Why Do Half of All Mars Missions Fail? | SciShow Compilation

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  • Опубликовано: 22 май 2024
  • In this series of videos, we explore the successes and failures-so many failures-of our missions to the Red Planet.
    Hosted by: Reid Reimers
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    Original Episodes:
    Why It’s So Hard to Land on Mars
    • Why It's So Hard to La...
    The First Time We Landed On Mars
    • The First Time We Land...
    NASA Might Send a Helicopter to Mars
    • NASA Might Send a Heli...
    The Electric Thruster That Could Send Humans to Mars
    • The Electric Thruster ...
    The VASIMR Engine: How to Get to Mars in 40 Days
    • The VASIMR Engine: How...
    Photonic Propulsion: Mars in 3 Days?
    • Photonic Propulsion: M...
    Images:
    www.jpl.nasa.gov/videos/7-min...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PI...
    mars.nasa.gov/resources/25828...
    www.nasa.gov/centers/marshall...

Комментарии • 267

  • @WaterlordArthur
    @WaterlordArthur Год назад +96

    I’m very glad they brought sci show space back to the main channel. It’s all great sci show content and I don’t think as many people were watching it on the separate channel

    • @thefallensolo3549
      @thefallensolo3549 Год назад

      I'm really glad that lady came on to repeat the same stuff the first guy told us

    • @WaterlordArthur
      @WaterlordArthur Год назад +10

      @@thefallensolo3549 lmao the compilations can have overlap that’s for sure 😂

  • @BaronVonQuiply
    @BaronVonQuiply Год назад +39

    Let's not forget all the Kerbal missions where reverse accelerating at full thrust in the lowest point in the atmosphere still results in the giant craft skipping off and heading into deep space because you rushed the trip and went way too fast.

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy Год назад +207

    The people of Mars have great stealth tech...

    • @tabeebrahman4843
      @tabeebrahman4843 Год назад +28

      Lets hope they don’t start experimenting with extra solar goo

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад +3

      @@tabeebrahman4843
      Definitely.

    • @DeltaNovum
      @DeltaNovum Год назад +26

      Meanwhile it's the belters who do all the work.

    • @b_uppy
      @b_uppy Год назад +6

      @@DeltaNovum
      Sing it!

    • @christianheichel
      @christianheichel Год назад

      Unfortunately all native Martians are flat Marsers that believe our satellites and rovers are from other Martian nations. They also are extremely paranoid and shy so they hide from everything. Since they are flat Marsers they don't bother sending spacecraft up and out to their moons or other planets.

  • @prim16
    @prim16 Год назад +100

    1:17 "Before Mars, the only places we've ever landed spacecraft are the moon and Earth"
    Not quite - several of the Venera series of spacecraft landed on Venus in the 1970s. They were launched by the USSR and a few iterations successfully landed.

    • @stephen1r2
      @stephen1r2 Год назад +26

      and even functioned... for a few seconds

    • @jonhall2274
      @jonhall2274 Год назад +18

      Think they lasted longer than seconds something like 42isj minutes I believe.
      I just know didn't send signals after an hour because it had degraded enough to where no longer could.

    • @hithere5553
      @hithere5553 Год назад +18

      Truly incredible engineering there. The surface of Venus is hot enough to melt lead.

    • @rogerwilco1777
      @rogerwilco1777 Год назад +10

      @@stephen1r2 i think one made it over a couple hours.. but yeah most were toast in under 50min

    • @prim16
      @prim16 Год назад +17

      ​​​@@hithere5553 Venera 14 lasted for a full hour and actually even transmitted an image of the surface back! Along with lots of other useful data that we still reference today. According to an article that NASA has on it:
      "Although data from Venera 14 was beamed across the inner Solar System almost 40 years ago, digital processing and merging of Venera's unusual images continues even today."

  • @Fenrisson
    @Fenrisson 11 месяцев назад +11

    Seven minutes of terror? Man, astrophysicists are WAY better than historians at naming stuff.

  • @Daedalus-ed5nd
    @Daedalus-ed5nd 11 месяцев назад +4

    Why Do Half of All Mars Missions Fail?
    Conclusion: because it's really hard.
    Makes sense. 10/10

  • @oberonpanopticon
    @oberonpanopticon 11 месяцев назад +12

    Dang, I never would’ve thought the airbag pyramids were so terrifying. Imagine how freaky it’d be to see something like that bouncing across the surface of earth… reminds me of that one review for the giant beachball

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 11 месяцев назад +5

      the review, for reference and because funny:
      “We took this ball to the beach and after close to 2 hours to pump it up, we pushed it around for about 10 fun filled minutes. That was when the wind picked it up and sent it huddling down the beach at about 40 knots. It destroyed everything in its path. Children screamed in terror at the giant inflatable monster that crushed their sand castles. Grown men were knocked down trying to save their families. The faster we chased it, the faster it rolled. It was like it was mocking us. Eventually, we had to stop running after it because its path of injury and destruction was going to cost us a fortune in legal fees. Rumor has it that it can still be seen stalking innocent families on the Florida panhandle. We lost it in South Carolina, so there is something to be said about its durability.”

    • @TheKrispyfort
      @TheKrispyfort 11 месяцев назад

      Inspired by S3 of Chocky

  • @diGritz1
    @diGritz1 Год назад +12

    Makes me feel a bit better about my 100% failure rate.

    • @UGNAvalon
      @UGNAvalon Год назад +3

      100% *learning opportunity rate
      🙃

  • @drbigmdftnu
    @drbigmdftnu Год назад +12

    Russia got landers to the surface of Venus, which didnt last long but were able to transmit images.
    So, we, as in the US, had never landed on any other planet before Mars. But we, as a world people, or species, did reach Venus too.
    And we (much more recently) landed on Titan, moon of Saturn.

  • @janetf23
    @janetf23 Год назад +26

    It's pretty clear that Barsoom does not particularly want us there, but humans are fairly difficult to discourage when they want something.💥

    • @gloriouslumi
      @gloriouslumi Год назад +1

      ISWYDT

    • @francislutz8027
      @francislutz8027 Год назад +1

      Edgar Rice Burroughs?
      Did Frazetta illustrate that series too?

    • @janetf23
      @janetf23 Год назад +1

      @@francislutz8027 I only ever had the paperback series, illustrated by whom I couldn't tell you, since I loaned them out to a 'friend' in 1982 and never saw them again.😒

  • @BritishBeachcomber
    @BritishBeachcomber Год назад +10

    3:32 The parachutes used by Curiosity and future Mars missions are made from ultra lightweight fabric developed by a Devon, UK company near me. John Heathcote.

  • @laser8389
    @laser8389 11 месяцев назад +3

    I heard "Mars has been fascinating people" like fascinating people was a group of people that Mars has been.

  • @theperfectbotsteve4916
    @theperfectbotsteve4916 Год назад +17

    if nasa didnt exist the coffie industry would be at least 89% smaller lol

    • @tietosanakirja
      @tietosanakirja Год назад +1

      And would brew at the speed of light... What? Oh, oohh... got it. You meant... yep. 😂

    • @manjsher3094
      @manjsher3094 Год назад +2

      Never thought of it that way, touche!

  • @adamJKpunk
    @adamJKpunk Год назад +4

    I feel like this is all old news.

  • @witness1013
    @witness1013 Год назад +24

    Well if you figure out why half succeed - you're halfway there.

  • @Gytman189
    @Gytman189 Год назад +4

    The thing I've never understood and would love an episode on. Why do we believe we can "teraform" mars abd yet we're not using whatever tech that is to fix the damage we're causing here?

    • @oberonpanopticon
      @oberonpanopticon 11 месяцев назад

      Well, for one thing, “Whatever tech that is” is what’s CAUSING the damage to earth. We’re pumping out billions of tons of greenhouse gasses into our atmosphere which heats up the planet. That sucks for earth, but it’s exactly what we’d need to make mars, which is cold and has a thin atmosphere, more earthlike.
      There’s also the fact that (as far as I’m aware) people who think we can terraform mars are assuming that by the time we tried to do that, we’d have technology at our disposal which we don’t currently, like something we could use to make an artificial magnetosphere. Even with the most optimistic theoretically possible technologies it’d probably still take well in excess of a human lifetime.

    • @IQzminus2
      @IQzminus2 11 месяцев назад +5

      Those are basically opposite problems.
      To put it shortly and over simplify things.
      If the goal is to Terraform Mars, then you would want loads of more greenhouse gasses in its atmosphere and make the plant way hotter.
      While Earth the greenhouse gasses we are realising into our atmosphere and global warming is the issue.
      Still would be way way way easier to make sure Earth remains habitable for humans, then it would be to make Mars habitable for humans.
      And the problem with global warming isn’t so much that we don’t have a solution or don’t know what to do. But more that we have so far been unwilling or otherwised failed to make the changes that would be needed.
      Especially when it comes to politicians listening to scientists and implementing changes on a national and global scale.
      Because for more or less all countries, it seems like the issue again over simplified can boil down to, if your goal is to win the next election in maybe 3 years from now, or otherwise remain popular with key holders to make sure you are able to stay in power. Then implementing regulation that is inconvenient, expensive and / or limits economic growth now in the short term for the people that is able to keep you in power. For a problem of what we do now will mainly have major consequences multiple decades in the future.
      There isn’t a lot of incentives to do what’s clearly been outlined needs to be done. Expect for the whole super major longterm consequences with a bit of time delay.
      The theorised methods to terraform Mars isn’t really some magic atmosphere controlling sophisticated machine. More as a example one of the more extreme ideas, is to nuke the icecaps on the poles of Mars. That I believe is know to contain loads of CO2. As a way to basically kickstart giving Mars a atmosphere.
      So taking the technology / idea to nuke the poles to melt all the ice, and hope to realise more green house gases. Would not transfer well to help us with earth.
      And that is the case with basically all the theorised methods of terraforming Mars, it’s the opposite of what we would want to do.
      Anything involving terraforming Venus on the other hand. Would have more overlap with the climate change issues in earth.
      As Venus is basically what happens if you take green house gases and global warming and dial it to the max.

    • @czhaok
      @czhaok 4 месяца назад

      @@IQzminus2to oversimplify it, if the solution involves going back to the Stone Age and using horses again, not having the free will to eat meat because I want to eat meat, and half of the world freezing because gas boilers would be banned from heating homes, then frankly - let the planet burn as we simply aren’t compatible with Earth in that instance.

  • @adamcooper5723
    @adamcooper5723 Год назад +7

    I personally like how you had a shave in the intro

  • @ShayBlez
    @ShayBlez Год назад +6

    Thank you for posting, great to see Scishow in my feed again. :]
    I always think of Destiny 2 whenever Mars comes up in space news for any reason, hear the Escalation Protocol startup noise. Cant help it, whatsoever.

  • @Scubaman2357
    @Scubaman2357 Год назад +4

    Heating of the spacecraft is caused by gas compression not friction.

  • @joshclark756
    @joshclark756 Год назад +1

    the curiosity rover is so cute

  • @wmdkitty
    @wmdkitty Год назад +2

    I've played DooM. We should leave Mars alone, just in case.

  • @studioMYTH
    @studioMYTH Год назад

    Yooooo 33 minute scishow video!!!

  • @Zappygunshot
    @Zappygunshot 11 месяцев назад +1

    I don't know why, but all the prettiest colours in the world are just so dangerous. The beautiful blue glow of Cherenkov-radiation; the gorgeous pale green of the screaming Hall Effect thruster; the stunning patterns of aposematic colour on dangerous animals; the incandescent pulsing of red hot coals; the vibrant colour displays of volcanic acid pools... it's so pretty and yet - so, so bad for your health.

  • @wesselLandman-wq7ej
    @wesselLandman-wq7ej Год назад

    VERY GOOD

  • @LuisGonzalez-yv6kn
    @LuisGonzalez-yv6kn Год назад +3

    Have we attempted missions to venus? It's closer, no?

    • @twinostrich8045
      @twinostrich8045 Год назад +1

      From another comment: Several of the Venera series of spacecraft were launched by the USSR to land on Venus. Most of them were destroyed within minutes since it's hot enough to melt lead at the surface.

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад +1

      Soviets landed a couple of landers on Venus. They took pictures and took measurements before failing.

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      yes, we landed on Venus, earth & the moon before Mars
      If we send humans to venus, it will be to work/live 50kms up though, just like when we land on earth, we land at sea level (in the ocean traditionally), NOT the bottom of the Mariana trench, we'd do the same on Venus, so in terms of sucsessful missions to Venus, what is of relevence is what happens if we "land" where air filled bubbles float to naturally (50km up) & we've done that twice, transmission from those balloons to be picked up by a Haley's comet flyby, so balloon probes only had enough battery to last for 2 days. When the batteries failed after 2 days, the probes were still alive & well, with absolutely no sign they couldn't stay there for years.
      It's really silly to talk about the very first probes we sucessfully landed on another planet 50 years ago as only lasting for a short time, as if that means there's a problem with the planet! We couldn't even land on Mars with the same tech we had back then! Any probe sent to land or float on venus today would do as well, if not better than on Mars. In terms of landing, would be the same as landing at the bottom of the Mariana trench & we couldn't even reach Titanic when we last landed on venus! Today we have that tech available though, so easy to do & don't even need parachutes or anything, the thick, water like atmosphere slows the craft down & protects it from injury on landing

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      @@twinostrich8045 a pizza oven's hot enough to melt lead too, so what? You don't have anything you can put in a pizza oven that won't melt?
      Australian bushfires are hot enough to melt a LOT more than lead! They also melt bronze, copper, aluminium, tin, iron, zinc, silver, gold etc etc, being over double the temperature of the surface of venus, but people still manage to build houses out of materials that can withstand them

    • @twinostrich8045
      @twinostrich8045 Год назад

      @@mehere8038 to my knowledge its very difficult to simultaneously protect electrical equipment and have it take readings. Put your phone actively recording video inside a steel box in an oven and let me know how well it goes
      Also, since most houses don't have asbestos anymore, they actually burn really fast.

  • @sampagano205
    @sampagano205 7 месяцев назад

    I love learning about the soviet space program. Its so much more fun and mad sciencey.

  • @SnepperStepTV
    @SnepperStepTV 9 месяцев назад +1

    Well first you have to use a gravity slingshot around the moon. Then you need to let the automatic joystick controls fly you through the valley and slow the descent till juuuust before you fall off the cliff. Badda bing badda boom welcome to mars and welcome to the astronaut core. Thanks Lt. Dan!

  • @OttawaOldFart
    @OttawaOldFart Год назад +3

    The problem with light speed travel or as near to it as you can get is radar works at the speed of light. How do you get out of the way of anything? Space is not empty.

    • @peeperleviathan2839
      @peeperleviathan2839 9 месяцев назад

      The main problem is hitting pieces of dust as while space is not empty the chance that you will hit something is very low. The dust will still destroy whatever vehicle you are on

    • @OttawaOldFart
      @OttawaOldFart 9 месяцев назад

      @@peeperleviathan2839 dust is the least of your problems. They just put out a video talking about how there are rog planets flying all over the place as suns go nova and planets are released.

  • @bbartky
    @bbartky Год назад +4

    @SciShow I see in the comments that many people were confused and didn’t realize that this is a compilation video. I know you put it in the title, which is great, but not everyone will read that. It would be really helpful to say at the beginning that this is a compilation video of several previously-aired videos. Also, you should delete or edit outdated content. For example, when Reid talked about 2020 being in the future you should have deleted that or added text saying Perseverance successfully landed on Mars in 2020.
    And there are other options you should consider. For example, one commenter had a great idea and said you should just make a playlist of related videos.

  • @AstronAndry
    @AstronAndry Год назад +2

    Great video!

  • @katfurio6952
    @katfurio6952 10 месяцев назад +1

    So I'm curious, is the shoot and couch just left there on the planet like trash or is the first and most important mission to go collect our trash so we can bring it back?

  • @oopsy444
    @oopsy444 Год назад +1

    Mars where the Wong's rule and raise their cow bettles!

  • @huggeebear
    @huggeebear Год назад +1

    “GET YOUR ASS TO MAAAS!”

  • @DannyBeans
    @DannyBeans 6 месяцев назад

    I'm sure somebody's already thought of it, but I wonder if the US Navy might be able to help make VASIMR practical. They've got decades of experience operating compact nuclear reactors safely.

  • @wandapease-gi8yo
    @wandapease-gi8yo 9 месяцев назад

    This is the difference between Star Trek “They’re ver advanced Captain! They’re usin’ Ion Drive!” And Star Wars . . .

  • @thanksfernuthin
    @thanksfernuthin Месяц назад

    I believe all of the Hall Thruster research has been on small versions that could fit on a space craft. If this is the case they should try to build a giant one. Disregard weight and dimensions. Create the highest thrust version possible. Maybe, instead of thrust equal to the weight of a piece of paper, a whole ream of paper. Obviously it would be useless on a space craft but I bet they'd learn so much from that research it would greatly enhance understanding and many things learned could be used on the smaller ones.

  • @habichnicht8845
    @habichnicht8845 10 месяцев назад

    @16min how about a very long (like 50m)rotatable pole with a camera on top? wich can also be folded so it better fits in the rover and can be protected against sand storms?

  • @garyjust.johnson1436
    @garyjust.johnson1436 Год назад +1

    Studebakers' parent company Raytheon made ablative heat shields for the mercury and gemini space programs in the early 1960's.

  • @maksphoto78
    @maksphoto78 Год назад +1

    Reentry heat isn't caused by friction, it's caused by compression of air. A very rookie mistake to make on a science channel. 😅

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Год назад +2

    Well, knowing is half the battle.

  • @gaster4610
    @gaster4610 25 дней назад

    25:23 EYYYY POLISH DIAGRAM SPOTTED

  • @escobasingracia962
    @escobasingracia962 Год назад +1

    32:06 the satellite also accelerates in the opposite direction, right? I mean, conservation of momentum and all that. Maybe accelerates just a little compared to the solar sail, but it's greater than zero (i guess)

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад

      Yes, but we can make them very massive, so they will hardly move at all.

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад

      ​@@gloriouslumi Wrong. Photons have relativistic mass, and apply photon pressure. Also, they are not bouncy balls. When light is reflected, photons are absorbed, and new photons are emitted.

  • @WTH1812
    @WTH1812 7 месяцев назад

    Ever see an autogyro or a pine seed falling to the ground? Excellent for soft landings.
    Hall thrusters/ion drives build speed slowly. So start at a higher speed.
    Near sonic jet launches escape velocity rocket pod carrying the ion drive craft.
    Long elliptical loop once around the Earth for gravity assist, refire the rockets, open the pod and release the Mars bound craft with enough momentum for the ion drive to catch up.
    -or-
    For repeating missions, use a solar sail connected to a cargo bay. Surely someone at NASA knows how to tac a sailboat in the wind.
    - or -
    Sit on 1960s technology another 40 years and launch the Centennial Series, to Low Earth Orbit and (maybe) Beyond.

  • @SMunro
    @SMunro 6 месяцев назад

    Lasers dont need to push a ship to 10% the speed of light. It can push hydrogen to 10% light speed and have it push solar sails of a ship.

  • @Frikiman_H
    @Frikiman_H Год назад

    Confirmed: talking about Mars shaves your beard.

  • @world_still_spins
    @world_still_spins Год назад +1

    2x speed on youtube seems to help somewhat.

  • @gyrran
    @gyrran Год назад

    dope vid, but can you please be more specific about the atmospheric density? 2:04 / 14:26

  • @zizimugen4470
    @zizimugen4470 8 месяцев назад

    Why was this recommended to me three years after i saw it?

  • @evolancer211
    @evolancer211 7 месяцев назад

    Aren't hall thrusters the same as ion propulsion?

  • @morninggloryvisuals
    @morninggloryvisuals 11 месяцев назад

    Why Do Half of All Mars Missions Fail? Freedom units...

  • @Isamudyson84
    @Isamudyson84 Год назад +1

    Could be wrong here, but humanity landed a probe on Venus six years before landing anything on Mars.

  • @donnygraham4378
    @donnygraham4378 Год назад

    great

  • @ausnetting
    @ausnetting Год назад +7

    Do lasers experience kickback from the light they send out? If so, why not just point a big laser out the back of the spaceship and turn it on?

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Год назад +1

      no, they do not

    • @patar3323
      @patar3323 Год назад +2

      Ions do, they have ion engines. They're great with nuclear batteries, cause they do tiny thrusts for a long time

    • @trolly4233
      @trolly4233 Год назад +1

      because it takes too long to accelerate. like, the sun will scald the earth before you get anywhere (probably not but its too slow to be practical)

    • @abstractlizard9377
      @abstractlizard9377 Год назад

      Light has no mass, no

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад +2

      ​@@abstractlizard9377 there's a thing called photon pressure.

  • @timfriday9106
    @timfriday9106 11 месяцев назад +1

    would be cool to see multiple propultion systems one that uses electricity like the ones we have now for small adjustments. the laser sail thing for zooming, and back up chemical propellant that can be engaged for both main and minor propultion. so you can make the best choice for each situation

  • @impeachy1518
    @impeachy1518 11 месяцев назад

    The meaning of life is 42..
    And the two wisest phrases are
    1. "Knowing is half the battle!" (☝️There is either something we still do not know, or something we know but aren't confronting. Also possibly something we don't know that would whoop our azzaleas into a great red spot like the eye of Jupiter)
    "Choose a Nice one.. And not too expensive!" (🤔 Perhaps we have spent too much of everything developing space lasers.. 👉Just in general not the Jewish ones.. in particular.. reference.)

  • @SMunro
    @SMunro 6 месяцев назад

    A helicopter whose rotor magnets are attracting iron dust from dust storms. So we might farm iron for laser 3-D printers using magnets.

  • @W.Rain.
    @W.Rain. Год назад +6

    When the landing systems were described, it was very much a moment of: "Yeah, I know that type of engineer".
    As in the vibes and attitudes are very much reflective of different approaches mechanical eng. have.

  • @SynicalBeats
    @SynicalBeats 11 месяцев назад

    6:27 you mean "support human life AGAIN"

  • @richross4781
    @richross4781 Год назад +1

    Mars is a hazy and dead world. We will never see Mars as a home for many millions of years yet. Once the sun expands, cooks our world, then we may be able to use it.
    Until then, we will be staying here.

  • @Forgan_Mreeman
    @Forgan_Mreeman Год назад +3

    is there a reason they didn’t mention landing on Venus that i’m missing?

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад +2

      Because this video isn't about Venus?

    • @Brucie69
      @Brucie69 Год назад

      Or that time we slammed a probe into Saturn

    • @Forgan_Mreeman
      @Forgan_Mreeman Год назад

      @@maksphoto78 when he said mars is the only planet we’ve landed on, that wasn’t true. why would he leave out landing on venus?

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад

      @@Forgan_Mreeman USSR did it, this is a US channel. They tend to ignore anything not done by the US. You are right though, before Mars we humans had landed on the moon, earth & venus

    • @australien6611
      @australien6611 Год назад

      ​@@Forgan_Mreemanmaybe by "we" he means NASA or the U.S.? Seems a poor oversight of his..

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 Год назад

    Arrow show?
    (a few minutes later)
    Ah! Aeroshell.

  • @ZA-mb5di
    @ZA-mb5di 6 месяцев назад

    It's because
    whether we wanted it or not, we'ce stepped into war with the Cabal on Mars

  • @fcsuper
    @fcsuper Год назад

    You said it. It's Martians. :)

  • @OptimusPrime-od3zh
    @OptimusPrime-od3zh Год назад

    Nice video

  • @kwilliams5260
    @kwilliams5260 7 месяцев назад

    I thought it was John Batista for a moment

  • @krazy8242
    @krazy8242 8 месяцев назад

    Is no one gonna mention the shave jumpscare??

  • @frankalphonso268
    @frankalphonso268 10 месяцев назад

    Now I must go play kerbal space program

  • @TheMastersHarvest
    @TheMastersHarvest 9 месяцев назад

    Because that's what the script calls for.

  • @jay23cr
    @jay23cr Год назад +3

    OMG how old is this video? "Mars 2020 in the next few years"!

    • @TheDoomLordd
      @TheDoomLordd Год назад

      Yea Mars2020 already happened and has a Drone Helicopter and the works, video is so outdated

    • @francislutz8027
      @francislutz8027 Год назад +1

      What got me is the "artists rendering" of what the drone copter "may" look like in 2020.
      Pretty sure I could have traced a real picture of it for them or something

    • @tiffanysandmeier4753
      @tiffanysandmeier4753 11 месяцев назад

      It is a compilation video. I am pretty sure I watched this year's ago

  • @hellegennes
    @hellegennes Год назад

    He says that before Mars we had only landed on the Moon and the Earth but in reality Venus was the third celestial body, not Mars.

  • @AlbertaGeek
    @AlbertaGeek Год назад

    I don't know, why do half of my Kerbal missions fail?

  • @Heartsanime
    @Heartsanime Год назад

    Are we not able to send enough satellites around mars and either earth moons orbit to create an almost instantaneous relay that we can use whatever method of landing to be able to adjust to the variables on mars? We should be focusing on that if we want to minimize risk of the astronauts we plan to send there.
    Also we know the rotation on mars and should be able to get a rough estimate of the landing zone? Unless we haven't mapped all of the surfaces of mars? But it is safe to say that regardless you will be landing on an uneven surface on even the "flattest" part of mars. Regardless of a "soft" landing it seems the major issue is slowing down the speed of mass that we are sending there.
    With the retro rockets can't we adjust the chemicals in a way that maximizes the counter force according to mar's atmosphere rather than our own? I don't know the specifics but surely a chemist and liquid gas and or whatever is used professional create a "reverse rocket fuel" to boost the power of the retro rockets. Since there is a lot less oxygen in mar's atmosphere they should adjust accordingly?
    Bear in mind I have written out these questions before even watching 11 minutes of this. after the 15:30 timestamp my question is not to use earths conventual means of creating lift but adjusting accordingly? The amount of oxygen is clearly a problem of landing and even more so re-orbiting. I mean we haven't even got earths atmosphere down to a science that we can cleanly enter and re-land on our own planet let alone re-send objects from mars surface.
    I know it is more expensive on the side of breaking earths atmosphere part but the issue seems at this point is landing on mars safely and traveling mass distances. Send to james webb telescope satellites into mar's moons orbit and collect data accordingly and adjust from there. I gave up after hanks info.

    • @drewberrymore2415
      @drewberrymore2415 Год назад +1

      To answer the first part of your post, that wouldn't help. Such a satellite collection could help with mars to mars communication.. the 7 minutes of terror are caused by the distance between the earth and mars. No matter how many satellites you have around mars this distance is unaffected.
      Eventually if laser communication is perfected a satellite in orbit around mars could communicate with a satellite around the earth shortening the delay. In such a scenario, only 1 satellite is needed around mars.

    • @Heartsanime
      @Heartsanime Год назад

      @@drewberrymore2415 That is my question. OUR moons can and do orbit at a radius that makes it "unpredictable" Create a lesser distance between the two or increase the numbers between the two..
      Incorrect. There cannot be a constant laser connecting the two as you would need to calculate and connect the two in such a way that what you say is impossible. Regarding light and physics.. My main issue is our ability to send and receive radio signals.

    • @drewberrymore2415
      @drewberrymore2415 Год назад +1

      @@HeartsanimeIndeed, it could not be a constant connection with a single satellite.. but one can make sure the landing happens when such a connection is possible.
      Are you suggesting we bounce signals off a satellite in lunar orbit? If so, this could augment bandwidth but won't affect the delay. The signal still has to travel the same distance even if it is relayed along the way(unless the operators are in lunar orbit)

    • @mehere8038
      @mehere8038 Год назад +1

      @@Heartsanime we can't send anything faster than the speed of light no! That's impossible! Satellites don't change the laws of physics!

  • @kwilliams5260
    @kwilliams5260 7 месяцев назад

    Why don't they use magnets inside the rover which could cause artificial gravitation with electromagnetism.

  • @meejinhuang
    @meejinhuang Год назад +2

    This will happen if they try to send a human to Mars.

  • @unclesamuk8687
    @unclesamuk8687 11 месяцев назад

    Aliens...

  • @TPPMac1
    @TPPMac1 Год назад +2

    What's happened to SciShow Space? It's been 3ish months now since a video there.

    • @rickkwitkoski1976
      @rickkwitkoski1976 Год назад +3

      They deprecated that channel. Everything is now posted here.

    • @TPPMac1
      @TPPMac1 Год назад +1

      @@rickkwitkoski1976 Thanks! I always thought they should have done that anyway, but I didn't see any news about it.

    • @bbartky
      @bbartky Год назад

      @@TPPMac1 In the very last episode of SciShow Space they say at the end it’s the last episode. I understand they had to do it for budgetary reasons but I preferred having a separate channel for space.

    • @TPPMac1
      @TPPMac1 Год назад

      @@bbartky So they did! thanks for pointing it out as I'd either missed the video, or, more likely, was laying in bed watching it and dozed off.

  • @CritterKeeper01
    @CritterKeeper01 Год назад

    If a photon hits a solar sail and transfers momentum into the sail, does that mean the photon *loses* momentum? Does the photon slow down?

    • @ausnetting
      @ausnetting Год назад +2

      The photon reflects off the sail and transfers twice its momentum to the sail.

    • @CritterKeeper01
      @CritterKeeper01 Год назад

      @Aaron Hancock How can a photon add energy to the sail without losing energy itself? Doesn't that violate Newton's Laws? Hence my original question.

    • @maksphoto78
      @maksphoto78 Год назад +1

      ​@@CritterKeeper01 The photon is absorbed. When light is reflected, new photons are actually created. Photons aren't bouncy balls.

    • @CritterKeeper01
      @CritterKeeper01 Год назад

      @@maksphoto78 Okay, so why doesn't the new photon being created require just as much loss of energy as the old one being absorbed imparted? I'm just trying to see how we aren't getting something for nothing here.

    • @ausnetting
      @ausnetting Год назад

      @@CritterKeeper01 Photons have no mass, but they have momentum. In classical physics that momentum is described by p(photon momentum)=h/λ. In quantum physics it’s given by p=E/c.
      Imagine a photon as a perfectly elastic (but extremely tiny) billiard ball. Imagine the sail as a perfectly elastic billiard table rail. When the billiard ball hits the rail, it bounces back at the same speed but in the reflected direction. If perfectly perpendicular, it transfers 2x the kinetic energy it had to the billiard rail. If it was absorbed (stopped) it would transfer 1x it’s kinetic energy to the rail.
      This makes a black (absorptive) sail ½ as effective as a reflective sail.

  • @mathieugariepy2948
    @mathieugariepy2948 Год назад

    I say it's a curse!

  • @jamescifer2824
    @jamescifer2824 Год назад +1

    What if we developed an AI that would be sent down with a rover and act as the "Controller" for the Mars Helicopter?

    • @gloriouslumi
      @gloriouslumi Год назад +3

      We simply aren't there yet, and won't be until we achieve AGI, or Artificial General Intelligence. Right now we only have AI, which is very good at completing very narrow tasks. It may be able to complete these tasks, but it doesn't have any **understanding** of what the task is, or why it is doing what it is doing. So when something outside of it's limited purview happens, it can't adjust because it doesn't actually understand the processes it's completing.
      I like to compare it to the human body vs the human brain. The body carries out innumerous functions all on its own, without consciously needing to control it. If the body is damaged, it automatically starts minimizing injury and repair damage all on its own. But the body doesn't know the nature of the damage. It doesn't know that you just cut your femoral artery and no amount of clotting is going to stop it. That's AI. Your brain, on the other hand, is capable of that understanding, and is able to respond appropriately to stop the bleeding or seek help. That's AGI.

    • @abstractlizard9377
      @abstractlizard9377 Год назад

      Computers need electricity

    • @tietosanakirja
      @tietosanakirja Год назад +1

      I'm sure we're heading that way, though maybe not as sci-fi as you might think. It will look like increasingly sophisticated autopilots that can recognize features of interest and navigate obstacles with more autonomy.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 10 месяцев назад

    Because interplanetary travel is complicated?

  • @cariyaputta
    @cariyaputta Год назад

    L means Learning

  • @quietwon8992
    @quietwon8992 11 месяцев назад

    Antigravity reactor is the only way. Im sure its been secretly done.

  • @harrycee656
    @harrycee656 10 месяцев назад

    D-Star how original. 😂

  • @morenauer
    @morenauer Год назад +3

    We keep forgetting we need to bring our own oxygen supply. Who'd've thunk!

    • @Lighthouse_out_of_order
      @Lighthouse_out_of_order Год назад +1

      Not entirely true. Martin-Marietta (later became Lockheed-Martin) developed an automated oxygen production plant using Mars' Carbon-Dioxide atmosphere. The plant is small enough to get flown to Mars. The idea was (maybe is??) to send the plant to Mars about two years before humans are launched. By the time they will get there, they will have an air supply for over a year ready and waiting for them on Mars.
      So you only have to carry from Earth the oxygen to a one way trip. The oxygen for both the mission on Mars' surface and the voyage home will be produced on Mars.

  • @TheDoomLordd
    @TheDoomLordd Год назад

    Did this video get Reuploaded as this is all old news

    • @awaredeshmukh3202
      @awaredeshmukh3202 Год назад +1

      It's a compilation video

    • @TheDoomLordd
      @TheDoomLordd Год назад +1

      @@awaredeshmukh3202 for a compilation video its still old news

    • @bbartky
      @bbartky Год назад +1

      @@TheDoomLordd Right. I don’t blame them for making these compilation videos but they should, at a minimum, remove the outdated sections.

  • @BerryTheBnnuy
    @BerryTheBnnuy 7 месяцев назад

    Saying that half the probes that have gone to Mars have either crashed or disappeared is a little unfair... The vast majority of those failed missions were Russia just throwing garbage at Mars and hoping something will land safely.

  • @TheKrispyfort
    @TheKrispyfort 11 месяцев назад

    Wakanda expanded to Mars

  • @kwasiadisi3633
    @kwasiadisi3633 5 месяцев назад

    Venus??

  • @dravenstone8532
    @dravenstone8532 11 месяцев назад

    He shaved between shots!

  • @norikadolmy7274
    @norikadolmy7274 Год назад

    I wonder if we could use refraction to slow the light powered ships... like if there was a panel made of a material like glass or water which could slow the light from the beam and slow down the probe

  • @Nothing2150
    @Nothing2150 10 месяцев назад

    Why would it take 8 minutes to send the message to mars. Its only 3 light minutes away ?
    Unless you're talking about sending the message to the sun

    • @peeperleviathan2839
      @peeperleviathan2839 9 месяцев назад

      It has to come back and the sun is closer to 4 minutes away

  • @Manibular
    @Manibular Год назад +2

    "ion engines just aren't ready to do that yet..."
    Looks like we found who's afraid of commitment. 😢

  • @Tetianka.Ukrainka
    @Tetianka.Ukrainka Год назад

    Why in the video published in 2023 you are talking about Perseverance in future tense? It landed in 2021.

  • @michaeljfigueroa
    @michaeljfigueroa Год назад

    Who is this guy? Where's the regular guy?

  • @nicholasjaworski9368
    @nicholasjaworski9368 Год назад +1

    Yeah let’s forget about the Venus landing

  • @bigdogoutdoors4985
    @bigdogoutdoors4985 11 месяцев назад

    Frying pan voice.

  • @adpirtle
    @adpirtle Год назад +1

    I miss SciShow Space.

  • @josephdonais4778
    @josephdonais4778 Год назад

    1:05 Key to Mars, get easy feet off the table👣 and lend a better hand.👌
    18:03 "...channel...", /double take as I was wondering how a CBS illustration fit into this.

  • @44bthknuckles
    @44bthknuckles Год назад +1

    why are some people better at math or arithmatic and others arent?

    • @manjsher3094
      @manjsher3094 Год назад

      Early childhood education?

    • @Gertyutz
      @Gertyutz 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@manjsher3094 Yes. When I went to school in the '50's and '60's, if you were a girl, no one encouraged you to be better in math. It wasn't considered as important for girls as reading.

  • @xpndblhero5170
    @xpndblhero5170 4 месяца назад

    They failed because you didn't make this video 33:33.... The universe is punishing you.
    😂