Terralthra wrote:Broomstick wrote:YOU have come up with the notion that space colonization is to relieve population pressure, that is not seen as a universal goal. Some people favor the "lifeboat" goal, which doesn't require relocating massive numbers of people.
I didn't come up with it, but I think anyone who doesn't think of relieving population pressure is incredibly short-sighted. Many of the problems facing us here on Earth are related to the number of people we're trying to house on one orbiting habitat, with all the limits on volume and energy inherent therein.
Again, it depends on your end goal - if it's population relief that requires transporting lots of people, which is expensive, much more so than raw materials that don't require life support. If the primary goal is the survival of the species then you just transport a minimum number to set up a viable long-term colony and relying on breeding up numbers. Maybe you include additional genetic material to reduce inbreeding. Of course, the second option might mean allowing a lot of humanity to die. I'm not real keen on that, personally.
Terralthra wrote:Broomstick wrote:You also need more than just rocks. The notion of refining rocket fuel on Mars (as well as extracting oxygen for breathing, and various other volatiles) is that even if the atmosphere of Mars in very thin there is a still a lot of it. On space station you have to import gasses and liquids where on Mars you can extract them from the local environment.
Proposals for extracting breathable air and so on from Martian environments mostly focus on electrolyzing water, which is plentiful in space. Ice is everywhere.
Including Mars! (Not so much Venus... )
Terralthra wrote:Broomstick wrote:Terralthra wrote:The gap is year-round, though. There's no season on Mars in which there's enough sunlight to grow Earth plants that have worthwhile food value. Multiply all the food you want to grow by that 1/10th the power per area ratio of solar cells...
And... what's your point? Growing food requires a certain amount of area.
My point is that it requires a massive amount of area? I mean, I thought that was obvious. Growing food on Mars is going to be incredibly land-intensive, which in some senses defeats the purpose of going, since it'll be incredibly less efficient on a "required acreage per human" sense than Earth. Lots of science to accomplish, sure, but as far as colonies go, awful. It'd be like colonizing....I don't even know, colonizing the Nunavut or Kamchatka, only even worse.
Nunavut and Kamchatka have long been inhabited by humans. There is even limited agriculture there but to be honest a major difference is that in summer arctic regions on Earth receive abundant sunlight which, as you note, is an issue on Mars at any time of year.
Colonizing Antarctica is a better analogy in some limited ways, a place where agriculture outside is impossible any time of year. Antarctic bases do, typically, contain some hydroponics but no one has built anything extensive enough to support even one small base.
Anyone trying to grow food on Mars is going to have to supplement the sunlight, and most likely that would be led lightning at an optimized wave length for photosynthesis rather than full-spectrum light.
There may be strategic or scientific reasons to do so, but you wouldn't mark them as good habitable real estate.
On the other hand, given the transport costs and other limitations of Earth-Mars shipping making such a base as self-reliant as possible is a wise idea. Unfortunatley, there are several obstacles to growing food on Mars:
1) lack of air
2) lack of warmth
3) lack of water
4) unsuitable soil chemistry
5) lack of sunlight
You're going to need an atmosphere concentrator of some sort to deal with the first as well as some sort of pressurized container to hold a suitable pressure, an airtight greenhouse. Fortunately, a greenhouse will also help with the heat problem though you'll still need a supplemental heater. Water will either need to be found on Mars (and will require chemical extraction) or brought with you. The soil chemistry is a problem - so far as know there is nothing like what we'd consider organic matter in Martian "soil", and way too much of some things like iron oxide. Results of actual tests on actual Martian soil with the Viking Lander have occasionally been described as "fizzy". Suffice to say, whatever Martian soil is, it ain't Earthly dirt. Unfortunately, the plants that do best in low light conditions are also the ones that tend to be best at soaking up heavy metals, which might render them toxic for humans. Provided you can obtain sufficient water and recycle it with some efficiency some sort of hydroponics or airponics is going to be the way to go, at least initially. The upside is that such set ups,
provided they get sufficient light, take up less space allowing for smaller greenhouses... except for the issue of providing light on Mars. There's apparently been some work with concentrating sunlight via mirrors and transporting it via fiberoptics to where it's wanted. Not sure how practical that would be. Definitely, if you're using artificial light, even as a supplement, you'd want to optimize the wavelengths for plant growth.
Is growing food on Mars going to be easy? Nope. But, again, given the distances and time involved in transporting anything to Mars it might be worth the effort.
Terralthra wrote:Did your hydroponics garden fulfill all of your caloric needs for an extended period of time? If it didn't, estimate the fraction it did fulfill, then multiply the amount of work you had to do by the reciprocal of that fraction to get the working day of a Martian farmer, after adding in time to clear off the solar panels and greenhouse roof.
We were getting about a pound or two (kilo) of food a week out of 3m x 4m room, and we only utilized part of the room, basically, the 1/3 just in front of the windows. Once set up about an hour a week of maintenance. A reset took more time, of course. Haven't extrapolated that out, but any set-up going to Mars is going to be way more efficient than my cobbled-together set-up.
There's a soilless set up on the ISS producing lettuce and radishes, which is a testbed for any sort of off-Earth food growing. We know it can be done because we've done it, the devil is in the details
Terralthra wrote:I suppose if you had someone who really wanted to do manual farming, there's no reason to stop them.
There are psychological benefits to being around green, growing plants as well.
It's possible that the combination of carbon dioxide to oxygen conversion, psychological benefits of being near growing plants as well as the consumption of fresh food, and even limited agriculture as a stop-gap against an interruption in supply lines might make farming on Mars cost-effective in context. Completely self-sufficient? Probably not for a long time, but just as you can boot strap from smaller to larger space habitats you might be able to boot-strap Martian agriculture over the long term.
It's also worth noting that travel time to and from the L5 Earth/Moon system is about the same as travel time to the moon - a few days. Travel time to Mars is way longer, and dependent on launch windows (there'd be launch windows to L5 daily, and non-optimal windows at all times that don't significantly increase time that much). If something goes wrong on a space habitat, help is not that far away. If something goes wrong on Mars....good luck!
At this point, if something goes wrong even in orbit help in time to do anything is unlikely. For a long time the only rescue in space is going to be self-rescue, which is one reason that figuring out a way to grow food on Mars is so attractive.
Terralthra wrote:Interest in space habitation cratered when the space program did, largely because it was never really fueled by a desire for exploration, but out of nationalism and cold-war era military-industrial spending. When the US won the space race (to Luna) and the Cold War wound down, so did the drive to go ever further, and with decreased launch frequency, economies of scale on launch costs never kicked in enough to make a lunar mining colony fit into the reduced NASA budget. Without the stepping stone, launch costs make any form of extraterran colonization extremely unlikely.
The other reason the space race wound down is lack of a something worth the cost of going there. Remember, initially Europe's interest in the New World was spices or gold - in other words, valuable stuff they hoped to find there. We got to the Moon and didn't immediately find "gold", so no industrial interests to help start space industry.