Gord_in_Toronto
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2006
- Messages
- 26,460
An Earth-based laser array of unprecedented size (10 m diameter) and power (100 MW) is assumed to be enabled by ongoing developments in photonic laser technology
Just for the record, despite the whimsical title of the thread the limited discussion seems to have been mostly about the 45 day plan. Also, not really seeing that a receiver holding it's shape against 40g necessitates unobtanium, not even close. Plenty of materials can do that. The force could even be used in tension to help the receiver maintain it's shape.
The preliminary design of critical subsystems necessary for such a spacecraft has not found fundamental technological roadblocks to realize this propulsion system.

A few engineers figured out how to build a few bridges that haven't fallen down yet.
Building a bridge to Mars is more difficult, I think, but it might not need to hold up for quite so many centuries.
- Arkadiko Bridge (completed circa 3300 years before present (BP))
- Caravan Bridge (circa 2850 BP)
- Pons Fabricius (2084 BP)
- Alcántara Bridge (1916 BP)
- Ponte Sant'Angelo (1888 BP)
I wasn't complaining.Sorry about the whimsy. It was just me playing homage to Boney M and their Night Flight to Venus.
Because the way I see it, the whole point of a crewed mission to Mars hinges on being able to bring the crew home again.Interesting choice. Why?
I'm sure "we" understand the problem just fine. What I'm looking forward to is the solution. It's not like we have any experience at all with launching man-rated vehicles from the Martian surface, requiring no more ground support than the crew of the vehicle itself. The Moon, with its zero atmosphere and much lower gravity, doesn't seem to teach us a lot of lessons for this kind of thing.That would be a problem I think we do understand well enough now.
It make sense to combine the test of a self-contained surface-return system with a sample return mission. It's exactly the design and development of that system that I'm looking forward to.I expect one or two sample return missions will happen before we send people.
That might be a way to mitigate risk, depending on the details of the design and the overall trade-offs. There's also risk inherent in requiring the crew to assemble, integrate, and check out their return vehicle, on the Martian surface, in environment suits rather than shirt-sleeves. Unless the design includes sending a Vehicle Assembly Building where they can work in a more Earthlike environment.I also see a way to mitigate risk by sending the ascent components to Mars on an earlier mission.
I agree with all that. I just wouldn't have chosen to describe that as interesting. It's obviously important and I might have used that word instead.
FFS. You said you were interested in it. And your current post is just pointless contrarianism.I didn't describe it as "interesting". You did.
FFS. You said you were interested in it. And your current post is just pointless contrarianism.
(It's also quite possible to include artificial gravity on the spacecraft that we send to Mars if this really is an issue, but it's probably not necessary.)
During space missions lasting six months or longer, astronauts can experience bone loss equivalent to two decades of aging. A year of recovery in Earth’s gravity rebuilds about half of that lost bone strength, researchers report June 30 in Scientific Reports.
Astronauts in space for less than six months were able to regain their preflight bone strength after a year back in Earth’s gravity. But those in space longer had permanent bone loss in their shinbones, or tibias, equivalent to a decade of aging. Their lower-arm bones, or radii, showed almost no loss, likely because these aren’t weight-bearing bones, says Gabel.
That's a myth. There are ~200 agents that result in "common cold" symptoms. Many are curable and/or preventable. There is no reason to track down every single virus that causes mild cold symptoms but if we did we could probably develop treatment or vaccines for them.... Doctors can't even cure the common cold.![]()

That's a myth. There are ~200 agents that result in "common cold" symptoms. Many are curable and/or preventable. There is no reason to track down every single virus that causes mild cold symptoms but if we did we could probably develop treatment or vaccines for them.
So they have or they can in most cases.![]()
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A 'huge boon' would be using the resources something worthwhile instead.Anything that could reduce the amount of time it takes to make the trip would be a huge boon.
Interesting choice. Why? That would be a problem I think we do understand well enough now. I expect one or two sample return missions will happen before we send people. I also see a way to mitigate risk by sending the ascent components to Mars on an earlier mission.
The authors thus propose adding "jumping resistance-based exercise that provides high-impact dynamic loads on the legs" to astronauts' existing exercise routines to prevent bone loss and promote bone growth while on spaceflight missions.
Of course, any new jumping regimen would require specialized equipment, and space is always limited aboard any spaceflight. "Successful implementation of high-load jump-training on-orbit will require an exercise device that mitigates forces transferred to the vehicle, along with an exercise regimen that accounts for astronaut deconditioning," the researchers wrote in the new study.