Colonizing Mars is humanity’s next great achievement

Colonizing Mars is humanity’s next great achievement

I’ve always dreamed of going to another planet.

Ever since I was little, the idea of humanity exploring exoplanets has been something I, along with so many others, have really wanted to see become a reality. One of the largest problems we face in making our sci-fi dreams come true is time: more specifically, we don’t live long enough to make the trip with the propulsion technology we have. It’s been clear that one of those factors had to change, and my money has always been on the latter rather than the former. That might be what has happened with Nasa’s EM Drive.


(The “Live Forever” department’s tests haven’t been nearly as successful)


The drive relies on solar energy instead of a propellant and is able to generate thrust seemingly out of nowhere through the use of a magnetron (which I’m linking for those of you who are physics-oriented, since I’m not and can’t explain it well).  There was skepticism after tests in 2014 about the unaccounted thrust being generated, but NASA recently tested the drive again in a vacuum and the thrust was still there, even though it was a small amount. When magnified to the size of a spaceship, the amount of thrust generated that seems to defy Newton’s law of conservation of momentum can send us through space without using any fuel.


 

(<<T H E   F U T U R E>>)


 

The implications for this drive are gigantic: it’s estimated that manned trips would reach the Moon in only 4 hours, Mars in 70 days, and Pluto in 18 months. To put that in perspective, the unmanned spacecraft that just took images of Pluto this year took nearly a decade to reach the body, and we could theoretically do so in a year and a half. Moreover, it would only take roughly 100 years to reach Alpha Centauri, a trip that would take 10,000+ years with our current technology.


 

(The welcoming committee, probably)


 

If the drive were to function successfully on the scale of a spacecraft, it only speeds along our current plans to explore the solar system. You may have heard of the commercial attempt to reach Mars and create a reality show, known as Mars One. There are already members of the crew who are talking about the possibilities of reproducing on Mars and colonizing. Being able to make the trip in less than 1/3 of a year would mean great things for travel between the planets. NASA has been planning a progression toward manned trips to Mars, creating new spacesuit designs and projecting humans on Mars by the 2030s. In addition, earlier this year MIT created a device known as MOXIE that would slowly terra-form Mars’ atmosphere to create breathable oxygen. Not only that, MOXIE would also create liquid oxygen that could serve as potential fuel for a return flight. Of course, if the EM Drive were a success, we wouldn’t need that fuel in the first place.


(“Just going to the store, Mom”)


It seems we’re hitting a time of discovery that all points toward human colonization of Mars, and maybe even beyond. Before the midway point of the century, humanity could be inhabiting other planets. Less than 100 years after we first landed on the Moon. If technology is progressing this fast, imagine where we’ll be by the end of the century. Before 2100, we could easily have kids who don’t have to dream about exploring other planets – because they were born on them.

The World Will Stand Still without Your Opinion.

I’m not an expert on anything.

I’m a 21 year old college student whose main proficiency is that of most other adolescents and young adults: consuming content on the internet.


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(pictured: me, doing what I do.)


As a member of this generation that has grown up alongside the growth of the internet and technology, my role as a member of this global network has developed with me. We’re in Web 2.0, which means we have multi-way communication and things are focused around user-generated content. No other form of media has immediate, direct communication between businesses, organizations, political figures, regular people . . . anyone. And it’s been around for less than 20 years.

It’s easy to forget just how new our connectedness really is. And with each new generation, the memory of how it was before will fade more and more. Just 50 years ago, the thought of having a face-to-face conversation with someone on another continent would’ve been mind-blowing. 100 years ago there were still parts of the United States that didn’t have bathrooms inside their house.


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(#blessed)


We’ve proven that we know how to have fun with it – through our Caturdayz, our memes, and the way we’re able to have thousands of vines making fun of a music video less than a week after the video releases (looking at you, Drake). The most re-tweeted tweet in Twitter’s (short) history is a photo. Facebook is prioritizing videos and photos in its algorithm. Instagram is now the most popular social media site for youth. We love visual content; we eat it up. Don’t get me wrong, there’s nothing inherently wrong with that, but shouldn’t there be a balance between our entertainment and our engagement in advancing society?


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(For the record, this one’s my favorite.)


We’re so much more fortunate, globally-informed, and equipped to do something about it than any generation has ever been. We’ve already begun to use our advantage for good: through the internet’s ability to crowdfund and expose the real lives of people, donors from over 100 countries raised over 1 million USD for a Brooklyn middle school in need and over 2 million USD to help end bonded labor in Pakistan. Those are only two examples of the countless wonderful things that have been done through this medium. But the sky is the limit on how much good we can do with our ability to spread information worldwide in less than a day.

We have the opportunity to be proactive, not reactive to all of the things happening in today’s world. At least five articles show up in my Facebook newsfeed daily on a new innovation, idea, or discovery that has been made. What if we opened a dialogue with each other and pooled our insights to see where these new things might take us – not just immediately, but five, ten, or even twenty years down the road? Imagine the foresight we have working as a unit. Think of all of the potential crises that could’ve been avoided if we would have had global communication. With a worldwide conversation made up of multiple future-oriented viewpoints, maybe we would have seen that a pesticide that was developed in the early 1900s would turn into a chemical weapon in WWI and the main ingredient for Nazi gas chambers in WW2. Or on a lighter note, we might have discovered the alternate use for a Cincinnati man’s wallpaper cleaner much sooner.


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(Spoiler: it’s Play-Doh. ^^ALSO WEREN’T THOSE THE GREATEST?)


We have the ability to make a large impact on the world, and that’s what this blog is about: using the technology we were lucky enough to be born into to think proactively about the world. Ideas act like viruses, and we’ve seen better than anyone how they spread across the cells of this network. And the best part is, you don’t have to be an expert on anything to have an opinion.

I mean, I’m not an expert either.