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Going to mars.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 3:00 ID:x3q7t6Oj

Is it really that difficult to go to mars? I don't think so.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 5:44 ID:yoFwyReN

read scientific american article on space travel. by the time the spaceship arrives at mars the astronauts dna will be cut to ribbons.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 5:55 ID:dls94CVQ

space tourism is the new thing.. in fact i'm starting a business where we take people on tours to other planets. my company will be the hot new stock tip.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 7:06 ID:WziR+UaV

>>2
lnk pleez

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 7:56 ID:yoFwyReN

>>4

Heres one:
http://blog.sciam.com/index.php?title=getting_nuked_on_the_way_to_mars&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1

Here's the best one. synopsis only here but you can download sciam off demonoid http://www.demonoid.com/files/details/540144/8267844/

http://www.sciamdigital.com/gsp_qpdf.cfm?ISSUEID_CHAR=4FFD6203-2B35-221B-654E89E20215C62D&ARTICLEID_CHAR=50103539-2B35-221B-658E15D66059B5F5
"Shielding Space Travelers; March 2006; Scientific American Magazine; by Eugene N. Parker; 8 Page(s)

In science fiction, the worst threats to space travelers are large ones: careening asteroids, ravenous creatures, imperial battle cruisers. In reality, though, the scariest menaces for humans in space are the tiniest: fast-moving elementary particles known as cosmic rays. On a long journey, they would give astronauts a dose of radiation serious enough to cause cancer. Unlike most of the other challenges of venturing into deep space, which engineers should be able to solve given enough time and money, cosmic rays pose irreducible risks, and dealing with them involves fundamental trade-offs. They could be the show-stopper for visiting Mars.

In the laboratory, cosmic rays first presented themselves as a minor annoyance. They were discovered when physicists noticed that electrically charged bodies do not stay that way; their charge slowly leaks away through the air. Something had to be ionizing the air, allowing it to conduct electricity. Many researchers blamed the ambient radioactivity of the soil and rocks underfoot. Austrian physicist Victor Hess settled the issue in 1912, when he went aloft in a balloon and showed that the higher he rose, the faster the charge leaked off his electroscope. So the cause of the ionized air was something mysterious coming in from space--thus the name "cosmic rays.""

Happy traveling!

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 9:22 ID:WziR+UaV

>>5
Thanks. Just starting to read and it seems we may be relying on the hull to protect astronauts. Ion/Electrical/something charged hull of some sort perhaps?

Too tired. But thanks again. Will look into.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 9:24 ID:x3q7t6Oj

>>2
Only if he careened through space bare ass naked. A magnetic field and a thin layer of lead stops/redirects all cosmic rays.

Name: Anonymous 2007-08-31 19:08 ID:yoFwyReN

>>6

It's a hard problem and they don't really know how to solve it. The bigger and heavier the shield, the more fuel you need and at some point the rocket become infeasible. Until then exploration is left to robots.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-01 9:13 ID:Xet5n374

>>8
Sort of proves the point of nuclear not being all that safe then. If it was then the power problem would be solved.

Robots FTW in any event.

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-01 9:15 ID:Xet5n374

>>8
also

What if the radiation in space could be utilised?

Name: Anonymous 2007-09-01 9:50 ID:NFpPSp9B

Didn't they plan on visiting Mars by 2020 or something?
I think they said that around that time when 9/11 happened.

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