Would You Take a One-Way Trip to Mars?

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The forum discussion centers around the feasibility and implications of one-way trips to Mars, highlighting the psychological and logistical challenges involved. Participants reference historical proposals such as John M. Cord & Leonard M. Seale's 1962 paper and Lawrence M. Krauss's 2009 New York Times article, emphasizing the need for a larger crew size to ensure survival and mental stability. The consensus indicates that sending a small group is akin to a suicide mission due to the high risks and potential for failure. The conversation also touches on the motivations of potential volunteers and the inherent dangers of space travel.

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  • Understanding of group dynamics and psychological stability in isolated environments
  • Knowledge of space mission logistics and survival strategies
  • Familiarity with historical proposals for Mars colonization
  • Awareness of the risks associated with long-duration space travel
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Would you take a one-way trip to Mars?

  • Yes

    Votes: 28 29.8%
  • No

    Votes: 49 52.1%
  • Maybe

    Votes: 17 18.1%

  • Total voters
    94
Borg
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This article made me wonder - how many people would go to Mars if it was a one-way trip?
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/10/101019171709.htm"
 
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provided my spouse was also willing, I think it would be grand.
 
Borg said:
One-Way Martian Colonization Missions: Proposal Would Cut Costs Dramatically, Ensure Long-Term Commitment

Ha, I nearly choked on my doughnut when I read that! :smile:

Bit of a given really.

On the subject, can't say I would. The thought of not seeing anyone again and basically losing all freedom wouldn't bode well for me. If I knew I'd be coming back (defying the point of one way) I'd be interested, but not coming back would be the equivalent of being in prison for the rest of your life.
 
Borg said:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/10/101019171709.htm"
That silly idea again? This has been floated many times over since 1962. Some of them:

John M. Cord & Leonard M. Seale (1962), “The One-Way Manned Space Mission,” Aerospace Engineering 94:102, pp 60-61

George W. Herbert (1996), “One-Way to Mars,” AAS-96-322, proceedings of the sixth Case for Mars Conference, American Astronomical Society, pp 235-244

James C. McLane III (2006), “‘Spirit of the Lone Eagle’: an audacious program for a manned Mars landing”, The Space Review, http://www.thespacereview.com/article/669/1

Lawrence M. Krauss (2009), “A One-Way Ticket to Mars,” The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/01/opinion/01krauss.html?_r=1The kind of people who would volunteer for a one-way trip to Mars with only a handful or so people sent to Mars are exactly the kind of people who should not be sent on such a trip. It is a suicide mission. Group dynamics and ensuring a critical skill base means the minimum number of people needed for a one-way trip to Mars is on the order of a hundred or so. But now we aren't talking about doing things on the cheap anymore.
 
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No way. I stay here. Maybe if Mars comes to me I'll consider it again..
 
D H said:
That silly idea again? This has been floated many times over since 1962. Some of them:

John M. Cord & Leonard M. Seale (1962), “The One-Way Manned Space Mission,” Aerospace Engineering 94:102, pp 60-61

George W. Herbert (1996), “One-Way to Mars,” AAS-96-322, proceedings of the sixth Case for Mars Conference, American Astronomical Society, pp 235-244

James C. McLane III (2006), “‘Spirit of the Lone Eagle’: an audacious program for a manned Mars landing”, The Space Review, http://www.thespacereview.com/article/669/1

Lawrence M. Krauss (2009), “A One-Way Ticket to Mars,” The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/01/opinion/01krauss.html?_r=1The kind of people who would volunteer for a one-way trip to Mars with only a handful or so people sent to Mars are exactly the kind of people who should not be sent on such a trip. It is a suicide mission. Group dynamics and ensuring a critical skill base means the minimum number of people needed for a one-way trip to Mars is on the order of a hundred or so. But now we aren't talking about doing things on the cheap anymore.

What so you're saying only cowards can go to mars?

Since when did we fall into this mentality that exploration must incur zero risk? You wouldn't exist if the early European explorers hadn't the gall to go out and explore the world - even if they were motivated by greed.

If human kind is ever going to take the next step forward it has to come at some risk or it will never happen. I for one would do it, and most people would probably say they would but in the end back out.
 
Mu naught said:
What so you're saying only cowards can go to mars?

Since when did we fall into this mentality that exploration must incur zero risk? You wouldn't exist if the early European explorers hadn't the gall to go out and explore the world - even if they were motivated by greed.

If human kind is ever going to take the next step forward it has to come at some risk or it will never happen. I for one would do it, and most people would probably say they would but in the end back out.

agreed
 
Mu naught said:
What so you're saying only cowards can go to mars?

Since when did we fall into this mentality that exploration must incur zero risk? You wouldn't exist if the early European explorers hadn't the gall to go out and explore the world - even if they were motivated by greed.

If human kind is ever going to take the next step forward it has to come at some risk or it will never happen. I for one would do it, and most people would probably say they would but in the end back out.

He's saying there's a broad gulf between heroism and suicide.

Or:

You can't jump across a canyon in two leaps.

If you were given a bunch of scuba tanks and dropped down the Marianas Trench to start a farm, would you call it "a risk by a courageous person" or would you call it suicide?
 
DaveC426913 said:
He's saying there's a broad gulf between heroism and suicide.

Or:

You can't jump across a canyon in two leaps.

If you were given a bunch of scuba tanks and dropped down the Marianas Trench to start a farm, would you call it "a risk by a courageous person" or would you call it suicide?

It's suicide based on the assumption that its certain to fail.

I'm sorry, but why does the assumption that its possible to succeed make you foolish and naive, but the assumption that its impossible somehow makes you rational?

People probably thought the Apollo missions would fail and were impossible when they were proposed, but we ended up placing 12 American men on the moon.

Also I may add that it's very easy for those who are already old enough that a mission to Mars will not happen in their lifetime to say "we should wait". Those who are young enough to one day live to see such a thing come to fruition are a little bit more motivated the the old guys.
 
  • #10
Mu naught said:
It's suicide based on the assumption that its certain to fail.

I'm sorry, but why does the assumption that its possible to succeed make you foolish and naive, but the assumption that its impossible somehow makes you rational?

People probably thought the Apollo missions would fail and were impossible when they were proposed, but we ended up placing 12 American men on the moon.

Also I may add that it's very easy for those who are already old enough that a mission to Mars will not happen in their lifetime to say "we should wait". Those who are young enough to one day live to see such a thing come to fruition are a little bit more motivated the the old guys.

Do you not understand the concept of "one way"?

They may achieve something, they may not. But it is fact that people don't do well in small groups in isolation. We turn on each other, with potentially horific consequences.

All issues you have to overcome.

A manned mission there and back is just an upscaled, more complicated moon mission, to put people there permanently is a different issue. You have to supply them with everything they need to survive (that's a lot even for only a few months).
 
  • #11
Mu naught said:
What so you're saying only cowards can go to mars?
Did I say anything even close to that? The answer is no.

Since when did we fall into this mentality that exploration must incur zero risk?
Once again, did I say anything even close to that? The answer once again is no. So do stop putting words in my mouth.There is a huge difference between sending people on a suicide mission versus sending people on a mission that entails a good amount of risk but also entails a reasonable chance that they will live to a reasonably ripe old age. Sending a small number of people to Mars is a suicide mission. Someone will go insane and wreak a lot of damage, particular so since the kind of people who would volunteer for a suicide mission are exactly the kind who have a much higher chance of going insane. This is exactly why Navy now has rather strict mental stability tests for crew assigned to submarines. Incidents have happened in the past, some of them rather serious.

Assuming for the sake of argument that that does not come to pass. Unless the Mars contingent has a sufficient skill base, people will still die prematurely because of broken bones, ectopic pregnancies, failing life support equipment, dying plants in the hydroponics garden, etc. There are lots of things that can go wrong on a lifelong mission with no return home. Even if nothing goes wrong as far as health and safety are concerned, suppose the communications system dies some day. Now what's the point of the mission? We sent a bunch of people on a suicide science mission and now the return on investment has suddenly and permanently dropped to zero unless someone there knows how to fix that equipment. The number of people that need to be sent to Mars on a permanent or indefinite basis is a lot more than the number needed for a short duration mission with a return to Earth at the end.
 
  • #12
I was watching something once which was talking about generation space ships (breeding on board them and avoiding inbreeding), and I think it applies equally here. They were discussing the minimum number of people required to ensure inbreeding doesn't occur. I believe the number they discussed was 200 couples in order to maintain a non-inbred population over X amount of years (I can't remember the duration but it was a good few generations worth, in the case of Mars you'd hopefully be introducing more people every now and then to help with this). And that is simply to avoid genetic problems. When you factor in all the skill sets required, it goes up for each system introduced.
 
  • #13
If I go, will the court reduce my speeding ticket?
 
  • #14
Newai said:
If I go, will the court reduce my speeding ticket?

I'd say that given the nature of the trip, extradition to prosecute for failure to pay isn't very likely.
 
  • #15
Newai said:
If I go, will the court reduce my speeding ticket?
Just pay the ticket! Are you going to take your dollars to Mars?
 
  • #16
turbo-1 said:
Just pay the ticket! Are you going to take your dollars to Mars?

I was going to Arby's. But I guess another night of rice will have to do.

Just what is a person supposed to get out of a one-way to Mars, anyway? Not exactly the kind of view that ups the value of real estate.
 
  • #17
Newai said:
Just what is a person supposed to get out of a one-way to Mars, anyway? Not exactly the kind of view that ups the value of real estate.
You'll get high doses of radiation, unless the Sun stays incredibly quiet during the whole trip. Once outside of the Earth's magnetic field, Solar tantrums get really serious.
 
  • #18
will this invalidate my life insurance?
 
  • #19
This could be an interesting experiment in social-power. How much would the people living on Mars have to beg to get Earth to come pick them up, despite the expense?
 
  • #20
The volunteers for a suicide mission don't necessarily need to be insane. There are plenty of people near the end of their lives who wouldn't mind dying on Mars instead of Earth.
 
  • #21
Jack21222 said:
The volunteers for a suicide mission don't necessarily need to be insane. There are plenty of people near the end of their lives who wouldn't mind dying on Mars instead of Earth.

Why do you say suicide mission? The people can perfectly die from natural causes... say, vacuum exposure .. :wink:
 
  • #22
NASA - This is a one way trip...

If I had no family, and nobody to really care about, I think i'd be signing up to be honest...

Thoughts?

Space program looking for volunteers
Program aimed at settling other worlds
Astronauts would not be brought home
IT'S the biggest dead-end job ever.

NASA is looking for volunteers to fly to Mars - the snag is that you won't come back.

It is actively investigating the possibility of humans colonising worlds such as the Red Planet.

The settlers would be sent supplies from Earth but would go on the understanding that it would be too costly to bring them home.

NASA revealed that it had already received more than $1 million to commence work on the project at its Ames Research Centre in California.

Centre director Pete Worden, who claimed humans could be living on Mars by 2030 despite the inhospitable conditions, said: "The human space program is now aimed at settling other worlds.

"Twenty years ago you had to whisper that in dark bars or get fired."

http://www.news.com.au/technology/sci-tech/nasa-mars-mission-a-one-way-trip/story-fn5fsgyc-1225945124330"
 
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  • #23


I think I would never have the guts to do it :-)
 
  • #24
Gaius Baltar, I moved your new thread into this existing recent thread on the same topic.
 
  • #25
I think this is a great idea. What is the purpose of existence except to have something to reach for? It may take a thousand years to build a large settlement which can sustain itself with recycling, local materials and solar energy, but it is worth it. Just read some Carl Sagan.

Plus we get a semi-permanent 100 year spaceship which will transport us anywhere within the solar system and which will be flexible allowing new propulsion and energy sources to be bolted on as they become available.

http://journalofcosmology.com/Mars108.html



Growing up watching the space program in the UK watching Americans land on the moon was amazing. It showed the world that the USA were the leaders in high technology. Now it is time for the USA to once again inspire the world to greater things.

This could be in the form or a permanent spaceship operating within the inner planets of the solar system designed in such a way so as to allow adds on as new technologies become available. Eg. Propulsion, Power Supply source, living quarters, cargo etc

This ship would allow a staging post to be set up on Phobos which orbits Mars at a distance of 9000Km. At the right time the ship would eventually allow humans to take a one way trip to Mars and set up a permanent Martian colony.

Never mind the risk it is time for NASA and the USA to inspire humanity to greater things by colonizing and terraforming a new planet, journeying to the new frontier like the explorers of the new world.


Looks like someone liked the idea:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...n-astronauts-Mars-leave-forever.html?ITO=1490


Will the resident aliens on Mars be known as Martians and will they be elligible for green cards?

Hey Brainstorm, you think they could name their ship "The Silver Machine" :) and Uncle Sam really would be on Mars!
 
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  • #26
With all the Martian real estate being sold already chances are you'd be trespassing soon as you land. : )
 
  • #27
Radrook said:
With all the Martian real estate being sold already chances are you'd be trespassing soon as you land. : )

Law enforcement troops are welcome... :smile:
The question is if they will accept one-way ticket.
 
  • #28
Tanelorn said:
Growing up watching the space program in the UK watching Americans land on the moon was amazing. It showed the world that the USA were the leaders in high technology. Now it is time for the USA to once again inspire the world to greater things.

This could be in the form or a permanent spaceship operating within the inner planets of the solar system designed in such a way so as to allow adds on as new technologies become available. Eg. Propulsion, Power Supply source, living quarters, cargo etc

This ship would allow a staging post to be set up on Phobos which orbits Mars at a distance of 9000Km. At the right time the ship would eventually allow humans to take a one way trip to Mars and set up a permanent Martian colony.

Never mind the risk it is time for NASA and the USA to inspire humanity to greater things by colonizing and terraforming a new planet, journeying to the new frontier like the explorers of the new world.

Hearing people who distance themselves from USA identity seek inspiration from the USA irritates me the way it irritated me when the pope was dying and some journalist went on about how special it was when a person so close to God was on the verge of meeting him. If you think it's so great the the USA takes initiative and inspires the world, why don't you rally for the UK to do so? I hate to generalize, but it seems to be a European habit to view one's own nation as small and weak and yet still claim it with full solidarity. When are people going to start either having faith in their nation's power or abandoning it for a more powerful one?
 
  • #29
The question should be 'How much information can a team of geologist,,
supply us with,in order to make living easier for the next team,,add addendum,Courage and Bravery has not yet been TOTALLY bred out of American,Europeans,China, Japan,,and other countries.
Joe in Texas
The answers about some-one going crazy,is an opinion..of one who wishes to think that way.
 
  • #30
jarednjames said:
I was watching something once which was talking about generation space ships (breeding on board them and avoiding inbreeding), and I think it applies equally here. They were discussing the minimum number of people required to ensure inbreeding doesn't occur. I believe the number they discussed was 200 couples in order to maintain a non-inbred population over X amount of years (I can't remember the duration but it was a good few generations worth, in the case of Mars you'd hopefully be introducing more people every now and then to help with this). And that is simply to avoid genetic problems. When you factor in all the skill sets required, it goes up for each system introduced.

Why not just take a smaller number of people and use cloning for reproduction?
 

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