Taranaki Daily News

Elon Musk says he will probably move to Red Planet

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Despite a high likelihood of dying even before arriving and daily conditions hostile to human life, Elon Musk says that he’ll probably move to Mars.

The SpaceX and chief executive said there’s a ‘‘70 per cent chance’’ he’ll get to Mars within his lifetime, with plans to permanentl­y resettle on the Red Planet. Musk said his desire to colonise Mars is driven by the same passion that fuels people to climb mountains – for the challenge.

‘‘We’ve recently made a number of breakthrou­ghs that I am just really just fired up about,’’ Musk said during an interview with Axios on HBO.

Musk’s remarks are the latest in a series of bold announceme­nts that have defined his career in recent years, from his aim to transform the auto industry with electric vehicles made by his company Tesla to the goal of colonising Earth’s neighbouri­ng planet.

SpaceX aspires to send its first cargo mission to Mars in 2022, according to its website, with a manned mission targeted for 2024. Musk announced last week that the company has renamed its massive Mars vessel the Starship (it was previously dubbed the Big Falcon Rocket). The rocket boosters that will allow the vehicle to escape Earth’s gravity are called the Super Heavy.

Nasa, too, has ambitions to send humans to Mars, though sometime in the 2030s. China is also expanding its space program with the goal of launching a Mars probe around 2020. Scientists are interested in going to Mars for a host of reasons, from learning more about the origins of life to better understand­ing the rise and collapse of potentiall­y lifesuppor­ting environmen­ts.

The planet was not always the desert world that it appears to be today. Its now empty lakes and channels suggest that liquid water once flowed at the surface, which may indicate that a thicker atmosphere once enveloped the planet, perhaps supporting life. But scientists see Mars as a ‘‘failed planet,’’ with conditions hostile to humans.

During the interview, Musk compared the propositio­n to colonise Mars to explorer Ernest Shackleton’s expedition­s to Antarctica.

He said the price of a ticket to Mars would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, with no guarantee of return or even survival during the trip or upon landing. But despite the daunting journey, Musk sees a worthwhile trade-off.

‘‘You know there’s lots of people who climb mountains. You know why do they climb mountains? People die on Mt Everest all the time,’’ he said. ‘‘They like doing it for the challenge.’’

Earlier this year, SpaceX pledged to advance its space exploratio­n efforts by revealing the identity of its first paying tourist who would take a trip around the moon.

In 2023, Japanese billionair­e Yusaku Maezawa and six to eight artists are tentativel­y scheduled to fly to the moon on a week-long trip.

Their vehicle, the nearly200m-tall Starship, is still in developmen­t and is slated to complete its first flights to orbit in two to three years.

But SpaceX and Musk’s interplane­tary plans have seen setbacks. The company recently announced a delay in its initial mission to fly Nasa astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station. SpaceX also delayed its plans to fly tourists around the moon.

 ??  ?? A artist’s illustrati­on shows Elon Musk’s vision for a Mars colony.
A artist’s illustrati­on shows Elon Musk’s vision for a Mars colony.
 ??  ?? Elon Musk
Elon Musk

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