chillstar
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It takes all kinds to make a universe.
Posts: 155
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Post by chillstar on Oct 30, 2023 13:49:51 GMT
A great deal of resources has been utilized by NASA, in order to construct and deploy robots to Mars. NASA is betting that there is life somewhere on the planet. But how could such life be there? A couple of possibilities come to mind.
Scenario one:
Somewhere in the universe a distant planet harboring life, not necessarily intelligent, exploded, and a chunk of the planet flew out into space and headed towards our solar system. Where it navigated through the Keiper belt. Finagled its way through the Oort cloud. And then continued on to Mars. Where it landed and deposited the lifeforms it was carrying, for the robots to find.
Scenario two:
Prior to life forming on Earth, life could have first started to form on Mars--or at least tried to, briefly. And then having Mars collide with another planet, leaving it [Mars] unable to sustain that life, in some dried-out lake certain lifeforms became facilized. Where they remain to this date for the rovers to discover.
Either way, it's a very long shot.
Now, would finding such life be considered the same as finding intelligent exoplanetary beings which we expect to encounter and or contact? Probably not. We would not be satisfied until we make contact with a higher life. Maybe someday we will and see what certain aliens in the universe look like.
But how about Saturn's moon Titan. What if we discover lifeforms there--still living? Not facilized. Would that constitute as finding aliens? Who can say. Or maybe fly to Jupiter's moon Europa. Blast a large hole in the ice and expose the ocean underneath. And maybe then, we can all live in a yellow submarine.
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Post by moksha on Oct 30, 2023 19:57:22 GMT
A great deal of resources has been utilized by NASA, in order to construct and deploy robots to Mars. NASA is betting that there is life somewhere on the planet. But how could such life be there? A couple of possibilities come to mind. Scenario one: Somewhere in the universe a distant planet harboring life, not necessarily intelligent, exploded, and a chunk of the planet flew out into space and headed towards our solar system. Where it navigated through the Keiper belt. Finagled its way through the Oort cloud. And then continued on to Mars. Where it landed and deposited the lifeforms it was carrying, for the robots to find. Scenario two: Prior to life forming on Earth, life could have first started to form on Mars--or at least tried to, briefly. And then having Mars collide with another planet, leaving it [Mars] unable to sustain that life, in some dried-out lake certain lifeforms became facilized. Where they remain to this date for the rovers to discover. Either way, it's a very long shot. Now, would finding such life be considered the same as finding intelligent exoplanetary beings which we expect to encounter and or contact? Probably not. We would not be satisfied until we make contact with a higher life. Maybe someday we will and see what certain aliens in the universe look like. But how about Saturn's moon Titan. What if we discover lifeforms there--still living? Not facilized. Would that constitute as finding aliens? Who can say. Or maybe fly to Jupiter's moon Europa. Blast a large hole in the ice and expose the ocean underneath. And maybe then, we can all live in a yellow submarine. Might want to look at cesium 137 on Mars. Thanks for your thoughtful posts. 7154, could of done it.
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chillstar
Full Member
It takes all kinds to make a universe.
Posts: 155
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Post by chillstar on Oct 31, 2023 2:18:41 GMT
I imagine that Mars holds a lot of secrets on its surface, which the rover Curiosity may be able to locate. After all, the red planet is in a pristine condition, since it has not been polluted or contaminated by us in any way--other than the droids that we sent there of course. And, any samples that we collect and analyze, might be able to tell us more about the early universe, and maybe how our solar system formed. Effort and money well spent. Curiosity may even uncover an abandoned, or even still active alien base--which some UFO hunter alleges to have found. {Here}
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Post by maxxhazzard on Nov 16, 2023 9:24:10 GMT
do you really think NASA has landed a rover on Mars? Humans cannot invent a ship to reach the depth of the sea, my drone breaks and looses battery power quicly. i find it suspect we are capable of building a rover and drone cabable of operating on mars without humans being able to repair, let along, the hostel environment it has to endure….. I dont think NASA can built a space-ship able to deliver anything to Mars As far as, what aliens may look like, I believe the bible has the answer stating at creation, Animals were created first, then a man call Serpent, whom was Intelligent and walked up-right on Two legs. Serpent was smarther than Eve and Adam and in my view was punished allong with Adam and Eve and bound to Earth…. Im just say'n
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chillstar
Full Member
It takes all kinds to make a universe.
Posts: 155
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Post by chillstar on Nov 19, 2023 0:28:37 GMT
Did we land men on the moon (Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin)? Did we send and land droids on Mars? Have we really built a space station above the Earth? Who knows. I guess we are going to have to take all that on good faith.
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chillstar
Full Member
It takes all kinds to make a universe.
Posts: 155
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Post by chillstar on Nov 20, 2023 15:31:44 GMT
Old photograph taken of Martian, before the rovers ( here). My favorite.
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chillstar
Full Member
It takes all kinds to make a universe.
Posts: 155
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Post by chillstar on Dec 13, 2023 15:50:10 GMT
Perseverance rover celebrates 1,000 Mars days on the Red Planet. Source ( here) NASA's Perseverance rover just rolled past a big milestone on the Red Planet. The car-sized Perseverance has now been exploring its exotic environs for 1,000 Mars days, or sols. (One sol is slightly longer than an Earth day — 24 hours and 37 minutes.) "Sol in, sol out! I completed 1,000 Martian days … and my work is far from done," Perseverance team members wrote on Tuesday (Dec. 12) via the mission's official account on X (formerly known as Twitter).
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Post by buoyant on Jan 25, 2024 0:33:36 GMT
Did we land men on the moon (Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin)? Did we send and land droids on Mars? Have we really built a space station above the Earth? Who knows. I guess we are going to have to take all that on good faith.Or the huge amount of photographic evidence and telemetry.
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Post by buoyant on Jan 25, 2024 0:35:19 GMT
But how about Saturn's moon Titan. What if we discover lifeforms there--still living? Not facilized. Would that constitute as finding aliens?Obviously it would.
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Post by purr on Jan 28, 2024 17:11:30 GMT
Did we land men on the moon (Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin)? Did we send and land droids on Mars? Have we really built a space station above the Earth? Who knows. I guess we are going to have to take all that on good faith. I tend to believe we did, Chillstar, perhaps more men and droids than admitted to. Did we see the real or complete footage / imagery? I say, no. There's imo a genuaine ISS above our heads too, again some of the more interesting sensor data withheld. purr
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