by Roy » Sat Mar 23, 2024 5:39 pm
I love a good Martian sci-fi story, too, featuring the incomparable Dejah Thoris, princess of Helium, and Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark. But when humans get to Mars, it will probably be after we figure out how the UFOS do it. Here are the problems to consider:
Gravity is 38% of Earth gravity.
Atmosphere is equivalent to earth’s pressure at 116,500 feet altitude, is 95% carbon dioxide, no oxygen, no water, very little nitrogen, and varies up to 25% in pressure due to freezing and thawing of dry ice polar caps.
Surface temperature varies from 32 F down to -103 F.
One good thing, is the presence of dust devils and dust storms. This indicates the presence of electricity - I suspect Mars sweeps up solar electrons, just as the Earth does (magnetically channeled into auroras). The absence of a thick atmosphere probably likens the surface to a continual “Carrington Event “, and electrical power in plenty can be extracted from it. All other problems then become solvable.
I love a good Martian sci-fi story, too, featuring the incomparable Dejah Thoris, princess of Helium, and Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark. But when humans get to Mars, it will probably be after we figure out how the UFOS do it. Here are the problems to consider:
Gravity is 38% of Earth gravity.
Atmosphere is equivalent to earth’s pressure at 116,500 feet altitude, is 95% carbon dioxide, no oxygen, no water, very little nitrogen, and varies up to 25% in pressure due to freezing and thawing of dry ice polar caps.
Surface temperature varies from 32 F down to -103 F.
One good thing, is the presence of dust devils and dust storms. This indicates the presence of electricity - I suspect Mars sweeps up solar electrons, just as the Earth does (magnetically channeled into auroras). The absence of a thick atmosphere probably likens the surface to a continual “Carrington Event “, and electrical power in plenty can be extracted from it. All other problems then become solvable.