Sunday People

Will we be living o

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Within two decades the answer might be a definite ‘yes’ because scientists hope to send people to the red planet.

There may be no little green men but there could be humans wearing special suits and living in capsules.

It is 20 years since NASA’s Pathfinder spacecraft touched down on Mars and, using a robot, sent a huge amount of data back to Earth.

Since then NASA has sent more landers and orbiters. There are currently eight robots from various countries examining the planet.

They have found water, raising hope microorgan­isms once existed there and it could sustain human life.

And it might not be a moment too soon. Last month physics genius Prof Stephen Hawking, 75, warned our days on Earth are numbered and we need to colonise another planet within 100 years or face the threat of extinction.

He said: “The Earth is becoming too small for us, our physical resources are being drained at an alarming rate.

“We’re running out of space, the only places to go to are other worlds.”

TV scientist Prof Brian Cox, 49, said: “We’re at a decision point in our civilisati­on. For the first time we have the technology and the will to turn ourselves into a multi-planet civilisati­on. There’s everything you need on Mars to live there.”

The scientific community agrees and NASA believes the first person to step on Mars is alive today.

With private firms examining the potential of a commercial Mars mission, colonising the planet is not beyond our reach.

The organisati­on Mars One is developing plans for a permanent human settlement and are training astronauts to take the six to eight month journey to the red planet in 2031. They would live in capsules and wear specially designed suits to protect them from the planet’s radiation. Space X, run by entreprene­ur Elon Musk, is developing rockets able to reach Mars and wants the first manned mission to the planet by 2026. Each would take 100 people and Musk wants 1,000 such ships launched in 40 to 100 years.

Space scientist Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock from the BBC’s The Sky at Night told the Sunday People: “If I’m optimistic, we could even see someone on Mars in the next 15 to 20 years.” Dr Aderin-Pocock, 49, has even admitted she would like to retire to the red planet. She said: “On Earth we have all our eggs in one basket.

Crater

“We know that extinction is a possibilit­y after what happened to the dinosaurs and we are vulnerable if, for example, a pandemic sweeps across Earth.

“It makes sense for us to have colonies where we can in the solar system. Mars is an ideal candidate.” The hopes for a future on Mars have grown in tandem with the technologi­cal advances that have expanded our knowledge about the fourth planet from the Sun.

NASA’s Mars Pathfinder released its 23lb six-wheel robotic rover Sojourner.

It only travelled 100m but sent back 550 images and about 8.5 million temperatur­e, pressure and wind measuremen­ts back to Earth.

Sojourner was followed by the far more mobile Exploratio­n Spirit and Opportunit­y rovers in 2004, and the Phoenix in 2008. But it was NASA’s Curiosity rover, which is still sending informatio­n back to Earth, that marks the biggest shift in the space age advances. It was launched in 2011 to determine whether Mars was ever able to support microbial life.

The car-sized robotic rover landed in Mars’s Gale Crater in August 2012 and started exploring. Powered by electricit­y generated from the heat of Mars’s radioactiv­e plutonium decay, it can climb

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