What The Journey To Mars Will Be Like!

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  • Опубликовано: 27 май 2024
  • What The Journey To Mars Will Be Like!
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Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
    @otpyrcralphpierre1742 4 месяца назад +168

    I'm almost 71 now, and I hope I live long enough to see Man set foot on Mars.

    • @MrEncore91
      @MrEncore91 2 месяца назад +12

      Have faith my man. Walk plenty and keep yourself busy. All the best to you.

    • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
      @otpyrcralphpierre1742 2 месяца назад +10

      @@MrEncore91 I'm so busy I don't know weather to wind my butt or scratch my watch!

    • @yashrajput9464
      @yashrajput9464 2 месяца назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @GavinScrimgeour
      @GavinScrimgeour 2 месяца назад

      Sorry you won’t. It’ll be a woman of colour.

    • @GavinScrimgeour
      @GavinScrimgeour 2 месяца назад

      Sorry you won’t. It’ll be a woman of colour.

  • @user-kn6sz8ji1j
    @user-kn6sz8ji1j Год назад +1154

    Having served on a nuclear submarine that was over 360 feet long, had three decks, both extracted its oxygen and distilled its potable water from seawater, had plenty of storage for food, operated in a gravity present environment, was relatively comfortable, and could surface in an emergency...I sincerely wish the Mars crew good luck with a mission extending beyond a year.

    • @Supraboyes
      @Supraboyes Год назад +87

      Yeah, not going to happen is it really

    • @kingk2405
      @kingk2405 Год назад

      The whole Mars thing is just pure propaganda . There is no way our technology can send humans there . In order to do so we need first to have proper propulsion for our rockets and not a second WW technology in order to reduce the time of the journey because of radiation and lack of gravity . We will need 50 years of first really managing to stay on the moon in order to send people to Mars and during that time AI might be implemented into sophisticated human type robots that can handle the journey and do any job on Mars .

    • @danielsweeney6742
      @danielsweeney6742 Год назад +35

      I would hope that the flight to Mars will take advantage of all of ideas available. I hope they will take ideas from subs give astronauts space to live. Could you imagine going to Mars in an Applo style ship?

    • @sergiodario58able
      @sergiodario58able Год назад +15

      ​@@danielsweeney6742
      What's an Applo style ship?

    • @user-zs5nx3ty8u
      @user-zs5nx3ty8u Год назад +14

      I thought I saw a woman submariner touted as an astronaut. Lots of spurious studies mentioned. My favorite. If not given enuf space the crew will go mad.

  • @waynewilliams8554
    @waynewilliams8554 9 месяцев назад +53

    In my 70s now and wish I could be here to see this achieved. Glad I got to see A. Shepard go sub orbit to Armstrong go manual safe landing on the moon. Best wishes to all future pioneers!!

    • @Royyaaaal
      @Royyaaaal 3 месяца назад +3

      You will be here don’t worry 💙

    • @pinn
      @pinn Месяц назад

      thank you brother

    • @Itsmytest
      @Itsmytest Месяц назад +3

      What a time to be alive: watching Alan Shepard and hearing the ominous beeps of Sputnik... I'm only old enough to see the wall come down, but to have seen and bear witness to those events that led to that moment, must have been truly amazing.

    • @otpyrcralphpierre1742
      @otpyrcralphpierre1742 Месяц назад +2

      @@Itsmytest It was, and still is!

  • @stuartgibson9755
    @stuartgibson9755 Год назад +549

    I was 8 years old when I watched the first men land on the Moon, and I've been waiting for them to get to Mars ever since. I hope I'll still be alive to see it happen.

    • @infernoplexx9562
      @infernoplexx9562 Год назад +32

      Spacex planning to land humans on Mars as early as 2028.

    • @scottdayney9825
      @scottdayney9825 Год назад +10

      Me too

    • @erictam7014
      @erictam7014 Год назад

      Hopefully the Chinese can do it, after 50 years its pretty much out of the question for anything associated with the USA to make it. The red tape space x is dealing with will bankrupt them first.

    • @erictam7014
      @erictam7014 Год назад +57

      @@infernoplexx9562 🤣And Nasa was planning on 1980.🤣 Still waiting....

    • @alemdevp2048
      @alemdevp2048 Год назад +33

      ​@@infernoplexx9562 I highly doubt it my geometric friend

  • @tedh.8356
    @tedh.8356 7 месяцев назад +34

    Best of luck to the first crew to Mars, most likely they won't be seen again, it won't be as easy as these video's portray that trip to be, the time it will take, how almost every mechanical device must work, the Van Allen radiation belt to go thru, the need to get along with one another for such a long period of time, and the space hazards as the vehicles travel thru space beyond the Moon, the odds are not in their favor, lots of luck.

    • @Royyaaaal
      @Royyaaaal 3 месяца назад +2

      On top of that the Rover Samples also need to come back

    • @ethorii
      @ethorii Месяц назад

      You are correct. It's easy to make a plan on paper. A very different thing to execute effectively

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 11 дней назад

      Mars is as hostile as space itself.

    • @tedh.8356
      @tedh.8356 11 дней назад

      @@samr.england613 Has anyone ever been there to really know? a robot one thing, people another...

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 10 дней назад

      @@tedh.8356 Well sir, our robotic probes, rovers, and orbiters (with their sensors) have revealed to us that Mars has no magnetosphere to protect against deadly cosmic rays and radiation; nor does it have an ozone layer to protect against almost equally lethal UV radiation, nor a thick atmosphere to also protect against X-rays and Gamma rays from our own Sun. Furthermore, the Martian "soil" (regolith), is riddled with calcium and ammonium perchlorates, planet-wide, as well as lead, arsenic, and mercury, and is UTTERLY TOXIC to all known animal and plant life! Mars is NOT a, "Second Earth". Mars is an extremely cold (Average Global Temperature Minus -82 Degrees Fahrenheit), irradiated, dry, poisonous dustball.

  • @user-yj1jv7iw1m
    @user-yj1jv7iw1m 4 месяца назад +8

    You go. I will stay home.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 8 дней назад

      Nobody's going to want to actually LIVE on Mars. Doesn't matter what they say.

  • @Masterpresident
    @Masterpresident 6 месяцев назад +15

    We are still very prehistoric when you come to space travel. Rockets are like old school

    • @AxoManYT
      @AxoManYT Месяц назад +5

      😂

    • @torben777
      @torben777 Месяц назад +2

      They may be old school, but we have no alternative.
      The wheel is also old school, but it does not mean it is not still the best solution to the problem.

    • @-1nterruption-960
      @-1nterruption-960 21 день назад

      Human Technology is constantly advancing. At some point we'll use new propulsion systems and methods of travel to explore our universe

  • @SoapinTrucker
    @SoapinTrucker Год назад +14

    It took 25 years to get JWST in Space, so I don't see a manned space craft that can stay on Mars for practical reasons and usage for at least 25 more years, and that's being super optimistic 😂

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      Yep. These ultra-Mars enthusiasts are seriously deluded in their forcasted timelines. Much of all this hoopla originates with Musk, and is just publicity for SpaceX, I believe. But, 20 or fewer years from now, Musk's idealistic forecasts are going to create a negative mood towards him and SpaceX because of unfullfilled dreams and actual delusions.

    • @howieduin915
      @howieduin915 Год назад +4

      I'd estimate 125years.

    • @johnryan8808
      @johnryan8808 Месяц назад

      100 years.

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 Год назад +33

    I once went on a Mars simulator at an amusement park when I was a little girl. It was a bumpy ride, took about 10 minutes!

    • @pirax5552
      @pirax5552 Год назад +8

      Thank you for your service

    • @ThatOpalGuy
      @ThatOpalGuy Год назад +1

      ​@@pirax5552she's the real hero.

    • @16nowhereman
      @16nowhereman Год назад

      Wow! Thanks for sharing.

    • @andriandrason1318
      @andriandrason1318 Год назад

      You sure it was a simulator and not just the janitor?

  • @user-nn5ot6by8r
    @user-nn5ot6by8r 3 месяца назад +3

    Let’s get the launch and landing right before we start worrying about the journey

  • @frenchguyst-croissant3432
    @frenchguyst-croissant3432 11 месяцев назад +37

    Send me to mars , i'm already spending all my time alone 🥲 . Being stuck in a spaceship with 2-3 people is an upgrade to my social situation 😅

    • @GavinScrimgeour
      @GavinScrimgeour 2 месяца назад

      @@davebryant8050I agree. Go to the library and challenge yourself to talk to someone. Only small talk. “A bit chilly outside”, “when you’re finished with that book, can I get it”…….

    • @msdcode5605
      @msdcode5605 2 месяца назад +1

      😂😂😂😂

    • @MeganVictoriaKearns
      @MeganVictoriaKearns Месяц назад +1

      ​@@davebryant8050I can't believe how dense you are. What are you even doing?

    •  Месяц назад

      poor guy

    • @frenchguyst-croissant3432
      @frenchguyst-croissant3432 Месяц назад

      It was sarcasm 😂 but thanks

  • @JimBarry-nr2pj
    @JimBarry-nr2pj 9 месяцев назад +8

    We are two hundred years away from going to Mars

    • @SteveCrosby789
      @SteveCrosby789 3 месяца назад

      At least

    • @intheplums
      @intheplums Месяц назад +1

      ​@@davebryant8050 we've been to the moon mate

  • @richardjohnson9543
    @richardjohnson9543 Год назад +27

    By the time they build something I'd feel comfortable taking that trip on, I'll be long gone but I do hope I live to see people land on Mars

    • @leelunk8235
      @leelunk8235 3 месяца назад

      1ST LETS TAKE BABY STEPS MOON 1ST OK. TIL THIS DAY ITS IMPOSSIBLE

  • @masamune2984
    @masamune2984 Год назад +29

    Not even mentioning Mars or even the permanent Moon base, just the phrase “Lunar Gateway Space Station” brings me so much joy and chills 😅☺️

    • @gulfy09
      @gulfy09 Год назад

      It's all fake

  • @ritagomes7838
    @ritagomes7838 Год назад +4

    In one word: ''Deadly.'' Goooood luck to the first adventurers...do send postcards!

  • @kevinroley4680
    @kevinroley4680 Месяц назад +3

    If landing on Mars is going to be an island hopping venture, such as first having a base on the moon and then jumping off from there, don't hold your breath, if the last 55 years progress can be extrapolated into the future, ain't no way it's going to happen in 200 or more years. It's nice to dream but a dream without a goal is a hallucination

  • @mbraun777
    @mbraun777 Год назад +242

    Bone loss, muscle atrophy, blood pooling - gonna be a hell of a ride. I would be surprised if they could even survive returning to Earth.

    • @andrewmorton395
      @andrewmorton395 Год назад +11

      Yes, got over come lack of gravity

    • @DesertRat332
      @DesertRat332 Год назад +85

      Going to Mars is a suicide mission.

    • @bigjimtruth6957
      @bigjimtruth6957 Год назад +2

      How do they get above 62 miles high

    • @mcpack49
      @mcpack49 Год назад +57

      Don't forget the solar radiation. Sorry but we are not going anytime soon. Might want to focus on fixing things here first.

    • @terranhealer
      @terranhealer Год назад +24

      You forgot to add galactic radiation ☢️. Radiation not from our sun but from beyond the solar system. Further from our sun you get, the more galactic radiation gets you

  • @youtubeviewer4489
    @youtubeviewer4489 Год назад +106

    Short stay using a gravity assist around Venus is incredible. Imagine being the crew on that ship. Not only do you get to see Mars up close, but you also get to see Venus, too.

    • @michman2
      @michman2 Год назад +1

      No. The alignment that favors this trip are too rare to be worthwhile.

    • @jamesalling2781
      @jamesalling2781 Год назад

      AND NO SEX? I'LL STAY IN MY SMALL TOWN AND HAVE A GOOD TIME ON A SATURDAY NIGHT. 💅💃

    • @MrMarco855
      @MrMarco855 Год назад +3

      Imagine is all anyone can do.

    • @mudman6156
      @mudman6156 Год назад

      Your trip around Venus, I’m afraid, will be rather disappointing. You won’t be seeing much. What you’ll see are orange, seared cloud tops with occasional flashes of lightning. Nothing more. You won’t be seeing the ground of Venus. There’s no rivers, lakes, or oceans, as it’s a very dry planet, the hydrogen element of it’s water having been stripped off into space eons ago due to the lack of a magnetic field. Venus has an incredibly SLOW retrograde spin that makes it’s day longer than it’s year. Yet there’s no place to escape from the suffocating heat unless you can “float” in the upper reaches of the atmosphere, where it’s cooler and the pressures won’t squeeze you flat.

    • @caesarsalad1170
      @caesarsalad1170 11 месяцев назад +1

      Going to Venus is better in the first place, closer, floating colonies can be built in the atmosphere, and gravity is very similar to Earths.

  • @koori3085
    @koori3085 6 месяцев назад +3

    Nuclear thermal rocket engine sounds like something Wil-E-Cyote would chase the Roadrunner with, but with DARPA involved, probably much more likely to work. Very interesting!

    • @JP-uk9uc
      @JP-uk9uc 5 месяцев назад +2

      Till goes pop

  • @WaldoBMC3
    @WaldoBMC3 11 месяцев назад +4

    ayo star wars is about to be real. i use to dream of walking on mars. i can not wait wait for this man. i hope i live to see this

  • @ezekielteklaking
    @ezekielteklaking Год назад +96

    400 day return? That is almost unbelivable, I think the plan will change as we get closer and technology gets better.

    • @222cubing8
      @222cubing8 Год назад +12

      id rather die on mars

    • @liquidbraino
      @liquidbraino Год назад +16

      ​@@222cubing8 Me too just not on impact.

    • @GolfBala
      @GolfBala Год назад +4

      Just take one way flight 😮

    • @dragonrage9359
      @dragonrage9359 Год назад

      Astrophysics are a complicated thing 😂

    • @Arturo-lapaz
      @Arturo-lapaz Год назад

      24.months

  • @13orrax
    @13orrax Год назад +105

    imagine being on a coach flight for 2 years?

    • @jsy-tak
      @jsy-tak Год назад +12

      Economy Plus.

    • @dorsk84
      @dorsk84 Год назад +11

      I'll take the exit row.

    • @stick9648
      @stick9648 Год назад +12

      Beans and wienies again tonight ?

    • @Geauxlsutigers617
      @Geauxlsutigers617 Год назад +3

      What is the next up from economy plus

    • @nancyjason8159
      @nancyjason8159 Год назад +3

      Won't be flying for 2 years gowls😅

  • @RollMeWanKenobi
    @RollMeWanKenobi 14 дней назад

    Just seeing all of these older people here wanting to see us walk on mars is making me want it to happen even sooner. Thank all of you old timers for giving us the stepping stones to make this happen.

  • @martinsutoob
    @martinsutoob 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm going to challenge the first part of this video - establishing a Moonbase as the initial step. According to this idea, we have to lift all the Mars equipment that we will need out of the Earth's gravity well, drop it into the Moon's gravity well, and then later, when all is ready lift it out of the Moon's gravity well again. But surely if the Mars rocket assembly process was all completed in Earth orbit, we would obviate the extra mass required to get on and off the Moon. In other words, unless you manufacture the propellant and necessary hardware actually on the Moon, you don't win anything by going there first.

  • @robvangessel3766
    @robvangessel3766 Год назад +16

    A 2 year journey without gravity. I'll have to see it to believe it. Until they work out a viable artifical gravity system, any manned venture to Mars is going to be difficult if not impossible.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +5

      Totally agree, among all the other seemingly intractible problems of actually staying on Mars for over two years. IOWs, we could probably get there, but what about living there for over two years? ISS astronauts that spend more than 6 months on the station come back to Earth totally fucked up!
      We have no idea how to keep people alive off Earth for 9 months transit to Mars, 2 years and 2 months there, and 9 months return to Earth. The ISS is pretty large, and, with an average of six astronauts stationed there at a time, it has to be resupplied with oxygen, water, food, and medical supplies every MONTH for Christ's sake!

  • @Pisti846
    @Pisti846 Год назад +12

    It is sad the US did not settling the Moon 45 years ago.

    • @pixelgamer4985
      @pixelgamer4985 Год назад +4

      true, society could be so much more advanced if we did

    • @801oap
      @801oap Год назад +1

      Too bad all the funding went from one war to the next.

    • @pixelgamer4985
      @pixelgamer4985 Год назад

      @@801oap yep

    • @skipintroux4098
      @skipintroux4098 Год назад

      But the US decided to give billions of dollars to Israel every years instead. Never forget USS Liberty.

    • @mrdim362
      @mrdim362 Год назад

      Yes, they could have had a great moon base today to allow them to build and service other rockets.

  • @pbjsilverstudio4882
    @pbjsilverstudio4882 Месяц назад

    Just got Apple TV and we are watching For All Mankind. It’s a great show and wonderful to thinking that these things HAVE and WILL come to pass!

  • @ropshubop
    @ropshubop 4 месяца назад +2

    Love the TKS nod in one of the animations! 😍

  • @BillBadMule123
    @BillBadMule123 Год назад +39

    Until the Trip to Mars can be made in less than a week I am fine right here on earth .

    • @sungoddogg
      @sungoddogg Год назад +9

      Currently fastest is 9-7 months. I am sure that will be rapidly reduced once we use nuclear energy to proper the trip. Would be easier and faster to return to earth from Mars.

    • @lmdetect
      @lmdetect Год назад +13

      You won't live to see the day when regular folks can go.

    • @sungoddogg
      @sungoddogg Год назад +2

      @@lmdetect trip for normal folks will be 2030. R u living in a cave?

    • @sungoddogg
      @sungoddogg Год назад +1

      2030 will be the 2nd colony trip. Will be open for normal people.

    • @MrWolfheart111
      @MrWolfheart111 Год назад +2

      "can be made in less than a week... fine right here on earth".... why? There's Nothing your doing in your life now that you cant be doing on the ship to mars. (For alot of people generally) :)... not trying to pick a fight. Its just kinda true. :)

  • @borusa32
    @borusa32 Год назад +9

    Sorry to say 'Not quite there yet' is a bit of an understatement. Just a few scientific impossibilities to overcome before we get to Star Trek. Travelling Faster than Light, Mechanical teleportation -that sort of thing.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      According to the late (and great) theoretical physicist Freemon Dyson, it would take the equivalent energy of the entire Milky Way Galaxy to warp space like Captain Kirk and Company. That's not just the energy emanating from the Galaxy's 200 Billion Plus suns, but the potential energy contained in every ATOM of this Galaxy!

    • @MrWolfheart111
      @MrWolfheart111 Год назад +1

      "Sorry... 'Not quite there yet' is a bit of an understatement".... DEI, BLM, CRT, LEGBHGF+.... get your priorities straight human. AI aint got those concerns and will solve FTL Travel quickly. My Predic

  • @JosephDent-qd9ih
    @JosephDent-qd9ih 7 месяцев назад +3

    The disc shape must be launched in pie slices/ Vandenberg facility.

  • @user-cj3je3ch2t
    @user-cj3je3ch2t 10 месяцев назад +2

    We are going to have to develop a [TSH] Telescoping Star-ship HAB 10 to 12 levels to build the first over 400d foot for gravity. 1 70 ft 6 to 8 docks with 2 HABs should transport 50 crew. 2 HUB, 4 tranker, 2 Transports/10 crew HAB, 2 Cargo/Transports.

  • @Joseph-fw6xx
    @Joseph-fw6xx Год назад +6

    Space is so vast i wonder how far we will travel but we have a few billion years to come up with something

  • @Krisesakes
    @Krisesakes Год назад +17

    All this money spent on this pipe dream could be better spent on solving the problems on this Earth planet !

    • @greenblood6186
      @greenblood6186 2 месяца назад

      The ignorance...

    • @wingedhussar2909
      @wingedhussar2909 2 месяца назад

      ​@@greenblood6186your right, this is much better than curing cancer.

    • @FetsumBerhaneDire
      @FetsumBerhaneDire Месяц назад

      The research for such trip is what ends up as the next technology you use to make life easier.

    • @KingsOfSpins
      @KingsOfSpins Месяц назад

      A waste of money and earth resources to go to a planet where nothing grows. I totally agree with your comment.

  • @johanliljegren4759
    @johanliljegren4759 Год назад +1

    I'm looking forward to mankind's progress in space and the mission to Mars.

  • @marktaub
    @marktaub Месяц назад

    This is good! Wow, lots of comments. I appreciate the work you put into this. Thank you for the entertainment.. I watch The Space Race often.

  • @leonardgibney2997
    @leonardgibney2997 Год назад +89

    A hundred years from now we'll still be planning a Mars mission. Just an opinion. A bit like nuclear fusion.

    • @DesertRat332
      @DesertRat332 Год назад +4

      Agree!

    • @Mikhail-Tkachenko
      @Mikhail-Tkachenko Год назад

      Ah so you have the inside scoop on it then? I know a journalist who would pay you a few thousand for your sources and story if you'd like.

    • @16nowhereman
      @16nowhereman Год назад +14

      @@Mikhail-Tkachenko Why would you do that? We know this fantasy trip to Mars is not happening in the next 10 years. The James Webb telescope took a zillion years to build and put into space. Now think about landing humans on Mars.

    • @AndriasTravels
      @AndriasTravels Год назад +5

      Exactly. If humans have not regressed into the Era of Stupidity.

    • @rogerfroud300
      @rogerfroud300 Год назад

      Nuclear Fusion is never going to be viable, even if they manage to do it. However, there are no insurmountable technical issues will getting to Mars and establishing a permanent presence. Quite why anyone would want to go there is beyond my understanding, it sounds like a vision of Hell to me.

  • @adamtyrell4227
    @adamtyrell4227 Год назад +41

    My thoughts are that it's a crazy thing expecting people to travel for two years in such a confined object and an out of this world experience,the astronauts must be very brave but what about the families they leave behind,I think it's an impossible mission, just remember how lighthouse keepers found it difficult to cope in isolation for several weeks so imagine years,ya can't imagine it.

    • @travisgrant5608
      @travisgrant5608 Год назад +12

      Plus they probably won't return. The first will die up there. Things go wrong.

    • @gailcrowe727
      @gailcrowe727 Год назад

      Adam Tyrell. Yes it does sound very daunting and dangerous, but I really believe that there
      will be people who are willing to undertake the challenge. They will be very special people
      with very high qualifications and training, very psychologically stable and very physically
      fit and their spirit of adventure and determination will overcome any fear they may have.🎉

    • @jdl9679
      @jdl9679 9 месяцев назад

      It’s essentially a suicide mission for the betterment of mankind

    • @Syulang-nt4kj
      @Syulang-nt4kj 8 месяцев назад

      @@travisgrant5608 It's worse. They die for nothing... leaving Earth to claim a dead, utterly sterile, radiation soaked ball of rock and toxic dust. Our culture has really messed up values and priorities.

    • @VIC33-bd6dc
      @VIC33-bd6dc 8 месяцев назад

      training, dedication...First crew will rewrite the history books..

  • @kenc5156
    @kenc5156 Год назад +3

    This would make a good science fiction movie. That's about all this is. Even the tiny part about colonizing the Moon... infrastructure there... living there... manufacturing and processing facilities there... producing and making what you need there...
    If the countries of the world got together and attempted it, that one little part alone is still a pipe dream.

  • @josephwarra5043
    @josephwarra5043 5 месяцев назад +3

    Nobody ever talks about the "Moondogs"!

  • @jeffkrupke3810
    @jeffkrupke3810 Год назад +31

    Nice thing is NASA when they land can go for a drink at SpaceX Mars bar.

    • @user-zs5nx3ty8u
      @user-zs5nx3ty8u Год назад +3

      I asked SpaxeX to name that bar after me for a million dollars. "Bart's Mars Bar." Wouldn't you know, they don't need the money. Curses NASA!

    • @bevpotter9938
      @bevpotter9938 Год назад

      I’m sure Spacex will send over a taxi (based on a Tesla) to pick up any NASA astronauts for a visit to Elon City.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      Water will be very hard to come by on Mars, so I doubt they'll use a drop of it to brew beer. That's just Musk and his typical bullshit. [edit] Whatever water they'll be able to extract, detoxify, purify, and filter will be used to drink, make oxygen, or feed food crops. (And btw, good luck growing anything in Martian "soil" eh, regolith, because that Martian dirt is a toxic cocktail riddled with perchorates, arsenic, lead, and mercury.)

    • @Cwra1smith
      @Cwra1smith Год назад +1

      Knowing Elon there will be a brothel there too.

    • @jeffkrupke3810
      @jeffkrupke3810 Год назад

      @@Cwra1smith for sure. Basically total recall IRL

  • @95bhutan
    @95bhutan Год назад +14

    At night, Mars temperature is 100 to 190 degrees below zero (F).
    They should definitely bring a warm sweater.

  • @larrybaker5316
    @larrybaker5316 9 месяцев назад +3

    Very interesting video!.Man on Mars is a must........I watched the 1st men walk on the moon, and hope to see the 1st astronauts walk on Mars (that's the only thing on my bucket list) at 74 years old I hope they speed the whole process up!

  • @wk8219
    @wk8219 9 месяцев назад +9

    I’m sure SpaceX will greet them and take them out to dinner a few days after arriving.

  • @patricktuorto
    @patricktuorto Год назад +5

    Not sure if Mars can be a habitable planet considering that it’s gravity is a fraction to that on Earth, it’s just not suited for human life, It’s probably a better idea to construct Mall-sized living space ecosystems with either centripetal or centrifugal motion to create artificial gravity. We could print the parts in space and assemble it all in space. Sure, do the Mars stations and exploration but gravity is the elephant in the room that needs to be front and center in the continuing need to journey out into the heavens. Without solving Earth-like gravity problem, we might as well scrape the idea of routine long-hall space exploration.

  • @tarekmasud9369
    @tarekmasud9369 Год назад +11

    Just wonderful! I feel so upbeat! Ever since my childhood, space exploration never failed to ignite my imagination.

  • @leslieross3404
    @leslieross3404 4 месяца назад +2

    It will be just like the trip to the moon, pretend and imagined.

  • @dantyler6907
    @dantyler6907 Месяц назад +1

    Would be great if SpaceX gets there first!!!

  • @Tony-dp1rl
    @Tony-dp1rl Год назад +203

    We better work out a cure for cancer first, the radiation for the long stay would damage the human body severely.

    • @stuartmccormick5372
      @stuartmccormick5372 Год назад +17

      no doubt the astronauts will be DOA, or dead on arrival

    • @stub2022
      @stub2022 Год назад +10

      Yep. We really don't know what will happen at a cellular level.

    • @christianterrill3503
      @christianterrill3503 Год назад +12

      We have the ability to shield it.

    • @shazanali692
      @shazanali692 Год назад

      ​@@christianterrill3503Chinese military scientists believe the tardigrade’s cells improve a human's ability to withstand radiation and potentially other diseases

    • @longtabsigo
      @longtabsigo Год назад +19

      I have suggested using older folks, like me, on these missions. That way, if something goes wrong, it’s not a loss of someone in their prime. Likewise, we are far enough on, in years, that cancer doesn’t have as much of a chance to entrench itself.

  • @alexlittle5237
    @alexlittle5237 Год назад +40

    Have you guys forgotten about SpaceX? I thought they were going to send the Starship to Mars and build a colony.

    • @SoapinTrucker
      @SoapinTrucker Год назад +4

      Still, I'm thinking 25 years from now, we will actually have a Crew on Mars, money and human safety being the serious considerations:(

    • @leonardgibney2997
      @leonardgibney2997 Год назад +4

      Dream on.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 Год назад +9

      Elon Musk should go to Mars. One way.

    • @fearfx2562
      @fearfx2562 Год назад +8

      Space x is the only way we get to Mars lol 😂

    • @JL-ql2jo
      @JL-ql2jo Год назад +4

      @@sentientflower7891why?

  • @techplainer
    @techplainer 4 месяца назад +1

    Hope the journey will happen in our lifetime!

  • @moneygivemenowplease
    @moneygivemenowplease 4 месяца назад +2

    I wanted more of what a journey would be like

  • @GEOFERET
    @GEOFERET Год назад +6

    I sure hope we land on Mars during my lifetime! (I am not in my first youth) I would really like to witness that!

    • @ryanarmstrong1378
      @ryanarmstrong1378 Год назад

      First youth?

    • @16nowhereman
      @16nowhereman Год назад

      Are you 3- or 4-years young? Then it probably will probably happen in your last few years on earth, when you are about 89- or 93-years young.

    • @AndriasTravels
      @AndriasTravels Год назад +1

      Maybe you will be reincarnated.

  • @Dreama40
    @Dreama40 Год назад +19

    Great goals but seems highly unlikely that this will ever happen due to the costs and risks involved.

    • @gailcrowe727
      @gailcrowe727 Год назад

      Dreams 40. When I was little I asked my mother if we would ever have colour tv and she
      said she didn’t think so, but years later here we are with colour tv!😅

    • @rocquecaceres9221
      @rocquecaceres9221 9 месяцев назад +2

      Haha very naive to equate colour tv with a trip to mars

    • @gailcrowe727
      @gailcrowe727 9 месяцев назад

      @@rocquecaceres9221 It’s not naive at all, when I was little colour telly seemed as far away as going to Mars
      was in this day and age, don’t be so nasty I was only a child.

    • @markyinbelfastxx9088
      @markyinbelfastxx9088 4 месяца назад

      Let's get t9 the moon first

  • @simons.2948
    @simons.2948 6 месяцев назад +1

    Exciting times, I hope I’m still around to see mard landing 👍🌙🚀🚀

  • @rawtothecore61
    @rawtothecore61 8 месяцев назад +4

    Where do I sign up

  • @aquamanGR
    @aquamanGR Год назад +6

    Wonderful cartoon and plan. Now, all they have to do is figure out how not to die from exposure to radiation after a few months on the Mars.

  • @DavidVeal
    @DavidVeal Год назад +44

    I am really loving the details here, and the idea that innovation is going to make things quicker and easier than we know at this moment. Great video.

    • @grip2015
      @grip2015 11 месяцев назад

      ARE U PEOPLE DUMB, THE MOON LANDING WAS A FAKE & GOVERNMENT ALREADY HAS TELEPORTATION TO MARS & WORMHOLES CLASSIFIED

    • @jelink22
      @jelink22 9 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, innovation is just a wish away!

    • @Syulang-nt4kj
      @Syulang-nt4kj 7 месяцев назад

      @@jelink22 And if not, it's because you're not wishing hard enough!

  • @upsidedowndog1256
    @upsidedowndog1256 6 месяцев назад +2

    The cosmic radiation may be the most difficult thing to overcome for these missions.

  • @ItzJustThat
    @ItzJustThat 5 месяцев назад +1

    i like how you, as well as nasa, make it sound so doable :) i wish humans lived longer. hopefully it happens before im an old man

    • @michaelmcmillan8815
      @michaelmcmillan8815 5 месяцев назад

      It won't we haven't even landed on the moon yet we all been scammed by the government its all bs

    • @NorthernNorthdude91749
      @NorthernNorthdude91749 5 месяцев назад

      @@michaelmcmillan8815 Only BS is what's coming out of your mouth.

  • @CarlosMendoza-qn6mj
    @CarlosMendoza-qn6mj Год назад +9

    My children’s grandchildren will still be in the lifetime of planning a trip to Mars lol.

  • @glen5998
    @glen5998 Год назад +8

    Artificial gravity would make the journey so much easier for humans!

    • @joolanch2848
      @joolanch2848 Год назад

      Magnets?

    • @801oap
      @801oap Год назад +1

      ​@@joolanch2848 Some kind of magnetic resistance between the spacesuit and ship that mimics gravity, interesting.

    • @tfcabral
      @tfcabral Год назад

      It's just inexcusable how little (as in, pretty much no) research has been done on free-space centrifugal 'gravity' and its effects on mammalian biology.
      2 Starships (or whatever) at opposite ends of a long tether (at least a few hundred meters, to minimize Coriolis forces), spun end-over-end during the coast phase, and folks can just get out and walk when they get there (make it .5g, say, and they'll be all John Carter...as opposed to just better than Charles Xavier).
      And the Artemis plan is an excruciatingly Byzantine hodge-podge of extraneous steps. Some variant of "Mars Direct" (cf. Robert Zubrin's The Case For Mars) is the way to go.

    • @mrdim362
      @mrdim362 Год назад +1

      Yes, I experience Artificial Gravity when i have wind.

    • @brianmcnellis5512
      @brianmcnellis5512 9 месяцев назад

      "The alien agenda, if revealed, would undoubtedly send shockwaves through humanity, forever altering our perception of reality. Mundane interests and burdensome mortgages would become trivial matters in the face of mind-bending physics and extraordinary discoveries. With unequivocal proof of the human Soul and the afterlife, a new era of communication with the deceased would commence, allowing us to explore realms beyond our wildest imagination. As the Soul's ability to traverse the universe at the speed of thought is unveiled, the very fabric of our existence would undergo an unprecedented transformation. No longer plagued by unanswered questions or unsolved crimes, humanity would stand on the precipice of a truly remarkable future."

  • @normadamous
    @normadamous 6 месяцев назад +1

    Mike Collins mustache always makes me chuckle

  • @cpmow831
    @cpmow831 5 месяцев назад +1

    I hope I get to see this in my lifetime.

  • @ceojr1963
    @ceojr1963 Год назад +4

    My brother's first job out of college was with Mac Dac, building bits of the ISS, or the Boeing Space Station, it's nick name after Boeing bought macdac. We've been science geeks since birth, Dad was USAF electronics and Motor Pool trainer, If it drove on base he could drive it, and teach you how to as well. thanks for the videos

  • @etralin3dream983
    @etralin3dream983 Год назад +3

    If the starship fleet of 1k is realized than there is no reason we won’t be able to build small star trek sized ships in space. Its within reach in the near future!!

  • @igg3937
    @igg3937 9 месяцев назад +4

    I hope I live long enough to see a thriving community of humans in space.

    • @apollo11guy
      @apollo11guy 2 месяца назад +1

      Really? Why? I would never give up living on Earth to move to such an uninhabitable (and dangerous)
      environment.
      Now if they found an Earth twin (or better) and had a way to get there in a few weeks, maybe.

    • @igg3937
      @igg3937 2 месяца назад

      @@apollo11guy Why did people first sail the oceans (a completely inhospitable environment for humans). It's part of our nature to want to explore.

    • @apollo11guy
      @apollo11guy 2 месяца назад

      @@igg3937 Those early guys were looking to make a buck. And you can hardly compare the ocean to outer space in terms of hazards. They didn't know what to expect; we know how bleak Mars is. And for what?

    • @igg3937
      @igg3937 2 месяца назад

      @@apollo11guy Expanding human knowledge? Conquering something difficult? Multiple reasons. People don't just explore to "make a buck".

    • @apollo11guy
      @apollo11guy 2 месяца назад

      @@igg3937 Columbus did. And it did not cost nearly as much as this Mars stuff is going to cost. Are people really going to want to leave earth and move there?

  • @drgeoffangel5422
    @drgeoffangel5422 7 месяцев назад +2

    2 years in a tin can? air supply? food? , water? heating, power? radiation shields? All these need to be sorted out just on the way there. Once on Mars, a liveable sturdy domicile with air supply? food? , water? heat? power, radiation shields? Would all need to be erected before the first ship even arrives on Mars. The resource logistics for such a venture, would be critical path to the survival of the crew. If you had sufficient resources to get there , to last the duration of your stay on Mars, and the return journey back to earth, you would only need to worry about everything else that could go wrong. Thus sickness of crew, contagion of unknown viruses, life threatening accidents , malfunctioning of critical systems and equipment, and a myriad of other unexpected things, like meteor storms, dust storms, etc, that could be deadly to the crew. If this venture /mission was truly ever undertaken, the life expectancy, or survival of the astronauts would be minimum. That is , not many, if any, would ever return safely back home to earth alive. There are just way too many deadly factors , any one of them, which could result in a total mission failure. So dream on, and fantasise all you like, but the odds , if you really consider them, are stacked against a successful mission.

  • @EvanDaniell
    @EvanDaniell Год назад +19

    These intros are getting REALLY good. Been watching every video on both your channels for over a year and just want to say good job team 👏 👏

    • @RailithicEmporthus
      @RailithicEmporthus Год назад

      Wait what's the other channel? Just found this one and it's phenomenal

    • @EvanDaniell
      @EvanDaniell Год назад +1

      @@RailithicEmporthus The Tesla Space

    • @EvanDaniell
      @EvanDaniell Год назад +1

      @@RailithicEmporthus you’ll love it.

    • @RailithicEmporthus
      @RailithicEmporthus Год назад

      @@EvanDaniell thanks friend! Much appreciated

  • @DigitalAstronaut
    @DigitalAstronaut Год назад +56

    This was a great video, but I ESPECIALLY loved seeing some of my videos featured in it! Thanks for the shoutout! Really fun.
    As I've been talking with some NASA engineers and scientists lately, there really does seem to be a big push from within the community to either send humans to Venus before Mars (although not to land) or, as you mentioned, to at least travel to Mars via a Venusian gravity assist. Venus is just far easier (and cheaper and faster) to travel to and return from than Mars. Again, not to land, but to study the planet from a few hundred or thousand kilometers above. In either case, very exciting to get to visit not just one but TWO planets on our way to a Mars mission! We'll be making a video on our channel about this soon, but really cool to see it mentioned here.

    • @ecatpanther1
      @ecatpanther1 11 месяцев назад

      Amazing content!! Appreciate your work

    • @TonySt-jean-fb5wj
      @TonySt-jean-fb5wj 6 месяцев назад

      not like you havent been yet. classified yes?

    • @dougball328
      @dougball328 Месяц назад

      But you will never land on Venus - too hot and too toxic. So why go?

  • @johnsterman77
    @johnsterman77 Год назад +1

    There’s short stay, long stay, and, most likely, eternal stay.

  • @AmericanJohnnyBoone
    @AmericanJohnnyBoone 11 месяцев назад +1

    I want in-flight snacks, and they had better be serving dinner.

  • @calvinhobbes7504
    @calvinhobbes7504 Год назад +13

    Well, the parts about human curiosity and determination were spot on. But humans will have to wait a couple of generations before they see humans on the surface of Mars. The videogame dreamers of today who think they're gonna see it will be long gone before it happens.

  • @dlewis8405
    @dlewis8405 Год назад +20

    I am pretty sure any plans NASA has for a Mars mission will be altered by what SpaceX does with Starship in the next few years. By the late 2020s all NASA's exploration plans will be built around what Starship is capable of doing and has demonstrated.

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад +1

      We'll see. And rather quickly at that, or not.

    • @davidbrayshaw3529
      @davidbrayshaw3529 Год назад

      I think NASA might be taking a step back and looking at reviving the Saturn 5 rockets at this rate.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад

      Well, so far, SpaceX has shown it can make a big dust cloud.

    • @davidbrayshaw3529
      @davidbrayshaw3529 Год назад +3

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver And let us all put our hands together to celebrate that, FFS. 54 years ago, rocket technology was putting man on the Moon. Now we're supposed to jump up and down celebrating because one actually left the launch pad. Then we're meant to clap even louder when a controlled detonation of the rocket occurs FFS, FFS!
      One small step for mankind, one giant leap for marketing departments. FFS.
      How do people get sucked into this garbage.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +1

      @@davidbrayshaw3529 The Musk crowd acts as if all those prior achievements don't matter. It's almost a Jim Jones thing.

  • @oliverlabares2646
    @oliverlabares2646 7 дней назад

    ❤ thanks for sharing 👍

  • @djcuriosity6670
    @djcuriosity6670 3 месяца назад

    As the crew of the Mars-bound spacecraft prepared for their historic journey, anticipation and excitement filled the air. The spacecraft, equipped with cutting-edge technology, embarked on a months-long odyssey through the vastness of space.
    Even the robotic assistants on board joined in the fun, programmed to deliver lighthearted jokes and puns during routine updates..

  • @dragonrage9359
    @dragonrage9359 Год назад +5

    Where did all this information come from? Specifically the Artemis 10+ missions and Mars mission durations? Adding your sources to the description would allow people to get more info and would be a great way to maintain credibility!

    • @erictam7014
      @erictam7014 Год назад +1

      I first heard most this back in the 1970's, not much has changed.

  • @alexanderx33
    @alexanderx33 Год назад +10

    The long duration mission actually sounds safer if we can't use a rotating vehicle. On the other hand if we can then the short duration mission would clearly be better. Its possible (really not that difficult) to simulate 1G in space with a teather and counterweight.

    • @altha-rf1et
      @altha-rf1et 6 месяцев назад

      It will have to be a big one, cannot rotate a small ship, people would get sick

    • @dalezegarelli5553
      @dalezegarelli5553 4 месяца назад

      Keep dreaming ...MORONS!!!

  • @fionagibson3314
    @fionagibson3314 9 месяцев назад

    We make it to Mars, we colonise Mars, we make its atmosphere breathable, then where to next.

  • @oldconspiracydude236
    @oldconspiracydude236 3 месяца назад

    One problem with a 45 day transit to mars, @ 200,000 MPH a BB size asteroid can cut through 1/2 inch steel. a good portion of the ships mass would have to be a bulkhead to protect the ship

  • @williamarnold1304
    @williamarnold1304 Год назад +14

    Stephen Baxter wrote a book called Voyage. Using Apollo technology with a gravity assist using Venus to add extra speed, a manned mission could've been done in the 1980s. It's a well written story worth checking out.

    • @brianbartolomeo107
      @brianbartolomeo107 Год назад

      How do we know they aren't already going?

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Год назад +1

      @@brianbartolomeo107 Gee, when was that launch?

    • @MrMarco855
      @MrMarco855 Год назад

      I wrote a book called 'never went to the moon', check that out.

    • @jamesvertrees5857
      @jamesvertrees5857 Год назад +4

      @@MrMarco855 Then you sir are a fiction writer.

    • @CitizenScorpio
      @CitizenScorpio 11 месяцев назад

      @@MrMarco855 what??

  • @CaptainJuiccy
    @CaptainJuiccy Год назад +4

    The blooming space-age blows my mind and inspires me to get healthy and finish my education so that I can experience these monumental times... Imagine what the world could accomplish together...

  • @ingridhohmann3523
    @ingridhohmann3523 Месяц назад

    One step at the time,one journey at the time,one Galaxie at the time ⏲️ ✨️ 🙏

  • @karlphillips8310
    @karlphillips8310 5 месяцев назад +2

    Great having way stations (around the Moon, on the Moon and around Mars) but three additional things will make the whole journey a lot safer and easier to plan/fund: (1) consider taking boring robotic equipment to Mars to start building structures underground (increased protection against solar radiation; less equipment to transport to build structures and integral protection against the dust storms), start creating automous robotics (to build the stations - have more than one and get them operational before humans even arrive, eventually create underground railway networks to make the transportation of people, goods and raw materials a lot easier and efficient) and finally start spreading autonomous power collecting/generators stations around the planets (so vehicles don't have to go back to a major base to recharge, they also act as self-sufficient lifeboats in an emergency, and protection if anything need to get out of a storm, warm up or charge up, it will extend the reach across the planet).

  • @ad2mars
    @ad2mars Год назад +22

    Loved this video. Great to see a lifelong dream of exploration of space become a reality. Thanks for the time your team takes to enlighten our minds & renew our aspirations

    • @ralph8427
      @ralph8427 Год назад +1

      making a video isn't the same as reality

    • @astralclub5964
      @astralclub5964 Год назад +1

      A manned mission to Mars with current and near future tech is a suicide mission. Remember, the worst day in Antartica is infinitely better than the best day on Mars!

    • @rogervonschleusingen4603
      @rogervonschleusingen4603 Год назад

      GO BACK TO YOUR TV !! admars2

    • @MrMarco855
      @MrMarco855 Год назад

      They need to explore honesty by admitting we never landed on the moon.

    • @grip2015
      @grip2015 11 месяцев назад

      ARE U PEOPLE DUMB, THE MOON LANDING WAS A FAKE & GOVERNMENT ALREADY HAS TELEPORTATION TO MARS & WORMHOLES CLASSIFIED

  • @dariusrus5335
    @dariusrus5335 Год назад +6

    Don t worry they will film it in a studio like the moon landings ,nobody was hurt😂

    • @inharmonywithearth9982
      @inharmonywithearth9982 Год назад

      They already have hired CGI movie producer James Cameron ( maker of those Avatar movies) full time for the I.S.S. videos.

    • @diegoflores9237
      @diegoflores9237 Месяц назад

      And the morons will believe its real

  • @JosephDent-qd9ih
    @JosephDent-qd9ih 7 месяцев назад +2

    Build it!

  • @mht525
    @mht525 3 месяца назад

    1st thing to be done is to create land pads. The surface of the Moon and Mars contains cylica. Therefore, a lander would cylica blast the surrounding and landing will require building..

  • @Nerdmom1701
    @Nerdmom1701 Год назад +4

    Wonderful! ❤

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 10 месяцев назад +4

    It's fascinating to think about other planets, but to leave our blue marble to go live on a dead dust ball is insane.

  • @coolraul07
    @coolraul07 3 месяца назад

    7:35 - Hold up.... by what logic is longer transit better than longer stay on Mars? Based on below, I would posit that shorter transit would be the way more desirable option.
    1) Gravity: At least you have a decent amount on Mars. Supplement with resistance training (think stretching/hydrolic/pneumatic items rather than weight plates) and cardio, you might be minimally OK. In transit, micro-G is a lot worse for you, relatively speaking.
    2) Radiation: On Mars, a cave or other subterranian habitat could help mitigate exposure. Plus you could "pre-ship" additional shielding. In space, it's whatever shielding you bring with you, and that means more weight to propel and other considerations come into play.
    3) Supplies (food, water, spare parts, etc.): Similar pros/cons as #2 (e.g., "pre-ship" additional versus carry all with you)
    4) Mental health: you can more easily vary routine and environment on Mars. Take a walk, ride a rover, etc. In transit, "the same 4 walls" the entire time.
    I look forward to a possible healthy debate on this.

  • @donmears4090
    @donmears4090 4 месяца назад

    Before revisiting the Moon or voyaging to Mars cleaning up what we can out of Earth orbit is needed. The astronauts onboard the International Space Station have to cower in a protective area because of space debris that could impact the station.

  • @lilitheden748
    @lilitheden748 Год назад +6

    When I watched Star Trek as a young girl I was always over exited about space. I used to talk for hours with my grandfather about it. When I asked him when we would be able to really explore space he gave me the following answer. When mankind will find a way to overcome all it's differences and stop all the bloody wars and quarreling on this planet, when man will get enlightened enough to work together as a team we will find a way to explore space for real. It may still take a while, we are slow learners. His view on things had probably to do with him fighting in WWII.
    Anyway it makes me happy that there is progress in space exploration. On the other hand there is still a lot of bad will and concurrence between nations. it would be amazing what could be accomplished if all nations would put their knowledge together and make it happen. In fact this is for all the many challenges we need to tackle on this Earth of ours.

    • @jameskeeler6321
      @jameskeeler6321 Год назад +1

      You grand papa was a visionary. We will explore space despite our differences. It may take longer, but we will get there. Cheers good lady.

    • @ltdees2362
      @ltdees2362 Год назад +1

      ...very well said my dear...your Grandfather is a wise man...my dad was also a wwll veteran. As you mention, there are many more issues here on our earth to address than worrying about Mars...We must figure a way "fix" ourselves and our differences, if that is even possible...I fear that it will never come to fruition...man is too greedy and power hungry...

    • @lilitheden748
      @lilitheden748 Год назад +1

      @@ltdees2362 We can only hope Tom and be positive. For our children and grandchildren… they deserve a better world.

    • @leecowell8165
      @leecowell8165 Год назад

      Its a pipe dream. This species continues to kill one another with reckless abandon. We should take some lessons from the other top predator on the planet.. Orca. they do NOT kill like kind.

    • @SeattlePioneer
      @SeattlePioneer 4 месяца назад

      Only the DEAD have seen the end of ware.

  • @glassesstapler
    @glassesstapler Год назад +5

    If humans would put our egos aside we could be making so many strides in exploring and understanding the universe. Humans are the weakest link and most expensive part of these missions. let the robots go explore and we can figure out how to join them in the future!

    • @samr.england613
      @samr.england613 Год назад

      I agree with you, to a point. But, without those human egos, we wouldn't have the robotic probes in the first place! :) We're all fallible, my brother, or sister.

    • @pumamountainlion7777
      @pumamountainlion7777 Год назад +1

      Humans are top busy sinning to care about this nerdy stuff

  • @BLAB-it5un
    @BLAB-it5un 5 месяцев назад +1

    As much as I love the idea of humans managing to land on Mars, I find it impossible to imagine anyone surviving the journey with the technology and speeds currently available. The human body just plain isn't designed to live outside of gravity and natural oxygen conditions for such extended time. We are only in the infant stages of studying the impact of short stays on the space station. The changes in body dynamics is profound and much of them may be permanent. The eyes change, the pressures in the brain change, the brain itself changes, bone density changes. It's an enormous dream to think humans can overcome all of this any time soon. My hunch is we need decades of unmanned missions to figure out what, if anything, Mars offers people back on earth. I can't see how living there is worth striving for without first testing long range living on the moon...Sure hope I'm wrong but I am not at all optimistic any of this will happen for decades if not much longer.

    • @KPL400
      @KPL400 5 месяцев назад

      TLDR...

  • @SSpees
    @SSpees 2 месяца назад +1

    We will see if this happens. Radiation will be the real threat

  • @stevej7139
    @stevej7139 Год назад +5

    Glad to see you promoting Nuclear Thermal, I get tired of those that promote the money pit VASIMR. Pretty good break down although I suspect the plans will change once SpaceX's StarShip is operational, with the new Raptor3 engines the amount that will be able to be lofted beyond orbit in a single launch gets much bigger. Generally speaking plans use hardware available or very near available to make decisions but when a dramatic shift in capability comes online plans change.

  • @sheronemcknight-linton7272
    @sheronemcknight-linton7272 Год назад +5

    It’s very exciting to look ahead to see what the future is gonna be like.🚀🤓⚡️

  • @Starship007
    @Starship007 6 месяцев назад +1

    We are explorers looking for the next great adventure. What is behind or around the next corner

  • @kennethsalyers3809
    @kennethsalyers3809 4 месяца назад +1

    ,awesome ,keep moving forward