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Will Life On Mars Ever Be Possible? | Unveiled
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2 years ago
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00:00
From ancient Babylon, Egypt, and Greece to modern times, Mars has fascinated those who
00:05
observe the cosmos.
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Mars is the closest planet to ours, making it the next great frontier after the 1969
00:12
moon landing.
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But despite promises from governments and billionaires, progress on Martian exploration
00:17
has been slow in recent years.
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Will we ever take the next great step in space exploration?
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Can we?
00:24
This is Unveiled, and today we're answering the extraordinary question; will life on Mars
00:29
ever be possible?
00:31
Do you need the big questions answered?
00:32
Are you constantly curious?
00:34
Then why not subscribe to Unveiled for more clips like this one?
00:37
And ring the bell for more thought-provoking content!
00:41
To answer this question, we need to identify the major hurdles standing between humanity
00:46
and the Red Planet.
00:47
The most immediate problem is diminishing public support for space exploration.
00:52
According to the Pew Research Centre, 69% of Americans in 2023 believe that the US should
00:57
be a leader in space exploration.
00:59
While that's high, it's down 3% from 2018.
01:03
And space exploration has never been a top priority for voters, who generally have more
01:08
earthly concerns.
01:09
In 2019, another Pew poll found that roughly two-thirds of Americans believe that NASA
01:14
should focus more on climate change than on space exploration.
01:18
That sentiment was shared by former NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver.
01:23
Why then should we even care about Mars?
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First, it's hard to overstate the significant technological and scientific advances a concerted
01:31
Mars shot could produce.
01:33
The Apollo missions to the moon, for example, represented huge leaps forward in technology.
01:38
The technologies developed for Apollo missions have affected everything from footwear to
01:43
firefighting.
01:44
They discovered new construction materials and load-bearing methods.
01:48
NASA scientists pioneered solar panels, cordless power tools and digital imaging tech now used
01:54
in medical scanners like MRIs.
01:56
Their tremendous impact on our day-to-day lives has been immeasurable, permeating every
02:01
aspect of modern technology.
02:03
A Mars mission could do the same in the 21st century, ushering in a new era of consumer
02:08
and industrial technologies.
02:10
Biologists believe that studying Martian history could help us understand life on Earth and
02:15
elsewhere in the cosmos.
02:16
That same 2023 Pew poll saw more than half of Americans excited about space tourism.
02:22
Finally, there is no way to quantify the economic potential of space mining.
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Mars is the closest planet in the solar system to the asteroid belt.
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NASA has claimed that the mineral and rare element wealth contained within the belt is
02:35
equivalent to around $100 billion for every individual on Earth.
02:40
The installation of a Martian mining base could lead to a 21st century gold rush.
02:44
A sobering but glaring fact remains, however.
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Even if the human race drummed up the collective willpower to explore and colonise Mars, there
02:52
are two major practical obstacles.
02:54
The first is its distance from the Earth.
02:57
On a cosmic scale, Mars is our closest neighbour - just one door over, so to speak.
03:02
On a human scale, well, close is a relative term.
03:06
In truth, the average distance between Mars and Earth is 140 million miles.
03:10
With our current technology, a one-way trip to Mars takes about six and a half months.
03:16
That means that if something were to go wrong with a Mars mission, there's very little
03:19
help available for our astronauts.
03:21
Worse, outside of Earth's magnetosphere, astronauts are exposed to solar radiation,
03:27
which can penetrate spacecraft and spacesuits.
03:30
The longer the trip to Mars, the more exposed astronauts are to harmful solar winds.
03:35
While we're currently working on countermeasures, we don't yet have a definitive answer.
03:39
To make Mars colonisation feasible, we need to significantly cut down on that travel time.
03:45
Fortunately, there are plans in the works to get us there faster.
03:49
And teams around the world are working on new propulsion systems that, if successful,
03:53
could potentially open up our entire solar system to exploration.
03:58
At the start of 2023, the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts, or NIAC, division approved
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14 new propulsion concepts for Phase One development.
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In the summer of 2023, NASA announced a new partnership with DARPA and defence contractor
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Lockheed Martin.
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The organisations are going to design and build a nuclear-powered rocket.
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A nuclear-powered engine could be three times more efficient than a standard chemical rocket.
04:24
Projections cut a six-to-seven-month odyssey with a chemical rocket down to just a 45-day
04:28
jaunt with a nuclear engine.
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NASA hopes to put a working prototype into space by 2025.
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Private companies, too, are getting in on the alternative propulsion market.
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Evo Limited is partnering with SpaceX to launch and test their electric quantum drive in October
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of 2023.
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If successful, they could rewrite what we know about the laws of physics, creating thrust
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without propellant.
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The last and most daunting barrier to colonising Mars is that the Red Planet is a dead planet.
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Mars is arid, rocky, and cold.
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The Martian atmosphere, such as it exists, is over 100 times thinner than ours.
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The average temperature on Mars is about minus 80 degrees Fahrenheit, and Martian gravity
05:10
is just over one-third of standard Earth gravity.
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Those are workable problems, but when you factor in the lack of liquid water and a lack
05:18
of oxygen, Mars appears to be less than hospitable.
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To be clear, there is water on Mars, in the form of ice, especially at the poles.
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Studies have also discovered ice sequestered underneath the Martian surface.
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While we don't yet have technologies needed to extract and thaw that ice, NASA is hopeful.
05:36
They hold a yearly competition for university science departments called "Mars Ice Challenge".
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They're optimistic that emerging technologies will make ice mining a feasible solution.
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The atmosphere, though, is a trickier problem.
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The Martian atmosphere is 95% carbon dioxide.
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There is virtually no oxygen to speak of - bad for humans - and very little nitrogen - bad
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for plants.
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On top of that, because the air pressure is so low, colonists would have to live in pressurised
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habitats.
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There is a debate among scientists and engineers about the ethics of how to deal with these
06:08
issues.
06:09
Some advocate for exploring and colonising space in situ, adapting ourselves to the environment.
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Others say that sustainable colonisation requires terraforming, or adapting the planet to our
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needs.
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NASA is currently working on options for both.
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For example, NIAC has partnered with TechShot Incorporated to create sealed biodomes for
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in situ colonisation.
06:32
Using screw mechanisms to mine subsurface ice for water, they would deploy large colonies
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of oxygen-producing cyanobacteria and algae.
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This way, colonists could have a sustainable source of oxygen.
06:45
Terraforming is a more complicated matter.
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We would need to essentially create a liveable atmosphere from scratch by triggering a greenhouse
06:51
effect.
06:52
Filling the atmosphere with greenhouse gases would both thicken it and warm the planet.
06:57
Elon Musk once proposed nuking Martian poles to release greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
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The problem is that Mars likely doesn't naturally have enough of those compounds to
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terraform the planet completely.
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Scientists have proposed importing ammonia, methane, or other hydrocarbons from planetary
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bodies within the solar system.
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The practicality of those plans is dubious, given current technology.
07:20
However, with upgraded propulsion systems, it would be much easier to travel to various
07:25
moons and asteroids to extract those elements and transport them.
07:29
Another slightly more feasible plan would be the importation of fluoride compounds,
07:34
like PFCs and CFCs.
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These compounds have more bang to the greenhouse buck than CO2 and ammonia.
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Generating 170 kilotons of fluoride compounds per year could get us where we need within
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a decade.
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This could be achieved either by bombarding the planet with PFC and CFC rockets, or by
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local mining efforts.
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If we managed any of these complex terraforming schemes, though, all that work to create a
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habitable environment would be undone by solar radiation.
08:03
Current research suggests that at some point in the distant past, Mars was a warmer, wetter
08:07
world with an Earth-like atmosphere.
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But along the way, the Martian magnetosphere died, and solar winds wiped its atmosphere
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away.
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Without a magnetic field to protect the planet, any atmosphere we create would be temporary.
08:21
And without protection from solar radiation, astronauts, explorers, scientists, and colonists
08:26
are all at increased long-term risk for cancer.
08:30
As of now, the technology to give a planet a magnetic field is well beyond our abilities.
08:35
However, NASA's former chief scientist, Jim Green, has devised a plan for that.
08:39
He's proposed erecting an artificial magnetosphere at the L1 Lagrange point between Mars and
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the sun.
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Due to the distance, it could be much smaller than a planet's magnetic field and still
08:50
shield Mars.
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With that magnetic shield in place, the atmosphere would stabilise and start to slowly terraform.
08:56
On its own.
08:58
Without any further intervention, the air pressure and temperature would both significantly
09:02
increase over time.
09:04
President John F. Kennedy announced America's moonshot in his famous 1962 speech, saying
09:10
that "we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because
09:15
they are easy, but because they are hard."
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The fact is, in terms of difficulty, colonising Mars makes travelling to the moon look like
09:24
child's play.
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The obstacles are as substantial as the potential rewards.
09:29
In a world contending with climate change, layered on top of our day-to-day concerns,
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it's easy to dismiss Mars exploration as a pipe dream.
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But while their work may not always make headlines, many scientists around the world are still
09:42
making strides towards that goal.
09:45
They are slowly, quietly, developing the technologies needed to make humanity a multi-planetary
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species.
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This colonisation would require a tremendous investment of money, effort, and hope.
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If humanity can come together with a common goal and a common dream, one day, life on
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Mars may very well be possible.
10:07
What do you think?
10:08
Is there anything we missed?
10:10
Let us know in the comments, check out these other clips from Unveiled, and make sure you
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