

      The starship will need a spinning ring for the human habitable sections, using centrifugal force for gravity simulation. Only go to zero gee for take off and landing (or maneuvering, if necessary)

      Watch 2001.

      Now that I think of it, the ISS should have something like this -- for extended astronaut missions and research on how to do it right.

    12. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Russ+Moerland · · Score: 1

      And back in the fifties doctors were worried that man might not be able to survive in a weightless environment. Then they began to wonder if they could survive the trip to the moon, and so on and so forth. You never know until you try.

    13. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Ellen+Ripley · · Score: 2

      Many of the technical questions being raised have proposed answers to them in Robert Zubrin's "Mars Direct" Plan..

      Anyone with mod points, please mod up krswan's post.

      The BBC article has completely out-of-date information corrected by Zubrin.

      (1) Travel time is 180 days, *not* 300.

      (2) The BBC article says: "Our current recycling technology
      is good -- but not good enough." Wrong. The technology
      is well-proven... a century old in some cases.

      The BBC article also has mythology as information, like the idea that if it did take 300 days that this is a great psychological hardship and we'll need to have a "specially selected" crew.

      Finally, there is some sort of politics going on, with the discussion of which nationality should get to place the first footprint on Mars. Quick answer: none of them. A human will be the first to set foot on Mars. (I wish there were Earth citizenships, for civilized people.)

      I second krswan's pointer to the Mars Direct site, and add a plug for Zubrin's book, _The Case For Mars_. Zubrin's book is a detailed outline of Mars Direct and will give precision to what is only summarized above.

      Ellen

    14. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If I, for one, was on the team to make it happen, these thing would be just problems, work, but not impossibilities.

      Then why aren't you on said team. Oh, that's right, because you're just another slashdot poser.

    15. Re:One thing the BBC article failed to mention... by Iron+Sun · · Score: 1

      There are so many things wrong with this post.

      First, it's not a starship if it's going to Mars.

      Second, there is no way that a craft with sufficient life support capacity for a human crew to travel to Mars is going to be capable of taking off and landing. It would go into orbit and deploy landers. I suspect you meant acceleration/deceleration instead of takeoff/landing. At least I hope you did.

      Third, I strongly doubt that a ring is the form that would be chosen, as in order for it to produce a reasonable g-force it would either have to have a BIG diameter, or spin too fast for comfort. Far more likely would be to have a ship with a nuclear engine (the only way to fly!) and fuel tanks that can be separated from the crew compartment by a long cable. After acceleration, the cable could be paid out and the whole craft could be spun around the centre of gravity.

      Now that I think of it, the ISS should have something like this

      And while I'm wishing, I'd like a pony. Let's see if we can actually get the thing built to current specs before we get too carried away. Keep in mind that each can on the orbiting sixpack costs at least a billion dollars. How much do you think a spin section (particularly one with a large enough radius, see above) would cost?

  16. Who Should Go? by phunhippy · · Score: 1

    Why All Americans of course!

    We're #1 !!!!!!
    we're #1 !!!!!!!!!!!

    yeah its a flame-bait
    but a funny-underrated-flamebait :)

    Did i mention we're #1?

    1. Re:Who Should Go? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why All Americans of course!

      ALL Americans? I second that!
    2. Re:Who Should Go? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      (-1; Troll)

    3. Re:Who Should Go? by larien · · Score: 2
      Hrm, this brings to mind a sketch from many years ago (from the Mary Whitehouse Experience):

      Band member: we're number one in Bulgaria!
      Translator: We're crap.
      Band member: we're number one in Czechoslovakia!
      Translator: We're totally crap
      Band member: We're number one in America!
      Translator: We're crap... but rich...

  17. Who ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Usama Bin Laden !

    1. Re:Who ? by Seehund · · Score: 1

      In that case he'd better make sure that this time his pilot knows how to take off and land...

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  18. Crew by loconet · · Score: 2, Funny


    "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?"

    Well, we all know who will get all the votes!...

    CowboyNeal!

    --
    [alk]
    1. Re:Crew by Seehund · · Score: 1

      I think it could be dangerous to remove such a large part of Earth's mass and put it on Mars. Who knows how astronomical orbits will change after such great changes in gravitational relations?

      --
      Help savingAmigaOS and a free PowerPC market
  19. Oh please by p3d0 · · Score: 5, Interesting
    They said the same things about the moon mission.

    I particularly like this one:

    If the crew is relying on technology to manufacture its rocket fuel to get home from the hydrogen and oxygen locked up in the Martian ice then it had better work - first time.
    Yeah, it's a shame we have no ice here on Earth with which to test this system. Anyway, the rocket booster that lifted Armstrong and Aldrin off the moon had to "work the first time", and they still signed up.

    History is full of shortsighted people telling us what scientists can't possibly do, sometimes only months before they do it.

    --
    Patrick Doyle
    I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    1. Re:Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're assuming the Apollo Moon landings actually occurred. Please present your evidence that allows you to reach that conclusion.

    2. Re:Oh please by GMontag · · Score: 2

      No kidding! I remember mucho crappola in the 60's from both the Brits and US "theoriticians" on what may happen going to the moon. Too bad all they had to do was go over to NASA and get all of the details they wanted. You know, depict the boxy aluminum LEM instead of the slick Hollywood/Pinewood LEM, etc.

      Maybe these guys should checkout the Mars Society. Forgot what sort of return fuel they were planning on, but it was not obtained by cracking H20, it was something completely different.

    3. Re:Oh please by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      There is no evidence that refutes this either. Believe it or not, Big Brother is not watching you.

    4. Re:Oh please by phayes · · Score: 1

      Manufacturing fuel & oxidiser at Mars has been studied for almost 40 years. One solution to this that has been present in a number of Mars mission plans (Zubrin's Mars direct IIRC) is to send a robot mission to Mars BEFORE anyone leaves Earth. This robot mission contains all that is needed to fabricate fuel + oxidiser. The factory must be working for the astronauts to be autorized to leave for Mars.

      This was long before abundant supplies of H were known to be present on Mars, so the robots were to be cracking atmospheric CO2 into CO + 0, but I shouldn't imagine that mining the H out of the soil would be an insurmountable obstacle. O can be obtained from the soil if the H is present as water, or from the atmosphere if it is not.

      --
      Democracy is a sheep and two wolves deciding what to have for lunch. Freedom is a well armed sheep contesting the issue
    5. Re:Oh please by pexatus · · Score: 1
      History is full of shortsighted people telling us what scientists can't possibly do, sometimes only months before they do it.
      In what way was the article short-sighted? The article wasn't saying, "Scientists predict Mars mission impossible" or "Lack of ice on earth prevents testing of system." It just pointed out that a mission so far away will not have as many backup options as one closer to earth, and consequently we had better be doubly certain that no critical systems fail. I agree with that assertion.
    6. Re:Oh please by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 2

      Maybe these guys should checkout the Mars Society [marssociety.org]. Forgot what sort of return fuel they were planning on, but it was not obtained by cracking H20, it was something completely different

      They wanted to craft CH4(Methane) and O2 from C02 (from the atmosphere) by taking H2 from earth with them in case no water/ice was found on mars.

      Of course they would now use ice on mars to split up, but very likely they would create CH4 anyway as it is easyer to store and handle.

      The main idea is to send the return vehicle and/or the fuel factories BEFORE the crew is send. So you know in advance if it makes sence to send the crew as you only would do that if the fuel factories have filled the tanks of the return vehicle.

      Well, the return vehicle may be only used for lift of and carrying enough fuel into orbit to reuse the orbiting transfer vehicle by refilling it.

      angel'o'sphere

      --
      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
    7. Re:Oh please by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 2

      You're assuming the Apollo Moon landings actually occurred. Please present your evidence that allows you to reach that conclusion.

      1. No stars in the pictures. If the landings had been faked, they would have painted stars on the backdrop to make the moon hoax idiots happy. Everybody knows that when you take pictures in the daytime you don't see stars, even with no atmosphere, because of the shutter settings required to avoid overexposure.

      2. The mirror left on the moon by the astronauts, which has been reflecting lasers from earth ever since.

      3. The requirement of an elaborate conspiracy that all moon hoax theories require. Almost any theory can be made logically consistent if you can explain away all contrary evidence with an elaborate conspiracy.

      4. To hold their theories together, the moon hoax people usually insist that all space travel is impossible, the Van Allen radiation belts will kill you, the shuttle orbits are faked as well, and that Christa McAuliffe was murdered because she found out the truth and wouldn't keep it a secret, etc.

      5. The only major network to take the moon hoax idea seriously has been FOX, which aired a one-hour special on it hosted by Mitch Pileggi from the X-Files (!). Fair and balanced as usual, FOX presented a show that was dominated by moon hoax nutcases like Kaysing and that concluded that yes, the moon landings were faked.

      To see a refutation of all the moon hoax conspiracy arguments see Bad Astronomy.

    8. Re:Oh please by jafac · · Score: 2

      Number 2 - the mirror could have been left by an unmanned mission.

      Number 4 - The last serious attempt on this one, I heard from a friend of mine, who is a muslim in the UK (who sadly, buys into the moon-landing-hoax-hoax). Apparently, this is a very popular theory among muslims (according to him). They feel that the US Moon Landing was a hoax so that the US could "prove" to the world that Americans were better than the rest, and the Science is the one true way and the "backwards religious people" can't do "great" things.
      Along with a lot of this rhetoric is some very anti-white racist thinking - the World Trade Center versus the Petronas Towers was also involved (this was pre-Sept 11.) as an example that Muslims (and people of color) can do things just as great as the whites/infidels. This reason has been cited as why the World Trade Center has been a prime target of muslim terrorists for over 10 years.
      (the Sears tower is taller, dammit!)

      This is why I'll be laughing my ass off when the Chinese build a moon base.

      It IS true that had their been a solar flare while the astronauts were outside the van allen belts, they would have received a strong dose of radiation - but most likely not lethal. In fact, they were exposed to some fairly high radiation, but certainly not enough to affect their health. There are plans in the Mars missions for how astronauts can be warned and sheilded from radiation during the trip.

      Another part of the conspiracy is how no earth-based telescope is powerful enough to actually SEE the leftover moon landers, etc. But Hubble supposedly is - but JPL refuses to point Hubble at the moon because (conspiracy) that would expose the hoax (truth) the instruments are too sensitive to be exposed to light that bright.

      All seriously funny stuff. Except for the knocking down of the WTC. That wasn't very funny.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  20. Sounds like a slashdot poll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ergo, the obligatory Cowboy Neal.

  21. who the crew should be?? by hummer357 · · Score: 1

    who should the crew be??

    ME!!

    (and my girlfriend of course!!)

    1. Re:who the crew should be?? by Purzel · · Score: 1, Funny

      What about Bob, your big white mouse?

  22. Mars is quite a haul by Greyfox · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't really see us going there anytime soon. And even if we do send a crew there, what then? I would have expected that after getting someone to the moon, we would have followed that up with a permanent base, but we pretty much got bored with the whole thing and never went back. If we're going to ask a crew of people to risk their lives and spend a couple of years in a tin can, I'd want us to show a little more commitment to the whole endeavor.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Mars is quite a haul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we're going to ask a crew of people to risk their lives and spend a couple of years in a tin can, I'd want us to show a little more commitment to the whole endeavor, people!

      You're a manager, aren't you?

    2. Re:Mars is quite a haul by JohnPM · · Score: 1

      The fact that you think we got bored with the whole thing doesn't speak much to your grasp of the issue. It makes as much sense as saying that a marathon runner gets bored with the whole thing when he stops running at the end rather than continuing to jog on the spot for a few hours. Once you win a race you stop running it. With the moon shots, it's that simple.

      Also, we don't need "to ask a crew of people to risk their lives", we would simply have to allow a handfull of the millions of volunteers to do so. The very difficult tricky bit will be deciding who gets to go. I honestly think I'd go in a heartbeat.

      --
      Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
    3. Re:Mars is quite a haul by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking about it, and I think I'd go too. To be the first on an alien planet...I can't imagine how incredible that would feel.

  23. Who to send? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I say Hillary Rosen and Jack Valenti. No idea why really, but it feels SO right.

  24. Re:Put ya hands together by hplasm · · Score: 0

    Why Ren! Can this mean that you are..unhappy???? . (nice post dude, er was there something you were trying to get across??......;-> )

    --
    ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
  25. Overestimating the costs. by hirofxp · · Score: 0

    All we have to do is blow the fuckers into space, pointed toward mars. Once they get there, they don't need their goofy little oxygen suits. Humans can breath in space. Those pussy astronauts just never had the stones to try it. ("I'd never say that about an astronaut")

  26. Potential Mars Astronauts by SirSlud · · Score: 4, Funny

    > Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?

    Oh, too easy! The MPAA and the RIAA, of course!

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
    1. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by kramer · · Score: 1


      >> Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?

      >Oh, too easy! The MPAA and the RIAA, of course!

      No, no that's for the mission to the sun.

    2. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by estoll · · Score: 1

      Oh, they probably won't go but I'm sure they'll find a way to make millions on a movie or a reality TV show about it. Come to think of it, they already have....

      --
      http://www.askthevoid.com
    3. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is one of the funniest comments I've read in a good while :)

      If I had mod points, I'd mod it up.

      Yeah. I have to post this as AC, because I don't want to lose karma.

    4. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 1

      How about doing a whole Hotblack gig on the moon, flying the RIAA and MPAA into the sun and webcasting it as DIVX and MP3 audio streams at the same time? Any suggestions for a headlining band?

      --
      OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
    5. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2

      Disaster Area, of course!

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    6. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by coward_2.0 · · Score: 1

      Man Plus By Frederick Pohl.... very good read.. see http://www.maths.tcd.ie/~pswift/books/manplus.html .

      I think that this is a few years off though.. =)

    7. Re:Potential Mars Astronauts by CrystalFalcon · · Score: 2

      The MPAA and the RIAA, of course!

      Now now. The question was who would be CREW, not who would be fuel. Try again.

  27. Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    The crew:

    Gather 16 random trolls. Make a pseudo-forum generating random articles, add some fp bots and plenty of p0rn and you're almost there.

    We may have a problem with reproduction though.

  28. Keanu Reeves by pubjames · · Score: 4, Funny

    Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?

    Definately Keanu Reeves wearing some cool sunglasses. Definately not Tom Hanks crying and being sentimental like a big girl.

    1. Re:Keanu Reeves by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 2

      The sun will rise..... and fry me like the ham that I am.

    2. Re:Keanu Reeves by brianvan · · Score: 2
      Definately Keanu Reeves wearing some cool sunglasses. Definately not Tom Hanks crying and being sentimental like a big girl.
      Such a move may greatly increase the proportion of talent-to-actors in Southern California. Film students everywhere rejoice. Can we send Haley Joel Osment up there too?
    3. Re:Keanu Reeves by pubjames · · Score: 5, Funny


      Yes, and none of that "One small step for man..." rubbish when they land. I want Samuel L. Jackson jumping out of the spacecraft and saying something with the word "motherfucker" in it.

    4. Re:Keanu Reeves by jtseng · · Score: 1

      I'd definitely let Carrie-Anne Moss on my crew! And I wouldn't hesitate like Val - none of that "I shoulda kissed you" crap...

      --

      Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

    5. Re:Keanu Reeves by KH · · Score: 2

      But is Keanu Reeves not supposed to say, ``Whoa''?

    6. Re:Keanu Reeves by arnie_apesacrappin · · Score: 2
      Well, if Red Planet is any indicator, I hereby volunteer my services as the "space janitor" (played by Val Kilmer). After the rest of the crew dies on Mars, and I use an old Russian rocket to get back to the ship and nearly die, I really think I could handle the year long ride back with Carrie-Anne Moss.

      During my trip to Mars, I also will volunteer to have an encounter with Sil (Natasha Henstridge) from Species, but only if I make it home to be with my wife (Charlize Theron), as indicated by The Astronaut's Wife

      Keanu will be allowed to join the mission, but will end up being sucked into space trying to shout "noooooo" as the pressureless environment causes him to explode.

      --

      Still, with a plan, you only get the best you can imagine. I'd always hoped for something better than that. -CP

  29. Politically Correct Ideas by Alien54 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    One appealing suggestion I heard a few years ago is that included in any crew should be a representative of the poorest nation on Earth and that this individual should make the first footfall on another world as a pledge to the poor of planet Earth. And if this person did become the first human to stand on the red soil of Mars, what would they say? Discuss.

    gak. sounds like a college professor.

    but in any case, such considerations sound like something from the politically correct crowd, and tend to overlook the qualifications that such a person would have to have. It looks like to actually do something like this, you would have to preselect someone from the poorest nation on earth now, and groom them for the job 20 years from now. not very likely, considering how many administrations we'll have between now and then. Not very likely at all.

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by Timmeh · · Score: 1
      Some of these Brits, I swear man:
      It's sexy, exciting and the stuff of dreams - but how, with nations lining up to annihilate each other with weapons of mass destruction, millions dying from famine, drought, disease, slavery, oppression and global warming - can we justify spending the hundreds of billions of dollars it would take just to put one or two lucky individuals on Mars' surface? We should be confronting and solving our problems in the here and now, not looking for ways for a handful of the "great and good" to run away from them.

      Steve Pauline, UK

      Ummm, there was famine drought disease, slavery, and oppression when Wright brothers made their first successful flight @ Kitty Hawk, did that stop them? I'm not sure what this guy thinks we can do to change human nature... but if he has any ideas, I'm sure the UN would love to hear them.

    2. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by HiQ · · Score: 2, Funny

      And if this person did become the first human to stand on the red soil of Mars, what would they say?

      Got some spare change?

    3. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by Salsaman · · Score: 1
      Hmmm...Starvin' Marvin in Space...

    4. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by tjgoodwin · · Score: 1

      Has it not occurred to you that the poorest nation on Earth might, despite its poverty, have a University or several? (This concept is known as social inequality. I understand that, even beyond the golden door, still the odd item of wretched refuse lingers, so you should be able to grasp it.) Maybe, just maybe, one or two of this nation's citizens are as smart / fit / sociable / whatever as - gasp! - an American.

    5. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did it ever occure to you that the poorest nations of the world don't have the money to fund a trip to mars? you don't see the airlines footing the bill to send your fat ass to some tropical get away for free do you? Why should the countries putting in money and time give away their ride to mars?

    6. Re:Politically Correct Ideas by DegenerateMatter · · Score: 1

      Well, if this person is wealthy enough to afford a University education equivalent to that of an American (which is, when you get down to it, fairly good), he or she would hardly seem representative of a poor people anyway. ^_^

  30. Why come back? by HeyBob! · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most of the cost of sending people to Mars is the cost of getting them back again. The trip should be one way, with new people and supplies sent every few months. Eventually, after 10 - 20 years, there may be enough manufacturing capacity on Mars to send people back to Earth, but that wouldn't be guaranteed. I'm sure out the 5 Billion people on Earth we could find a few thousand settlers. Most of the people who settled the "New World" (Europians coming to North America) came on a one way trip.
    Maybe the volunteers remaining families would receive money (a pittance compared to the savings). There might be enough demand to go, you could run a lottery, with the winners going and the money raised for paying part of the trip.

    1. Re:Why come back? by cruelworld · · Score: 2

      I could fund a trip to mars in no time. Sell the television rights. It'd be the ultimate reality show.

      And I agree, send people there who aren't exepecting to return. I'd volunteer in an instant and I know thousands of others who would too.

    2. Re:Why come back? by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the Europeans could breathe the air in the "new world". We won't be able to.

    3. Re:Why come back? by Fyz · · Score: 1

      Hey, sign me up for martian language lessons!

    4. Re:Why come back? by letxa2000 · · Score: 3, Funny
      I'd volunteer in an instant and I know thousands of others who would too.

      Hmm, I would too, except... imagine the ping response time? 365,000ms on a good day (season) and 2,700,000ms on a bad day (season).

      Definitely won't be telnetting into my Linux shell. :)

    5. Re:Why come back? by ScannerBoy · · Score: 1

      "(Europians coming to North America) came on a one way trip"

      Yea, but they knew they could eat, drink and BREATH in the new world.

      --
      --Should work--
    6. Re:Why come back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Eventually, after 10 - 20 years, there may be enough manufacturing capacity on Mars to send people back to Earth, but that wouldn't be guaranteed. I'm sure out the 5 Billion people on Earth we could find a few thousand settlers.

      Betcha I could find a few dozen volunteers even if it were a one-way suicide mission. Some people would figure it was worth the price.

    7. Re:Why come back? by morbid · · Score: 0

      Would it be worth the price for a suicide mission now, instead of maybe waiting 30-40 years when it wouldn't have to be a suicide mission?
      That isn't really such a long time. We haven't had proper scientific reasoning for more than a few hundred years. Mathematics only really took off in Newton's time, Physics in the 1700's and the Industrial Revolution was, what, 250 years ago?
      Slow down cowboy! I'd love to go to Mars, but I'd like to come back to, or at least have the option to travel frequently, cheaply and safely from Earth to Mars and back, in the same way that people can travel aroung the globe on a 747.

      --
      I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
    8. Re:Why come back? by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 2

      If you make the return trip "a possiblity", I'm afraid you'd have trouble finding sane, balanced people wanting to go. Sure, you could find off-center and/or extremist people that would be willing to leave planet earth forever, but I'm worried about how these people would endure hardships and if they would keep their cool in crisis.

      --

      Stop the brainwash

    9. Re:Why come back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Would it be worth the price for a suicide mission now, instead of maybe waiting 30-40 years when it wouldn't have to be a suicide mission?

      *shrug* A 20-something Mars enthusiast today will be a 50-something Mars enthusiast 30 years from now. Assuming the first roundtrip Mars mission is 20, 30, or 40 years from now, who do you think NASA is going to send? A 50 year-old has-been or a healthy, bright-eyed 20 year-old? Like I said, some people would figure it was worth the price.


      Of course this is all hypothetical. NASA isn't sending anyone, especially on a suicide mission, until the've had a couple or three decades to study the problem.

    10. Re:Why come back? by Chase · · Score: 1

      > I'm afraid you'd have trouble finding sane, balanced people wanting to go.

      What type of people do you think were sent to the Americas? I assure you that the sane and balanced types were not the first on the boat.

      --
      -==-
    11. Re:Why come back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, from what I've seen, they still haven't arrived in the Americas.

    12. Re:Why come back? by adunakhor · · Score: 1

      Interesting ideia, but this has some complications. When the puritans came to North America, they expected a new land, true, but they assumed it would have breathable air, water for them to drink (liquid and ACCESSIBLE), soil for them to seed and animals for them to hunt, that is, the basic requisites needed for human survival. The story is a whole lot different on Mars, and I don't think I have to explain why. Nevertheless, your idea is an interesting one, since it would be the first step in spreading the human race throughout the universe, and it would also mean that our neighbor planets would be no longer just potential turist atractions, but real places where real people live! But of course, in order for this to become viable, scientists would have to improve a lot our current space exploration technology, and governments would have to start looking at the solar system (and later, at the stars) with different eyes. However, I just don't think that space exploration will become a real issue until we have consumed all of our natural resources and overpopulation becomes a serious problem. I hope the governments of this planet have the wisdom to antecipate this.

    13. Re:Why come back? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, there were sane and balanced people here before C. Columbus was born, but they disappeared at an alarming rate once the Europeans started coming in quantity.

    14. Re:Why come back? by ParticleGirl · · Score: 2

      Yes, ok, so the "New World" doesn't seem so foreign and dangerous to you on this side of the 16th century.

      Look at it this way. They had a months-long ocean voyage ahead of them. A very dangrous, months-long voyage on a tiny ship on the wide ocean (an environment in which they most certainly could not live) with a destination that's very hard to find successfully because such navigation had only been done successfully a few times in the past. (Sound familiar yet?)

      When they got there, they had to contend with hostile conditions (ok, so they had air, but they also had people familiar with the territory who wanted nothing more than to kill them.) And possibly nothing to eat, or new diseases... or not seeing a person besides those with which they're travelling, for months or years at a time, if you're talking about pioneers moving west or the first settlers on the coasts.

      No matter how you cut it, in the 1500s people were travelling into the unknown, with dangers as real as those that would face people on a mars-shot. They may have been different dangers, but there they were. Ok, so we wouldn't be able to get there, build our little log cabin, and start farming. But most of us today don't build log cabins and farm, anyhow. What we do is work with new materials and the latest science, and that's what we'd have to do on Mars to find ways to live. Would it be dangerous? Sure. Would that stop people? Not a chance in hell. It never has. People will always want something new and different, and potentially better and grander. People would die. Possibly lots of them. But people would keep going, given a chance.

      --
      Do something about world hunger. Click here
    15. Re:Why come back? by jesser · · Score: 3, Informative
      This is an old problem.

      With existing IRBM hardware we could put a man into orbit in a year. But don't ask me how we'd get him back. If a man would be ready to sacrifice his life by being fired into orbit it would answer some of the questions about space flight, but even if one volunteered we probably couldn't find anybody willing to shoot him up there.
      Interview with Wernher von Braun, missile development specialist, after Sputnik II was launched into space by the Russian government in 1957.

      Sources: 1 2
      --
      The shareholder is always right.
  31. Why water is important by pacc · · Score: 2

    In the earlier slashdot subject there was a lot of discussion about the use of the water in terms of oxygen to breathe, water to drink etc for a human expedition. But isn't all of this things that to some extent can be recycled?

    Isn't the importance of water it's use in fuel - you only need solar power to build up a supply of hydrogen and oxygen to power you rockets and give inertia on the journey back. The real advantage is that you don't have to bring along fuel for the way back (and extra fuel to propel that mass) and this could be an advantage even for non-human expeditions if you want to bring something back.

  32. What's the difference? by skwog · · Score: 1

    Sure it would be nice to go sooner, but what's so important about getting there in the next 20 years? If we are going to bother going there, why not wait a bit more for the money, the technology and the plan itself to develop properly. If I were going to mars, I'd make it worth my while.

    --


    You can laugh without eating a sandwhich, but you can do both if bring one.
  33. "H2O ice reserves" ? by bigmouth_strikes · · Score: 1

    Isn't this the ultimate irony ? We have plenty of water on our planet, but instead of concentrating on how to keep/make it drinkable and how to supply it to people, we spend the money on getting to another freaking planet to get it.

    China recently mentioned going to the moon so that they could mine there. The colonization of space will carry on where colonization on Earth stopped during the last century... plundering of natural resources.

    Not to mention our need to keep our own ice from melting. Wars will be fought over fresh water, maybe on Mars too ?

    This is so depressing I think I need a drink... and no ice, please.

    --
    Oh, I can't help quoting you because everything that you said rings true
    1. Re:"H2O ice reserves" ? by coryboehne · · Score: 1

      I think you may have missed the point, since mars has large H20 reserves in the form of ice, it is much more likely that a manned mission would and could succeed. The weight and volume of water necessary to support a team on mars would simply be an overwhelming demand on payload resources if it was necessary to bring water from earth and transport it to mars.

    2. Re:"H2O ice reserves" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even bother to read the article? They aren't going to goto Mars to obtain water jackass. Plundering of natural resources? Unlike Earth, Mars and the Moon have no ecology which this "plundering" would effect. And if resources are put to good use, how is that plundering? "Not to mention our need to keep our own ice from melting" Wtf are you smoking? We have a need to control GLOBAL WARMING, not ice melting. Sea levels rise not from ice melting, but from thermal expansion of the oceans. And wars over water? Um, they invented this neat thing called desalinization, and I doubt the cost of making such processing facilities outways the cost of launching a war to control fresh water. I feel dumber after reading your worthless message.

    3. Re:"H2O ice reserves" ? by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      Just like a catchphrase of one of my local radio stations: "Earth First! We'll strip mine the other 8 planets later."

    4. Re:"H2O ice reserves" ? by Salsaman · · Score: 2
      I disagree.

      Surely it's better to extract raw materials from an uninhabited ball of rock than from our own planet. I think the Chinese have the right idea. Start mining the moon, and maybe we won't screw up the Earth so much.

    5. Re:"H2O ice reserves" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No one is planning on returning water from Mars to the Earth.


      I would much prefer we stop plundering the Earth and start plundering lifeless rocks in space, and the sooner the better.

  34. Does it really need to be manned? by nautical9 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    With the major advances in robot technology, A.I., computer vision, etc. etc., I'm very surprised they'd even consider using people again. The cost associated with maintaining a human crew's life support, food, and environment is huge (not to mention how much larger the craft must be to hold all this, and how much more fuel it takes to get out of Earth's atmosphere, AND bring them all back, AND the usual huge risk of loss of life...). I think it would be better spent building a better robot.

    Obviously, the robots can't do everything themselves, but humans on earth can reasonably control them (it would take anywhere from 3 to 22 minutes for a one-way communication from Earth to Mars, depending on their respective orbits around the sun).

    Unless we're ready to start terraforming, I don't think it's cost-effective to send humans.

    1. Re:Does it really need to be manned? by Russ+Moerland · · Score: 1

      You know, you could send a robot to Sydney, Australia for New Years and control it from ISS.

      You can never replace the experience of actually being there, and taking home the memories of an absolutely wonderful time.

      Sending humans may be expensive, but you can NEVER replace the experience of actually going.

    2. Re:Does it really need to be manned? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we are already doing that. all the mars probes are some kinds of robots (though they don't look like a "classic" humanoid robot).

  35. Rocket Guy by coryboehne · · Score: 1

    I think I will personally cast my vote for that crazy-shoot-myself-into-oblivion-and-not-even-care rocket guy, I think the mars mission needs at least one crazy. (of course provided his first launch is'nt his last.) :)

  36. Er... by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 2

    "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?"

    Er... trained astronauts, perhaps?

    RMN
    ~~~

    1. Re:Er... by rmohr02 · · Score: 1

      ...or trained cosmonauts?

  37. Radiation Determines the Crew by cybrpnk2 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The crew of a Mars mission will be 50-somethings who will die of natural causes before they have a chance to develop cancer from radiation exposure during a Mars trip. Send somebody in their late 20s or early 30s like Apollo/Shuttle and they are going to have some obvious and serious health problems from the trip before they live out their lives. Most people don'r realize how serious radiation in space is. The biggest problems are cosmic rays and solar flares. During the Apollo program there was an August 1972 flare which could have subjected an astronaut to 20,000 REM in 14 hours - 20 to 40 times the lethal dose. Luckily Apollo 16 was back and Apollo 17 was still on the pad. On a Mars mission there won't be any such luck. It lasts YEARS instead of a week and radiation exposure is UNAVOIDABLE. Once you get outside the Earth's protective magnetosphere, you are literally on your own in the unknown...

    1. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Send somebody in their late 20s or early 30s like Apollo/Shuttle

      I doubt that any of the astronauts in the Apollo or Shuttle era were in their late 20's or early 30's...more like mid to late 30's, 40's (John Glenn Mercury-era), 50's (Story Musgrave) and 70's (John Glenn Shuttle-era).

    2. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First they get a trip to mars, then they get bombarded by cosmic rays, and develop wierd powers.

      What is the downside?

    3. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by p3d0 · · Score: 2

      Couldn't a ship have an artificial magnetic field that served the same purpose? I wonder how much power that would require?

      --
      Patrick Doyle
      I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
    4. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by mess31173 · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily any. It doesn't have to be electromagnetic. There are magnets that don't consume any electricity you know. But who knows how this would effect other instruments or things on the ship.

    5. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by JohnPM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A magnetic field could divert the protons and electrons emitted in a solar flare, but wouldn't effect the x-ray and gamma-ray radiation which are uncharged photons. I'm pretty sure the electromagnetic radiation is far more dangerous and can only be blocked by putting something massive between the sun and the traveller. The Mars literature covers this (see Red Mars by KSR). Usually there is a hidey-hole where the travellers ride out the storm partially shielded by the water/fuel tank. Also, you would travel in a minimum of the solar 11 year cycle. These are around 2006, 2017, 2028, etc.
      In any case there's no doubt you would receive a large dose on a trip to Mars. It probably wouldn't kill you immediately but it would most likely sterilise a male. You would want to stock your sperm beforehand on Earth and have a cure for cancer handy at the time as well.

      --
      Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
    6. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by esonik · · Score: 1

      The earth magnetic field is huge in size. That makes it protective although it's not very strong. A corresponding mag field of the size of a spacecraft would have to be very strong in order to deflect the high energy protons from the solar wind. If have to calculate it but it would probably of such strength that it would disturb the function of electric devices on the spacecraft.

    7. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      actually, the engines that they plan to use for this type of thing are plasma-based. the electromagnetic field used to contain this plasma is very effective at blocking the normal dosage of space radiation.

      i got this info from a tour of nasa, houston. sorry no link :P

      -brady

    8. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if the electronic devices were moving in relation to the field. Things like hand held electronics would have trouble, but assuming a static magnetic field in relation to the fixed electronics, there would be no induced current.

    9. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by cybercuzco · · Score: 3, Interesting

      At the university of Maryland this semester, I took a class that had the task of designing a lunar base. We considered using magnetic fields too, until the professor told us the story of a class he had a few years ago that tried to go to jupiter. They wanted to use a magnetic field too, using a superconducting magnetic loop. The ship -HAS- to be torodial (donut shaped) because the ener4getic protons are repelled by the field but attracted to the poles of the magnet. When the professor asked if they had any backup in case the superconductivity failed, the answer was "We dont need to worry about that, because if the superconductivity fails the energy that will be released will vaporize the entire spaceship." To answe your question about how much power it needs, you need cryogenic cooling equipment that is able to maintain liquid nitrogen temperatures for the entire mission duration. If the system fails, your ship goes poof.
      Radiation is really a bugbear though. Martian atmosphere provides some protection, and its assumed that if you were establishing a premanent base, you would cover your habitat in enough dirt so that radiation would be at earthlike levels or better. Then just dont go out on EVA during solar flares and youll be ok. Martian atmosphere is enough to protect against cosmic rays and normal levels of solar proton flux, which is the biggest problem for free space radiation. Just build shelters and youll be fine.

      --

    10. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you please quit spreading this tripe. I've watched Star Trek enough times to know you do NOT get fucking irradiated in space. Quit being a fucking moron motherfucker.

    11. Re:Radiation Determines the Crew by esonik · · Score: 1

      Think about really big field-strengths. There still is Lorentz-Force, you'd have Hall-effects in many places.

  38. Space Race by nicklott · · Score: 1

    "There is no Mars race between superpowers in the offing" [from the article]

    Hmmm... unless the Chinese do actually manage what they're promising and make a manned flight within 8 years. Bet the senate won't be forcing cutbacks on NASA then

  39. I have an idea for the Crew. by forged · · Score: 1, Redundant
    • The crew will have to be specially selected to be able to cope. Should it be a mixed crew or all men, or all women?

    They can send me and a large number of females for breeding and other recreational (and scientific) activities !

  40. Of Course! by groupthink · · Score: 2, Funny
    Of course a manned mission to Mars is a long way off!

    As evryone knows, Mars needs women, not men... geez, when will the male centric NASA get it right!?

    1. Re:Of Course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmmmmm... Mars babes...

  41. Launch Window by smartin · · Score: 2

    I believe that there is a period around 2019 when Mars is at it's closest to earth. Picking the right time to go can make a big difference in terms of cost and flight time. I think is covered in a recent Wired article.

    --
    The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
    1. Re:Launch Window by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

      I remember reading about this in Time magazine. But the thing is you don't want to launch when Mars is at its closest, but within the trajectory. It would take far more energy to travel a straightline path rather than follow the orbit of the earth. The plan is to launch and then arc out to meet Mars. Secondly, in planning a launch, you also need to find a time that would work out best for the return flight. So, the launch window become significantly smaller.

      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
  42. Crew by DigitalDragon · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched

    How about a rock band or a pop band like N'Sync? Or even better, we already know the bad ass crew from Armageddon!

    --
    http://dtum.livejournal.com
  43. Crew members by Greger47 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    "Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?"

    Well duh! Marstronauts, ofcourse!

  44. Space Madness by Joel+Ironstone · · Score: 1

    Man I hope the astronauts don't get space madness!

  45. There are several factors to consider by Iron+Sun · · Score: 1

    Cracking the water is the easy bit, because we know exactly what energy budget we need. The critical part, and one that will have to be tested by robot probes before we send people, is how easy it is to get the water out of the Martian soil. That's still an unknown, so we can't currently estimate how much energy would be required, how long it would take, or what area would need to be mined to provide the requisite amount of fuel. If you view his off-the-cuff comment in that light, then yes, there are a lot of on- and off-planet tests still to be done.

  46. China? by pexatus · · Score: 1
    There is no Mars race between superpowers in the offing, so going to the Red Planet will be for other reasons
    What about China and its recent Mars mission announcement? They might be full of sh&t and wind, but if they actually attempt a Mars mission, don't tell me that that the US and its new pal Russia will sit back and let them take all the glory.
    1. Re:China? by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

      I think you have it confused with the moon. China recently announce that they are planning on building a base on the moon within 10 years. I'm sure this will respark our interest in the moon (as long as we aren't spending every cent we have chasing after, but not capturing this binladin guy..)

      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
    2. Re:China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure this will respark our interest in the moon (as long as we aren't spending every cent we have chasing after, but not capturing this binladin guy..)

      Now what if someone were to mention to President Bush that Bin Laden may be planning an alliance with the Chinese to build a secret moon base and a giant "laser" that could destroy any city on Earth from millions of miles away? Come on baby, NASA needs a couple dozen billion dollars to revitalize the space program this year.

  47. The answer is obvious. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 5, Funny



    Of course, the answer to who we send is obvious -- We should send an ethnically-diverse "Power Rangers" like team to Mars, because that way, we can sell action figures and color-changing cups at Burger King. We should send an African bush man that speaks in grunts and clicks, along with an Eskimo, an Aboriginie, and perhaps a midg^H^H^H^Hsmall person, because sending qualified engineers and scientists from the actual country footing the bill for all of this crap would be RACIST. So what if most of the engineers and scientists happen to be white. So's 80% of the country. How did they get to be such a big majority? Simple.. They're RACIST!!

    For the humor impaired: The parent article dicusses the question of "who we should send".... In other words, "lets discriminate", which is a subtle form of racism in and of itself. It infers that the people who are going to be picked will NOT be picked for their qualifications, but rather, picked for their ethnicity or skin color, which is friggin retarded. I say, send the best people for the job. If they happen to be blacks, cool. If they happen to be hispanic, cool. If they happen to be white, cool. If they happen to be friggin purple, cool. The whole issue of picking an "ethnically diverse" crew is a crock of shit, because "ethnically diverse" may not mean the same thing as "best people for the mission". Neil Armstrong wasn't chosen to be the first guy to walk on the moon because he was white. He was chosen because he busted his ass in training for several years, training that anyone could have undergone, and many did.

    Call it like you see it.

    Cheers,

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

    1. Re:The answer is obvious. by JohnPM · · Score: 1

      Yeah but you seem to be assuming that the priority for the mission will be to give the absolute best possible chance of success, rather than any other political or symbolic goals. Say the best possible chance of success was 83% using a team composed mostly of white american men. If the mission planners could use a politically correct team (whatever that means - equal male/female more ethnically diverse, etc) by picking perhaps not exactly the absolute best people for the job and at the same time reduce the overall chance of mission success to 82.5%, then they should probably do so.

      I really think that there are more "best of the best" top people out there than you realise. There will be millions of volunteers to choose from. The cream of the crop, the people who are all so good you can't really measure them, will number in the dozens at least. It would be easy to then make selections that are more or less politically correct as well.

      --
      Karma police, I've given all I can, it's not enough, I've given all I can, but we're still on the payroll.
    2. Re:The answer is obvious. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, he was probably chosen to look good on TV. like JFK did. and no one wants to fund "black men on the moon" either.

    3. Re:The answer is obvious. by smiff · · Score: 1
      Neil Armstrong wasn't chosen to be the first guy to walk on the moon because he was white. He was chosen because he busted his ass in training for several years, training that anyone could have undergone, and many did.

      Astronauts for the moon mission were chosen back in the 1960's, while racism was rampant. In order to even be considered for the space program, potential astronauts had to have experience flying experimental aircraft for the military.

      In the 1960's, every single American astronaut was a married, white male in his 30's or 40's. Do not delude yourself into thinking there was no racism, sexism, or other political factors influencing crew selection.

  48. Give inertia? by Iron+Sun · · Score: 1

    you only need solar power to build up a supply of hydrogen and oxygen to power you rockets and give inertia on the journey back.

    Thou shalt not giveth inertia nor taketh it away. It is an innate property of matter related to its mass. I suspect you mean momentum, which still isn't quite putting it right, but is at least in the ballpark.

  49. Hydrogen factory by tsa · · Score: 1

    With so much water and so much sun on Mars it should not be too difficult to build an efficient hydrogen and oxygen factory there. Visiting spacecraft can use these gases to refuel and to take in new oxygen before starting to do real work.

    --

    -- Cheers!

  50. bill gates, and other ceo types who suck... by hatrisc · · Score: 0

    that way, if they die no one will care... oh, and if for some reason everything is ok and they make it there... something will happen that nasa won't get them back here (i.e. not enough fuel, or some miniscule error in math)... so we win either way!

    --
    I write code.
  51. Re:preparedness - intelligent life? by coryboehne · · Score: 1

    I would just love to see your overwhelming evidence, if you're referring to the "face" on mars, later surveys reveal nothing particularly interesting about that feature, other than when it is struck by light in just the right fashion, photographed from just the right angle (with a poor quality camera), it happens to look somewhat like a human face. As far as living in a dreamworld, I feel that anyone whom would say that there is a real possibility of intelligent life on mars must be living in a dream world. Due to the total lack of atmosphere, it's highly unlikely that anything larger than slime type organisms are going to be found, and even those would most likely be exotropic (probably living off sulfer or some other chemical compound). The only possibility of other life forms is in the ice, and once again, due to lack of atmosphere this is very unlikely.

  52. i wouldnt be able to go by AsnFkr · · Score: 1

    untill they get broadband on mars. fuck dialup.

    1. Re:i wouldnt be able to go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      get a life.

  53. Mars vs. Luna by Dan+Crash · · Score: 2

    I know Mars is the trendy spot in our solar system right now, with its beautiful Southwestern-style landscape, but can I hear an answer as to why we don't try building a base on the Moon first?

    Both have very similar challenges involved; one just happens to be 300 days closer. Doesn't it make sense to start closest to us and work our way outward? Development on the Moon could give us crucial insights into how we should develop Mars, and besides: The Moon is really the only likely space tourism destination in our lifetimes.

    The Sea of Tranquility, The Bay of Rainbows, The Ocean of Storms, the Lake of Dreams... if nothing else, the Moon is the most beautifully named object in our solar system. So can anyone give me a reason why we should colonize Mars before we colonize the Moon?

    --
    He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
    1. Re:Mars vs. Luna by mess31173 · · Score: 1

      Three little letters can sum this up.

      h
      2
      o

      Living on mars can be quite a bit easier (long term) with water already there.

    2. Re:Mars vs. Luna by Dan+Crash · · Score: 2

      The question of whether there's water on the Moon is still open. It's believed there is ice at the north and south poles, and perhaps even frozen in the shadows of craters. We don't know, though. We just haven't looked hard enough.

      Besides, we can always ship water to the Moon if they need it. We can't ship similar unexpected necessities to Mars colonists.

      --
      He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
    3. Re:Mars vs. Luna by mess31173 · · Score: 1

      I should have clarified. I seem to have to do that a lot in my posts. Significant, obtainable amounts of water.

    4. Re:Mars vs. Luna by Dan+Crash · · Score: 2

      Significant: The figure quoted for ice on the moon is 6.6 billion tons. That oughtta fill your Dixie cup.

      Obtainable: "...the latest results show the water may be more concentrated in localized areas (roughly 1850 square km, or 650 square miles, at each pole)."

      But let's ignore the fact that you didn't read the link. Because I don't think your argument holds, um, water. :)

      The question is whether or not it's more practical to build our first colonies on the Moon or on Mars. I think the simplest argument here relies on capitalism.

      The Moon already has a built-in industry that it can use to generate dollars to pay for importing water: Tourism. The Moon is a 3 day trip away. We also know there's a significant group of millionaires who would be early adopters, and they alone could subsidize the cost of bringing water to the Moon. (This is assuming, of course, that it would be cheaper to import water than it would be to mine and refine it. If mining and refining native ice was cheaper, the millionaire trips could subsidize other materials.)

      As lunar tourism becomes accessible, more and more people will go. (Wouldn't you go to Disneyland Luna?) These people will bring the Earth resources needed to expand colonization and create an economy.

      In contrast, Mars doesn't have anywhere near the practical capitalist possibilites as a tourist destination that the Moon does. To go to Mars you essentially have to abandon your entire life for several years. Not even most millionaires can afford to do that. Add to the that the increased risks of cell damage and the fact that there's no help should you encounter any unforeseen circumstances, and you'll see why I think it's inarguable that building on the Moon is the most practical way to begin.

      I'd still like to see us make it to Mars eventually... but it's a bad choice as a first step.

      --
      He who refuses to do arithmetic is doomed to talk nonsense.
  54. A doctor named Smith by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Why not just have a doctor named Smith? Along with a robot that looks like it is made of dryer parts and a chimp with a high hat.

  55. Send the Jewish Settlers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After all, they know how to make themselves welcome and there's lots of "space". It'll keep them out of everyone's hair too, nasty bunch!

  56. One appealing suggestion ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    ... I heard a few years ago is that included in any crew should be a representative of the poorest nation on Earth and that this individual should make the first footfall on another world as a pledge to the poor of planet Earth.

    And if this person did become the first human to stand on the red soil of Mars, what would they say?


    Yeah man. Itsah great 'onoh to be down 'e withda homies. Shoutout to all my gettho ho's! Propz to dah homies! Respect Jah! Love to mee mum in Port-au-Prince!

  57. Who to send... by unikron · · Score: 1

    Well... nobody said anything about walking out of the rocket.... :)

    I say, give me an extra pack of fuel, some final fantasy games a good computer and I'll go...

  58. I agree by ThousandStars · · Score: 1
    Quote the master:

    Eight humans, crowded together for almost three Terran years, had better get along much better than humans usually did... four married couples were considered optimum.

    And naturally, this being science fiction, four could be found with the requisite skills. Here in reality, though, I don't think four married couples would work so well because of the possibility of cheating, devious alliances, people falling out of love, etc.

    Of course, the potential for fun in a gravity reduced environment might help fix that issue.

    1. Re:I agree by Provocateur · · Score: 1

      ...so well because of the possibility of cheating, devious alliances, people falling out of love, etc.

      So one of the crew men should be Springer, as in Jerry

      --
      WARNING: Smartphones have side effects--most of them undocumented.
  59. Proposed Crew Members by TJPile · · Score: 0

    An international team composed of:

    A military person with combat/leadership training
    A mechanical engineer from the military or NASA
    A computer systems expert
    A geologist/archeologist
    A medical doctor
    A bio/chem person

    Being such a small crew, each member would have to wear multiple hats.

  60. They should bring the message meant for the moon by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 4, Funny

    There's an urban legend or true story about the moon mission. They should bring the same message to mars.

    ---

    About 1966 or so, a NASA team doing work for the Apollo moon mission took the astronauts near Tuba City. There the terrain of the Navajo Reservation looks very much like the lunar surface. Among all the trucks and large vehicles were two large figures that were dressed in full lunar spacesuits.

    Nearby a Navajo sheep herder and his son were watching the strange creatures walk about, occasionally being tended by other NASA personnel. The two Navajo people were noticed and approached by the NASA personnel. Since the man did not know English, his son asked him who the strange creatures were. The NASA people told them that they were just men that were getting ready to go to the moon. The man became very excited and asked if he could send a message to the moon with the astronauts.

    The NASA personnel thought this was a great idea so they rustled up a tape recorder. After the man gave them his message, they asked his son to translate. His son would not.

    Later, they tried a few more people on the reservation to translate and every person they asked would chuckle and then refuse to translate. Finally, with cash in hand someone translated the message,

    "Watch out for these guys, they come to take your land."

    --
    We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
  61. Well DOH! - Me of course! by Moderation+abuser · · Score: 1

    I should be on the crew of course. Who else?

    --
    Government of the people, by corporate executives, for corporate profits.
  62. Risku Business!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've got to have nerves of steal to live on Mars in an artificial eco system. Just imagine a little ant hops on for the ride and upsets the mini eco system - the crew will be powerless as the eco system dies. They would be so isolated from Earth that they would face an inevitable and slow death. If they are struck by a dust particle on route to/from Mars the capsule could be destroyed or crippled.

    This would be a truly amazing mission because the risk of failure is enormous. Good luck to the guy, gal or animal that gets to go first:-)

  63. LOL! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed. That is now my number one requirement from a Mars landing as well.

  64. Who to send? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "One appealing suggestion I heard a few years ago is that included in any crew should be a representative of the poorest nation on Earth and that this individual should make the first footfall on another world as a pledge to the poor of planet Earth"

    How about we send a poor American.

  65. Women and Bone Loss by zensmile · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I read some place that because of accelerated bone loss, women might not be able to make the trip. They would be toothless and have fragile bones by the time they got back. the lack of gravity on the way over and back being the culprit. It would still do the same to men...but not to such a radical and damaging degree.

    It just isn't science fiction or political correctness that should be the judge in picking a crew...but in success of mission...and who would reasonably be expected to complete the mission.

    1. Re:Women and Bone Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With some luck they'll loose their teeth. I hate it when they scrape my whopper.

    2. Re:Women and Bone Loss by ParticleGirl · · Score: 2

      I don't know where you read your "information," unless you're extrapolating that assumptions in some sci-fi novels are scientific facts. Women do not show significantly different bone loss than men, in studies executed to date. They most certainly would be no more toothless or fragile than men. While there are many potential differences in the ways men and women cope with the stresses of a long duration spaceflight, none of these are confirmed, and to date it seems that individual responses vary much more than gender-differentiated responses.

      Regardless of who is going, they are likely to suffer some damage unless some mechanism or mechanisms are in place to help them maintain their physical fittness. Don't dismiss women until you have a good reason to. In the meantime, NASA has done quite a bit of research into the matter of gender differentiated responses to long duration space travel, and they haven't found anything remotely conclusive.

      --
      Do something about world hunger. Click here
    3. Re:Women and Bone Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd be willing to go. I'm already a couch potato so I need the exercise.

    4. Re:Women and Bone Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you forgot to read this part of the research:

      "Insufficient data exist in most of the discipline areas at the present time to draw valid conclusions about gender-specific differences in astronauts"

    5. Re:Women and Bone Loss by ParticleGirl · · Score: 2

      Perhaps you forgot to read this part of my post:

      In the meantime, NASA has done quite a bit of research [spacedaily.com] into the matter of gender differentiated responses to long duration space travel, and they haven't found anything remotely conclusive.

      I'm just saying it's too quick to decide to rule out sending women, since there's not enough data to warrant it.

      --
      Do something about world hunger. Click here
    6. Re:Women and Bone Loss by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know where you get your "information" but maybe you haven't noticed that women on average are weaker, and usually smaller then men.

      Also, about the psychological effects of the trip, do you know that women are 70% more likely to see a pyschologist during their lifetimes, and 120% more likely then men to be prescribed something for psychological illness (ie PROZAC)

  66. No Bill!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Microsoft on Mars! We have already poluted Earth by Microsoft, communists, patents and US dictatorships. Lets' avoid same mistakes on Mars.

  67. Errr... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    or trained spationauts maybe ?

  68. The poor on Mars by jonerik · · Score: 2

    One appealing suggestion I heard a few years ago is that included in any crew should be a representative of the poorest nation on Earth and that this individual should make the first footfall on another world as a pledge to the poor of planet Earth.

    Pfffffftttt - Yeah, that'll happen....

    1. Re:The poor on Mars by Arcturax · · Score: 2

      How about we send some NYC bums who were displaced from their sleeping quarters in the WTC parking garage then. All we need to do is send them enough alcohol to last the trip and some steel garbage cans and Sterno to keep them warm on the trip over and on the cold surface of Mars. And best yet, if the alcohol runs out, the Sterno can be used as backup and will kill any of those pesky exterrestrial viruses they may run across.

      --

      --Won't that be grand? Computers and the programs will start thinking and the people will stop. - Dr. Walter Gibbs
  69. Don't forget... by jtseng · · Score: 1

    You may want to burn in your on-board AI systems. I hope no one forgets what happened to Discovery on its trip to Jupiter...

    --

    Sanity.html - Error 404 not found

  70. God DAMN it by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does nobody else remember how ludicruous a moonshot was in 1962? We didn't know how to do it, we didn't know if we could figure out how to do it, and JFK might as well have signed the death warrants of the Apollo 11 crew.

    And yet we did it, and got them there and back safely. We did it because one man said we would do it, not because it was easy, but because it was hard.

    Every time I read this pussyfooting around a manned Mars mission, it turns my stomach. We are now so petty and adverse to risk that I cannot see that we will ever launch a Mars mission. There are too many negatives and not enough positives. There's too much that we don't know, and that we think - assert vehemently even - that we can't learn or fix. It's too hard, we complain, it's too dangerous, we might fail. We can't afford the risk, we have to wait until we can make it safe. We have to wait, and wait and wait.

    What we need is for one man - hell, even Dubya - to stand up say "This country commits itself to putting a man on Mars and bringing him back safely by the end of this decade. Make it happen."

    Then we can turn some of our horrifying arms budget to something a little less self destructive, we can find volunteers, brave men and women who understand the risks and choose to go anyway, and we can stop nay-saying and do our damndest to get them there and back safely.

    And we might fail. That's not an option, but it is a possibility. But to not try for fear of failure means we're already defeated, and we should weep not for a lost crew of astronauts but for the loss of all astronauts. Buzz Aldrin - a man who has walked on the surface of another planet - laments that he never thought space exploration would mean shuttling cargo around in low Earth orbit. Perhaps we'd just become so used to watching stage managed, post-produced heroes on film and TV that we'd forgotten that the real thing still exists, until September 11th reminded us. We wept for the emergency services men and women who died, but nobody - nobody - cheapened their memory by suggesting that it would have been more prudent, more sensible, for them not to have put themselves in harm's way.

    If our reach no longer exceeds our grasp then we might as well gear up to manufacture parts for the Chinese Mars mission, because if we don't go, then they will. Because they seem to understand (as we've forgotten) that constantly striving to achieve more than we believed ourselves capable of is the defining trait of being human.

    I've heard talk that we'll rebuild the twin towers, just to show that our spirit isn't broken. Great, but why stop there? Why not keep going up, and up? Why not stop saying "We'll go when it's achievable" and say "We are going. Achieve it."?

    Let's got to Mars, not because it is easy, but because it is hard.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buzz Aldrin has never walked on another planet.

    2. Re:God DAMN it by Zelet · · Score: 1

      You need to email this to Ari Fleischer (Bush's Press person) and have him give that speech... it is awesome.

      I would have you email it to Bush... but some of the words are too big for him.

      --
      ...And when they came for me, there was no one left to speak out for me." - Martin Niemoeller (1892-1984)
    3. Re:God DAMN it by uradu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I can hear the sounds of the national anthem and see a huge flag unfurling behind you while you utter these most patriotic words. Oh JFK, you most American of our sons, what would our country be without you? Of course, thank God for the Cold War and the need to beat them godless Russkies, too.

    4. Re:God DAMN it by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's too hard, we complain, it's too dangerous, we might fail. We can't afford the risk, we have to wait until we can make it safe. We have to wait, and wait and wait.

      That's NOT why we're not going. We're not going because going there is TOTALLY WORTHLESS.

      People really need to clue in to why people made voyages in the past. They didn't make the voyage for the hell of it, or just to see if they could, they did it for selfish reasons: 1) Find Gold, 2) Escape oppression, 3) Escape crowding and find virgin land, 4) Gold.

      There currently is just economic reason to go to Mars. If you want to men in space and you want men in space to stay, then stop whining about how the government should dump money when there is almost no return on the investment except "Gee! Wow! We made it! Whoop-de-doo!"

      If we are ever to stay in space, space has to pay for itself through industrialization.

      The reason we don't go to Mars is exactly the opposite reason you cite: We don't go because we already know we can do it with enough money. With the moon mission, that really was new.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    5. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      With due respect, what are you suggesting the US should have done about Russia? Knuckle under and let even more nations live under the iron fist of Communist rule than already did? Really?

    6. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're misquoting JFK. The actual quote was `I chose to go to Marilyn not because she was easy, but because I was hard'.

      =Duck=

      (Above quote is from a blog article now misplaced. Extra credit for anyone who follows up with a link)

    7. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Roger, let us all make a vow not to forget those naysayers in Washington, those unimaginative in the Heart Land of America, the intellectually lazy who dare not dream bold dreams.

      Let's not forget them when all of this is finished. When we are old and gray, when we have passed on the reins, when we are tired and filled with regret. Let's not forget them, those who stood in our way, who constructed obstacles to our noble pursuits, who build so many bombs that left us no hope and those who went along with them blindingly.

      Nor let not our great grandchildren forget them when their inherited planet is taken over by flies feeding on the dead of their overpopulated orb.

      Or as their skin is melting because our generation chose not to follow in our forefathers' pioneering footsteps but instead took the path of power-hungry warlords and chose to build our capacity to fight and kill and neglect our very souls that cry out, that ache, that need to go where no man has gone before.

      No, let them not forget that we could have, should have, and, yes, God damn it, would have --if it weren't for the naysayers, the world destroyers, the unimaginative and the intellectually lazy-- given our planet hope, its inhabitants peace.

      I am with you, Roger. It makes me physically sick to realize we won't go in my lifetime, and probably never will.

    8. Re:God DAMN it by rizzo · · Score: 2

      Awesome.

      --

      "More organs means more human." - Zim

    9. Re:God DAMN it by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

      You bring up some interesting arguments, but the main assumption that underlies them all is that, before something can be worth doing, it has to be self-sustaining.

      This thinking reminds me of a conversation from Terry Pratchett's "Maskerade." A cheese mogul has just bought the Great Opera House of Ankh-Morpork, and is suddenly realizing why it was a bad investment. The manager of the opera house takes him aside and explains [bad paraphrase follows] "Opera isn't like cheese. You don't put opera into this place so that money will flow out. You put money in, and out comes opera!"

      Or something like that. Sure, economics drove the exploration of the New World. But the sheer thrill of exploration is also a factor. We didn't climb Mount Everest after running a detailed cost/benefit analysis. Nobody went to the South Pole because they wanted to be able to sell penguin pelts for $100 each.

      Less exotic examples: people who spend a summer backpacking through Europe don't do it because they expect to make money off the book rights or because they hope to make connections that will increase their earning potential. People don't go to movies because they expect that they'll get a pay raise through witty banter around the water cooler the next day.

      In such cases, the main reason for going is that there's something we want to see.

      I want us to see Mars, and I'd pay my share of the cost even if there wasn't any benefit beyond the momentary thrill and feeling of accomplishment. Of course, in the long run, any colony would have to be able to sustain itself. But what would it hurt if we splurged just this once?

      --

      You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

    10. Re:God DAMN it by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Or something like that. Sure, economics drove the exploration of the New World. But the sheer thrill of exploration is also a factor. We didn't climb Mount Everest after running a detailed cost/benefit analysis.

      I agree that a certain amount of exploration is done for the sake of research and learning. I think that's why we went to the moon in the first place. The USSR certainly gave us some motivation, but more than that, we wanted to do something that hadn't been done before.

      Of course, in the long run, any colony would have to be able to sustain itself. But what would it hurt if we splurged just this once?

      But see, that's the problem: space has been done before. There was a lot more mystery surrounding the moon shot. The was truly something that had never been done before. But going to Mars is just more of the same. There's no doubt in anyone's mind that we can do it; it's just a question of spending the money. In other words, we've already done the splurging -- on the moon. If we're going to spend money like that, we can do 100 unmanned probes for the cost of 1 manned probe.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    11. Re:God DAMN it by FatBobSmith · · Score: 1

      Lewis and Clark weren't sent across the continental United States for Gold or any other reason. They were sent to pave the way for others. To see what was there and find what might be of value, scientifically, economically or otherwise.

      Sending a manned mission to Mars is similar. The first astronauts may not set up a McDonalds, but they're exploring and gathering information on what eventually COULD return their investments.

    12. Re:God DAMN it by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      Lewis and Clark weren't sent across the continental United States for Gold or any other reason. They were sent to pave the way for others. To see what was there and find what might be of value, scientifically, economically or otherwise.

      Dude, you're contradicting yourself in the same sentence. They didn't send them out just for the hell of it, they sent them out to see what might be (as you say) "of value". The US government was extremely interested in expanding the size of US territory. Of course, they were also interested in finding new trading routes to East Europe.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    13. Re:God DAMN it by axlrosen · · Score: 2

      What we need is for one man - hell, even Dubya - to stand up say "This country commits itself to putting a man on Mars and bringing him back safely by the end of this decade. Make it happen."

      No, it also needs the support of the Congress to fund it, and therefore the support of the people in the country to spend the billions or trillions of dollars it'll take to make it happen. And that doesn't seem like it's going to happen any time soon. There's just not the sense that it's worthwhile, like we thought going to the moon was because of the Russians. With Mars, sure, we could probably do it if we wanted, but in general we don't really want to that badly.

    14. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To quote USATODAY, "The financial benefits of the Apollo program have been well chronicled. The technology spin-offs of the space program have yielded a 10-to-1 return on investment." There's your ROI



    15. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      Mm, typical. Read this post's parent and it's parent's parent, and note which got modded `insightful' and which got modded `flamebait'.

      Let it never be claimed that /.'s moderation doesn't favor a particular political position.

    16. Re:God DAMN it by uradu · · Score: 2

      You mainly got trounced for failing to notice the suggestion that maybe the US didn't just spent countless billions on the moon race out of some altruistic urge to simply be the best they can be, but rather because the Russians would have gotten there first otherwise (maybe, in hindsight), and that simply would have not been good at all for PR.

    17. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      Which is all very well, but it's also worth recognizing (and this is what I was trying to point out) that the Russians actually did pose a very real threat, and that competing with them in space, as here on earth was anything but a simple PR game. The lives and liberty of millions of real human beings were at stake.

    18. Re:God DAMN it by uradu · · Score: 2

      > The lives and liberty of millions of real human beings were at stake.

      Maybe you should avail yourself of some transcripts of the type of language floating around in the White House at the time. JFK basically asked if we had any reasonable chance of beating the Russians to the moon, and if yes, to proceed. Given the alternative, of course the answer was affirmative, even though the track record up to that point hadn't been encouraging. Keep in mind that just a few years earlier the US was caught with their PR pants down when the USSR launched Sputnik. Winning the moon race was by far mostly about regaining respect for democracy--after all, the West itself painted the world as a struggle between Good (West) and Evil (USSR). How could they let Evil triumph? This had nothing to do with developing semiconductors or Teflon in order to develop superior military technology. It was a war of rhetoric. In hindsight it also led to bankrupting the USSR in the long term, but this is just something we can pat ourselves on the shoulder about today. Back then nobody sat down to strategize how to bankrupt the Soviets. At the time it still appeared to be a viable social and political system.

    19. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      While this is on the mark, I repeat that beating the Soviets to the moon had real repurcussions for the ideological conflict here on earth, a conflict which was about a lot more than PR.

      Concern about the military repurcussions of being behind in the space race should also be kept in mind, of course.

    20. Re:God DAMN it by DietProZac · · Score: 1

      Everything you say about the motivation for Mars exploration is completely wrong. You say that the only motivator for Mars exploration that currently exists is ecconomic, while that is actually the only motivator that does not exist.

      Reasons to go to Mars:
      1) Find Gold: We already know that gold exists in Martian soil in greater concentrations than it does here on earth. However, Robert Zubrin pointed out in his book, The Case for Mars, that it would not be economically feasible to mine gold on Mars and export it back to earth. The cost of the rocket fuel needed to return the gold to Earth would be greater than the value of the gold itself. (Asteroid mining is economically feasible, however, and Mars is much closer to the Asteroid belt than is Earth) Therefore, greed alone is not driving us to Mars in the short term.

      2) Escape oppression: Take a look at the state of the world around you. Pardon my French, but I think it is pretty F----d up. Anyone who says that their freedom is not restricted by some form of bureaucracy, terrorism, extremism, ignorance or intolerance must already be living on a different planet. I'm not knocking my own quality of life in the good ol' U.S. of A, but quite frankly I would be much happier as a pioneer on the surface of Mars than I am right now, headed toward an exciting career in the soul-sucking field of white-collar paper-pushing.

      3) Escape crowding and find virgin land: The United Nations Population Information Network estimates the current population of the world to be upwards of 6 billion, expected to reach 10-12 billion by 2050. That sounds pretty darn crowded to me. Blah blah blah, pollution, human waste, disease etc... you have heard it all before. While I do not completely agree with all the alarmist predictions out there, I do feel that if we continue on at this rate we will eventually face a sharp and painful decrease in population. Unless people want to start populating the Northern Canadian and Siberian tundra (and cause further environmental destruction), we better find somewhere else to grow. Famine and disease may be the natural order of things, but I would rather not have to watch billions of people suffer and die when there is a perfectly empty and habitable planet right next door.

      And what about all the technological and spiritual advancement that we stand to gain? Isn't a shot at answering the eternal question "are we alone?" reason enough to go to Mars? I am only one of many who would be willing to risk their lives to answer this question for all of humanity. There are so many reasons to go to Mars, I can't believe we are even discussing reasons not to.

    21. Re:God DAMN it by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      but quite frankly I would be much happier as a pioneer on the surface of Mars than I am right now, headed toward an exciting career in the soul-sucking field of white-collar paper-pushing.

      That's great, and someday we WILL colonize other places for just that reason. But there is a BIG difference between old-world exploration and space exploration. The big thing is that an old-world colony could be self-sufficient once you got the colonists to the new land. With enough hard work and natural resources, you could build your colony from the land.

      But a Mars landing is different. To make a self sufficient colony is insanely difficult and expensive, and quite frankly might be beyond our technology right now. That means you have to have supplies continually coming from Earth. Big $$$$$.

      Isn't a shot at answering the eternal question "are we alone?" reason enough to go to Mars?

      If that's what you want, then you should definitely NOT be in favor of manned trips. Like I said in another post, we can send 100 unmanned probes for the cost of a single manned probe.

      Trust me, I want to go into space. Badly. But I realize that the only way it's going to happen is for space to pay for itself by establishing an industrial infrastructure first in orbit, then in the asteroid belts, then possibly on the moon (although there might not be much there worth having), and then -- someday -- Mars might be cheap enough when our technology reaches the right level.

      It sucks, but I think that's the reality of how it has to happen.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    22. Re:God DAMN it by sean23007 · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, a particular political position? I don't think anybody did claim that the moderation doesn't favor a particular philosophy. In fact, it only makes sense that the moderation would reflect the views of the moderators, who apparently may or may not subscribe to a political viewpoint. A lot of moderators disagree with a lot of other moderators, and they all disagree with a lot of posters. But you did not make clear your political position, rather you just revealed the fact that you are a spiteful man who may well be a dullard and an idiot.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    23. Re:God DAMN it by ChuckleBug · · Score: 1

      The sarcasm's cute and all, but the guy's point was that humans can do a lot when they have the will to do so. Right now, we don't have the Red Menace(tm) to race with, and al-Qaida's not trying to go to Mars, so we lack the motivation. One can go on and on about the cynical reasons we had to explore space, the dirty politics, public ignorance, cold war, and so on, but one fact remains - whatever the reason, we decided to go to the moon within ten years (+/- a year) and we DID it, in spite of the fact that we had no clue as to what we were doing at the start. From a technical perspective, it was an incredible accomplishment, one that I find inspiring.

      Sometimes people do great things for poor reasons. That doesn't mean the accomplishment is unworthy of respect.

    24. Re:God DAMN it by uradu · · Score: 2

      > but the guy's point was that humans can do a lot when they have the will to do so.

      Correction, Americans, not humans. I'm mainly using sarcasm to defuse his nationalistic (under)tone. But in this post-9/11 world (to use a Katzism), that's a lost cause anyway.

    25. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      Leaving aside your resort to insults at the end of your post, the fact remains that expressing a conservative viewpoint is a great way to get modded down. Now you may consider this `good' (and many liberals do, being very intolerant of opposing viewpoints, I could point you to any number of examples right here on slashdot), and I'm not going to tell you not to. Just don't claim it doesn't happen.

    26. Re:God DAMN it by Evil+Pete · · Score: 2

      Um. Not an American but still pretty much agree with you. Too much wimpy snivelling over this I think.

      As for a reason to go to Mars ? Well for me its just a matter of the attitude a civilisation or nation adopts. If the West (or civilisation in general) adopts the attitude that its best not to try anything ambitious then we'll never have the fscking motivation to tackle the more urgent issues. Sure there are lots of things we could spend the money on, but who on Earth is so naive as to believe that the money would actually be spent on those things. How many trillions will be spent on armaments in the next 20 years compared to the piddly amount for the Mars mission. Fact is the 100 billion US dollar cost of this isn't that big considering the time-span and that there could be some international co-operation etc on it, I'm sure lots of nations would like a chance to be associated with it.

      Anyway just my 2 cents.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    27. Re:God DAMN it by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      From everything I said in my post it sounded like I was denying the fact that "it happens," doesn't it? However, I would disagree that one only gets modded down for holding conservative viewpoints. A person is also likely to be modded down for a liberal viewpoint. As was once pointed out in a .sig: "The only way to /. karma glory is through humor. Actually having an opinion will only get you modded down."

      A lot of people are intolerant of opposing viewpoints, especially those who see those who differ from them as "opponents." Intolerance is not strictly assigned to liberals, nor only to conservatives. Rather, it is usually the extremist who is intolerant of a different opinion, though an extremist's opinion is also more likely to irk the majority of people than someone who is mildly to the left or the right. If you have had trouble with being modded down for your views, perhaps you are an extremist. You should work on that, it may be dangerous in the long run.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    28. Re:God DAMN it by ChuckleBug · · Score: 1

      but the guy's point was that humans can do a lot when they have the will to do so.

      Correction, Americans, not humans.

      So, Americans aren't humans, or non-American humans can't do a lot when they have the will to do so?

      I understand what you're getting at, but in the context of what I was saying I don't think the distinction is relevant. Americans happened to be the ones with the resources and motivation to go to the Moon, but any humans could have done this if they were in a similar position.

      In my experience, any display of enthusiasm for the US space program gets you accused of some kind of blind nationalism, and I think that's unfair. The only sort of nationalist thing the original poster did was quote JFK. If I say that was a real high point for JFK, and I think it was a real display of leadership, does that make me a jingoist? I could also slam him (Bay of Pigs, anyone?), but it wouldn't be relevant to the space exploration topic.

    29. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      Well, as they say on tv, `we report, you decide'. I would argue that there is a strong liberal bias to much of the moderation which goes on here, you seem to feel that there is not. I dare say the readers of our posts can decide that for themselves, taking this thread and others as their guide.

      As to your bit about intolerance, I would argue that it misses a key point. Modern `I feel your pain' liberalism, with its morass of identity politics, anti-Americanism, and subjectivist morality, has little use for rational argument and the respect for civil discourse which was a proud tradition of the liberalism of the past. From our college campuses, to our network news, liberals increasingly see labels and smears as a replacement for reason. Conservatism, with its central emphasis on reason and on individual rights, is less guilty of this.

      Hint: when was the last time you saw a small group of conservative protesters use insults, violence or threats of violence to shut down a liberal speech, event, or newspaper? It happens to conservatives all the time -- see here, or here, or here or here or here.

    30. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yup. That's the situation in a sentence:

      "we're not going because going there is totally worthless."


      I'll qualify my agreement somewhat:
      • Sending people there at this point would be mostly another elaborate NASA exercise in killing astronauts.
      • Why not send robotic probes instead? Nobody cries as much when they blow up on launch or fail to reach their destination.
      • Why blow all the money that could be spent on some of NASA's neglected hard science missions? (Oh, wait, that's the ISS role, isn't it?)


      Another slight disagreement about the need for industrialization. We can afford to waste some certain amount of our national income on pure science research.

      Just not on crappy projects like a manned mars mission....
    31. Re:God DAMN it by mojo-raisin · · Score: 1

      you must be a liberterian.

      i can tell because you are one of the few with actual intelligence.

    32. Re:God DAMN it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's why China will get there first.

    33. Re:God DAMN it by uradu · · Score: 2

      > Hint: when was the last time you saw a small group of conservative protesters use insults,
      > violence or threats of violence to shut down a liberal speech, event, or newspaper

      Well, I guess shooting doctors doesn't count. Curbing a citizen's abilities to pursue legal activities because it clashes with religious beliefs must be missing from the conservatives' Book Of Sins. I think I will start my own Church Of Tolkien and lobby for legal recourse against transgressors of the Lord Of The Rings morality.

      I think most people that consider themselves center to modestly left of center have no problem with rational discourse. Unfortunately such a thing hasn't been heard of from our contemporary statue-covering Right. As long as Less Government only applies to money matters of the established classes and not to meddling with people's morality and curbing of civil liberties, the whole ideology is nothing but a thinly disguised farce.

      And you're right, your viewpoint is unequally represented on Slashdot because that is a reflection of the society at large. Take it or leave it, but your views are quite right of center and by necessity mainstream opinion would be left of yours.

    34. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      OK, let's look at those claims:

      • Well, I guess shooting doctors doesn't count. -- the difference, of course, is that while murderers like the man who shot Dr. Slepian are granted no place in the conservative movement, and their actions are roundly decried, the left in this country openly praises thugs like the Black Panthers, and writes long editorials about how the murder of Pim Fortuyn was an understandable response to his conservative views. You have read that Dr. Slepian's murderer has been caught, by the way?
      • Curbing a citizen's abilities to pursue legal activities because it clashes with religious beliefs -- can you provide a single example of this? This is just a repeat of the same smear we saw repeated so many times in the resent cloning debate here on /. -- any conservative position the left disagrees with, they accuse of being religious in nature.
      • I think most people that consider themselves center to modestly left of center have no problem with rational discourse. -- don't read many politics threads here on /., do you? Even you are unwilling to accept that people rationally disagree with you without accusing them of reaching their position through religion, not reason.
      • Unfortunately such a thing hasn't been heard of from our contemporary statue-covering Right -- leaving aside that the statue thing is largely a construction (a decision by a PR type to hang a backdrop behind the AG when he speaks just doesn't make as good a story, I know, but what can you do?)
      • as long as Less Government only applies to money matters of the established classes and not to meddling with people's morality and curbing of civil liberties -- leaving aside the humor of hearing the party of Waco and of Elian Gonzalez, and of Filegate lecturing me about civil liberties, the fact remains that the right has made a consistent argument for the return of all levels of government to the limits set within the constitution. Long after the ACLU became nothing but a lobbying group for each latest liberal social project, conservative civil liberties groups like the Institute for Justice and the Mountain States Legal Fund soldier on fighting the good fight for the individidual rights and freedoms which are at the heart of the conservative movement.
      • And finally, every poll has suggested that conservatives are anything but a minority in American society at large. If you see less conservative views on slashdot, this is a reflection of the nastiness with which such views are greeted, and of the large numbers of current college students and recent graduates posting, those who have not yet realized that the hard leftism of our campuses is out of step with reality and with our society. `They'll learn'.
    35. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      And if you'll put aside you precious smears of conservatives for a moment, and have some curiosity about what concservatives actually do believe, check out my latest journal entry.

    36. Re:God DAMN it by sean23007 · · Score: 2

      You apparently cannot see your own contradictions and hypocrisy. You accuse "liberals" (by which I assume you mean everyone to the left of you) of seeing labels and smears as a replacement for reason, but in the previous sentence you use such labels as "I feel your pain liberalism," "anti-Americanism," and "subjectivist" and call it reason. Now, I don't live in the South so my take may not be skewed quite enough, but those labels and/or smears appear to be used as a replacement for reason. Conservatism's main emphasis may be focused on individual's rights, and what is good for one man at one moment, but liberalism tries to focus on what is best for the entire human race over the long run. That may make liberals seem like they disagree with each other a lot and are very factionalized, because different people have different opinions about what is best for humanity as a whole, but in the end it all gets worked out. On the other hand, conservatives appear very close together and non-factionalized, because the thing that is good for one person is easy to translate to another (in one's mind), so people are quicker to agree. Take taxes, for example: a conservative will say "cut taxes," and other conservatives will say "he's right, I want my money back." A liberal will say "we can't cut taxes, because we need to spend this money to do this for the country," but all the other liberals will say "well, you're right about the taxes, but we should spend the money on this and this, not that or that."

      The last time I saw a small group of conservatives use insults, threats or threats of violence... Well, September 11th immediately comes to mind (though I hate to bring it up). The conservative bin Laden used violence to attempt to shut down the comparatively liberal US. A better example would be the crowds of people outside abortion clinics every single day who shout at the doctors and the patients, block the entrance, and do various other things to prevent people from being allowed to have an abortion. These conservatives have not stopped short of murder to have their views heard. Killing a doctor who performs abortions is wrong, and it sure doesn't emphasize reason or individual rights (think about the doctor's rights). And what about all this talk about having a female priest in Christianity? Some liberal Christians said "great, what's the difference, go ahead and let a woman be a priest. After all, that's more rights for her." But a group of conservative Southerners traveled the country lambasting women and men who supported this apparently idiotic idea. At a church just blocks from my house (in Minnesota) a couple hundred people from the South (it was either Tennessee or Alabama) blocked off the church for an entire Sunday and threatened to kill a woman before she became a priest. That's a threat of violence used to shut down a liberal event, isn't it?

      The fact that you are blind to exactly half of the injustices that occur every day is interesting and depressing. It does not happen only to conservatives, nor does it only happen to liberals. You say I ignore the fact that there is a liberal bias in the moderation of this site, and that there is a liberal bias on the part of the newsmedia. Well, the moderation of this site reflects the views of its patrons. Just because you disagree with them gives you protection from moderation? A conservative is equally likely to mod down a liberal opinion as a liberal is to mod down a conservative opinion. It appears that there are just more liberals here than conservatives, eh? And the bias on the part of the newsmedia is completely subjective, and depends on the eye of the beholder. You think it is too liberal, and I know some people who think it is too conservative. If looked at objectively, the popular newsmedia is pretty moderate, sometimes swaying slightly to the left, sometimes to the right. If it seems too far left for you, maybe that's because you are pretty far to the right. If its sway to the left seems prolonged, perhaps you are much farther to the right than most other Americans. You can't ask the media not to pander to the majority, can you?

      For someone who claims to emphasize reason over all else, you are pretty blind.

      --

      Lack of eloquence does not denote lack of intelligence, though they often coincide.
    37. Re:God DAMN it by neocon · · Score: 1

      And here we have a perfect example of what I'm talking about. In but four short paragraphs, the poster manages to:

      • knock the south -- I don't live in the south either, but I find the poster's scorn for those who he no doubt considers the `great unwashed' of the rest of the country quite grating.
      • claim that only liberals care about some abstract notion of `humanity' -- as if no one could possibly believe that promoting individual liberty and getting the government off the backs of the individual could be good for humanity. Well, here's a counterpoint: in the forty years from 1950 to 1990, the bottom 20% of American society came to have, own, and consume as much (and yes, that's indexed for inflation) as the middle 20% had in 1950 -- and this happened through economic growth, not the myriad of wasteful social programs which served only to sap the economy, not to provide any long-term help to anyone.
      • to try to associate conservatives with Osama bin Laden -- I don't think this needs a response, I mention it as an example of how shameful the poster's smears are.
      • tries to associate a few instances of violence which were condemned unequivocally by conservatives with the entire conservative movement -- and this even as the mainstream liberal media lionizes murderers like the Black Panthers and the Weathermen, and writes long essays about how the murder of Pim Fortuyn was understandable due to his conservative views -- a notable contrast from conservatives who decry any who claim to be committing violence in the name of conservative causes.
      Which brings us to the only non-smear part of the post, the claim that if slashdot and the media are leftist in bias, it is a reflection of their readership. I can't speak for the political affiliation of slashdot's readers, but I will say that even a predominantly leftist readership which had any respect for reason and for civil discourse would not be modding down posts (or, as is more common, hurling insults and vulgarities) simply because they disagree with the author's opinions. As for the media, to claim that the media are biased left because American society is biased left misses the simple fact that ratings for network news are at an all-time low, as Americans rush to networks like Fox which, while themselves conservative, make an attempt to include both sides of every debate.

      There's a reason that Bernard Goldberg's book Bias is a run-away bestseller, you know.

  71. Once again "The Simpsons" shows us the way by jonerik · · Score: 3, Funny

    Who should be the members of such a crew if it were to be launched?

    A mathematician, a different kind of mathematician, and a statistician.

    1. Re:Once again "The Simpsons" shows us the way by Carbon+Blob · · Score: 0, Redundant

      +1 funny! I never have mod points at the right times...

  72. Of course it's some ways off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How many pods did we send to Mars that failed? I can't remember.. 2 out of 3 or 1 out of 2.. that's a huge failure rate. We're nowhere near even ready to begin conceiving about being on Mars until we can get a better survival rate / proof that we know what we're doing, before we can risk sending a few lives out that way, "hoping" that they make the multiple year journey.

  73. Tortuga speed warp by Ektanoor · · Score: 2

    As a longtime observer of the mega-series "Going to Mars", it seems that some people are real eager to avoid seeing someone walking there. All this looks much more as the prolongation of this soap-opera to cope with some "less interesting" discoveries which point not only to the presence of water in places like the equator but also with the fact that some places strongly suggest the presence of living beings out there (small and thiny but probably bigger than bacteria).

    It is interesting to note that since the end of the 60's there have been lots of news that could bring some positive moves on sending a manned craft there. However the large part of these stories don't get even the last page of the web. The rest gets some atention when it is NASA or its affiliates who found something (maybe to appease the taxpayers). But even these discoveries get into oblivion after a few massmedia dumb articles.

    Specially interesting to note that after such or similar discoveries, for a week or two we keep hearing that "Mars case moves on", "New findings give a boost to manned mission". After that we catch a lot of critics who repeat all the same song that the findings add nothing either because they are flaw, useless or the discoverer drinks too much. Later we get Hoagland & Co. talking on how this is connected with the hyperphysical squareness of the Egyptian Pyramids and how Tuthankamon still rules the world from his sarcophage by sending telephatic waves to the Face of Mars and back...

    And we wait for the next discovery... If it is about having some living dark dirt on the surface don't worry. We already know that Tuthankamon has his hand on it, that the government is after it and we just wait for the next discovery...

    On what concerns Man on Mars... Well maybe one day, far, far away...

  74. Suggestions for the first crew... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about the heads of the CoS? They'll kinda be like the pilgrims were, except we'll just stop sending people once they're there.

  75. Douglas Adams had a good idea... by nastro · · Score: 1

    Send the Telemarketers, telephone repair-people, door-to-door knife/luggage/vaccuum cleaner salesfolk, Sally Struthers, George Lucas, Jehovas Witnesses, Best Buy computer department employees, boy bands, send them all up. That way, all of our most (ahem) precious occupations will have a go there on the Red Planet. (Oh, yes, send the producers of that movie up, too.)
    The trick would be getting them all into one ship without them killing each other.

    1. Re:Douglas Adams had a good idea... by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      >Send the Telemarketers, telephone repair-people, door-to-door knife/luggage/vaccuum cleaner salesfolk, Sally Struthers, George Lucas, Jehovas Witnesses, Best Buy computer department employees, boy bands, send them all up. That way, all of our most (ahem) precious occupations will have a go there on the Red Planet. (Oh, yes, send the producers of that movie up, too.)
      >
      >The trick would be getting them all into one ship without them killing each other.

      I'm not sure I follow you.

      You're talking about getting all the telemarketers, door-to-door salesdrones, boy bands, RIAA and MPAA execs, Sally, George, and what-not on the B Ark.

      But there's a "trick", namely how to load 'em onto the ship without them killing each other.

      "Trick?" Either way, I fail to see this as a problem. ;-)

  76. Re:1 in stupidity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you stupid? Everyone knows those immigrants come to the US, study under an education visa and then come to work at American companies. Do you think you get high tech training in cow-manure filled fields in India or Africa?

  77. Who should be the members...? by phloda · · Score: 1
    Me!

    Advantages:

    Can power entire space ship with natural gas.

    Disadvantages:

    Can power entire space ship with natural gas.

    1. Re:Who should be the members...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your toilet humour is pathetic.

  78. Which flag? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 1

    Another question is what flag do we plant on the planet? Should we be planting the flag of a country or that of the United Nations, so that it is clear that Mars is about mankind, than the ego of any one country?

    I am tempted by the latter, but that's just me.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    1. Re:Which flag? by RayChuang · · Score: 2

      Given that a manned trip to Mars will be a multinational mission, we would probably see the following flags planted on that planet once we land:

      1. United States
      2. European Union
      3. Russian Republic
      4. Canada
      5. Japan
      6. United Nations

      The first five flags are listed because the countries listed plus the countries of the European Union will provide the technical expertise needed to build the spaceship and the lander systems. The UN flag will be included because this mission will truly be going for all mankind.

      --
      Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  79. Survivor: Mars by airship · · Score: 1

    Why not let a group of snotty, attractive, self-absorbed idiots make the trip, along with a bone-headed master of ceremonies and a stoned film crew? Every week, they could see who could eat the most newly-discovered Mars bugs, or rappel down a 10,000-ft cliff, or cross the ice-cap in cut-offs and tight tank-tops. They could form alliances and back-stab each other, and then vote one person off the planet every week until only one is left. Televise it and sell ads for beer and feminine products, and it would not only pay for itself, NASA could actually turn a profit.

    --
    Serving your airship needs since 1995.
  80. AMEN!! by RayChuang · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I agree with your sentiments despite your pejorative header. :-)

    Look, the technology is mostly in place to attempt the so-called Mars Direct mission that has been espoused for a number of years.

    We really need to bring back the spirit that brought Apollo to the Moon; imagine the possibility with the right funding that we could have a manned mission to Mars and it will be done in time to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence (2016).

    Besides the obvious boon of what we'll learn once we get manned missions there, what science we learn developing the spacecraft and landing systems for the Mars Direct mission could have huge benefits here on Earth; after all, the technology developed for the Apollo program is a major reason why I can type this message on Slashdot.org. ^_^

    --
    Raymond in Mountain View, CA
    1. Re:AMEN!! by wildsurf · · Score: 1

      ...we could have a manned mission to Mars and it will be done in time to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the American Declaration of Independence (2016).

      Um, the 250th anniversary is in 2026, not 2016. On the other hand, 2026 is a hell of a lot more realistic timeframe... So, your point is still well taken, and it's a very worthy goal to shoot for.

      --
      Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.
  81. Let's put things in perspective. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Man must know his limitations. Consider the Chinese 3 gorges damn project, or their moon base project. Like little boys daydreaming but in control of a country.

    The moon is close, and it was a crushing expense. Mars is far, far, away. The increased distance means more time which means greater chance of some failure to occur. And a very good chance of one or more X class solar flares to occur during the journey.

    Now, if we we were a purely scientific people, I might think differently. It would just be an exercise that a large portion of our energies could be devoted. But this is not a purely scientific world. It is a place of people not far removed from apes. It is a place where one must exert significant energy to defend against the other apes.

    The world is a mess right now, and the world must be the focus of our attention. And if men were sent off, it's almost a certainty they would be doomed before ever getting there. What sort of science are a bunch of dead astronauts gonna be able to do? Lives and money and energy, floooshed
    down the toilet.

    1. Re:Let's put things in perspective. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The world is a mess right now, and the world must be the focus of our attention.

      Not that we shouldn't be working to protect our planet and its denizens. But the world has always been a mess and, frankly, will always be one.

      It's funny, mankind always seems to be at their best when they look outside themselves and set high goals, not when they turn inward and comtemplate their navel.

      Set the stars as your goal and if you fail, at least maybe you'll hit Mars.

    2. Re:Let's put things in perspective. by isorox · · Score: 2

      The world is a mess right now

      Unlike during the cold war, where the threat of nuclear missiles landing on LA, NYC, Washington, London, Paris, and wiping out not 3,000 but 300,000,000 was very real.

  82. Re:Mission To Mars 2002 - Crew Member Manifesto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can this be offtopic? A humorous posting about something asked about in the damn Slashdot story itself, with the title "Mission To Mars - Crew Member Manifesto". This moderator is going down in meta-moderation for sure. Humorless git.

  83. The Crew by gelfling · · Score: 2

    The hardbitten chick pilot/copilot.
    The nerdy scientist who doesn't want to go but can't not go.
    The ex husband of the pilot chick who has some kind of vague 'command' role.
    The secret robot.
    The known robot who is amusing.
    The weird vaguely ex drunk science chick who is not as hot as the other chick.
    The corporate guy who knows the real deal about a secret alien weapon.
    The black guy who dies.
    The young buck army recon type who wants to populate Mars with either chick's offspring.
    A humanly smart mammalian animal of some kind.
    The other scientist who's kept his terminal illness hidden up to now.

    1. Re:The Crew by GrassyNoel · · Score: 1

      The guys in red shirts. You can take as many of them as you want because they'll all get killed by the Martians anyway.

      The ashes of Bill Bixby and Ray Walston.

      --
      Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose.
  84. The Crew has been selected already. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Carrie-Anne Moss and myself of course. The rest of you wankers can hear all about it through tape delayed broadcasts.... A guy's gotta have something sweet to look at while waiting for Linux Format to show up.

  85. Who should go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's obvious who should go - Carthusian monks, or members of some similar ascetic religious order. Their lifestyle isn't much different from isolation in a tin can, but they're used to it and they do it from deep personal convictions.

  86. MoonBase by SpaceJunkie · · Score: 1

    Wouldnt it make a mission to mars somewhat more viable were we to set up some kind of moonbase first. I mean, fuel and foodstocks could begin to be shipped there-reality shows and spacecraft billboard could fund it along with a possible mining operation, hydroponic plants could be established- meaning food growth. Sure it is much easier to launch a larger mission with higher payloads from the moons low gravity than earths, and also to return to the moonbase. This still unfortunatly leaves the space radiation problem. Any constructive suggestions? Maybe the Japanese should be reading this. If the US hasnt got the nuts to attempt this stuff any more- some zany Japanese group might - reality shows and all!(HeloKitty on the side of a shuttle - lets hope not)...

    --
    OrionRobots.co.uk - Robots From sol
  87. Water Ice, Water Water, Water Vapour? by fruey · · Score: 2

    What's all this about H20 ice, Water ice, etc?

    Isn't ice just ice, except when it's dry ice or ice cream? Or do you get some other kind of ice too? The solid form of water is ice. Who's going to think they discovered something else when they report "Ice discovered on Mars"? Let's check the dictionary:-

    Water frozen solid.
    - Easy enough, that's what they found

    A surface, layer, or mass of frozen water.
    - Yep, same again

    Something resembling frozen water: ammonia ice.
    - Note the qualifier AMMONIA in there

    A frozen dessert consisting of water, sugar, and a liquid flavoring, often fruit juice.
    Cake frosting; icing.
    - Maybe they found that on Mars? And the freakin' big bakery / freezer to go with it

    Slang. Diamonds.
    - Ya never know, maybe Ali G thought that

    Sports. The playing field in ice hockey; the rink.
    - Canadians maybe thought they found a hockey field buried deep under Mars, and are already planning the 2004 tour to Mars?

    Slang. A payment over the listed price of a ticket for a public event.
    - Hehe, like, you'll be paying in ice to get to Mars?

    Slang. Methamphetamine.
    - Maybe that's what they found too!

    My 2 Haitian Gourdes worth.

    --
    Conversion Rate Optimisation French / English consultant
  88. colonization. by sec0ndshooter · · Score: 0

    clearly a manned mission is not the right way to begin the colonization of mars. if the US wants to spread its domination of the galaxy all they need do is send off a few SCV's. once they mine the planet then they can then just build a barracks, etc, and then eventually a spaceport. the blue prints have already been layed out for us.

  89. Diverse Team by hotsauce · · Score: 1

    But a collection of white male engineers would be so boring! You could pay for the trip and get people interested in space travel if you structured the mission around a Temptation Island TV show. The best you could hope for from white male engineers would be passive-aggressive back-stabbing and we are all sick and tired of that at work, but two slutty chicks, the clicks-and-grunts guy, an Italian minister and a preist--I'd pay to watch that!

    1. Re:Diverse Team by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the obviously gay guy who nobody says is gay but they're afraid to be around him.

  90. We'll go to Mars for Money by medcalf · · Score: 2

    Let's face it: there is simply no political motive for going to Mars; science is fine as far as it goes, but not many people would pay US$30 Bn to know if there really is life on Mars.

    Eventually, though, some group of very rich people or companies are going to realize that Mars has the land area of Earth, and most likely has similar mineral content. There is no one there to contest the land, and for a few tens of billions of dollars, a 1500% or better return could be anticipated, if the investors are willing to look at it over a 20 year or longer term. And, hey, we happen to already know how to make a colony work there, to some degree - at least, well enough to determine and quantify the risk factors. And there are plenty of qualified people who'd go for room and board.

    Once that calculation is made by the right people (those with the money), the colonization of Mars is inevitable.

    --
    -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
  91. Worthless moon by SeanAhern · · Score: 2

    Um... the moon was pretty much worthless when we went back in 69. It's only been recently that we've discovered that there might be value there.

  92. Yes by SeanAhern · · Score: 1

    Amen, brother.

  93. Send automated factories 1st, to make O2 and fuel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The trip should be one way, with new people and supplies sent every few months. Eventually, after 10 - 20 years, there may be enough manufacturing capacity on Mars to send people back to Earth...

    One mission plan I've seen involves sending robotic ships that will set up the infrastructure for a manned base before humans ever get to Mars. That way we don't even have to send people until we know that there's a supply of oxygen, potable water, and the makings of fuel for the return trip, already processed and waiting for use.

  94. Re:Well: A Serious Problem by d.valued · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It may seem somewhat comical, but this is a serious hinderance.

    Consider the following: If you were on the first trip to Mars, barring some radical breakthrough in propulsion technology that violates Newtonian physics (the only way we'll see decent high speeds on such long trips), you would spend:

    -18 months going out in a tin can the size of a two bedroom apartment with four or five other people in microgravity
    -after you lose some bone and muscle mass, several months on a planet which you can only experience in a fully-encloesd suit
    -another 18 months to three years coming home in the same tin can with the same people

    ...and that's assuming things go smoothly! What happens if someone has appendicitis or develops some other codition? Operating in zero-g is at the least damned hard, and at most impossible!

    The people also have to be of a certain sort. Unlike the original moonshot pilots, who were psychologically stable hotshot pilots with an excess of personality, the Mars crew would have to be able to tolerate each other for up to FIVE YEARS. And these five would be the only real human contact that they'd have.. considering that, at furthest, there's something like a twenty to thirty light-minute gap between Earth and Mars. You could play chess, do the occasional interview, but you couldn't surf the Web (real well).

    So, the people involved on the craft have to be extremely intelligent, genial, and self-deprecating. Not too likely to find a couple of hackers that have those characteristics. (Of course, they'd not discuss it too much if they did. Part and parcel, you know.)

    --
    I used to be someone else. Now I'm someone better.
    Real life is underrated.
  95. Lets send up Omar, Al Qeda & Osama Bin Laden.. by crovira · · Score: 2

    It'll be cheap. We don't need to send space suits.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  96. We didn't go to the moon "For All Mankind"... by gdyas · · Score: 2

    ...we went to beat the Russians.

    That's the simple, God's honest truth about it. There's been alot of talk here comparing going to Mars to the Moon landings in the 60's / 70's, talk about how we did it "not because it was easy, but because it was hard", etc. Make no mistake that any objective reading of history will show that the race to the Moon was a high-tech form of cultural feather-ruffling between superpowers. Two nations, in the absence of direct armed conflict, were contending with each other on the fields of engineering and science rather than weaponry.

    We fed ourselves alot of hype about doing things for all mankind, to boldy go where no man has gone before, etc, but the truth, the real truth, is that Sputnik scared the shit out of us. Snug in our belief that the USA was the best at everything and that the Rooskies would soon see the errors of their ways, we were taken aback when they acheived such a feat before we'd even really pushed for it. And everyone could hear it, that beeping above our very own skies proudly declaring the technological prowess of the Russian state.

    In response, we jumped on science and technology spending & education with a ferocity rarely ever seen on a national scale. The Moon-shots were our attempt to catch up & surpass the USSR, nothing more & nothing less. Once we'd beaten them to the goal, the Moon program died of ennui.

    What gets lost in our debates on things like going to Mars is that there's a time and place for everything. Without the partitioning of Europe and the ensuing Cold War, we likely would have never landed on the Moon. Why not? Because there would have been no reason to. We need a reason to go to Mars, a good reason. And a reason is only as good as the number & quality of the people who believe in it. Perhaps to bring the world together in a uniting effort is a good reason, I don't know. But I do know that the missing reason for doing it, for trying to overcome the monstrous scientific challenges to such an endeavour, is what's preventing it from happening.

    Such lofty science & engineering goals as the Moon landings or the Panama Canal all derive from a need to solve real problems -- to show we're superior to the Russians technologically (and thus militarily), or to drastically lower the costs of trade & improve the ability to defend ourselves on the high seas. It's insipid to do anything "not because it is easy, but because it is hard". Under that rationale you can justify anything.

    --

    The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.

  97. Hah, you think that's worthless? by DegenerateMatter · · Score: 1

    The DOE spent $408,750 testing a "pollution-detection device" which uses "the ability of a human operator to sense changes in magnetic fields" last year.

    Tax-money.
    On a dowsing rod.
    Stuff like this goes on constantly in our government.
    At least a Mars mission would provide for science, and more than simply "whats on mars" but long term space exposure questions could be answered, questions that potentially effect ecnomically viable items such as asteroid mining, and what have you.

  98. Imagine this! by jyfnk · · Score: 0

    Linus + RMS + ESR + Larry Wall + Maddog.

    Damn...that would be eleet. But it would also be disastrous.

    Just imagine the tremendous fights between Linus and RMS.

    And the spaceship would better be running a free system, otherwise RMS's presence could be catastrophic! And please, don't forget to mention "GNU" before the name of the actual OS.

  99. Propellantless Mass Space Propulsion Engine by geekster_2000 · · Score: 1



    Space Propulsion Engine for Flying Saucer to
    be developed for MARS/Moon/Space travel -

    Rumor in Silicon Valley -

    Inventor of 3D volume holographic optical storage
    shopping his concept for Space Propulsion Engine
    using Propellantless Mass to US and other countries.

    for further look at biography background goto

    http://www.colossalstorage.net

    He is working in top secret and will not patent, publish or share
    concepts as he says no physicist or scientist he has ever studied
    or researched had this approach and knows his concept will work
    to give near light speed travel thru Galaxy with 500K/Miles per
    Hour to start or 138 miles/sec. Nasa fastest time are 25,000
    mile/hr or 3.9 miles/sec with the proposed $ Billion Dollar Nuclear Rocket Engines.

    He says it is a mankind first concept !!

    1. Re:Propellantless Mass Space Propulsion Engine by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      He is working in top secret and will not patent, publish or share concepts as he says no physicist or scientist he has ever studied or researched had this approach

      My bullshit detector just went off.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    2. Re:Propellantless Mass Space Propulsion Engine by geekster_2000 · · Score: 1

      Ha ! Ha ! HA ! is what the inventor had to

      say. He thinks its halarious that non one
      has thought of this technology and people get
      upset because he wont share it with him.

      I will add my comments here, good luck
      on your bull shit detector as I'm sure
      you are the world's best at it !!

    3. Re:Propellantless Mass Space Propulsion Engine by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      They laughed at Newton. They laughed at Einstein. But they also laughed at Bozo the Clown.

      Real scientists always publish and share their work. When someone says they have something brand new that no one has ever thought of before, and claims it will change the world, but won't tell you what it is, they are a fraud 99.9% of the time. That's what the bullshit detector picked up on.

      And why does the link on his site about flying saucer propulsion point to a Popular Mechanics article about a 40 year old US Military project?

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
  100. Not quite. by Rui+del-Negro · · Score: 2

    Technically, a cosmonaut is someone who travels through space (cosmos). An astronaut is someone who travels to a planet/star/asteroid/whatever (astro).

    Anyway, if my vote counts, I say we send Steve Ballmer. His armpits alone can cover the planet in an ocean several developers deep.

    RMN
    ~~~

  101. Balanced people are a *liability* by swb · · Score: 3, Funny

    Balanced people are a *liability*, not a strength. They make too many safe decisions and aren't willing to take the kinds of risks necessary for a "one-way" trip to Mars to work.

    Admittedly you don't want psychotic people, and a military-type discipline would probably be essential to maintain supplies, but at the same time a bunch of conservative, highly rational people aren't going to experiement and try edgy things that might be really successful.

    Look at the profile of successful people in business, sports, etc -- how many of them are sane, stable, follow-the-rules kinds of people? They're mostly not unstable, but they're also the kinds of people willing to take huge risks for huge rewards. Guys like you and I take tiny risks for tiny rewards, which is why we couldn't do the one-way to mars.

  102. Who Should go by smaster87 · · Score: 0

    me! pick me! me!!!

  103. Some psychological FACTS by adunakhor · · Score: 1
    Here are some psychological facts extremally relevant to this discussion:

    If you put >5 people in a small confined space and make them stay there for at least a few months; they are gonna go for each other! Fights are uninevitable!

    The situation gets even worse if it is a mixed gender crew: if the couples are married, there is a potential risk of cheating and jealousy among the crew members, which could prove DISASTROUS to the mission. And if there are no married couples, you risk having two guys fighting for the same girl, or vice-versa, which is also a BAD THING.

    Solution? No mixed gender crews. But that would create another problem: Sex. This problem, however, is much easier to deal with than the firsts I mentioned.

    That being said, my suggestion is for a male-only crew, since men are physically stronger and....how can I put this...understand machines better :)

    1. Re:Some psychological FACTS by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 1

      Am I nuts or is he suggesting an all gay male crew?

      I know a few people who would want to sign up for that.

      --

      Not everyone deserves a 320i

    2. Re:Some psychological FACTS by Banner · · Score: 1

      Remember sailing ships from days of old? year long cruises were nothing.

      also, why does the ship have to be so small? It could be made larger.

      Why no gravity? You could put some spin on it to alleviate the bone loss issues.

      It's always fun watching people on /. trying to talk about this stuff. No one here ever thinks things thru.

    3. Re:Some psychological FACTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember sailing ships from days of old? year long cruises were nothing.

      And how did they pass the time on those long voyages? Buggery.

    4. Re:Some psychological FACTS by adunakhor · · Score: 1

      No! I am not talking about homossexual crew members! The homo/hetero factor is not important here; what is important is that competition for sex does not become a problem in the mission. With a male-only crew, there would be other ways for them to......how can I say....."aliviate" themselves. Another solution: put them all to sleep! That way it doesnt matter if the crew is composed of males, females or kangoroos .....they wont have enough time to fight eachother during the voyage.

    5. Re:Some psychological FACTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The solution is to have a mixed sex crew where everyone is bisexual and unattached. Ever hear of Bonobo chimps? Social strife in primate groups can best be extinguished through orgies.

  104. I want the world to go to Mars yesterday but ... by Bob+Loblaw · · Score: 1

    From the BBC article:
    "And if this (poor) person did become the first human to stand on the red soil of Mars, what would they say? Discuss."

    My vote:
    "One small step for the poor ... one giant wack of cash that could have feed my whole country for a century!"

    What kind of foolish idea is that?

    Send the mission up there for it scientific and space infrastructural merit, not for political propeganda.

    That is a great big slap in the face of a poor country to give them such a token part of a project. That is kind of like burning a bale of money and warming up a cup of tea over the flames for them to drink.

  105. Who to go? by darkwiz · · Score: 2

    Obvious:

    Jodie Foster, Tom Skerrit (and maybe Matthew McConaughey, for moral support).

  106. Math majors discovered on Slashdot! by Storm+Damage · · Score: 1

    2016 - 1776 = 250

    Who would have thunk it!

    1. Re:Math majors discovered on Slashdot! by RayChuang · · Score: 2

      That does it. No more posting on Slashdot until AFTER I finish my first cup of coffee. :-)

      --
      Raymond in Mountain View, CA
  107. Re:Well: A Serious Problem by icer1024 · · Score: 1

    Actually, you would spend about 9 months out, and 8 months on the way back, with 1.5 years on surface. These numbers come from the Mars Reference mission, and the Mars Direct mission plan. Neither plan requires new technology to accomplish the travel times noted.

  108. Re:preparedness - intelligent life? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you're referring to the "face" on mars, later surveys reveal nothing particularly interesting about that feature, other than when it is struck by light in just the right fashion, photographed from just the right angle (with a poor quality camera), it happens to look somewhat like a human face.

    The fact that the hill formation which forms 'the face' only shows the face when the light hits at just the right angle shows that it was created by a REALLY intelligent form of life.

  109. Slashtard Bingo x2! by grytpype · · Score: 2

    Totally non-sequitur references to MPAA and RIAA.

    --

    - Have a picture

  110. Samual Jackson... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How 'bout

    "All your base are belong to us, motherfucker!"

    ?

  111. Sounds to me like a job for... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...British explorer of the Antarctic, Sir Ernest Shackelton.

  112. R. H. Lawrence Jr. R.I.P. by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

    "In the 1960's, every single American astronaut was a married, white male in his 30's or 40's. "

    There was a black astronaut in the 1960's. His name was Robert H. Lawrence, Jr. He deselected himself from the program before he could make his space flight, however. He did this by digging a multimillion dollar hole in the ground with an airplane during training. This was a common way for test pilots and astronauts of all races to end their career back then, so gravity was not being racist at the time.

  113. Re:Why come back? QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, there were sane and balanced people here before C. Columbus was born,

    You mean those sane and balanced people who were constantly at war and slaughtering each other when the Europeans came? You mean those sane and balanced people who ripped the flesh from the heads of their enemies? You means those same people who played games of torturing their prisoners by burying them up to their heads, prying their eyes open, and then pouring honey on them so the ants could eat them?

    And yes, they did all these things before the Europeans came.

    Sheesh, can't this myth of the "noble native american" finally die? They weren't all a bunch of savages, but most of them were.

  114. Re:Well: A Serious Problem -- Newton Who? by reallocate · · Score: 1

    You don't need to violate Newtonian physics to get to Mars in considerably less than 18 months. You just need to go faster. The speedometer has a lot of room on it before you get to relativistic speeds.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  115. Discussted by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

    Great, so some petty tyrant's nephew gets to be the 1st man on Mars. What does that say about Earthlings? Come on, you don't think the poorest nation in the world is going to be a corruption free democratic society do you?

    And, how would the people in the 2nd poorest nation feel? They could have had one of their people on Mars... if only the had been just a little poorer. You know what that says to me? "We reward failures."

    If you wanted to use a slot on the Mars mission to help motivate the 3rd world, then we should invent some kind of "most improved" award where we would give a crew slot to the nation that can increase it's per capita GDP the most between now and then. Of course, that would lead to fraudulent GDP figures from everybody. I wouldn't even trust the U.N. to produce honest figures to base the choice on. Then again, perhaps if the politically unconnected citizens could keep some of the wealth they earn instead of it going to buy el Presidente and his thugs a new private jet they would be even more motivated to produce real wealth. Nah, that's crazy; a useless gesture from the gov't that makes spoiled rich 1st worlders feel good about themselves without them having to really get off their @$$es and help solve the problem is much more sensible.

    1. Re:Discussted by Chris+Y+Taylor · · Score: 2

      Ooo, I just had a better idea for how to use a crew slot on a Mars mission to help the poorest nations. Randomly select one of the 5 poorest nations (in GDP per capita) a few weeks before the launch. The leader of that nation gets to go to Mars, where he will be stoned to death as the 1st human sacrifice on Mars to appease the local gods and insure a safe mission for the rest of the crew.

      Announce this "lottery" years in advance. Use CIA figures for GDP. Have Delta Force or some SAS guys do the "snatch job" if possible, to minimize the collatoral damage of a full scale invasion. I think people would be amazed at how quickly the situation in the poorest nations improves when the leaders fear they may pay with their lives if they are not able to lift their society from the grips of poverty.

    2. Re:Discussted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What does that say about Earthlings? Come on, you don't think the poorest nation in the world is going to be a corruption free democratic society do you?"

      No, but I also don't think the the US is a corruption free democratic society. And the US is definately going to send someone, so why not let poorest nation on Earth send someone.

  116. Limitations? Sez Who??!. by reallocate · · Score: 1
    What's with this "Man must know his limitations" nonsense? What limitations? If you want to stay in your own little village, go ahead, but some of us are curious about what's beyond the next hill.

    BTW, funding of the Apollo project was not a "crushing expense". It wasn't cheap, but it was, in fact, easily afforable by the U.S.

    --
    -- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
  117. Re:Well: A Serious Problem by panthro · · Score: 1
    considering that, at furthest, there's something like a twenty to thirty light-minute gap between Earth and Mars [...] you couldn't surf the Web (real well).

    The distance from Earth to the Sun is 150 million kilometers. That from Mars to the Sun is 225 million kilometers. Consider that it takes light 8 minutes to get here from the Sun and Mars is almost exactly 1.5 times as far from the Sun. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think we can neglect the eccentricity of Earth's and Mars' slightly elliptical orbits.


    From this we can conclude that at minimum you'd get a 4 minute delay, and at maximum you'd get a 20 minute delay. So if we choose candidates that have experience with 2400 baud modems, the surfing the web thing would probably not be much of a problem.

    --
    If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
  118. Re:Well: A Serious Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about rotating the ship?

  119. Re:R. H. Lawrence Jr. R.I.P. by Bowie+J.+Poag · · Score: 2

    But gravity is RACIST!!!! And i'll bet you the plane was RACIST too!!!!!! you RACIST!!

    ;)

    Cheers,

    --
    Bowie J. Poag

  120. Re:Lets send up Omar, Al Qeda & Osama Bin Lade by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.

    Can I quote you on that one? :-D

  121. MARS CANNOT BE EXPLORED BECAUSE TECHNOLOGY by geekster_2000 · · Score: 1



    for present day space propulsion is WW II Propellant Mass technology and
    the fuel/energy for this type of
    propulsion is best left on EARTH.

    Here is a scientist in SV who has a Solution !!

    Space Propulsion Engine for Flying Saucer - New Physics

    Rumor in Silicon Valley -

    Inventor of 3D volume holographic optical storage
    shopping his concept for Space Propulsion Engine
    using Propellantless Mass to US and other countries.

    for further look at biography background goto

    http://colossalstorage.net

    he is working in top secret and he says no physicist or scientist he has ever studied or researched had this approach and knows his concept will work to give near light speed travel thru Galaxy with 500K/Miles per Hour to start or 138 miles/sec. Nasa fastest time are 25,000 mile/hr or 3.9 miles/sec

    he says it is a mankind first concept !!