Elon would send Neurolink Zombies to die en masse if he could.
Comment on A City on Mars: Reality kills space settlement dreams
RGB3x3@lemmy.world 11 months agoYou don’t think all the scientists and engineers working around the world on this problem aren’t aware of the potentially fatal issues? The last thing they want is to be the reason people die in space.
Elon Musk talks a lot of shit, but the actual scientists are busy considering the real problems, dangers, and solutions to getting to and colonizing Mars.
AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 11 months ago
c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Jesus Christ you people really have no idea how space works, do you?
The guy can’t just send up his own spacecraft anymore than Lockheed Martin and Raytheon can declare war on Russia.
SpaceX sells spacecraft to NASA for them to use in the same way LM sells F-18’s to the Navy for them to use. At no point in time does Elon just get to unilaterally send civilians to Mars even if Starship was fully capable.
Everything SpaceX craft do in space is under the charter and dictation of NASA, and at the current point in time, exclusively for government/military missions. Not his own flights of fancy.
AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Hence the “if he could.”
c0mbatbag3l@lemmy.world 11 months ago
Hence why it’s a pointless comment.
Elon can’t do it, great. Next!
0x1C3B00DA@kbin.social 11 months ago
Scientists catalog what we know and don't know and try to chip away at the list of things we don't know. The whole point of the book and this article is that there is way more stuff we don't know than we realize and most discussion of space colonization tends to forget the parts we don't know.
The article even pointed out some very showstopping issues:
Space colonization may happen, but it's incredibly doubtful that it'll happen in our lifetimes.
PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee 11 months ago
Mars is actually full of oxygen. The surface is covered in oxidized iron, and trillions of tons of carbon dioxide makes up its atmosphere. Plus all the ice.
0x1C3B00DA@kbin.social 11 months ago
We can't breathe oxidized iron or carbon dioxide. We'd need to convert it into breathable oxygen and the mechanism would have to be foolproof and have redundancies. And that still leaves plenty of other problems.
But my main point was to everyone in this thread criticizing the authors for being pessimists. This isn't just naysaying or complaining. The authors are pointing out all of the necessary research we still have to do before a space colony can be feasible.
PersnickityPenguin@lemm.ee 11 months ago
NASA River has already successfully tested a carbon dioxide to oxygen conversion system.
mars.nasa.gov/mars2020/spacecraft/…/moxie/
nasa.gov/…/nasas-perseverance-mars-rover-extracts…
If they can do it on a rover, it’s pretty trivial to scale that up to an industrial scale.