![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I think it would not be necessary to terraform the entire planet, if the
Mariner Valley is indeed deep enough and able to hold in most of what's put in it, it has enough area inside by istelf to be quite enough living space to hold plenty of generations of colonists. What are the physics of this? How much "leakage" would have to be overcome? Would it have to be "roofed over" to hold in enough pressure? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Parallax" wrote in message
om... Marvin wrote in message ... (Parallax) wrote in m: Might it be possible to raise the surface temp and atmospheric density enough to make it easier for ppl to live there when astronauts get there in 15-20 yrs? I dont expect to see this happen cuz ppl think nukes are too scary but I was just wondering. Assuming you have the ability to redirect an arbitrarily huge amount of icy meteors/comets to mars. (we dont, by many MANY magnitudes, but never mind for now). Heating the place up is no problem. Incoming cometary material will posess enough kinetic energy to heat itself to many thousands of degrees. As we will need to dump trillions of tons of comets to form any real atmosphere, the problem will most definitely be excess heat, not cold. i.e. Terraforming mars by dumping comets on it will work fine if you are willing to move an *obscene* amount of comets, and do it over many years. Centuries if not millenia. There is no way to speed this method up. A *slightly* easier method would be to trigger as much deep seismic activity as possible, use vulcanism to release the needed gasses. Problem here is again the scale of energy needed. Mars has been kinda inactive for a loooong time, the molten stuff is way deeper than on earth.(1500 km down, compared to earth's 30-50km) Diverting comets theoretically shouldnt be too hard. It does not take much when the comet is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay far away to give it a tiny nudge to get its orbit to be where we want it int he inner solar system. X-rays emanating from a 1 MT nuke are a substantial nudge and we got lots of nukes. Diverting a comet to miss the Earth is easier than diverting it to hit the Earth. If a comet is aimed straight at the Earth, you have to change its course by 4100 miles to make it miss. If a comet is expected to pass 5 million miles from Earth, you have to change its course quite a bit to make it hit. Some asteroids are so massive that even a 100 megaton nuke won't change their courses much. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]() We could begin terraforming mars in a fairly short time by using nukes to alter the orbits of comets so they encounter Mars. I done accurately enough, it might be possible to have the comet torn apart by tidal forces as it comes very close to the planet to avoid impacts. The gases of the comet would become part of the new Martian atmosphere and cause some greenhouse warming. Some cometary impacts might be good to locally cause ice to melt and put water into the atmosphere for further warming. I dunno how many comets this would take or how long it would take to increase the temp of the martian surface. Havent even done the calculation of necessary mass. I would favor nukes as a way to alter a cometary orbit since the x-ray deposition in the low density comet would give it a more gentle impulse applied over the entire comet surface than a rocket mounted in one spot or other explosive methods. Furthermore, the nukes are available and maybe even the launchers. Might it be possible to raise the surface temp and atmospheric density enough to make it easier for ppl to live there when astronauts get there in 15-20 yrs? I dont expect to see this happen cuz ppl think nukes are too scary but I was just wondering. The more you heat Mars, the more atmospheret will boil off into space! |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Aozotorp" wrote in message ... The more you heat Mars, the more atmospheret will boil off into space! A Martian atmosphere of two Earth equivalent surface pressures would be stable for a geological time period. Like 10 million years. Long enough for humanity to set up home, complete terraforming, nuke ourselves back into the stone age, redevelop technology, colonize the solar system, evolving into a higher lifeform, move onto the Oort, develop FTL and head off to Andromeadia. Boil-off into space is irrelevant unless you're talking about a much more lumiscant sun and 5-billion year time periods. Regards Frank Scrooby |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Frank Scrooby" wrote in message ...
"Aozotorp" wrote in message ... The more you heat Mars, the more atmospheret will boil off into space! A Martian atmosphere of two Earth equivalent surface pressures would be stable for a geological time period. Like 10 million years. Long enough for humanity to set up home, complete terraforming, nuke ourselves back into the stone age, redevelop technology, colonize the solar system, evolving into a higher lifeform, move onto the Oort, develop FTL and head off to Andromeadia. Boil-off into space is irrelevant unless you're talking about a much more lumiscant sun and 5-billion year time periods. Regards Frank Scrooby When an object is at the farthest point of its elliptical orbit, even a tiny change in its velocity will make a huge change in the orbit (sorta like having lots of leverage). So, even a large comet could be diverted substantially with a properly placed nuke. This assumes we know a lot about the comet (density, mass, composition, compressive strength, etc). Unlike the movie Armeggedon, teh detonation does not occur within the comet but many km away, perhaps hundreds so that the x-rays from the nuke cover the entire area of the comet on that side. Most of the output of the nuke is int he formn of x-rays that are deposited within the comet "surface" causing very fast heating and ejection of the material producing an impulse distributed over the entire surface. As th comet nears Mars, decisions have to be made for impact or somehow getting tidal forces to tear it apart before it encounters the Martian atmosphere. In either case, I would assume we want to make it break up a lot so maybe then we use a nuke imbedded in it. Now that I think about it, if we changed the orbits at their farthest point, it would probably take many years for the comets to get to the inner solar system. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Aozotorp" wrote in message ... The more you heat Mars, the more atmospheret will boil off into space! A Martian atmosphere of two Earth equivalent surface pressures would be stable for a geological time period. Like 10 million years. Long enough for humanity to set up home, complete terraforming, nuke ourselves back into the stone age, redevelop technology, colonize the solar system, evolving into a higher lifeform, move onto the Oort, develop FTL and head off to Andromeadia. Boil-off into space is irrelevant unless you're talking about a much more lumiscant sun and 5-billion year time periods. Regards Frank Scrooby Really??? And you have the Physics of that worked out??? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Mike Rhino" wrote in
: Diverting comets theoretically shouldnt be too hard. It does not take much when the comet is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaay far away to give it a tiny nudge to get its orbit to be where we want it int he inner solar system. X-rays emanating from a 1 MT nuke are a substantial nudge and we got lots of nukes. Diverting a comet to miss the Earth is easier than diverting it to hit the Earth. If a comet is aimed straight at the Earth, you have to change its course by 4100 miles to make it miss. If a comet is expected to pass 5 million miles from Earth, you have to change its course quite a bit to make it hit. Some asteroids are so massive that even a 100 megaton nuke won't change their courses much. Thats the easy way to move comets, yes. But remember the original poster wanted things done "fast". To get enough comets, with a slow enough orbital speed that small nudges will direct them to the inner system, you would have to go waaaaaaaaaaaay out to the oort cloud. Care to guess what timescale you looking at, if you direct one of those bodies to the inner system and let it fall in? Hint: add 2 or 3 zeroes to your own expected lifetime!! All other objections to the cometary bombardment method of terraforming aside, just having to sit back and wait 1000++years for your ice to arrive is kinda.. boring. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Japan admits its Mars probe is failing | JimO | Policy | 16 | December 6th 03 02:23 PM |
Delta-Like Fan On Mars Suggests Ancient Rivers Were Persistent | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | November 13th 03 09:06 PM |
If You Thought That Was a Close View of Mars, Just Wait (Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter) | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | September 23rd 03 10:25 PM |
NASA Selects UA 'Phoenix' Mission To Mars | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | August 4th 03 10:48 PM |
Sixth International Mars Conference will Include Public Event | Ron Baalke | Science | 0 | July 14th 03 07:06 PM |