h a l f b a k e r yFewer ducks than estimates indicate.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Establish an atmosphere first, then introduce the plants. |
|
|
This terra forming would also make human travel
to Mars attract a nice diverse crowd of
adventurers. A planet where the grass is free. I
can imagine the shape a herd of stoners' space
ship to the promised land might be!
That kinda grass right? Hemp has many handy attributes! |
|
|
That's right, [Texticle]; the egg first, then the ch... Oh, bugger. |
|
|
[Squirrally], I suspect your main problem is going to be one of scale. Would you like to offer a vague, back-of-envelope estimate of how much CO2 would be necessary to make a noticeable difference to Mars' ability to contain heat, and then divide that by the payload of one rocket? |
|
|
Alternatively, would you consider a piecemeal approach using sealed domes? |
|
|
I am quite aware of the amount of gas needed hence the compression, also I think it is possible that you could launch it into a large dome-like structure, that way the gas could potentially be contained inside, although not able to sustain life with one my, plan involves launching 5-6 though it was not mentioned above, as this is about the invention not the system. |
|
|
I think we have a problem of scale here. The idea of flying dirt and grass seeds (and water and butane) to mars is comical. Either all the resources needed exist in situ or they don't and there is no way we are going to fly them there. Furthermore no plan for anything on mars works unless you face the fact that mars lacks an ionosphere thus is constantly bombarded with radiation on the surface. |
|
| |