The post demonstrates how infeasible it is to travel to a location outside our solar system anytime in the next several generations.
What are some things you would like to see humanity do within our solar system within the next century? When do you think it is feasible to achieve that goal?
@saba @Recant We’re definitely not going to have a moon colony in our lifetime, and a manned mars mission would only be a disaster.
The reason we haven’t really gone back to the moon and don’t have a colony there is because it’s much more expensive to access and offers no real benefit over space stations. It’s perk is low gravity instead of microgravity, but it trades off in massively increased fuel and time costs as well as the inability to “dodge” hazards. The moon has no special resources, no capacity for terraforming, and if we were wanting to build enclosed habitats we could do that more easily in a space station.
Mars is kinda worse because as far as I can tell we’re finding problems faster than we’re finding solutions. My favorite recent example of this is that we discovered anyone we sent would go blind before reaching the planet (microgravity destroys your vision over time, it took us forever to find out because the astronauts were hiding it so they wouldn’t be disqualified from future flights).
Why does microgravity cause blindness?
We don’t know yet https://youtube.com/watch?v=zXq5Uu1rRtA
I’m going off memory, but I’m pretty sure I read somewhere that the lack of gravity pushes all the blood in your body up to your head. On earth, your body has to fight gravity to get blood to your brain, so it evolved to squeeze blood out of your legs and lower body. In zero-g, the resistance is gone, but our bodies arent going to adapt so easily, so the blood is now being squeezed upward creating extra blood pressure in your head. I think i remember reading that some of that extra pressure concentrates right behind the eyes, which you can imagine is not great for them over time.