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Comments
thewtfcat OP t1_j9kzx8w wrote
Really?!! But Elon musk said in a decade. He’s lying?
jerrythecactus t1_j9l0ups wrote
Elon musk is a tech corporation billionaire with a god complex, of course he probably thinks he's going to start the expansion of humanity into the outer solar system in a decade's time. Though, realistically he probably said such things for publicity more than anything.
nobodysshadow t1_j9l13n0 wrote
When did he say that?
thewtfcat OP t1_j9l2qif wrote
In that case I may have heard it on a South Park episode
nobodysshadow t1_j9l55xb wrote
Sounds like a very reliable news source!
Piados1979 t1_j9kyrim wrote
Perhaps we put this topic to a more scientific way: What food should be eaten on Mars? I mean there is less gravity and if we eat as we would eat on earth our bodys will become very fat very soon. So what's the diet for mars?
thewtfcat OP t1_j9l08s5 wrote
Oh boy that’s a shocker and it’s bad
space-ModTeam t1_j9l0q5i wrote
Hello u/thewtfcat, your submission "Hello everyone at this sub. Where can I post about this following topic?" has been removed from r/space because:
- Such questions should be asked in the "All space questions" thread stickied at the top of the sub.
Please read the rules in the sidebar and check r/space for duplicate submissions before posting. If you have any questions about this removal please message the r/space moderators. Thank you.
jerrythecactus t1_j9l25jj wrote
Mars is a cold radioactive desert planet with a thin atmosphere, needless to say human habitation on mars will be on the same level as trying to live exclusively in a pressurized tin can with all of your living essentials being delivered via cargo landers.
Time spent on the surface would mostly consist of maintaining systems and doing research, which by that point might be more or less limited to figuring out how to turn the mars sands into usable resources. At the current point of time, a human habitation on mars is a massively pointless endeavor that would only serve to mentally traumatize a few scientists and engineers who may or may not end up dying in a place so far from home they'll never be recovered for even a symbolic gesture of closure.
The moon might be more manageable but that's just because it's closer to earth, a moon base itself would just be a ground format space station that might eventually expand to be for use at launching and refueling craft to mars and other planets without the burden of the earth's atmosphere to account for.
In short, at least for the foreseeable future, any human habitation on the moon or mars will be minimal purpose built habitats for industrial, research, or transport purposes.
[deleted] t1_j9l2s5i wrote
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jerrythecactus t1_j9l6j88 wrote
That would depend on the necessity of such a project. There are many factors to consider, such as where or how supplies will be transported to the facility, who will work at it, what the financial benefit would be, and the technological capability to build a McDonald's on mars.
Purely for the sake of speculation, installing any specific restaurant or store facilities on mars will require at the very least human habitation on mars to be mostly self sustaining without outside support, which means some level of terraforming or sufficient habitation systems to accommodate possibly thousands of people all of whom may not be trained scientists or engineers.
The discussion is mostly scifi at this point, as we already struggle to have people survive extended stays in orbit of earth, let alone on another planet long enough to build up a population large enough to make the prospect of McDonald's supplying franchises to the supposed colony. I imagine a lot of the limiting factors will be figuring out how to grow and process enough food to not only cover basic needs but to even make a luxury product like fast food available too.
There's also the matter of considering how or why a corporation like McDonald's would hope to benefit from such a effort. I imagine after a time the McDonald's installed on mars would become it's own mars exclusive chain since it would basically be feeding only mars population habitants and using those profits to keep itself running. Similar to how McDonald's has different divisions for different countries, mars would have it's own corporate McDonalds division that would only be linked to the main earth division by copyright and company policies and safety standards, with the profit generated being owned by the specific division that produced it. Really, this could be said for any earth origin corporation that produces facilities on mars.
Really, there's no realistic timeline for such a situation to occur, and I can only give general speculative answers based on levels of technical progress in a hypothetical mars colony.
[deleted] t1_j9l7ih4 wrote
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nobodysshadow t1_j9kyg3k wrote
I’d be surprised if they made a spaceship capable of taking people to mars in the next 100 years