Terraforming Mars: Inside the Insane (True) Plans to Make Mars Habitable

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Published 2023-08-26
Unlocking the Mysteries of Mars: Can We Terraform the Red Planet? Exploring the history, challenges, and potential methods to transform Mars into a habitable world. A future for our great-grandkids awaits!

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All Comments (21)
  • @mikeygallos5000
    I'm glad Simon moved Astrographics from Geographics to Mega Projects.
  • @davidmeehan4486
    Thanks for not ignoring the magnetic field issue. So many infotainment programs have spoken of terraforming Mars as just a matter of adding carbon dioxide, when the challenge is so much greater.
  • @jacobtovar6043
    That was a beautiful ending to the video Simon. The part about us wishing we were standing next to them on Mars. Hit me right in emotions/imagination, wondering if this species will make it far into the future or fizzle out in the next 1000 years.
  • @Oshidashi
    To record a message for the future citizens of Mars was quite mindblowing!
  • As a plant biologist myself, the issue I never see addressed is that of radiation exposure to our food crops. By and large they'll require the same protections as humans, radiation has the same effect on plants as us, and leads to wild unpredictable mutations that will mostly kill the plants or render them sterile. However, some plants do have mechanisms in place to repair their genome and this could be used as a protective mechanism.
  • Kim Stanley Robinson's Mar Trilogy (Red Mars, Green Mars, Blue Mars) is the best and most accurate example of how terraforming (areoforming) Mars would actually be approached. Anyone who read it was already familiar with most of the techniques in the NASA proposals. It's also an excellent example of hard science fiction with a heavy dose of political everything.
  • @mangogo44
    Imagine aliens right now in a distant galaxy discovering an exoplanet that is promising for life. And it's Mars bbecause they can only see how things were in the past
  • @Crytica.
    Man, to know that I am probably 1-2 generation(s) born too early to see people work/live on the moon and like 10 generations too early to see people work/live on Mars is really depressing
  • I already think in David Attenborough's voice when I see animals, I think in Morgan Freeman's voice when I think about existential things. I now hear Simon's voice for any random information stuff. If you outlive me, narrate my life, or get zefrank to do it please.
  • @happilyham6769
    It is important to remember that there are thousands of things that are a part of everyday life today that were thought impossible 200 years ago. Something is only impossible until it isn't.
  • @michaelmees6522
    Simon, I love the way you so eloquently put the ending of this video 👍
  • @antonnym214
    You can mitigate the radiation problem by placing your colony at the west end of Valles Marineris in Noctus Labyrinthus, where there is, coincidentally a glacier with water ice galore. More than your colony will ever need. Also, being 4 miles below the surface in the canyon, you'll have only a fraction of that radiation and the atmospheric pressure will be 150% more than you get on the surface.
  • @wdd3141
    One bonus: the toxic perchlorates of Mars might possibly be used to generate oxygen, for breathing, for fuel, and for other purposes. A friend once told me a mixture of sugar and potassium perchlorate would be like gunpowder (gunpowder uses the heat of burning sulfur and charcoal to break down potassium nitrate, liberating elemental oxygen that further fuels the combustion).
  • @azchris1979
    I think we need to redirect icy bodies to hit it. Adding energy, water, and atmosphere instantly.
  • @MinionofNobody
    For the first time ever, I want YouTube merch. A “Make Mars Great Again” t-shirt would be great.
  • @yggdrasil9039
    The Magnetic Field protection shield is the foundation upon which everything else is built.
  • @JoeGoesXtreme
    If I am correct the mars regolith contains potassium perchlorate. This salt is valuable because potassium is a useful nutrient. Also, it thermally decomposes giving out oxygen gas also useful: KClO4 ---> KCl +O2
  • @awake2late
    This is the first time I've heard about the first one. That is a simple and brilliant concept. It would be a lot safer than some of our my extreme idea. We have only been concentrating on just projects on Mars itself. If we combine this idea with those we might be able to actually do this.
  • @damonmorris5590
    I'm convinced it's actually Simon that's locked in the basement and not Danny. It would explain how Simon manages to make content daily for like 10 channels