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KARACHI: For the last decade or so, there seem to have been serious efforts by the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the scientific community in other countries to explore Mars and determine whether it can be liveable. Known popularly as the ‘Red Planet’ on account of the colour its iron-oxide rich surface, Mars is roughly half the size of the Earth and has been a constant source of curiosity for scientists over the years. This is reflected in the amount of exploration and research that has gone towards the planet to ascertain whether it is possible to establish life there. Projects like the Mars Foundation based in the Netherlands and the Mars Space Mission project based in New York are composed of scientists and aerospace companies exploring how Mars can be liveable in the first half of 21

Simulated Mars Mission Shows Benefits of All-Female Crew

Morgan McMullenGetty Images A low-budget sci-fi movie from 1968 begins with this ominous broadcast from alien invaders headed for Earth: “Mars needs women!” The best and brightest scientists from Planet Earth are currently working on making that trip in the other direction. In the process, they re testing a theory that women could be the most efficient option for colonizing the Red Planet. HI-SEAS, the Hawaii Space Exploration Analog and Simulation complex, recently concluded a one-month all-female mission simulation to examine how such a crew would handle life where only Mars Rovers have gone before. Located about 8,200 feet above sea level on the Big Island’s Mauna Loa mountain range, the HI-SEAS habitat is a 1,200-square-feet dome perched on the land’s Martian-like geology of rocks and lava. It has already served as the site of multiple long-term (four months to a year) simulated missions for NASA and a variety of private research groups.

This week on the Space com forums: Ancient climate, plastic rocket fuel and alien life!

This week, the community is intrigued by Earth s ancient climate. We also see one community member post some thought-provoking questions!

Space Chat with Space com: Tune in Fridays for science, space and more!

We are supposed to ask questions, so, I am gonna ask some. :D Are whiteholes possible? If yes, then, why haven t we yet discovered one, is it because we don t have enough technology or anything else? If not, then, why not? Are there more elementary forces? Can anything be smaller than the higgs boson? And last, but not the least, will we ever have a theory of everything? What will our reactions be like when we really have one? Hope that isn t too much. :) :D Reply science chick 07 January 2021 23:08 keep in mind the best questions are the ones with no answer

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