Deccan Chronicle

HUMANS IN MARS BY 2022?

- —Source: www.theguardia­n.com

SpaceX founder Elon Musk has outlined his highly ambitious vision for manned missions to Mars, which he said could begin as soon as 2022 — three years sooner than his previous estimates. However, the question of how such extravagan­tly expensive missions would be funded remains largely in the dark.

“What I really want to try to achieve here is to make Mars seem possible, like it’s something we can achieve in our lifetime,” Musk told an audience in his keynote speech at the Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress in Guadalajar­a, Mexico. He said there were “two fundamenta­l paths” facing humanity today. “One is that we stay on Earth forever and then there will be an inevitable extinction event,” he said. “The alternativ­e is to become a spacefarin­g civilisati­on, and a multiplane­tary species.”

In order to achieve this goal, Musk outlined a multi-stage launch and transport system, including a reusable booster — like the Falcon 9, which SpaceX has already successful­ly tested, only much larger. The booster, and the “interplane­tary module” on top of it, would be nearly as long as two Boeing 747 aircraft. It could initially carry up to 100 passengers, he said.

The first ship to go to Mars, Musk said, would be named Heart of Gold as a tribute to the ship powered by an “infinite improbabil­ity drive” from Douglas Adams’ science fiction novel The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Similar modules, also launched using reusable boosters, would remain in Earth’s orbit to refuel the interplane­tary craft to be able to use multiple trips, including to other parts of the solar system such as Enceladus, a moon of Saturn on which Nasa’s Cassini mission recently found evidence of a polar subsurface water ocean that could harbour life.

Musk also outlined a system by which fuel could be synthesise­d on Mars from water and carbon dioxide in order to fuel return journeys to Earth. He estimated the current cost of sending someone to Mars is at “around $10bn per person”, though it was not clear if he meant using existing rocket systems or on the initial flight of his proposed system. He said that there would be price improvemen­ts over time because of the reusabilit­y of the spacecraft, inorbit refuelling and on-Mars propellant production that would reduce that cost by “orders of magnitude”.

But he made little attempt to solve the thorny problem of the initial cost of constructi­ng the system. Suggesting possible revenue streams, Musk proposed two sources of cash — sending cargo and astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station and launching satellites — both already part of SpaceX’s business model.

Musk also outlined a system by which fuel could be synthesise­d on Mars from water and carbon dioxide in order to fuel return journeys to Earth The first ship to go to Mars, Musk said, would be named Heart of Gold as a tribute to the ship powered by an “infinite improbabil­ity drive” from Douglas Adams’ science fiction novel The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

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 ??  ?? Elon Musk addressing the audience at the Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress
Elon Musk addressing the audience at the Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress

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