Is it just me or does Mars look Terraformed?

You can increase the gravity on Mars. Stop it from spinning.

Errm, not so much. The change wouldn't even be noticeable. If you want more gravity slam a few million asteroids into it or one really big moon. You'll need to redo the terraforming a bit afterwards.
 
Errm, not so much. The change wouldn't even be noticeable. If you want more gravity slam a few million asteroids into it or one really big moon. You'll need to redo the terraforming a bit afterwards.

I see what you mean. I don't know if my calculations are correct but I get a 0.017m/s2 increase in gravitational acceleration if we were to stop Mars spinning. The time would be better spent building some sort of meta-dimensional jump drive that can get us into the Star Citizen universe so we can pinch their artificial gravity technology.
 
I seem to remember one possible method was to nuke the be-jesus out of it. I think to release the carbon dioxide from the rock. Although that would have some unfortunate consequences.
 
I remember that i have read science article about how to terraform mars. One way was to do what humans are the best to do. Pollution and greenhouse effect (same thing that is behind global warming on earth). Just build factories that release CO2 and it should slowly make atmosphere stronger. Then later you can start to make attempts to bring organic mas there to produce O2. But this method would take 1000 years.

The good news is that the martian atmosphere is already 96% CO2 :p

More seriously, assuming we wouldn't be murdering all existing martian life by introducing a corrosive gas like oxygen into their atmosphere, the biggest problem with terraforming is how to prevent the newly introduced gasses from leaking out into space like the did before. We would need to introduce something into mars that can generate oxygen faster than it is lost due to brownian motion and other forces.
 
The good news is that the martian atmosphere is already 96% CO2 :p

More seriously, assuming we wouldn't be murdering all existing martian life by introducing a corrosive gas like oxygen into their atmosphere, the biggest problem with terraforming is how to prevent the newly introduced gasses from leaking out into space like the did before. We would need to introduce something into mars that can generate oxygen faster than it is lost due to brownian motion and other forces.

Probably need to reinforce its magnetosphere a ton, too.
 
Probably need to reinforce its magnetosphere a ton, too.

maybe make Phobos and Deimos slam into it at just the right angle as to restart the spinning of the core, like the Great Impact theory says Earth got it's core and inner core which makes our magnetosphere so strong.
 
another question is, how did they create large enough electromagnetic field, that protects earth. Is something about it in Elite lore?

You don't have to. While it's true any new atmosphere put into place will eventually be lost to the Solar wind, it would take thousands or tens of thousands of years to do so.
 
maybe make Phobos and Deimos slam into it at just the right angle as to restart the spinning of the core, like the Great Impact theory says Earth got it's core and inner core which makes our magnetosphere so strong.

You would need something alot bigger than tiny asteroids Phobos and Deimos. Great impact hypothesis suggests that the body which slammed into the Earth was half the size of it. Seriously big planet. Of course, after such cataclysmic impact you can write off the planet for the next few million years until it cools down again.

You don't have to. While it's true any new atmosphere put into place will eventually be lost to the Solar wind, it would take thousands or tens of thousands of years to do so.

However, creating that atmosphere in first place would take thousands of years as well. Looks like Sisyphus' job to me: what you make today, Solar winds will eradicate tomorrow, so to speak.

There are theories that the terraforming of Venus might be actually easier than Mars.
 
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thats now how physis would allow this. Mars athmosthere is like only one thenth of what we humans would need. and youc nanot make mars' athmoshere that dense because solar winds and low gravity would make this athmosphere flow away into space and be gone. Unless you can artificially generate a higher gravity.

Actually gravity isn't a problem. You can have a thick atmosphere on a lower-gee body than Earth (look at Titan). Atmospheric erosion is the killer, if you don't have active volcanism to replenish it.

Cheers,

Drew.
 
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In the FE2/FFE games, Mars (and other worlds like it) was classified as a "small sustained terraformed world" in the system map - in other words, the terraforming isn't permanent and self-sustaining, it is constantly being renewed and reinforced (at great expense) and Mars would revert back to a barren airless desert without this constant human intervention. It is, therefore, an expensive synthetic garden planet - just the sort of thing you want to choose for your capital planet if you're a galactic superpower with a desire to flaunt your wealth and power to all who visit it.

I like how it still contains distinctly 'old martian like red patches' (when i first visited on xbox anyway) of landmass as if to suggest that our first terraforming attempt wasn't perfect. Not sure if that was the intention but it seemed like a nice touch to me.

The colouration of terraformed Mars, as with the colouration of other Earth-like planets, is primarily sorted by altitude above sea level. Mars is a distinctly asymmetric planet, with an ancient massive impact having carving out a huge dent at the North Pole; check out the topographical map of Mars on Wikipedia. ED uses this real-world elevation data for Mars, just as it does for Earth. Thus, there's a huge ocean covering the north pole and much of the northern hemisphere except for the Volcanic bulges of Tharsis and Elysium, a green swathe of near-sea-level plains near the equator, with the south pole at relatively high altitude except for the large Hellas impact basin. The thinner air, combined with remoteness from large bodies of water, mean that the Southern Hemisphere (except for Lake Hellas) is still largely a red desert.
 
I seem to remember one possible method was to nuke the be-jesus out of it. I think to release the carbon dioxide from the rock. Although that would have some unfortunate consequences.
Yea, that theory was from Elon Musk, I believe...
However, there are theories about ice trapped under the surface. We shall see.
 
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The terraforming of mars was a monumental act of environmental vandalism. After reading the "Red Mars" trilogy by Kim Stanley-Robinson I was soooo looking forward to checking out the terrain so wonderfully described in the book. But no, no no. Now it's all trees and ewoks. Criminal!
 
The terraforming of mars was a monumental act of environmental vandalism. After reading the "Red Mars" trilogy by Kim Stanley-Robinson I was soooo looking forward to checking out the terrain so wonderfully described in the book. But no, no no. Now it's all trees and ewoks. Criminal!

And do not forget that there was the extermination of the Martians before the terraforming

:)
 
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