Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Terraforming Mars
Episode Date: October 23, 2024Ever since the dawn of the space age, there have been some who have dreamed of establishing a human presence on Mars. However, despite being really far away, Mars is not exactly hospitable to humans.�...� Some suggest that the answer might be to completely change Mars's environment, to radically change its atmosphere, and, over time, to turn it into a second Earth where humans could live. Learn more about the idea of terraforming Mars, what would need to be done, and the challenges it would face in this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Plan your next trip to Spain at Spain.info! Sign up at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to get chicken breast, salmon or ground beef FREE in every order for a year plus $20 off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Ever since the dawn of the space age, there have been some who have dreamed of establishing a human
presence on Mars. However, in addition to being really far away, Mars is not exactly hospitable
to humans. Some suggest the answer might be to completely change Mars' environment, to radically
change its atmosphere, and over time, to turn it into a second Earth where humans could live.
Learn more about the idea of terraforming Mars, what would be done and the challenges it would face.
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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The idea of terraforming a planet is a relatively new one.
Terraforming is defined as the process of deliberately modifying the atmosphere, temperature,
surface topography, and ecology of a planet, moon, or other celestial body to make it more
earth-like and suitable for human habitation. As of right now, and probably for the foreseeable
future, this is a totally hypothetical process that has been in the realm of theorists and
science fiction writers. Astronomer Carl Sagan first seriously considered the idea writing a paper in
1961 about terraforming the planet Venus. The idea of terraforming Venus is as interesting as that
of terraforming Mars, but the problems are almost totally the opposite of each other. Venus's surface
is extremely hot with the temperature of 467 degrees Celsius or 872 degrees Fahrenheit. The emasphoric
pressure on the surface is the equivalent to the pressure found at 900 meters or 300 feet below the ocean's
surface. The atmosphere consists of 96.5% carbon dioxide, 3.5% nitrogen, and just to make things worse,
it has clouds of sulfuric acid. The surface conditions are so brutal on Venus that only four
landers have ever been sent to the surface of Venus which returned photos, and they only managed to
send six images between the four of them because their lifespan on the surface was so short.
Mars, on the other hand, is at the other end of the spectrum.
Its atmosphere is extremely thin, and its surface is very cold.
Sagan brought up the idea of terraforming Mars in 1973, which got even more attention.
In 1976, NASA commissioned a study which took place around the time of the Viking landings on Mars,
which concluded that the transformation of Mars into a habitable planet was theoretically possible.
Many space theorists and science fiction writers have kicked the idea around for several years.
While there are many ideas that have been proposed for how to go about doing it,
there's wide agreement on what the problems are.
Here I should note that many of these problems are intertwined.
The process of solving one will help solve something else.
So with that, the first problem preventing humans from living on Mars is the atmosphere.
For starters, the marshal.
atmosphere is extremely thin. Its surface pressure is less than 1% of the Earth. This would make it
impossible for liquid water to exist on the surface without freezing or sublimating. It also means that
any humans that visit Mars would have to wear pressurized spacesuits just as if they were on the
moon or conducting a spacewalk. What little atmosphere it does have isn't fit for humans to breathe.
The Martian atmosphere consists of 95% carbon dioxide, 2.85% nitrogen, and 2% argon.
Less than 1% is oxygen, water vapor, and carbon monoxide.
So, how do you go about increasing the atmospheric pressure of an entire planet?
The most obvious solution would be to unlock the frozen carbon dioxide located in Mars's polar regions.
Mars's southern polar cap is the larger of the two polar caps and contains,
most of the frozen CO2 on the planet.
Estimates suggest that if all of the CO2 in the southern polar camp were released into the
atmosphere, it could raise Mars atmospheric pressure from about 30 to 60 kilopascals.
And for comparison, the Earth's average surface pressure is around 101 kilopascals.
This is obviously a far cry from the pressure on the surface of the Earth.
However, in some ways, that's actually good enough.
this would be in the ballpark of the pressure that's on the top of Mount Everest.
If the pressure of the Martin atmosphere could be raised to a point where it was a significant
percentage of the Earth, then you wouldn't need a pressure suit to walk on the surface.
All you would need is to breathe oxygen, which is not too dissimilar from what mountain
climbers have to experience on Everest.
So the next question is, how do you melt the polar caps?
Here is where there are hosts of ideas and where planetary
engineering comes in. One idea would be to pump super greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
This could be ammonia, sulfur hexafluoride, chloral fluoride, chloral-chlorocarbonates, or per-fluorocarbonates.
The problem is that all these chemicals would have to, at least initially, be brought in from Earth,
which would be incredibly expensive. One recent suggestion is to make nanorods out of aluminum or iron
which can be found in abundance on Mars.
These tiny rods, with a length of 1 to 100 nanometers,
could be suspended in the atmosphere and trap heat
a thousand times more efficiently than other greenhouse gases.
Another plan would be to put mirrors in orbit,
which would then focus its light on the southern polar region.
Another proposed solution would just be to detonate nuclear weapons
over the southern pole.
It'd be fast, and you wouldn't have to worry about contaminating the environment,
because there really is no environment.
There is another problem on Mars that increasing the pressure would help alleviate,
and that is temperature.
Mars is really cold.
The average temperature on Mars is around minus 60 degrees Celsius or minus 80 degrees Fahrenheit,
with even colder temperatures at the poles.
This is due to a lack of atmosphere and the distance from the sun.
The act of melting the poles would, by whatever method,
increase the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, which would help warm the planet.
The more CO2, the warmer it would get.
Changing the atmosphere would have to be part of any solution to change the temperature on the planet,
but it's not the only thing that can be done.
In fact, there probably isn't enough CO2 on Mars to appreciably trigger a serious greenhouse effect.
One thing that could be done is to darken the surface of the planet.
By reducing the planet's albedo, that being the amount of light reflected by the surface,
more heat would be absorbed. But how do you do that? One idea is to crush up one of the moons of Mars into
dust and then spread it across the planet, or perhaps at least the poles. The darker surface
would increase the amount of heat retained. Another potential solution is to try to mimic what
happened on Earth by using life. The idea here would be to bioengineer a type of algae or
cyanobacteria that could survive in the Martian atmosphere. The algae would then cover the surface,
which could also reduce the planet's albedo. There is another thing that Mars lacks that is tied to
the atmosphere. Surface water. Mars is simply too cold and the pressure is too low for surface water
to exist for any extended period of time. There is some evidence that there may be liquid water on
Mars that flows seasonally, and the water is probably very salty, which, which is a lot of the water.
allows it to flow in cold temperatures.
So at a minimum, if you want to have liquid water on Mars, you need to raise the surface temperature
to the freezing point of water.
However, as you decrease the pressure of the atmosphere, it reduces the freezing point.
So even if you could increase the temperature of Mars, there probably isn't enough water
on the planet to have that much effect.
So how do you get water to Mars?
You can't very well take that much water from Earth.
would be a large percentage of the planet's water, and the energy requirements would be enormous.
If our simpler idea would be to find water-rich comets in the solar system and send them crashing into
Mars. This is believed to be what happened very early in the history of the Earth over
four billion years ago. It would probably take quite a few comets to be directed towards Mars,
and it would take quite a while, but it would bring water to the planet, a lot of it.
Smashing comets into Mars would also kick up dust into the atmosphere, which would cool a planet,
which would counteract all the efforts to warm it.
If you could somehow bring more water to Mars, it would also help solve one of the problems
I brought up earlier, the composition of the atmosphere.
If you want to increase the percentage of oxygen, the extra water provides a source for it.
You could use electrolysis to split the water into oxygen and hydrogen, or you could just seed plants on Mars,
to create it. What makes all the things I've talked about so far interesting is that Mars probably
did have a thicker atmosphere, a warmer climate, and liquid water a few billion years ago.
So, how did Mars lose its atmosphere? Two things. The first of which is that Mars only has
38% of the Earth's gravity. It's far easier for gases to escape out into space with weaker gravity.
However, the big difference between the Earth and Mars is that Mars lacks a magnetic field.
The Earth's magnetic field is what protects the planet from the sun's solar wind.
The magnetic field deflects the charged particles that fly out of the sun, which would otherwise
slowly strip the planet of its atmosphere.
That process is exactly what happened on Mars.
If Mars had a magnetic field, it only existed briefly.
Once it was gone, the solar wind slowly stripped the planet.
of its atmosphere, a process that is still ongoing today. The lack of a magnetic field would
undo whatever you did to try to create a thicker atmosphere. If you melt the ice caps,
you will eventually lose the CO2 into space. The lack of a magnetic field would also make
radiation levels on the planet so high as to be dangerous. Furthermore, as far as we know,
there is no way to start up a planetary magnetic field if it stopped or if it never existed in the
first place. The lack of a magnetic field seems like an insurmountable obstacle to terraforming Mars.
However, there just might be a solution that would achieve the same thing. It would involve a large
electromagnet situated at the Lagrange Point One. This is a point in space where the gravity of Mars
and the Sun are identical, and it's a point directly between the Sun and Mars. If you put an
electromagnet there, it could deflect the solar wind around Mars. The magnet wouldn't even have to be
that powerful in the big scheme of things. A magnet of one Tesla might be sufficient, and the most
powerful magnet in the world is currently 45 times more powerful. Mars would be far enough away that
it could effectively slip stream behind the magnet. So how realistic are any of the things that I've
discussed in this episode? For starters, anything that was done would take centuries if,
not thousands of years to complete. I've seen estimates as high as 10,000 years. Needless to say,
it's almost impossible to plan for anything that far out. Most people and governments can't really
plan out further than their own lifespans. The biggest thing, however, would be the cost. It's unlikely
that any government would ever attempt something like this alone. It would have to be a global
undertaking, and most countries have more important things going on than to fund some rocket program.
The estimated cost for terraforming Mars would run into the trillions of dollars,
and the return on investment would be had by generations that didn't have to put up any money.
It would require a vast number of missions to supply Mars.
Even something like Starship by SpaceX couldn't supply the resources necessary for terraforming.
Terraforming could probably only be done with the creation of a new type of spacecraft that hasn't even been invented yet.
We really have no idea if any of this is even remotely possible, as we have never come close to
even trying. So it's highly likely that we may never see this happen in our lifetimes.
So we had better take care of the planet we got, because we aren't going to be getting a new one
anytime soon.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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