Manawatu Standard

Elon Musk wants Mars, so do we

- STEPHEN L CARTER

‘‘He awoke – and wanted Mars.’’

That’s the first line of Philip K Dick’s classic novella, We Can Remember It for You Wholesale, the inspiratio­n for the Total Recall films. I first came across the story in a sci-fi anthology back in high school and I can remember the force of the yearning the words roused in me: I wanted Mars, too. After all, men had just walked on the Moon and everybody knew Mars would be next.

Well, the Moon landing will be celebratin­g its 50th anniversar­y in two years, and human beings haven’t even tried to walk anywhere else. So when Elon Musk announced that he hopes to send a manned mission to the red planet by 2022 – just five years from now – I felt my heart leap.

The 1969 Moon landing capped an era of enormous optimism about what humanity could achieve. Norman Borlaug was saving hundreds of millions from starvation. Integrated circuits heralded a digital revolution. The campy innocence of the original Star Trek dates from those years. So do The Jetsons. People actually believed that science was the endless frontier.

Since then our species has turned its vision inward; our image of human possibilit­y has grown cramped and pessimisti­c. We dream less of reaching the stars than of winning the next election; less of maturing as a species than of shunning those who are different; less of the blessings of an advanced technologi­cal tomorrow than of an apocalypti­c future marked by a desperate struggle to survive. Maybe a focus on the possibilit­y of reaching our nearest planetary neighbour will help change all that.

Mars has long fascinated us. The ancients associated it with various gods. Venus shines brighter in the sky, but somehow we have always known that our destiny lies with Mars. Filmmakers have been taking us there for decades. The planet has intrigued novelists for well over a hundred years.

That’s all fiction. But maybe we’ll get there in reality. Nasa has been pushing the idea for years. The agency’s current timeline would put humans on the planet in the 2030s. China intends to get there first. Musk claims he can beat them both.

For those of us who dream of the stars, reaching Mars has always been a preliminar­y step. Musk agrees. His bolder plan is for humanity to advance along the path of becoming ‘‘a space-bearing civilisati­on and a multi-planetary species’’ – an ambition he laid out earlier this year in a thoughtful paper.

Musk argues that what he calls the ‘‘Apollo-style approach’’ would make the cost of colonising Mars prohibitiv­e, something on the order of $10 billion a person in current dollars.

But people would move in droves, he insists, if the cost can be brought down to somewhere near the median price of a United States home, around $200,000. Most of Musk’s paper is devoted to laying out a theory on how, over time, we might bring down the cost.

‘‘With frequent flights, you can take an aircraft that costs $90 million and buy a ticket on Southwest right now from Los Angeles to Vegas for $43, including taxes. If it were single use, it would cost $500,000 per flight.’’

The booster rocket that he describes in the paper is enormous. Musk has since decided that his original vision was impractica­l. He now wants to build a much smaller version that will carry perhaps 100 people at a time.

He posted a series of images on Instagram to show both the vehicle he envisions and the Mars colony he imagines it would help populate.

It’s a lovely and elegant idea. Can we do it? I have no idea. But Musk’s confidence rekindles in me the old excitement. Perhaps we need not be earthbound forever. Perhaps we as a species can once more look skyward with a sense of shared anticipati­on and excitement, confident that if we cannot reach the stars, our children will.

So I hope we’ll try. I may not see Mars in my lifetime, but I’m thrilled that you might see it in yours.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand