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Mars

Don't Waste Your Eggs on a Broken Basket

Mars exploration and colonization advocates frequently repeat the slogan Don't Put All Your Eggs In One Basket. The implication is that Mars is a "second basket", just needing a little touchup to become a permanent, comfortable second home for Earthlife, and for human beings in particular.

Slogans are the opposite of knowledge.

Instead of putting all our eggs in one basket, we can:

  • Fry some eggs in hard radiation
  • Explode some eggs in near-vacuum
  • Freeze and bake some eggs with extreme temperature variations
  • Poison some eggs with perchlorates
  • Smash some eggs launching to a 10.6 km/s interplanetary Hohmann , smash more in a 5.7 km/s landing on Mars.
  • Rot some eggs on a 9 month journey
  • Attempt to preserve the remainder where refrigerators can't be manufactured or repaired

The few eggs that survive will cost more than a million dollars each.

Humans are not eggs, and cost far more to keep alive. We require one-gee gravity - Mars is 62% gravity-deficient, and centrifuge habitat wheels will be difficult to arrange in the 38% gravity that remains. We must breath non-poisonous air; keeping the perchlorates and other poisons out of a human habitat requires perfect isolation and cleanup.

Terraforming is handwaving nonsense. No conceivable nuclear/biological war could make the Earth as uninhabitable as Mars is now, and conflict would not destroy the deep resources available for restoring the Earth to habitability exceeding anything we can create on Mars with in-situ materials.

No, lets use our limited egg supply for more productive goals. Near-earth asteroids (NEA) are smaller but more numerous; they are more differentiated and mine-able than Mars. A centrifugal habitat can create one-gee without high pivot loading and slanted floors; a meters-thick regolith radiation shield can be supported over the centrifuge with a tiny fraction of the mass. Delta-V to many NEAs is smaller than the Delta-V to a Moon landing, and far less than landing on Mars. NEAs are in permanent sunshine, and in permanent darkness; ideal for processing solar energy.

NEAs are not the Barsoom of 1930s pulp science fiction; they are a new opportunity. All may prove as difficult as Mars, but there are many more opportunities for useful surprises. Let's find the best place to invest our eggs, not just throw them at a wall that we once believed was a window.

Mars (last edited 2019-07-19 21:17:16 by KeithLofstrom)