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General Tech Learning Aids/Tools 2 years ago
Posted on 16 Aug 2022, this text provides information on Learning Aids/Tools related to General Tech. Please note that while accuracy is prioritized, the data presented might not be entirely correct or up-to-date. This information is offered for general knowledge and informational purposes only, and should not be considered as a substitute for professional advice.
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I am working a hard science fiction story and I cannot come up with a really good reason to put people on Mars. I need people on Mars for the story to work, but there is no reason for them to be there. Drones can do anything people can (often better than people can). Why should they be there in the first place?
One possible solution I've come up with is maintenance. It's more economically viable to hire technicians to maintain the robotics than build robots to repair the robots.
Edit: I'm looking for city-size populations. These are not explorers (although in an early draft they are prospectors, kinda mining explorers). They could be a support city larger solar exploration.
So I'm going to be an asshole here and poke holes in a few responses on why it won't work in my world. Although some might work well enough to justify changing the world in a way that makes them work (adding social or economic pressures that justify it)
Food exports are really just carbon exports. Any self sustaining colony should have its own "farm" (algae panels like solar panels). They will however need carbon to match their population growth. Earth will never need to import carbon (at least not for a very long time), but a Martian farm could supply extra solar colonies that lack carbon. Lunar colonies would need to import 100% of their carbon; maybe breaking mars orbit an a transfer orbit is cheaper than taking Earth carbon?
A lot of responses don't put humans on the planet. No reason to leave orbit if all you're doing is refueling. And even a refueling station could be pretty automated.
Population pressure represents a new set of problems. Now you have to cheaply move living people. That creates a whole new set of problems. Refugees built a Mayflower to escape WW3? Getting pretty fantastical with that one...
I'm trying to do this with very hard science based fiction, but maybe I have to just assume some speculative technologies work (em-drive, for example) and redesign the economic structure with that in mind. Or create a Unobtainable that puts people on Mars.
I worked on a science fiction story centered on Mars for a while, and I intend to pull it off the back burner at some point. My primary driving economic factor for Mars turned out to be pretty simple: As humans began to expand into space, mars became the logical breadbasket for the solar system.
Mars has a carbon dioxide atmosphere (mostly) which is not at all hard to use to grow plants. It has soil that can be fairly easily adapted, and it even has areas of the surface in low points like the Valles Marineris that have significant air pressure and temperatures approaching those of Earth during some parts of the year. In such a region, it would be pretty cheap to create a large, soft "greenhouse" type structure.
So, you can grow stuff on a massive scale on mars, so what? Why not use hydroponics on your local dome structure? Mostly space issues. Hydroponics would be used on small colonies and ships, but would certainly be specialized to favor things that can be grown in very small spaces with maximum nutritional density for a given cubic meter of growing space. Such stuff probably won't taste wonderful to people even if it will keep them alive.
Mars could grow real apples, pears, nuts, whatever (Martian wine anyone?). It can also launch stuff into orbit much more cheaply than Earth can, due to the less extreme gravity well. The result: Mars is the natural place to set up a large scale agricultural operation to support anything else mankind happens to be doing in space.
[I just want to clarify: I'm talking about exporting food from Mars to other space colonies, NOT Earth!]
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