It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by MDDoxs
Not to go off topic here but..
In 5 billion years we will have either destroyed ourselves or evolved in beings that can transverse multiple dimensions and or intergalatic space....which ever comes first, my money is on first option.
Secondly, i believe that if left un touched Mars will remain to be a dead planet, unless some external forces are applied, either by humans or natural occurances.
Just a guess
Originally posted by welshreduk
I think an equally valid question would have been will Earth eventually have Mars like conditions?
Or...
"DID" Mars previously have "Earth" like conditions?
Originally posted by Mkoll
reply to post by DarthOej
When the sun begins to get bigger in the later stages of its life it will not become more massive. It will just increase in volume and decrease in density. The gravity would stay the same, I think. The red giant stage of our sun may heat up Mars and cause a thicker atmosphere due to outgassing, but any potential window for life to move in would be short.
I think the only way Mars can be fully resuscitated would be through a Dyson sphere collecting most of the suns output, or some other very large power source, powering some kind of equipment that would pump large amounts of heat deep into mars.
We could terraform mars at first without a working magnetic field, at least partially, but in the event of a solar flare people would have to hide underground. I don't know how other introduced life would stand up to a solar flare. The solar winds would also very slowly blow away the atmosphere. Over time it would return to its current density.edit on 7-9-2012 by Mkoll because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by lewman
reply to post by DarthOej
Mars seems to orbit the sun on a strange axis where it kind of wobbles a huge amount compared to the earths gradual slight changes to the angle that it spins at.
I am pretty sure that this stops Mars from being able to create a strong magnetic field that is able to keep out enough radiation to support an earth like atmosphere.