Roscosmos says Mars most preferable planet for future colonization
However, human beings most likely not with the current genotypes will be able to become Mars colonizers arriving from Earth in the distant future, Roscosmos' Executive Director for Long-Term Programs and Science Alexander Bloshenko said
MOSCOW, May 12. /TASS/. Russia’s State Space Corporation Roscosmos believes that Mars is the most preferable planet in the solar system for future colonization, Roscosmos Executive Director for Long-Term Programs and Science Alexander Bloshenko told TASS on Tuesday.
"The studies of the Sun show that it is getting hotter while the temperature on Venus and Mars is growing slowly and this is one of the reasons why Mars looks, perhaps, most preferable today from the prospect of terraforming [the creation of Earth-like conditions on the planet] and colonization," Bloshenko said.
Space colonization is the issue of the survival of humankind and all the life on Earth in a super-long-term perspective, he stressed.
However, human beings most likely not with the current genotypes will be able to become Mars colonizers arriving from Earth in the distant future, he pointed out.
Roscosmos is carrying out systemic work for preparing missions to the Moon and Mars, he said.
Along with Mars, Venus looks similar to Earth, Bloshenko said.
However, the environment on Venus is far from being favorable from the viewpoint of humans, he said. In particular, the average temperature of its surface equals about plus 470 degrees Celsius (compared to -63 degrees on Mars) while its atmospheric pressure exceeds that on Earth by 90 times, he pointed out.
"The conditions potentially ‘attractive’ for colonization are present on Venus only at an altitude of 50 - 65 km: here the planet’s atmosphere most of all resembles that on Earth by its temperature, pressure and gas structure," he said.
Life on Mars
At the early stages of its history, Mars presumably had the dense atmosphere and a large amount of water, i.e. the environment that resembles Earth’s conditions today. However, over the period of several hundred million years, this environment was lost, Bloshenko said.
All the studies conducted on Mars and Venus into the presence of the signs of life have not yielded any positive results so far, he added.
"Possibly, the next stage of the ExoMars joint Russian-European mission whose launch is scheduled for 2022 will shed light on this issue. The program envisages landing on Mars a rover equipped with a drilling device that is capable of getting in the Martian subsurface layer, and also a miniature laboratory to look for signs of life," the Roscosmos official said.