PHOTO: NASA
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In August, NASA’s unmanned Phoenix
Mars Mission blasted off from the Kennedy
Space Center as the first mission of NASA’s Mars Scout
Program. Phoenix will reach the Red planet in May 2008,
and is part of NASA’s strategy to “follow the water” on
Mars. This will pave the way for manned Martian
missions, which President George W. Bush made a NASA
priority in 2004. No date has been set for the crewed
mission to Mars, but NASA is drawing up plans. The
ultimate goal: making Mars a human outpost.
The renewed focus on Mars has rejuvenated the idea
of terraforming Mars, which once belonged to the realm
of science fiction, but is becoming increasingly
possible today. Terraforming—or earthforming—is a
Herculean feat of planetwide engineering that will
change the Martian atmosphere and allow humans to make
uninhabitable Mars into a planet fit for natural life.
Space suits will still be necessary for human
habitation, but food will available from plants that
grow on a more temperate Mars.
“Now we have fairly accurate maps of the Red
Planet, and can imagine how it might be
modified—terraformed—to make it nearer to our heart’s
desire,” said space visionary Arthur
C. Clarke recently. A little more than a
decade ago, Clarke wrote a book, The Snows of Olympus: A
Garden on Mars (W.W. Norton & Co.,
1994) that dealt with how to create a biosphere on Mars.
He envisioned a huge garden on the slopes of Olympus
Mons, the giant Martian volcano.
Mars, the only likely candidate for terraforming in
the solar system, has numerous features in common with
Earth. Like Earth, it has a rocky composition and marked
seasons. Clearly, an environment different from the
cold, dry world we see today once existed on Mars, as
has been clear from recent NASA missions. Liquid water
flowed on the Martian surface in the past: there are
vast dry gorges and canyons etched by water and ice. The
reddish color of the soil indicates hydration of the
surface rocks, and is evidence of the role of water in
the evolution of the planet.
Earlier this year the NASA rover Spirit confirmed that
Mars was once a wet place. Spirit was exploring
an area called Gusev Crater, when it found a piece of
nearly pure silica. Silica is a component of window
glass, and it is often a main ingredient in sand. The
sort of silica found on Mars is usually formed in the
presence of a significant amount of water. And if water
flowed once on this frigid planet, will it not be
possible to make it flow again?
Given that most astronomers and space scientists
believe that humans have been responsible for global
warming on Earth, some scientists think so.
“Humans are effectively warming the Earth,” says
NASA’s Christopher McKay, who says we “can, and should,
do the same on Mars.” McKay has written extensively
about terraforming Mars, which he terms “planetary
ecosynthesis.” McKay is one of a handful of NASA
scientists who have begun to think about creating a
permanent outpost on Mars even though many years may
pass before a human sets foot there.
The first step to terraforming Mars would be to
warm up the planet. It has a lot of frozen carbon
dioxide (dry ice) at its poles. Increasing the
temperature from its current –60 °C to just above 0 °C
would turn the dry ice into gas. The ensuing thick
atmosphere of carbon dioxide would create a greenhouse
effect and would allow water to flow on Mars; in
principle, plants could then grow slowly.
The first Martian plants would probably be lichens.
In a few decades, there would be a seasonally ice-free
lake on the summit of Olympus, Mars’s largest volcano.
Soon thereafter, a terraformed Mars would witness a
veritable green revolution characterized by pines and
oaks, allowing it to become our second home.
Of course, questions remain as to what is the best
way to warm up Mars. One possibility, espoused by James
Oberg in his book New
Earths in 1981, is to use giant mirrors in
orbit around the planet to increase the temperature by
reflecting sunlight onto the poles. NASA researchers are
currently investigating large solar sails in an effort
to provide
spacecraft with solar power. Such solar
sails could be adapted for this purpose.
Another warming idea, as proffered by McKay, is to
generate gases known as halocarbons that would create a
greenhouse atmosphere. They would exclude gases like
bromine and fluorine, which can damage an ozone layer.
It would involve building a factory on Mars to make
halocarbons through chemical reactions. The raw
materials would be the Martian soil and the Martian
atmosphere. Mars has a thin atmosphere, and many light
gases such as hydrogen aren’t trapped by Martian
gravity. However, the heavier halocarbon molecules would
be trapped, and they would contribute to a greenhouse
effect. McKay says that real chemical studies have yet
to be done, but he favors this method because we already
have “produced halocarbons on Earth that have
contributed to global warming.”
In addition, there are more speculative ideas, such
as using nuclear-powered rockets to divert asteroids to
crash on Mars. This would create a catastrophe that
would release a lot of heat into the atmosphere, which
would increase the planet’s temperature dramatically.