Underground cities inside caves, lava tubes, craters,… are much more realistic than any dome designs. Unless there is a habitable planet out there with dense, warm and breathable atmosphere, then underground city complex would be the best choice.
How about if slowly built a mars concrete substitute roof over a 100 to 300 wide crater .then the space beneath it gradually retrofit how you see fit .
@@thomas.parnell7365I believe that’s what the documentary mentioned sir! You didn’t even include any specifications for your “100 to 300 wide, is it metres, feet or miles???
I have worked in aerospace for over 20 years and over 7 years in the Space Industries. We can do all of this we have companies and people working on these problems NOW. I am too old to see come to reality however I am very excited about humanity's future on Mars. Teach your kids to dream and be engineers lol
Venturing out into our local solar system is our sentient species' next logical step. We already crossed vast oceans, explored from the highest mountains to the deepest oceanic trenches, and learned to live at the South Pole & in Low Earth Orbit. Next its on to the Moon and to Mars. Yeah, we need to take better care of our beautiful water planet, but we'll do better once our global population has plateaued and reached a sustainable equilibrium. Along the way, we'll watch SpaceX's Starship take ever longer journeys, carrying crew & cargo to each new project destination. I won't be around for most of these great leaps either, but if we can avoid self-destruction our innate human drive to innovate & explore will take us to the stars. Hats off to you aerospace engineers who designed & built everything that will make this glorious future a reality someday! Appreciate you...
A beautiful Utopia created by the same people that have denied US the same or similar environmentally safe & efficient conditions here...on Earth... where we live now.
The proposed construction of an underground city seems okay, on point. And the technology for "soiless farming" (not mentioned in this video) could be done for a Space Colony. The biggest problem people have not yet overcome is recycling. A "Zero Waste" civilization is a challenge I think humanity would need to accomplish before going to Mars.
We could if the corporations want to, but a buy new, always replacing is their money making design. Just think of all the precious metals locked into the land fields, from our electronic waste. Metals like gold, silver, copper, aluminum, steel, etc. When they tell you they are pushing for a sustainable & resilient world, they are straight up lying! They want a world where they control the materials & how you obtain them as well as how often you will. Planned obsolescence is the new design for everything!
Necessity is the mother of invention. A Mars colony would necessarily have limited importation of supplies, so any reuse of materials would be much more beneficial on Mars than Earth. It makes sense to believe that economics alone would resolve this issue. And too, a city dump would be unlikely to cause any environmental problems.The only concern would perhaps be esthetics, which at first might be an unaffordable luxury.
@@drmasroberts I agree with most of your statements. Except for trash dump sites or landfills. Waste dumps do pose an environmental hazard for lifeforms. The health of a Martian colony could and would be affected.
In the beginning you could argue that incinerators will be critical infrastructure - producing Co2, to eventually allow Mars to have its own atmosphere.
The cold fact is many will suffer only to discover it will be much more difficult than we thought to leave our home planet, Earth, and survive anywhere else. And that perhaps, they might have been watching too many movies and living in naive fantasy lands.
I love the space age imaginary stories. I won't be alive to see anything like this every happen so fantasy stories fill in longing in my heart to see this become reality.
Large scale excavation is not necessary initially because we have found several huge caverns and cave systems. Sealing all or part of them would be far easier.
One of the major problems with digging into the surface of Mars is the high concentration of toxic chlorine based elements in the soil. There are several heavy metals that would be toxic to plant and animal life also.
There's no "soil" on Mars, it's Regolith, powderised rock. Soil is a complex mixture of clays, sand, vegetable matter (carbon and nitrates) and microorganisms. To turn Regolith into soil, the Perchlorates are easily removed, they are very soluble in water, so could be washed out in large drums. The Martian atmosphere is mostly Carbo Dioxide, which can be used to grow inital plants to fix the carbon compounds like cellulose and carbohydrates. Not sure about where the Nitrogen comes from. Plants also need Potassium and other minerals to survive. The perchlorates are the easiest problem to solve.
I had been thinking about this for decades. I have designed plans and drawings of this very topic. Sending automated miners and concrete printers there years before the first person sets foot on Mars. I always thought this was our best option to lay the foundations for civilization on Mars.
This reminds of the films they made in the 1960s of what the future was going to look like in the year 2000. I'm still waiting on that collapsible refrigerator that comes out of the wall, and the robot oven that cooks my meals. I doubt the future Mars colony will look anything like what's shown here.
So because people in the 1960s made inaccurate predictions of the future, people in the 2020s are relegated to the same likelihood? There’s this little thing called artificial intelligence that’s a big deal right now, and it’s for a reason. Our predictive capabilities are far greater than the 60s. You are comparing a time when literally half of adults in the US smoked cigarettes to today - not the same society.
that's because they forgot to tell about the 100 year long Early access aka phase 0 where it's just a handfull of space tramps in very expensive tin cans.
did I miss the part where it is explained where all the energy and fuel comes from that powers and drives all the equipment and machinery that is needed to make the materials and refine the minerals in the ground to start building this city?
Interesting how in virtually every photo, the people look miserable. I imagine this would be accurate to the reality of those who will eventually live in Mars.
Awesome video and great presentation of our future on a Mars colony. I loved the detail of a Starfleet symbol on a pillow (10'44"). Very nicely done with all
If you want to highlight a time on a video just type in 10:44 not sure why you invented a completely new format for writing the time that doesn't even make sense
Fun video. Early settlement in Lava atubes seems easier than excavating new areas for structures. Dropping tunneling machines into a crater floor and tunneling horizontally would also produce spaces that should be easy to seal off.
Cool video. But it doesn't deal at all with one of the hugest problems with Mars colonization: Too vulnerable to destruction. All it would take to do tremendous damage or destroy the colony is one nut, or one enemy agent. That vulnerability would tend to turn a Mars colony into something like a military colony -- purely for security reasons, a Mars colony might not permit the degree of privacy that civilians in democracies typically enjoy. The colony would have to be constructed of many compartments capable of being sealed off and independent on short notice -- somewhat as submarines and ships sometimes have watertight compartments in part so damage in one spot doesn't spell doom.
Mars tends to get a lot of our attention, while Venus is largely ignored. However, the prospects of habitability there would be much easier than on our little red cousin. A gravity much closer to that of Earth would make this colony much more comfortable than our Martian city. Would you guys consider doing a video about setting up a floating colony in the upper atmosphere of Venus? Surface mining on Venus would be an exceedingly difficult task, but probe mining Mercury from Venus could be easier from this base.
The pressure and temperature on Venus is not survivable. The Venusian atmosphere is nasty, hot thick and corrosive. The planet emits so much radiation as it's surface is the hottest thing in the solar system except the sun. There is a very thin layer of oxygen in the upper atmosphere about 100km but everything else makes Venus totally inhospitable to humans and most if not all machinery.
Transporting metal for fabrication is going to be prohibitive, plus thousands of welding robots would represent a high maintenance requirement, and once you've used metal to create an airtight skin then you've got oxidisation problems from moisture within the sealed environment. Better off using resin to form reconstituted rock which would be airtight, and due to the lower gravity would enable larger structures than on earth. Weighted suits for work periods and sleep periods within a titled centrifuge on the crater wall would both work to reduce muscle and bone wastage etc. Putting human waste recycling above habitation and work areas would reduce raditiation exposure.
Copper yo. Do you get how much weight in copper we are talking about? Does Mars have a lot of easily mined copper too? We aren't flying all that there, nor any of dozens of other required materials. Lead and tungsten too. Smarter to just build orbital space stations up to autonomous to spread our mining reach, then see what makes sense to colonize and where. Might not make sense anywhere in our solar system, cost versus benefits wise.
I have a whole playlist of "food for thought". And honestly alot of your videos are on their. Whenever i get tp hang out with my nephews i put this kind of stuff on. They are 13 and 8. Hoping to get their scientific curiosity going xD
Earth quake happen when 2 tectonic plate have too much energy built up, but if the tectonic plates are not active on Mars from where the Mars quake could occur?
Please explain to me as to why man would take hundreds of thousands of years, many of these years in the last few thousands, finally achieving the technology to drag themselves out of caves here on earth, just to finally leave the planet and huddle in caves again? Is that what we have achieved?
Ok ahhm mining minirals, building furture settlements, getting excusid minarals to enhance the furture earth,building advanced space craft, selling the minarals to aliens, yearh i wrote aliens, they do exist you know?
@@HeineAnkerJensen1982 : why would we send humans to mine on any planet in this solar system, even today, our robotics are fully capable of ding this. Besides if resources are the problem, we could mine asteroids far more easily, or the moon. Human future is for exploration and knowledge, not mining. Besides, if we have the technology to mine planets, moons and asteroids, we have the technology to fix the planet that we live on. We should focus on our home planet until we are technically capable of interstellar flight.
Remarkable and so detailed imagination... Congrats for the enormous effort on scientific accuracy that is relatively rare in these futuristic docs...kudos for that Though the complete undertaking of the building process by robots takes away any romance for me....I like it when people build things themselves and not when everything is handed over to them without any effort from them whatsoever.. Anyway, it seems to me we will prefer superficial domes than this but whatever, we'll see...With the rate we are going it's possible we will build colonies to nearby stars before building underground cities to Mars... In our own solar system, it is easier to simply build cities on Earth!
We humans really need to start colonizing mars as soon as possible a human mission to mars is exactly the type of challenge that NASA needs mars is a place that we humans can settle. We humans must become at least a 2 planet species there’s to many accidents that can happen to a single planet species like us humans we must move out into space we can not stay here on earth 🌎 forever hopefully we can get humans to mars within the next 15 to 30 years from now.
Okay, this will never ever happen for one simple reason... there is absolutely nothing there so valuable that it justifies us building a colony on Mars.
There is a lot of water everywhere on Mars not only at the poles. That was discovered by the crash of a small meteorite near equator blowing a big bunch of water ice around the site 2 years ago.
EVERY DREAM IN THE PAST COMES TRUE IN PRESENT ❗ QUITE APPRECIATED TO YOUR SCIENCE FICTION WHICH IS QUITELY BASED ON SCIENCE RULES AND PRINCIPLES AND AT THE SAME TIME USING THE CREATIVE AND SCIENTIFIC THINKING TO FIND THE SOLUTIONS OF PROBLEMS. ACTUALLY IT IS AN AMAZING DOCUMENTARY ♥️ YEARNING TO WATCH YOUR NEXT EPISODE ♥️
With a bit more funding put into space travel humans could go to Mars within a decade. The technology is there, and if you are referring to travel time. People hundreds of years ago would go on boats across the ocean for months at a time. Granted space travel is different from that and would be harder, but humans are very resilient. And when it comes to the air and radiation on Mars. Governments and companies would obviously have things set up through sending previous missions with robots and supplies for a basic living station. So yes, people are very capable of going to Mars
The only phase missing from this is the ground investigation phase. Supremely important in all ground engineering. This would improve planning and design stages and mitigate hazards, improve risk and ultimately cost and programme time. We don't always get this phase right on Earth, so we need to make sure we are really doing it suitably on Mars. The stakes are always high with lives in hand, but in extreme remote environments you can't afford to underfund site and ground investigation.
Underground cities on MARS, will be the best way to protect and pressurize. City's can have high ceilings and open plazas. The Expanse TV show, gives great examples Ceres and Mars of underground cities.
Given the lack of atmosphere and the presence of meteorites, what are the changes of a meteorite hitting underground city? Can the roof be thick enough to prevent major damage to structure or inhabitants? I don't the video addressed this point. Great video and narration of course, I just was wondering.
I've been inside the underground Moon facility. Before you say that you wouldn't mind going to either place please be aware that the gravity technology causes extreme queasiness, especially during elevator rides. It is similar to a hangover on steroids used to prepare a really skinny man to compete in Mr. Olympia in 1 day. Projectile vomiting, dizziness, upset stomach and a headache while your immediate supervisor degrades you. Not fun.
You can do that on earth without travelling to mars.... Coober Pedy in outback South Australia has hundreds of underground homes and businesses not to mention many others throughout the world.
"Yes, we build this structure on Mars with supermodels, yeah. And everybody looks always really good, strutting around in their sleek space suits that are basically high-fashion runway attire. Each command center is like a celestial glam zone with perfect lighting for that Instagrammable moment. The Mars landscape might be red and rugged, but the vibe is all about chic space exploration. Forget just discovering new worlds; we’re redefining interplanetary aesthetics! Who knew that saving humanity could look so fabulous?"
We will probably start with cut-and-cover: dig a ditch, build something airtight and quake-proof in the ditch, maybe a pre-fab, cover it over (fill in the ditch) for insulation and to protect from micrometeoroid strikes and radiation. Cheap, relatively easy and effective using a minimum of resources.
A fun look towards the future, the energy requirements to build such a thing are wildly prohibitive though, as is the gravity for long term habitation.
Sounds like a good plan but I'd have more shields on the dome. So one outside, one inside that can shut up during storms or meteor strikes and one horizontal at the base of the dome, various small bunkers outside to house radar and air defence missiles to knock down threatening meteors. Could even build a launch pad into a nearby crater for rockets or other future ships. Have shutter doors for easier maintenance and living quarters for the initial crew that aid in and direct construction.
Moon quakes gave us a hint : maybe, there are huge caves under the surface of the Moon. Since the radiation is the same as on the Mars the solution could be the same.
This is the correct approach but dont forget any human presence on Mars or our moon should be understood as a means to increase our energy dense efforts to go beyond our solar system.
In a hole in the ground, there lived a Hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.
Beautiful visuals! I was glad to hear you considered the problem of perchlorates and 38% Earth gravity. I wonder though, whether orbital rotating structures such as O'Neill cylinders would be the way to go. They can be built arbitrarily large, provide Earth gravity and massive shielding from space radiation and meteorites, and robotically constructed. In theory, billions of people could live in these habitats spread around the Solar System, and they would be more accessible than planetary colonies.
I love when Venture uploads. Gets rid of all the brain fog and lets me engage my imagination again.
I'm happy to hear the video helps people imagine again
where did they get water at????????? your not Figuring reality in break downs and other things
best to have brain fog and just fix this PLANET
@@debbyhutchinson3225 This is subtitled as Science Fiction Documentary.
@@debbyhutchinson3225 Perhaps I should instead have said Categorized instead of Subtitled. 😀
Underground cities inside caves, lava tubes, craters,… are much more realistic than any dome designs. Unless there is a habitable planet out there with dense, warm and breathable atmosphere, then underground city complex would be the best choice.
How about if slowly built a mars concrete substitute roof over a 100 to 300 wide crater .then the space beneath it gradually retrofit how you see fit .
Until there is a earthquake.
@@zollen123 still better than on the surface with gigantic dust devils, deadly radiation, below zero temperature and even meteorites 😗
@@thomas.parnell7365I believe that’s what the documentary mentioned sir!
You didn’t even include any specifications for your “100 to 300 wide, is it metres, feet or miles???
Marsquake*
I have worked in aerospace for over 20 years and over 7 years in the Space Industries. We can do all of this we have companies and people working on these problems NOW. I am too old to see come to reality however I am very excited about humanity's future on Mars. Teach your kids to dream and be engineers lol
Planetary destroy to colonise Mars!? I N S A N I T Y!
Never gonna happen.
@@buca512boxer you saying this because you watch RUclips videos on the internet while I work in this industry SMH but yeah you know more than me tho 😂
Teach your kids to be cowboys sir!
Venturing out into our local solar system is our sentient species' next logical step. We already crossed vast oceans, explored from the highest mountains to the deepest oceanic trenches, and learned to live at the South Pole & in Low Earth Orbit. Next its on to the Moon and to Mars.
Yeah, we need to take better care of our beautiful water planet, but we'll do better once our global population has plateaued and reached a sustainable equilibrium. Along the way, we'll watch SpaceX's Starship take ever longer journeys, carrying crew & cargo to each new project destination.
I won't be around for most of these great leaps either, but if we can avoid self-destruction our innate human drive to innovate & explore will take us to the stars. Hats off to you aerospace engineers who designed & built everything that will make this glorious future a reality someday! Appreciate you...
First Timelapse video I've watched that doesn't have Timelapse video.
What a crazy time we're living in.
A beautiful Utopia created by the same people that have denied US the same or similar environmentally safe & efficient conditions here...on Earth... where we live now.
Dev, Ed Baldwin and all the Helios team appreciate your work
“Destiny Awaits”
Brilliant, as always. The only content on the Internet that you just can't skip forward or end early. Worth every minute. Thank you!
Glad you liked the video, thank you
@@VentureCitybhai Kumar sambhaw
I could move forwards and back.
The proposed construction of an underground city seems okay, on point. And the technology for "soiless farming" (not mentioned in this video) could be done for a Space Colony.
The biggest problem people have not yet overcome is recycling. A "Zero Waste" civilization is a challenge I think humanity would need to accomplish before going to Mars.
We could if the corporations want to, but a buy new, always replacing is their money making design. Just think of all the precious metals locked into the land fields, from our electronic waste. Metals like gold, silver, copper, aluminum, steel, etc. When they tell you they are pushing for a sustainable & resilient world, they are straight up lying! They want a world where they control the materials & how you obtain them as well as how often you will. Planned obsolescence is the new design for everything!
Necessity is the mother of invention. A Mars colony would necessarily have limited importation of supplies, so any reuse of materials would be much more beneficial on Mars than Earth. It makes sense to believe that economics alone would resolve this issue. And too, a city dump would be unlikely to cause any environmental problems.The only concern would perhaps be esthetics, which at first might be an unaffordable luxury.
@@drmasroberts I agree with most of your statements. Except for trash dump sites or landfills.
Waste dumps do pose an environmental hazard for lifeforms. The health of a Martian colony could and would be affected.
In the beginning you could argue that incinerators will be critical infrastructure - producing Co2, to eventually allow Mars to have its own atmosphere.
Well a lunar and large orbital stations can help make 0 waste cities
A cold fact is that those who build this will suffer horrible consequences so that others can live comfortably in the future.
Robots will build it.
Earth is our home.
The cold fact is many will suffer only to discover it will be much more difficult than we thought to leave our home planet, Earth, and survive anywhere else. And that perhaps, they might have been watching too many movies and living in naive fantasy lands.
@@standardprocedure7017Eventually, it will also be Mars
Elon Musk is edging himself to this comment
Very well done. Quality editing matching the images to the story.
Thank you
@@VentureCityPlease make a video on Human habitation of Titan
Gotta love when venture city releases a video. Soon videos will be coming out every other week
I love the space age imaginary stories. I won't be alive to see anything like this every happen so fantasy stories fill in longing in my heart to see this become reality.
It’s OK, this crap will never happen in any timeframe. You won’t be missing a thing.
I mean, we're closer to this than you think
@@jeremiahsymonette4781 based on what acid Trip? We have one planet we can live on, the rest is a waste of time
Large scale excavation is not necessary initially because we have found several huge caverns and cave systems. Sealing all or part of them would be far easier.
One of the major problems with digging into the surface of Mars is the high concentration of toxic chlorine based elements in the soil. There are several heavy metals that would be toxic to plant and animal life also.
Don't sweat the small stuff, man. You sound like a modern-day eco warrior attempting to cast doubt on any development anywhere.
There's no "soil" on Mars, it's Regolith, powderised rock. Soil is a complex mixture of clays, sand, vegetable matter (carbon and nitrates) and microorganisms. To turn Regolith into soil, the Perchlorates are easily removed, they are very soluble in water, so could be washed out in large drums. The Martian atmosphere is mostly Carbo Dioxide, which can be used to grow inital plants to fix the carbon compounds like cellulose and carbohydrates. Not sure about where the Nitrogen comes from. Plants also need Potassium and other minerals to survive. The perchlorates are the easiest problem to solve.
YES, so it is a PIPE DREAM, nothing more and nothing less. It would be more feasible to build orbital structures than on Mars itself.....
I had been thinking about this for decades. I have designed plans and drawings of this very topic. Sending automated miners and concrete printers there years before the first person sets foot on Mars. I always thought this was our best option to lay the foundations for civilization on Mars.
This reminds of the films they made in the 1960s of what the future was going to look like in the year 2000. I'm still waiting on that collapsible refrigerator that comes out of the wall, and the robot oven that cooks my meals. I doubt the future Mars colony will look anything like what's shown here.
So because people in the 1960s made inaccurate predictions of the future, people in the 2020s are relegated to the same likelihood?
There’s this little thing called artificial intelligence that’s a big deal right now, and it’s for a reason. Our predictive capabilities are far greater than the 60s.
You are comparing a time when literally half of adults in the US smoked cigarettes to today - not the same society.
that's because they forgot to tell about the 100 year long Early access aka phase 0 where it's just a handfull of space tramps in very expensive tin cans.
برنامج جميل جدا افكار مستقبلية جدابة ، واصل ❤
love this kind of content
Thank you
did I miss the part where it is explained where all the energy and fuel comes from that powers and drives all the equipment and machinery that is needed to make the materials and refine the minerals in the ground to start building this city?
Nope. It's called "magic". Just close your eyes and click your Elon Musk Ruby Space-Slippers (tm) together. And don't think about X.
Humans can't even get to the moon .
But Mars, no problem .
There you go getting all factual and stuff. lol.
Portable Nuclear Generators!
@silent apparently you did miss it because you didn’t watch the whole video? try @13:50
Another great vid ! Thank you Venture City team 🙏
Thank you
Amazing video. I am so glad I came across this channel. Absolutely terrific content. Subscribed
You worked really hard. Hats off
The advanced of science and technology make this a reality in the near future, colonization of the planet Mars will be positive
Interesting how in virtually every photo, the people look miserable. I imagine this would be accurate to the reality of those who will eventually live in Mars.
Smiley faces would be an improvement... I will be peachy on Mars. Life is too short to be a grump.
They'll probably be even more grumpy when their bones become brittle and start to crack.
Whatever you guys do, don't stop eating your medication!
Awesome video and great presentation of our future on a Mars colony. I loved the detail of a Starfleet symbol on a pillow (10'44").
Very nicely done with all
Glad you enjoyed it
If you want to highlight a time on a video just type in 10:44 not sure why you invented a completely new format for writing the time that doesn't even make sense
My friend…..I gotta say, your work is super impressive man! Absolutely fantastic job 👌
I love these videos keep them coming great time as well 20 minutes
Glad you like them
The planet Mars watching humans coming to it: Ah shit here we go again!
Fun video. Early settlement in Lava atubes seems easier than excavating new areas for structures. Dropping tunneling machines into a crater floor and tunneling horizontally would also produce spaces that should be easy to seal off.
Inspiring. Love it
Finally, exactly what I've been seeing as the perfect approach to this exploration and spreading of the human settlements.
This is so good, great use of AI.
do you know which ai are they uusing?
@@SufyanAshfaq-bh8lf No I do not.
Maybe MidJourney
Another banger video from VC! keep them coming
INCREDIBLE ❤
I am pleased ,this is a wonderful example.
Cool video. But it doesn't deal at all with one of the hugest problems with Mars colonization: Too vulnerable to destruction. All it would take to do tremendous damage or destroy the colony is one nut, or one enemy agent. That vulnerability would tend to turn a Mars colony into something like a military colony -- purely for security reasons, a Mars colony might not permit the degree of privacy that civilians in democracies typically enjoy. The colony would have to be constructed of many compartments capable of being sealed off and independent on short notice -- somewhat as submarines and ships sometimes have watertight compartments in part so damage in one spot doesn't spell doom.
This is absolutely great. I need to read Dr. Robert Zubrin's new book on Mars.
Mars tends to get a lot of our attention, while Venus is largely ignored. However, the prospects of habitability there would be much easier than on our little red cousin. A gravity much closer to that of Earth would make this colony much more comfortable than our Martian city. Would you guys consider doing a video about setting up a floating colony in the upper atmosphere of Venus? Surface mining on Venus would be an exceedingly difficult task, but probe mining Mercury from Venus could be easier from this base.
I should look into it further
The pressure and temperature on Venus is not survivable. The Venusian atmosphere is nasty, hot thick and corrosive. The planet emits so much radiation as it's surface is the hottest thing in the solar system except the sun. There is a very thin layer of oxygen in the upper atmosphere about 100km but everything else makes Venus totally inhospitable to humans and most if not all machinery.
Outstanding! Thank you.
The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance, the wise grows it under his feet.
Except when the ground under his feet become overpopulated
... said the weasel.
And many thanks to the creators of this video.❤🎉🎉
Thank you
Great content. AI voice is maddening. Couldn't finish.
I'm digging it. - Thanks you for making it for us.
Transporting metal for fabrication is going to be prohibitive, plus thousands of welding robots would represent a high maintenance requirement, and once you've used metal to create an airtight skin then you've got oxidisation problems from moisture within the sealed environment.
Better off using resin to form reconstituted rock which would be airtight, and due to the lower gravity would enable larger structures than on earth.
Weighted suits for work periods and sleep periods within a titled centrifuge on the crater wall would both work to reduce muscle and bone wastage etc.
Putting human waste recycling above habitation and work areas would reduce raditiation exposure.
Copper yo. Do you get how much weight in copper we are talking about? Does Mars have a lot of easily mined copper too? We aren't flying all that there, nor any of dozens of other required materials. Lead and tungsten too. Smarter to just build orbital space stations up to autonomous to spread our mining reach, then see what makes sense to colonize and where. Might not make sense anywhere in our solar system, cost versus benefits wise.
@@JulioConnory I didn't mention copper
So thorough! This could be a great series due to what appears to be a long process in completion!
I couldn't imagine that living in the dead sands of Mars could be so exciting, but now I'm convinced that it sucks!
Reminds me of Loveless' secret city in Wild Wild West. All you need now is a giant mechanical tarantula to drive. 😎👍
How can a "Biosphere" work on Mars, when they couldn't even get one to work on Earth? LOL!
My thoughts exactly. I can see a colony of rovers and robots being up there...but not humans...unless it's just for a few days.
முதல் 100M viewers சார்பாக வாழ்த்துகள்❤️
Dude... this will be a lifeless bunker
Before they build all that on Mars...they might want to build one in a barren desert on Earth...to make sure it actually works.
I have a whole playlist of "food for thought". And honestly alot of your videos are on their. Whenever i get tp hang out with my nephews i put this kind of stuff on. They are 13 and 8. Hoping to get their scientific curiosity going xD
Earth quake happen when 2 tectonic plate have too much energy built up, but if the tectonic plates are not active on Mars from where the Mars quake could occur?
It all sounds great ,only it may take a thousand years to start this plan.
It Will happen.❤❤
Man this channel is AMAZING keep those awesome videos coming😊
Please explain to me as to why man would take hundreds of thousands of years, many of these years in the last few thousands, finally achieving the technology to drag themselves out of caves here on earth, just to finally leave the planet and huddle in caves again? Is that what we have achieved?
It’s a necessary step along the way to a much grander future.
@@NoTorr2000what is this grander future? We seem to be building towards something but not solving what is already here
@@NoTorr2000 : human's will not have left the solar system before my great, great, great, great, great, ... grandchildren have passed
Ok ahhm mining minirals, building furture settlements, getting excusid minarals to enhance the furture earth,building advanced space craft, selling the minarals to aliens, yearh i wrote aliens, they do exist you know?
@@HeineAnkerJensen1982 : why would we send humans to mine on any planet in this solar system, even today, our robotics are fully capable of ding this. Besides if resources are the problem, we could mine asteroids far more easily, or the moon. Human future is for exploration and knowledge, not mining. Besides, if we have the technology to mine planets, moons and asteroids, we have the technology to fix the planet that we live on. We should focus on our home planet until we are technically capable of interstellar flight.
A very imaginative video. Perhaps it will come to fruition in about 10,000 years, if humanity survives that long. I hope so.
Fiction Fantasy !
Remarkable and so detailed imagination...
Congrats for the enormous effort on scientific accuracy that is relatively rare in these futuristic docs...kudos for that
Though the complete undertaking of the building process by robots takes away any romance for me....I like it when people build things themselves and not when everything is handed over to them without any effort from them whatsoever..
Anyway, it seems to me we will prefer superficial domes than this but whatever, we'll see...With the rate we are going it's possible we will build colonies to nearby stars before building underground cities to Mars...
In our own solar system, it is easier to simply build cities on Earth!
thank you for your kind words
We humans really need to start colonizing mars as soon as possible a human mission to mars is exactly the type of challenge that NASA needs mars is a place that we humans can settle.
We humans must become at least a 2 planet species there’s to many accidents that can happen to a single planet species like us humans we must move out into space we can not stay here on earth 🌎 forever hopefully we can get humans to mars within the next 15 to 30 years from now.
Interesting video ! Thanks
Okay, this will never ever happen for one simple reason... there is absolutely nothing there so valuable that it justifies us building a colony on Mars.
Right? There’s just no point.
Nicely done, thanks for showing how it might be done one day.
10,000 people land on Mars...then run out of water one week later. 😮 Then realize they should have colonized Earth's deserts instead.
There is a lot of water everywhere on Mars not only at the poles. That was discovered by the crash of a small meteorite near equator blowing a big bunch of water ice around the site 2 years ago.
Great content and visuals. Thank you!
I'm sick of AI content
EVERY DREAM IN THE PAST COMES TRUE IN PRESENT ❗
QUITE APPRECIATED TO YOUR SCIENCE FICTION WHICH IS QUITELY BASED ON SCIENCE RULES AND PRINCIPLES AND AT THE SAME TIME USING THE CREATIVE AND SCIENTIFIC THINKING TO FIND THE SOLUTIONS OF PROBLEMS.
ACTUALLY IT IS AN AMAZING DOCUMENTARY ♥️
YEARNING TO WATCH YOUR NEXT EPISODE ♥️
Thank you. Glad you enjoyed it
First, first to say LOL you cant go to mars silly
Yes we can, we have done it already with rovers silly
@@xdg938 people can't go silly
@@freebie808 Theoretically we can, we have the technology
People take these videos to seriously
With a bit more funding put into space travel humans could go to Mars within a decade. The technology is there, and if you are referring to travel time. People hundreds of years ago would go on boats across the ocean for months at a time. Granted space travel is different from that and would be harder, but humans are very resilient.
And when it comes to the air and radiation on Mars. Governments and companies would obviously have things set up through sending previous missions with robots and supplies for a basic living station.
So yes, people are very capable of going to Mars
Interlocking habitat modules and sanitation plumbing.
This is brilliant and brilliantly done subbing hard af
Love this content. I just subscribed. 👍
The only phase missing from this is the ground investigation phase. Supremely important in all ground engineering. This would improve planning and design stages and mitigate hazards, improve risk and ultimately cost and programme time. We don't always get this phase right on Earth, so we need to make sure we are really doing it suitably on Mars. The stakes are always high with lives in hand, but in extreme remote environments you can't afford to underfund site and ground investigation.
a collection of MidJourney pictures as a screensaver! I can do that in an hour too.
Underground cities on MARS, will be the best way to protect and pressurize. City's can have high ceilings and open plazas. The Expanse TV show, gives great examples Ceres and Mars of underground cities.
Шикарное видео. Спасибо!
Love it, what’s beautiful vision.
Glad you like it
I love this. nicely done.
Adorable
Given the lack of atmosphere and the presence of meteorites, what are the changes of a meteorite hitting underground city? Can the roof be thick enough to prevent major damage to structure or inhabitants? I don't the video addressed this point. Great video and narration of course, I just was wondering.
You don`t need to go fully underdround. Just cover your habitat with 1 or 2 meters of regolith and you will be fine.
Great documentary.
This video is awesome.
I've been inside the underground Moon facility. Before you say that you wouldn't mind going to either place please be aware that the gravity technology causes extreme queasiness, especially during elevator rides. It is similar to a hangover on steroids used to prepare a really skinny man to compete in Mr. Olympia in 1 day. Projectile vomiting, dizziness, upset stomach and a headache while your immediate supervisor degrades you. Not fun.
Far more rational than the many domed city renderings that would offer too little protection from the bitter cold at night.
Imagine traveling to mars and building your own home by digging out a section of an underground tunnel. A lot of people would be excited to do so.
You can do that on earth without travelling to mars.... Coober Pedy in outback South Australia has hundreds of underground homes and businesses not to mention many others throughout the world.
"Yes, we build this structure on Mars with supermodels, yeah. And everybody looks always really good, strutting around in their sleek space suits that are basically high-fashion runway attire. Each command center is like a celestial glam zone with perfect lighting for that Instagrammable moment. The Mars landscape might be red and rugged, but the vibe is all about chic space exploration. Forget just discovering new worlds; we’re redefining interplanetary aesthetics! Who knew that saving humanity could look so fabulous?"
Is this an excerpt from somewhere?
@@DynesLair-kb6qs I was trying to be funny
Comments restored my faith in humanity.
We will probably start with cut-and-cover: dig a ditch, build something airtight and quake-proof in the ditch, maybe a pre-fab, cover it over (fill in the ditch) for insulation and to protect from micrometeoroid strikes and radiation. Cheap, relatively easy and effective using a minimum of resources.
They should build stuff like this on earth. Especially for hurricanes
A fun look towards the future, the energy requirements to build such a thing are wildly prohibitive though, as is the gravity for long term habitation.
what a really intresting video, man,i will grow my spirulina not over sea ,but on Mars, Arthrospira Platensis for our Fututur 🧬✌
Awaken
Awesomeness 😊
Real cool 😎
Thank you 🧬🧫🔬🔭
Wow, very interesting
Sounds like a good plan but I'd have more shields on the dome. So one outside, one inside that can shut up during storms or meteor strikes and one horizontal at the base of the dome, various small bunkers outside to house radar and air defence missiles to knock down threatening meteors. Could even build a launch pad into a nearby crater for rockets or other future ships. Have shutter doors for easier maintenance and living quarters for the initial crew that aid in and direct construction.
Moon quakes gave us a hint : maybe, there are huge caves under the surface of the Moon. Since the radiation is the same as on the Mars the solution could be the same.
I went from "Hell no, I won´t go" to.. "Yeah, might be nice sounds like fun =)"
why we need to live in mars our planet is the best places to living..
This is the correct approach but dont forget any human presence on Mars or our moon should be understood as a means to increase our energy dense efforts to go beyond our solar system.
The final frontier!
In a hole in the ground, there lived a Hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort.
Beautiful visuals! I was glad to hear you considered the problem of perchlorates and 38% Earth gravity. I wonder though, whether orbital rotating structures such as O'Neill cylinders would be the way to go. They can be built arbitrarily large, provide Earth gravity and massive shielding from space radiation and meteorites, and robotically constructed. In theory, billions of people could live in these habitats spread around the Solar System, and they would be more accessible than planetary colonies.