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Could we actually live on Mars? - Mari Foroutan

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    So, you're thinking of moving to Mars.
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    Have you picked out a spot
    for your new home?
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    No? Well, I'm here to help.
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    First things first,
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    here are some of the things
    you'll need to bring to The Red Planet:
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    a high tolerance for cold,
    loneliness, and radiation,
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    a lifetime supply
    of breathable air and food,
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    a multibillion dollar spaceship,
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    a desire to just get away from it all,
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    and water.
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    You're definitely going to need water.
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    So what sort of real estate
    are you looking for?
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    How about a mansion in the maze-like
    Noctis Labyrinthus?
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    A hide away in the Happy Face Crater?
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    A fortress on the Face Mesa?
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    An oceanview?
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    Uh, bad news on the last one.
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    You're about 4 billion years late.
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    We're pretty sure that Mars
    used to have oceans, lakes, rivers,
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    the whole package.
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    But over time, almost all of it
    froze beneath the surface,
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    or evaporated off into space.
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    There's probably still some
    trapped beneath
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    the seasonally expanding and contracting
    carbon dioxide ice caps, though.
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    So what might Mars look like today
    if it had surface water?
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    That of course depends
    on how much we're talking about,
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    but maybe something like this.
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    The relatively flat northern hemisphere
    is below the average elevation,
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    so it would become one giant ocean,
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    while the crater-ridden
    southern hemisphere
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    would stay mostly high and dry.
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    That difference between hemispheres
    is a bit bizarre,
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    and we don't know why it's like that.
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    The southern half is probably
    much older,
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    judging by features
    like the number of craters,
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    and the evidence of increased
    volcanic activity in the north.
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    Okay, so who knows.
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    Maybe one day Mars will have oceans again,
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    but for now, what we've got is essentially
    one giant dusty desert.
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    In fact, it's similar enough
    to deserts on Earth,
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    that we've been able to learn a great deal
    about Mars on our home planet.
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    For instance, Maritan sand dunes
    form and behave
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    similarly to our sand dunes,
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    though the Martian versions
    often grow twice as large
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    thanks to a gravitational pull
    that's about a third as strong as ours.
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    And Mars has some features
    you won't see on Earth,
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    like tars, which are crestless
    sand dunes up to fifteen meters tall,
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    whose formations
    we have yet to understand.
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    You're probably wondering,
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    "What do you get when you
    combine a planet-wide desert
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    with an atmosphere, like ours,
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    is subject to wind-generating
    pressure differentials, dust storms?"
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    These will be your main weather hazards
    on the Red Planet.
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    They play a large part
    in making the planet red
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    by distributing rusted iron particles
    across the surface and into the air.
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    Thanks to the low gravity
    and lack of moisture,
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    these dust storms can last for months
    and cover the planet.
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    So, you might want to build your home
    as high as possible.
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    Well, look no further.
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    This is Olympus Mons,
    the largest volcano in the Solar System.
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    Even if Mars had a breathable atmosphere,
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    you'd find the views from
    the 25 kilometer summit breathtaking.
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    Or are volcanos not your thing?
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    Then how about Valles Marineris,
    the largest canyon in the Solar System?
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    It's so wide that from one side,
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    the opposite rim would be below
    the curve of the horizon.
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    Still, you catch som spectacular
    blue sunsets in the normally red sky,
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    which gets its color from the dust
    absorbing most of the blue light,
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    and the way sunlight is scattered
    by the atmosphere.
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    Have you got spirit, curiosity,
    or are you just looking for opportunity?
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    Then stop stalling
    and make the move to Mars today.
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    Mars: Redder than Ever.
Title:
Could we actually live on Mars? - Mari Foroutan
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:30

English subtitles

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