LookieNoNookie -> RE: I want the WORLD to go to Mars....not just the United States.... (5/6/2013 6:01:04 PM)
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ORIGINAL: MasterCaneman quote:
ORIGINAL: Aswad Yeah, significantly less gravity. But, the West doesn't have the Will to colonize Mars. Simply put, colonizing Mars would cost less than the Second Gulf War, and we could have people living there in less than three decades. We have the Will to trash third world countries for oil, but not to safeguard our species against an asteroid impact or other global disaster. A back of envelope calculation tells us that a fully reusable launcher that can get two payloads per day to geostationary orbit without toxic emissions, using existing technology only, is about half a trillion dollars. By payload, I mean between one and three floors of the Twin Towers per launch, a couple dozen kilotons, about one thousand times our current payload capability. Some orders of magnitude to think about: An anchor: 1 ton. Space Shuttle payload: 20 tons. International Space Station: 400 tons. Space Shuttle launch vehicle: 2 kilotons. Battlestar Galactica, estimated: 50 kilotons. RMS Titanic, fully loaded weight: 52 kilotons. Nickel production pr year: 1 megaton. Twin Towers (both buildings): 1.5 megatons. The Great Pyramid of Giza: 6 megatons. Seafood harvest (pr year): 85 megatons. Weight of humanity: 400 megatons. Steel production pr year: 1 gigaton. Concrete production pr year: 3 gigatons. Global oil output (2009): 4 gigatons. CO2 output of USA (pr year): 5 gigatons. Weight of a tall mountain: 10 gigatons. CO2 in atmosphere: 700 gigatons. World coal reserves: 3 teratons. Organic matter on Earth: 10 teratons. Modest asteroid: 100 teratons. Earth atmosphere: 5 petatons. Earth oceans: 5 exatons. Moon: 70 zettatons. Earth: 5 yottatons. Putting a vessel of a few dozen kilotons on Mars is absolutely feasible. It would be orders of magnitude less than other human activities in scope, and orders of magnitude more than what we're currently doing about space. It would also cost less in every way than the war we just fought. It could be done in a few decades. And, in the process, we would be left with a launch facility that could handle kiloton range payloads, so we might as well do Venus while we're at it. But that would take the same kind of Will we apply to matters like war. China has that, apparently. IWYW, — Aswad. I like the weight comparisons. And you are very correct in why we aren't (haven't) done it yet. Another reason I wanted to bring up is we have a society that is too risk-averse, for the most part. And too litigious, in my opinion. In order to do this, we need to start taking the steps now. A GCTNR could do just what you said. And it's technically feasible. Just not socially feasible. You'd have every hippie on Earth wailing outside the launch facility about what would happen to the poor fishes and whales if one fell into the sea, forgetting all along there's already a shit-ton of less stable nuclear material already down there. In a way, Lookie is right, the only realistic way we'd get to Mars as a people would be under one flag. I don't know if I want that kind of compromise. But I would like to see a real Battlestar in commission. (Major BSG nerd here) So say we all... Which is why this should be a world gig. I think I read once that the world GDP is (currently) about 80 trillion (someone correct me if I'm wrong). 1% of GDP of the big boys and 1/2% for everyone else, with all technology shared equally, worldwide....that's gotta be at least 500 - 600 billion a year (we currently spend about 100 billion I think, at NASA?)...seriously, who would go to war with another if we were all in some kind of common cause? (Probably just about anyone, including the U.S. but....hell, it's a reasonable starting point eh? Some kind of "we're all in this together" kind of gig). It'll never happen....but I sure fucking wish it would.
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