Here's an interesting analysis of the economics of SpaceX, and calculations as to the financial costs involved. Also, a sobering view of Starship economics.
Space Review SpaceX Analysis
Space Review SpaceX Analysis
I hope nobody thought building a self-sustaining colony on Mars would be cheap.Here's an interesting analysis of the economics of SpaceX, and calculations as to the financial costs involved. Also, a sobering view of Starship economics.
Space Review SpaceX Analysis
Or a pleasant place to live. Huge daily temperature swings with extremely low overnight temperatures, micrometer size dust particles to infiltrate machinery and human lungs, high levels of surface radiation with spikes during solar proton events. The atmosphere is too thin and composition not suited for human life, no readily available water, negligible soil organics and no complex soil microbiome that supports plant growth on earth and unknown effects of long term, low (~1/3rd G) surface gravity on humans.I hope nobody thought building a self-sustaining colony on Mars would be cheap.
How many people died in the 1600s when they came to North America?Or a pleasant place to live. Huge daily temperature swings with extremely low overnight temperatures, micrometer size dust particles to infiltrate machinery and human lungs, high levels of surface radiation with spikes during solar proton events. The atmosphere is too thin and composition not suited for human life, no readily available water, negligible soil organics and no complex soil microbiome that supports plant growth on earth and unknown effects of long term, low (~1/3rd G) surface gravity on humans.
Antartica is a much more benign environment.
Many!How many people died in the 1600s when they came to North America?
negligible soil organics
NASAspaceflight member Steven Pietrobon has collected pictures from Musk Mars talk. They are attached to this post.
Starship Update presentation - May 2025
Starship Update presentation - May 2025forum.nasaspaceflight.com
Archibald posted that previously, and I wouldn’t call it sobering, because his central premise - that nobody outside SpaceX knows its financials - renders his entire article meaningless. It would have been more honest for him to say, “I wanted this conclusion, so I made these numbers up to fit it,” in the places he does actually use numbers. Yes, sometimes he quotes others’ work, but too often he just assumes a number that sounds good without reflecting if it *is* good.Here's an interesting analysis of the economics of SpaceX, and calculations as to the financial costs involved. Also, a sobering view of Starship economics.
Space Review SpaceX Analysis
The only real issue with Mars that we can’t fairly readily solve is the gravity. Everything else - temperature swings, atmosphere, water, and such - is an engineering problem with a reasonable solution.Or a pleasant place to live. Huge daily temperature swings with extremely low overnight temperatures, micrometer size dust particles to infiltrate machinery and human lungs, high levels of surface radiation with spikes during solar proton events. The atmosphere is too thin and composition not suited for human life, no readily available water, negligible soil organics and no complex soil microbiome that supports plant growth on earth and unknown effects of long term, low (~1/3rd G) surface gravity on humans.
Antartica is a much more benign environment.
Still an engineering challenge and not a dealbreaker. Much of Earth is habitable to us only through advanced technology. Mars would be the same even if it were otherwise more Earthlike.Many!
But not of radiation poisoning or lack of breathable air. And when they arrived, they could grow crops and raise animals...
Easily remedied by washing the soil. Perchlorates are a problem, but a well-understood one.Also the Martian regolith is loaded with perchlorate which would need to be neutralised in any of it being used to make soil (Which would also require the introduction of benign microbes imported from Earth).
Yes, many. And then they learned to live in their new home.Many!
But not of radiation poisoning or lack of breathable air. And when they arrived, they could grow crops and raise animals...
Or not. People seem to think a fully, rapidly reusable rocket, with over twice the liftoff thrust of a Saturn V, would be a walk in the park. When it runs into a rough patch, they lose their minds, and suddenly the sky is falling. Anybody who knows anything about development recognizes it for what it is: part of the learning process. Of course, in the West, not quitting at the first sign of difficulty is an alien concept but pushing through it is the only way to success.I think it is because, for a long time, the Moon was seen as a poor relation to Mars in regard as to space program priorities, even though money spent on the former would have contributed to the latter in the long term. Attempts by some of the more ah, more strident Mars advocates in the last 20yrs or so have the Moon totally bypassed by space efforts, manned and otherwise, in favour of Mars may have ended up severely backfiring in the present day.
No hate intended,don't get the hate for Mars.
Yes, and the SpaceX approach is different than in the past large rocket programs. In their case, they concede that things will go awry, and as long as they learn from each launch and correct problems, it will continue. It's an evolutionary process. And they have set up a continuous production capacity for the Starship and booster. Most importantly, the plan calls for recovery and reuse, rather than dumping the components into the water. The success of that model has been amply demonstrated by their Falcon 9.People seem to think a fully, rapidly reusable rocket, with over twice the liftoff thrust of a Saturn V, would be a walk in the park. When it runs into a rough patch, they lose their minds, and suddenly the sky is falling.
What does ‘workable and sustainable’ mean in this context? We know there are ample sources of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, three of the most important elements to sustain life, on Mars. Martian dirt is rich in iron. Martian water is rich in deuterium. And so on. There are few good reasons to assume that we can’t scale manufacturing on Mars, given that the primary difference in design is gravity, and not everything is gravity-dependent in operation.No hate intended,
I am all for exploration and small settlements to scope out exactly what is available (in terms of resources) on Mars. So far, rovers and satellites are the only source of information on conditions and minerals available. As BlueAbyssmal says, there are technical solutions, but are they workable and sustainable on Mars on a large scale?
Resources are a product of the human imagination, not something that already exists. That’s why it’s so common to be able to substitute one raw material for other to accomplish a particular goal - take something as simple as electrical wiring. The raw materials are there. In this case, the challenges are finding them and accessing them cost-effectively, but Martians will have a significant advantage in that there haven’t been thousands of years of mining already ongoing. As far as support from Earth, I do not know of anyone who expects Mars to be completely autarkic any time soon. Self sufficient in many basic goods, perhaps, by the time a million people live on Mars, but most nations on Earth aren’t autarkic either. There’s been plenty of planning on this subject already though - from the Mars Society and beyond. Nexus Aurora has put a lot of thought into an initial colony, as have people such as Casey Handmer (who is presently running a company whose mission applies pretty well to Mars - hydrocarbon synthesis).The question is, will Mars grow past an outpost or will there be enough Martian resources to successfully sustain a larger population (such as Elon's 1 million inhabitants) without significant support from earth for missing resources. Time will tell.
The initial question to be answered by early exploration is how much of those resources are readily available, how much energy will it take to extract and process them, and what percentage of necessary minerals are present. As a specific example, nitrogen content of the atmosphere is much lower than on Earth, and the atmosphere much thinner. Soil nitrogen is much lower. Nitrogen will be necessary for plant growth. So it's there, but how much work will it take to extract in large quantities for plants? These are open question, along with many others.What does ‘workable and sustainable’ mean in this context? We know there are ample sources of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, three of the most important elements to sustain life, on Mars. Martian dirt is rich in iron. Martian water is rich in deuterium. And so on.
All of them. Including the ones who stayed behind.How many people died in the 1600s when they came to North America?
That is the correct answer.All of them. Including the ones who stayed behind.
All of them. Including the ones who stayed behind.
It is not possible to terraform Antarctica without causing enormous damage to the rest of the planet.Look, we all want to be like GerMars, but do we really have the pure strength of will?!"
Making Mars a livable place would likely include such fun activities as orbital mirrors hundreds or thousands of KM in diameter; liberal use of Project Plowshare nukes to make channels and such; orbital bombardment with comets and asteroids; genetic engineering of invasive species of bacteria, algae and plants; the construction of vast industrial facilities whose main output is staggering quantities of greenhouse gases. Now... do any of those sound like they'd be allowed for terraforming Antarctica?
TerraformationThat's loser thinking right there, buddy! Sure, a temperate Antarctica will mean the oceans die and the forests burn, but that's a small price to pay for warm, toasty thawed shoggoths.
That's why most of the money will come from off world.
Why not both?
To have a new branch not just of mankind, but of pine trees, cats and bunnies? Yer gotdammed right it is.
The effort required to make a sustainable biosphere on Mars would be immense. But once achieved, it'll be possible to replicate it a million times throughout the system, from Ganymede to the clouds of Venus to paraterraformed Saturn to bubbled asteroids to artificial habs made by the gigaton.
One may as well have asked where the money to build the infrastructure of the modern world, from the US, to Canada, Europe, China, Japan, and beyond, came from. Economic activity in every region paid for massive construction projects that would boggle the minds of our ancestors. It's a fairer question to ask how will the Martians start up an economy, but there are options there; supporting asteroid mining companies in the Belt; driving development of new technologies thanks to their unique pressures that Earth simply doesn't have; and ultimately, circulating goods and services on Mars itself, rather than relying on outside sources alone. Few (if any - I don't recall offhand) nations on Earth rely on trade for a majority of their economic growth.That's why most of the money will come from off world.
Even though it is a longer trip--maybe Titan's hydrocarbons is what opens things up.
yes is true, if amount of hypercarbons are low on Mars, we need to import them from Titan or Asteroid beltWe'll still need plastics. And we might need to pump Titan dry for hydrocarbons to turn bare rocks into farms
All of them. Including the ones who stayed behind.
There were already people here in 1600. Indeed, there were people here before the Egyptians built the pyramids. Diseases brought by Europeans (also here, in North America, before the 1600s) killed large portions of the native population.How many people died in the 1600s when they came to North America?
Frankly, I would prefer O'Neil type colony on the Earth-Moon L1.Neat. So whose Mars colony *would* you move to?
i have allot question on O'Niel cylinders:Frankly, I would prefer O'Neil type colony on the Earth-Moon L1.
Frankly, I would prefer O'Neil type colony on the Earth-Moon L1.
If there is a good reason for the first cylinder, more will be built and by doing so from the experience accumulated in space they will be more and more perfect.i have allot question on O'Niel cylinders:
Can they easy to build with Earth, Lunar, asteroids resources ?
how look with life span of cylinder decades, centuries ?
Can O'Niel cylinder and Stanford Torus can have stable ecology ? ( i mean Life support and supplied)
what about corrosion ? externally (sun radiation, atomic oxygen) and Internal (water rust decaying structure)
When the lava formed those tunnels millions of years ago no one explained to him that he should not do it again, this time the path would be made. The tunnels are the line of the least resistance for the advance of lava. That is the reason why it is forbidden to build on the banks of rivers.Nah, no need for them. Why bother building from scratch in deep space a cylinder 8 km wide and 32 km long; when some lunar lava tubes, while "only" 4 km in diameter, are 170 km long ? See this link https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016GL071588#grl55400-tbl-0001
Plus you have gravity, even if a little weak.
I'd argue that it's probably worth making hydrocarbons locally on Mars instead of trying to ship them in from Titan. Burning them for energy is a significant portion of their usage on Earth, and the Martians won't want to do that, preferring instead to save them for industrial or pharmaceutical use. To drill for hydrocarbons and ship them back to Mars means operating in Saturn's powerful radiation environment, and you'd want to do so as cheaply as possible, so you'd probably use solar sails or low-thrust electric propulsion - and that means many years between departure from Titan to arrival at Mars.yes is true, if amount of hypercarbons are low on Mars, we need to import them from Titan or Asteroid belt
also for Nitrogene needed for Habitats on Mars
while Titan has some advances for Heavy Industry to work better efficiency do lower temperatures on Titan.
I'll push back for this reason: I think offworld colonies will struggle to attract immigrants if they don't treat them well. Why move to BezosHabGamma if you'll be treated the same or worse as where you live now? Especially in the early years, labor will be too expensive for anyone to risk maltreatment (and making oxygen is pretty easy). Authoritarianism of the sort you postulate appears to me to be far more likely among settled societies with long histories, not young colonies working hard just to survive. Yes, it makes for good fiction, but few people would write - or read - a story about an orbital habitat that didn't have conflict, intrigue or the like.Also, I would never move to a colony established by somebody like Musk or Bezos. Company towns around the mines in Pennsylvania or West Virginia were bad enough, but they couldn't charge you for the air and didn't have the technology for 24/7 surveillance.
A) we don't know how much gravity we need to have healthy children, b) solar energy is far easier to access in free space, c) what if we don't want to live on the Moon? There's other reasons, but those are three of them.Nah, no need for them. Why bother building from scratch in deep space a cylinder 8 km wide and 32 km long; when some lunar lava tubes, while "only" 4 km in diameter, are 170 km long ? See this link https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016GL071588#grl55400-tbl-0001
Plus you have gravity, even if a little weak.
And they all died.
Mainly because in O'Neil colony you could have 1 g gravity, and perfect Earth-like conditions - any one you wish.Nah, no need for them. Why bother building from scratch in deep space a cylinder 8 km wide and 32 km long; when some lunar lava tubes, while "only" 4 km in diameter, are 170 km long ? See this link https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2016GL071588#grl55400-tbl-0001
Plus you have gravity, even if a little weak.
Basically this was the whole idea - the giant construction build from very simple, basic components (flat plates) that could be easily produced from Lunar materials, delivered by mass drivers, using only solar energy.Can they easy to build with Earth, Lunar, asteroids resources ?
Centuries likely. Millenias, if overhauled periodically.how look with life span of cylinder decades, centuries ?
That's the idea. They are big enough, that any ecological problem could be identified and corrected with large safety margin.Can O'Niel cylinder and Stanford Torus can have stable ecology ? ( i mean Life support and supplied)
I think Orionblamblam meant that absolutely every human who lived in 1600s eventually died) No matter did he migrate to America, or stayed in Europe, or lived in Japan and knew nothing about America or Europe)They did not, despite the best efforts of the European colonists.
that Biosphere 2 experiment show how difficult that isThat's the idea. They are big enough, that any ecological problem could be identified and corrected with large safety margin.
In space the situation must be even more dangerous because of the radiation accumulated in the airframe. The Russians have already had problems with the proliferation of bacteria inside their space station. Imagine the mutations that can emerge in a few years. But at some point, humanity will have to launch itself into space and knowing what people are like, it cannot be in a far-sighted and premeditated way, but because of something terrible. Imagine an environmental theocracy... brrrr.that Biosphere 2 experiment show how difficult that is
the site had close ecosystem to support crew of eight person from 1991 to 1993
the experiment had serious issue like collapse of part the installed ecosystem, Ant infestation (became dominant species in Biosphere 2)
Dropping oxygen level do it absorption by concrete and outgassing CO2
during first year the crew experience hunger do issue of farming but solve the issue.
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Biosphere 2 - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org