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The Red Sands of Mars
If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists
could if they manage their chemistry and physics. Then we can grow plants there and get Mars' oxygen atmosphere back. And we will have a second planet to play on. |
#2
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The Red Sands of Mars
On Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 8:39:15 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote:
If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. Then we can grow plants there and get Mars' oxygen atmosphere back. And we will have a second planet to play on. On Mars you live inside your space suit if you go outside your under ground cave.Mars has only 1% atmosphere,and no pressure.No way for Sun's harmful radiation to be filtered We best send robots they can do it all.My idea is robot's in size of big ants.Bert |
#3
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The Red Sands of Mars
"homoreber G=emc^2" wrote:
"My idea is robot's in size of big ants.Bert". Wrong since https://tinyurl.com/Trump-is-walking-all-over-Bert snicker-chuckle-chortle- ROTFLMAO. "O ya" |
#4
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The Red Sands of Mars
Le 11/09/2018 Ã* 17:39, Mark Earnest a écritÂ*:
If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. Then we can grow plants there and get Mars' oxygen atmosphere back. And we will have a second planet to play on. The water phase diagram shows that the water have a triple point at 0.01°C and 611Pa And the surface pressure of the Mars is between 610 and 636Pa Very just to have liquid water And Mars is leaking. It's losing 3 000 tons of his atmosphere by years. The atmospheric pressure decrease, in 3.5 billion years Mars will be like the moon |
#5
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The Red Sands of Mars
On Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 10:06:16 AM UTC-7, Herbert Glazier wrote:
On Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 8:39:15 AM UTC-7, Mark Earnest wrote: If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. Then we can grow plants there and get Mars' oxygen atmosphere back. And we will have a second planet to play on. On Mars you live inside your space suit if you go outside your under ground cave.Mars has only 1% atmosphere,and no pressure.No way for Sun's harmful radiation to be filtered We best send robots they can do it all.My idea is robot's in size of big ants.Bert When you were a kid, did you ever have a bubble come up in you nose from a soda you were drinking? Burned, didn't it! That is probably what it would feel like to be breathing Mars' CO2 atmosphere! Double-A |
#6
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The Red Sands of Mars
On 9/11/2018 8:39 AM, Mark Earnest wrote:
If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. I'd suggest you read "The sands of Mars". "The Sands of Mars" is the first novel written in 1952 by Arthur Clarke. The "goodreads" rating of 3.72 is fair, perhaps even generous. If you feel you need to read one more Clarke novel, it is fine to read. Even more so than in his other books, it is interesting how he gets some things 'right', and some things far wrong, (file cabinets & typewriters on a space ship, messages to a passenger in a sealed envelope, garbage including paper just jettisoned out & flying along with coasting ship, etc.) Certainly has some precursors to his "2001" and other books. I always find Clarke's imagination interesting as he envisions the life of plants and animals that have developed off of earth. Here are some citations with a variety of opinions and information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sands_of_Mars https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/..._Sands_of_Mars https://www.amazon.com/Sands-Mars-Ar.../dp/B00AHKJD74 or listen to a reading of it he https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRztotQsu84 |
#7
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The Red Sands of Mars
Winner!
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#8
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The Red Sands of Mars
On Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 10:21:06 PM UTC-5, a425couple wrote:
On 9/11/2018 8:39 AM, Mark Earnest wrote: If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. I'd suggest you read "The sands of Mars". "The Sands of Mars" is the first novel written in 1952 by Arthur Clarke. The "goodreads" rating of 3.72 is fair, perhaps even generous. If you feel you need to read one more Clarke novel, it is fine to read. Even more so than in his other books, it is interesting how he gets some things 'right', and some things far wrong, (file cabinets & typewriters on a space ship, messages to a passenger in a sealed envelope, garbage including paper just jettisoned out & flying along with coasting ship, etc.) Certainly has some precursors to his "2001" and other books. I always find Clarke's imagination interesting as he envisions the life of plants and animals that have developed off of earth. Here are some citations with a variety of opinions and information: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sands_of_Mars https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/..._Sands_of_Mars https://www.amazon.com/Sands-Mars-Ar.../dp/B00AHKJD74 or listen to a reading of it he https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRztotQsu84 Clarke is excellent in English and has enough imagination to keep us entertained for the full length of one of his books. He wrote mostly in times when almost nothing was known about Mars and I think he did pretty good. I always loved his book and movie, "The Martian Chronicles." |
#9
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The Red Sands of Mars
On Tuesday, September 11, 2018 at 11:11:01 AM UTC-7, Sylvain wrote:
Le 11/09/2018 Ã* 17:39, Mark Earnest a écritÂ*: If we could only get it to rain on the desert planet. I would bet the scientists could if they manage their chemistry and physics. Then we can grow plants there and get Mars' oxygen atmosphere back. And we will have a second planet to play on. The water phase diagram shows that the water have a triple point at 0.01°C and 611Pa And the surface pressure of the Mars is between 610 and 636Pa Very just to have liquid water And Mars is leaking. It's losing 3 000 tons of his atmosphere by years. The atmospheric pressure decrease, in 3.5 billion years Mars will be like the moon Mars is a lot like the moon now.Craters,mountains,sand,dust and no water.Also sun's high energy photons seperate the water molecule into its two elements.So moon and Mars can have no surface water.Also moon and Mars can have no surface microbes/. As I been posting Mars has to drill 50 feet down to see microbes.Not hard for a probing robot.Bert |
#10
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The Red Sands of Mars
"homoreber G=emc^2" wrote: Bert's arse is a lot like the moon now. As SwineBert been posting that "Tremendous https://tinyurl.com/Trump-is-walking-all-over-Bert with fire and fury like the world has never seen before" snicker-chuckle-chortle- ROTFLMAO. "O ya" |
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