By Albert Burneko

9:00 AM EDT on September 11, 2024

Mars does not have a magnetosphere. Any discussion of humans ever settling the red planet can stop right there, but of course it never does. Do you have a low-cost plan for, uh, creating a gigantic active dynamo at Mars’s dead core? No? Well. It’s fine. I’m sure you have some other workable, sustainable plan for shielding live Mars inhabitants from deadly solar and cosmic radiation, forever. No? Huh. Well then let’s discuss something else equally realistic, like your plan to build a condo complex in Middle Earth.

  • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    This is a pretty embarassing way to open this article:

    Mars does not have a magnetosphere. Any discussion of humans ever settling the red planet can stop right there, but of course it never does. Do you have a low-cost plan for, uh, creating a gigantic active dynamo at Mars’s dead core? No? Well. It’s fine. I’m sure you have some other workable, sustainable plan for shielding live Mars inhabitants from deadly solar and cosmic radiation, forever. No? Huh. Well then let’s discuss something else equally realistic, like your plan to build a condo complex in Middle Earth.

    NASA legitimately has a plan for this, and no it’s not crazy, and no it doesn’t involve restarting the core of a planet:

    https://phys.org/news/2017-03-nasa-magnetic-shield-mars-atmosphere.html

    You just put a giant magnet in space at Mars’ L1 Lagrange point (the orbital point that is stable between Mars and the sun), and then it will block the solar wind that strips Mars’ atmosphere.

    Otherwise cosmic rays etc are blocked and interrupted by the atmosphere, not the magnetosphere.

    The confident dismissiveness of the author’s tone on a subject that they are (clearly) not an expert in, let alone took the time to google, says all you really need to know about how much you should listen to them.

    • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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      3 months ago

      This is cool. Reading the article I’m not sure if 1-2 Tesla is sufficient for the shield, or if you would actually need a lot more. But either way I feel like when we get to the point that we are seriously colonizing Mars in such a capacity that we need to worry about the magnetosphere, that putting a powerful magnet at the L1 point wouldn’t really be that big a deal.

      • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        The rub there is that it’s 1-2 Tesla’s over the whole cross sectional area of Mars (I believe).

        It’s not that hard to make a 2 Tesla magnet, but the most powerful electromagnet we’ve ever made is only 45 Tesla’s and even that only produces a 2 Tesla strong field out to 2.8m. So you might be looking at a Mars diameter worth of small magnets.

        • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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          3 months ago

          Wouldn’t that make it not an embarrassing way to open the article at all then?

          • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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            3 months ago

            No, not really. If we’re talking about colonizing a planet, building a bunch of magnets connected to solar panels is not going to be that big or expensive a part of it.

            It’s also the kind of relatively cheap thing that takes a long time that we may as well get started now. I mean we churn out that much bullshit e-waste constantly for no reason, if we were more focused / more billionaire’s oney went to that, you might actually be able to get it done.

            • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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              3 months ago

              The scale of what you just described is really goofy.

              It’s also a very delicate shield against a very serious problem.

              I don’t think it’s feasible to protect a mars-diameter disc of massive magnets from damage by either normal objects traveling through the area or from some human engineered attack.

              If you’re imagining the capacity to create such an emplacement, don’t you imagine that such phenomenal effort and wealth of resources would be better spent solving some terrestrial problem?

              There’s a real difference between e-waste, which is mostly byproducts of the petroleum refining process with electronic components smeared liberally on, many of which rely on petroleum byproducts themselves and electromagnets, which are, at the scale you’re discussing, massive chunks of metals refined, shaped and organized into configurations that will create magnetic fields when dc is present.

              I have a hard time imagining a level of focus required to bridge that gap.

              • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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                3 months ago

                The scale of what you just described is really goofy.

                The word you’re looking for is “big”. As in, it embiggens the noblest spirit.

                I don’t think it’s feasible to protect a mars-diameter disc of massive magnets from damage by either normal objects traveling through the area or from some human engineered attack.

                It’s also not possible to protect the ISS from either of those and yet it’s operated fine for 30 years. You do not need every little bit of it to be perfect, you just need to deflect enough solar wind that it allows Mars atmosphere to build back up which is what provides the real protection.

                If you’re imagining the capacity to create such an emplacement, don’t you imagine that such phenomenal effort and wealth of resources would be better spent solving some terrestrial problem?

                Like I said, we waste more resources than that all the time. I’d rather we didn’t build yachts and country clubs and private schools, yet we do. There’s no reason to not get started building that array, especially if it will take a while.

                There’s a real difference between e-waste, which is mostly byproducts of the petroleum refining process with electronic components smeared liberally on, many of which rely on petroleum byproducts themselves and electromagnets, which are, at the scale you’re discussing, massive chunks of metals refined, shaped and organized into configurations that will create magnetic fields when dc is present.

                That is not what e-waste is. E-waste primarily consists of silicon chips and the metal wires connecting them. Even the circuit boards themselves are primarily fibre glass, not petroleum.

                And no, we wouldn’t be creating those using actual magnets, we’d be using electro magnets, which is just coils of wire connected to PV and logic chips.

                I quite frankly flat out do not understand why people on the left are so against space exploration suddenly. You know that Elon Musk is not the only billionaire right? And you know virtually that all of them just sit on their wealth, and do nothing with it but wast on luxury lifestyles for themselves right? Yeah it would be better if billionaire’s did not exist, but as long as they do, why are you upset about their money going to space exploration as opposed to just yachts and $20,000 a night hotel stays?

                • anachronist@midwest.social
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                  3 months ago

                  I quite frankly flat out do not understand why people on the left are so against space exploration suddenly

                  Ever heard the song “whitey on the moon?”

                  Setting that aside, exploring space is not the same thing as building a company town for the world’s least mentally stable pregnancy fetishist oligarch in an unworldly cold desert where everyone is sure to die.

                • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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                  3 months ago

                  How much (metal, refined, produced on earth) wire would you say is required to produce an air (actually vacuum, but we know air core really well so there’s math for them) core electromagnet which can generate a field capable of deflecting solar wind over the area of its pv array? In order to maintain that field strength, how much current is required? Can it be supplied by a pv array equal in area to the effective field area? How many of those are needed to cover the area of mars?

                  That’s-a lotta metal!

                  Also speaking as a person who deals with e-waste daily, it’s both by volume and mass composed of petroleum products. Fiberglass is reenforced plastic. Ics are 90% plastic by volume. Discrete components are made of petroleum distillates in a lot of cases and encased in them in even more cases!

                  Even if you only considered the boards as the e-waste and not the plastic cases and bodies themselves, those dont exist in a vacuum like our hypothetical electromagnets, a reduction in printer boards means fewer printers which are almost completely just plastic.

    • Midnitte@beehaw.org
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      3 months ago

      You just put a giant magnet in space at Mars’ L1 Lagrange point

      Well, that’s a lot saner than nuking the poles.

      Doesn’t seem like we’re near technical feasibility, though - how would you power such a massive magnet in space?

      • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        Solar panels would be my guess, though you can always build a space based nuclear reactor if you can refuel it and get rid of its waste.

        It would certainly need a lot more to figure out an actual feasible plan, but I don’t think there’s anything fundamentally impossible about doing it with today’s technology, let alone the future’s.

        • Midnitte@beehaw.org
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          Mars gets roughly half the light of Earth, so I don’t think Solar panels would be realistic (how much solar panel surface would you need to power a magnet of that size?)

          I’m also not sure a nuclear reactor is realistic - forget the nuclear waste, how do you get rid of the heat waste?

          You’d need quite a big magnet operating at a level akin to superconducting magnets in particle accelerators.

          Perhaps someone could calculate more accurate numbers and feasibility, but to me, it currently sounds very out of reach for us (not impossible, mind you).

        • FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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          The linked article says the artificial magnetosphere would encompass the entire planet and points out this includes two critical places where the most atmosphere is lost.

          So yes by virtue of it encompassing the whole planet it does cover those two places… I suppose they wanted to specifically mention them

        • Midnitte@beehaw.org
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          3 months ago

          In the future it is quite possible that an inflatable structure(s) can generate a magnetic dipole field at a level of perhaps 1 or 2 Tesla (or 10,000 to 20,000 Gauss) as an active shield against the solar wind."

          Indeed, “in the future” seems to be doing quite a lot of heavy lifting. As noted, 1-2 Tesla is a pretty powerful magnet - so you’d need a pretty big and powerful magnet.

          It also doesn’t completely protect the entire planet just two critical points on the surface.

          That is certainly an important catch.

        • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 months ago

          as masterspace noted NASA has actually given it some thought.

          Just because people talk about something at one conference that doesn’t make it real, feasible, happening, etc. As the actual people said, it’s “fanciful”. It’s literally just people talking. It doesn’t matter where they work.

          • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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            3 months ago

            You’re talking about the people who lowered a car from a rocket crane onto the surface of another planet, you can be thoughtfully critical, but their technical record has earned them a lot more than surface level dismissal.

    • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      You just put a giant magnet in space at Mars’ L1 Lagrange point (the orbital point that is stable between Mars and the sun), and then it will block the solar wind that strips Mars’ atmosphere.

      lol… According to your own citation, this wacky scheme was just a talk at some conference. Like the researchers said, it’s “fanciful”. It’s not real.

      The confident dismissiveness of the author’s tone on a subject that they are (clearly) not an expert in, let alone took the time to google

      This is rich coming from someone who posts articles that they didn’t read.

      • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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        3 months ago

        Yeah bud, there’s also these little shelters called caves.

        The author of the article literally guffaws at the prospect of respinning a planet’s core when that’s not remotely how you would approach that problem.

        It would be like writing an article saying “Come on, you believe in vaccines? What, you think a scientist can cut open your individual cells and put antibodies in each one? You really think they have tweezers that small? Get real dum dum.”

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 months ago

    Colonize is not the same as terraform.

    Mars could be colonized without terraforming it. Closed habitats could be permanent thus providing a way of colonization.

    Terraforming is a trouble without magnetosphere that’s true. But not impossible. As there are tech concepts on how it could be possible to shield mars atmosphere. And doesn’t seem imposible, just expensive and complex.

  • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Fuck Elon Musk, but don’t discourage human curiosity and stupidity. There’s nothing humans love more than conquering an impossible task. Humanity would have never made it as far as we did without people doing stupid and crazy shit. Humanity is the kinda species that just says “fuck it, we ball” and then proceeds to just do exactly what they shouldn’t do. Shit like walking across ice sheets to new continents because why not and go to the fucking moon.

    Someone will figure it out eventually. Might take a couple hundred years (if we don’t kill ourselves first) but we’ll get there.

    • anachronist@midwest.social
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      3 months ago

      He’s a “free-breathing absolutist.” He thinks everyone should have a supply of oxygen except the people he personally doesn’t like.

  • zod000@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    Even in the unlikely event that Elon did get a colony going on Mars, he’d be like Cohaagen from Total Recall, but worse.

  • endofline@lemmy.ca
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    3 months ago

    The problem of sun radiation can be mitigated by dwelling underground as many early humans did so

  • Chemical Wonka@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 months ago

    We, as a human race, will face so many problems, of various orders and magnitudes in the near future, that thinking about colonizing Mars will be considered an outrage.

  • hackerwacker@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I honestly don’t think any wetware human will ever land on Mars or even enter its orbit.

    We’ll be posthuman cyborgs before that happens.

    • PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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      The idea of “posthuman cyborgs” is so fanciful, that I don’t think you are connected enough to reality to even make an accurate judgement on “the possible.”

      We have the technology TODAY, RIGHT NOW to go to mars and make it back. There is no over-arching reason to do such a thing, but there are also no significant technological barriers preventing us from doing it. Human Cyborgs are 100% impossible today, and there are a myriad number of things preventing that kind of development. For example, we cannot today, keep a brain alive for any significant time, outside of it’s existing organic support body. Individual neurons? Sure, but a system of neurons at any comparable complexity as even a simple mouse brain? Nope. On the other-hand we have actually kept people alive in space for over a year, and we only need around 2years to get to mars and back. We also have the capability to send things to mars and bring them back, so combining those two things, and there ya go.

      • hackerwacker@lemmy.ml
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        3 months ago

        We really don’t. We can barely make it to orbit. Boeing is failing at even doing that.

        It’s like saying your grandpa can climb Mount Everest because he can shamble to the local tesco. It’s not even close.

        • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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          this is straight up nonsense. we get into orbit just fine, ISS has been operating for decades. Going beyond that is only a matter of political will, not a limit of tech or engineering. In fact they are working on Artemis to go back to the moon right now, and Mars after that.

          and i actually disagree with the person above that we can go to mars right now. there are issues they need to figure out, but they are solvable problems. This isn’t like cold fusion that is 30 years away from being 30 years away.

          also boeing isn’t representative of the aerospace industry or even just NASA. They are mismanaged and negligent. they can’t even build airplanes, never mind spacecraft.

          • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Going beyond that is only a matter of political will

            Yeah, who’s willing to murder a bunch of hapless astronauts?

            also boeing isn’t representative of the aerospace industry or even just NASA. They are mismanaged and negligent. they can’t even build airplanes, never mind spacecraft.

            Tell that to NASA.

            • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Yeah, who’s willing to murder a bunch of hapless astronauts?

              pure ignorance.

              Tell that to NASA.

              what does this even mean? NASA knows, that’s why they didn’t let Boeing take astronauts back. NASA had concerns and acted accordingly, as a competent organization should.

    • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      just landing on mars? nah that’ll happen soon. settling it on a long term basis is a whole other matter though.

      • hackerwacker@lemmy.ml
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        We can land corpses or soon-corpses on Mars sure. Getting people there and back reliably and in good shape is going to be extremely difficult if not completely impossible. And the benefit is near zero.

        • acosmichippo@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          difficult yes, of course. impossible, not even close. NASA’s goal is by the 2030s - even if you don’t believe that timeline which would be fair, the technology is well within our reach.

        • 4am@lemm.ee
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          Every time we do it we learn from it. That’s nowhere near zero.