Your kids might live on Mars. Heres how theyll survive Stephen Petranek

Strap yourselves in,

we’re going to Mars.

Not just a few astronauts –

thousands of people
are going to colonize Mars.

And I am telling you
that they’re going to do this soon.

Some of you will end up
working on projects on Mars,

and I guarantee that some
of your children will end up living there.

That probably sounds preposterous,

so I’m going to share with you
how and when that will happen.

But first I want to discuss
the obvious question:

Why the heck should we do this?

12 years ago,

I gave a TED talk on 10 ways
the world could end suddenly.

We are incredibly vulnerable
to the whims of our own galaxy.

A single, large asteroid
could take us out forever.

To survive we have to reach
beyond the home planet.

Think what a tragedy it would be

if all that humans have accomplished
were suddenly obliterated.

And there’s another reason we should go:

exploration is in our DNA.

Two million years ago
humans evolved in Africa

and then slowly but surely
spread out across the entire planet

by reaching into the wilderness
that was beyond their horizons.

This stuff is inside us.

And they prospered doing that.

Some of the greatest advances
in civilization and technology

came because we explored.

Yes, we could do a lot of good

with the money it will take
to establish a thriving colony on Mars.

And yes we should all be taking
far better care of our own home planet.

And yes, I worry we could screw up Mars
the way we’ve screwed up Earth.

But think for a moment,

what we had when John F. Kennedy
told us we would put a human on the moon.

He excited an entire generation to dream.

Think how inspired we will be
to see a landing on Mars.

Perhaps then we will look back at Earth

and see that that is
one people instead of many

and perhaps then
we will look back at Earth,

as we struggle to survive on Mars,

and realize how precious
the home planet is.

So let me tell you about the extraordinary
adventure we’re about to undertake.

But first,

a few fascinating facts
about where we’re going.

This picture actually represents
the true size of Mars compared to Earth.

Mars is not our sister planet.

It’s far less than half
the size of the Earth,

and yet despite the fact
that it’s smaller,

the surface area of Mars
that you can stand on

is equivalent to the surface area
of the Earth that you can stand on,

because the Earth
is mostly covered by water.

The atmosphere on Mars is really thin –

100 times thinner than on Earth –

and it’s not breathable,
it’s 96 percent carbon dioxide.

It’s really cold there.

The average temperature
is minus 81 degrees,

although there is
quite a range of temperature.

A day on Mars is about as long
as a day on Earth,

plus about 39 minutes.

Seasons and years on Mars
are twice as long as they are on Earth.

And for anybody who wants to strap
on some wings and go flying one day,

Mars has a lot less gravity than on Earth,

and it’s the kind of place

where you can jump over your car
instead of walk around it.

Now, as you can see,
Mars isn’t exactly Earth-like,

but it’s by far the most livable
other place in our entire solar system.

Here’s the problem.

Mars is a long way away,

a thousand times farther away
from us than our own moon.

The Moon is 250,000 miles away

and it took Apollo astronauts
three days to get there.

Mars is 250 million miles away

and it will take us
eight months to get there –

240 days.

And that’s only if we launch
on a very specific day,

at a very specific time,

once every two years,

when Mars and the Earth
are aligned just so,

so the distance that the rocket
would have to travel will be the shortest.

240 days is a long time to spend
trapped with your colleagues in a tin can.

And meanwhile, our track record
of getting to Mars is lousy.

We and the Russians,
the Europeans, the Japanese,

the Chinese and the Indians,

have actually sent 44 rockets there,

and the vast majority of them
have either missed or crashed.

Only about a third of the missions
to Mars have been successful.

And we don’t at the moment have
a rocket big enough to get there anyway.

We once had that rocket, the Saturn V.

A couple of Saturn Vs
would have gotten us there.

It was the most magnificent
machine ever built by humans,

and it was the rocket
that took us to the Moon.

But the last Saturn V was used in 1973
to launch the Skylab space station,

and we decided to do
something called the shuttle

instead of continuing on to Mars
after we landed on the Moon.

The biggest rocket we have now

is only half big enough
to get us anything to Mars.

So getting to Mars is not going to be easy

and that brings up
a really interesting question …

how soon will the first humans
actually land here?

Now, some pundits think
if we got there by 2050,

that’d be a pretty good achievement.

These days, NASA seems to be saying
that it can get humans to Mars by 2040.

Maybe they can.

I believe that they can get
human beings into Mars orbit by 2035.

But frankly,

I don’t think they’re going to bother
in 2035 to send a rocket to Mars,

because we will already be there.

We’re going to land on Mars in 2027.

And the reason is

this man is determined
to make that happen.

His name is Elon Musk,
he’s the CEO of Tesla Motors and SpaceX.

Now, he actually told me
that we would land on Mars by 2025,

but Elon Musk is more
optimistic than I am –

and that’s going a ways –

so I’m giving him
a couple of years of slack.

Still …

you’ve got to ask yourself,

can this guy really do this
by 2025 or 2027?

Well, let’s put a decade with Elon Musk
into a little perspective.

Where was this 10 years ago?

That’s the Tesla electric automobile.

In 2005, a lot of people
in the automobile industry were saying,

we would not have
a decent electric car for 50 years.

And where was that?

That is SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket,

lifting six tons of supplies
to the International Space Station.

10 years ago,

SpaceX had not launched anything,
or fired a rocket to anywhere.

So I think it’s a pretty good bet

that the person who is revolutionizing
the automobile industry

in less than 10 years

and the person who created an entire
rocket company in less than 10 years

will get us to Mars by 2027.

Now, you need to know this:

governments and robots
no longer control this game.

Private companies are leaping into space

and they will be happy
to take you to Mars.

And that raises a really big question.

Can we actually live there?

Now, NASA may not be able
to get us there until 2040,

or we may get there
a long time before NASA,

but NASA has taken a huge responsibility
in figuring out how we can live on Mars.

Let’s look at the problem this way.

Here’s what you need to live on Earth:

food, water, shelter and clothing.

And here’s what you need to live on Mars:

all of the above, plus oxygen.

So let’s look at the most
important thing on this list first.

Water is the basis
of all life as we know it,

and it’s far too heavy for us to carry
water from the Earth to Mars to live,

so we have to find water
if our life is going to succeed on Mars.

And if you look at Mars,
it looks really dry,

it looks like the entire
planet is a desert.

But it turns out that it’s not.

The soil alone on Mars
contains up to 60 percent water.

And a number of orbiters that we still
have flying around Mars have shown us –

and by the way,
that’s a real photograph –

that lots of craters on Mars
have a sheet of water ice in them.

It’s not a bad place to start a colony.

Now, here’s a view of a little dig
the Phoenix Lander did in 2008,

showing that just below
the surface of the soil is ice –

that white stuff is ice.

In the second picture,

which is four days later
than the first picture,

you can see that
some of it is evaporating.

Orbiters also tell us

that there are huge amounts
of underground water on Mars

as well as glaciers.

In fact, if only the water ice
at the poles on Mars melted,

most of the planet
would be under 30 feet of water.

So there’s plenty of water there,

but most of it’s ice,
most of it’s underground,

it takes a lot of energy to get it
and a lot of human labor.

This is a device cooked up
at the University of Washington

back in 1998.

It’s basically a low-tech dehumidifier.

And it turns out the Mars atmosphere
is often 100 percent humid.

So this device can extract
all the water that humans will need

simply from the atmosphere on Mars.

Next we have to worry
about what we will breathe.

Frankly, I was really shocked

to find out that NASA
has this problem worked out.

This is a scientist at MIT
named Michael Hecht.

And he’s developed this machine, Moxie.

I love this thing.

It’s a reverse fuel cell, essentially,

that sucks in the Martian atmosphere
and pumps out oxygen.

And you have to remember that CO2 –

carbon dioxide, which is
96 percent of Mars' atmosphere –

CO2 is basically 78 percent oxygen.

Now, the next big rover
that NASA sends to Mars in 2020

is going to have one
of these devices aboard,

and it will be able
to produce enough oxygen

to keep one person alive indefinitely.

But the secret to this –

and that’s just for testing –

the secret to this is that this thing
was designed from the get-go

to be scalable by a factor of 100.

Next, what will we eat?

Well, we’ll use hydroponics to grow food,

but we’re not going to be able to grow

more than 15 to 20 percent
of our food there,

at least not until water is running
on the surface of Mars

and we actually have the probability
and the capability of planting crops.

In the meantime,

most of our food will arrive from Earth,

and it will be dried.

And then we need some shelter.

At first we can use inflatable,
pressurized buildings

as well as the landers themselves.

But this really only works
during the daytime.

There is too much solar radiation
and too much radiation from cosmic rays.

So we really have to go underground.

Now, it turns out that the soil on Mars,

by and large,
is perfect for making bricks.

And NASA has figured this one out, too.

They’re going to throw
some polymer plastic into the bricks,

shove them in a microwave oven,

and then you will be able to build
buildings with really thick walls.

Or we may choose to live underground
in caves or in lava tubes,

of which there are plenty.

And finally there’s clothing.

On Earth we have miles
of atmosphere piled up on us,

which creates 15 pounds of pressure
on our bodies at all times,

and we’re constantly
pushing out against that.

On Mars there’s hardly
any atmospheric pressure.

So Dava Newman,

a scientist at MIT,

has created this sleek space suit.

It will keep us together,

block radiation and keep us warm.

So let’s think about this for a minute.

Food, shelter, clothing, water, oxygen …

we can do this.

We really can.

But it’s still a little complicated
and a little difficult.

So that leads to the next big –

really big step –

in living the good life on Mars.

And that’s terraforming the planet:

making it more like Earth,

reengineering an entire planet.

That sounds like a lot of hubris,

but the truth is

that the technology to do everything
I’m about to tell you already exists.

First we’ve got to warm it up.

Mars is incredibly cold
because it has a very thin atmosphere.

The answer lies here, at the south pole
and at the north pole of Mars,

both of which are covered

with an incredible amount
of frozen carbon dioxide –

dry ice.

If we heat it up,

it sublimes directly into the atmosphere

and thickens the atmosphere
the same way it does on Earth.

And as we know,

CO2 is an incredibly
potent greenhouse gas.

Now, my favorite way of doing this
is to erect a very, very large solar sail

and focus it –

it essentially serves as a mirror –

and focus it on the south pole
of Mars at first.

As the planet spins, it will heat up
all that dry ice, sublime it,

and it will go into the atmosphere.

It actually won’t take long

for the temperature
on Mars to start rising,

probably less than 20 years.

Right now,

on a perfect day at the equator,

in the middle of summer on Mars,

temperatures can
actually reach 70 degrees,

but then they go down
to minus 100 at night.

(Laughter)

What we’re shooting for
is a runaway greenhouse effect:

enough temperature rise
to see a lot of that ice on Mars –

especially the ice in the ground – melt.

Then we get some real magic.

As the atmosphere gets thicker,
everything gets better.

We get more protection from radiation,

more atmosphere makes us warmer,
makes the planet warmer,

so we get running water

and that makes crops possible.

Then more water vapor goes into the air,
forming yet another potent greenhouse gas.

It will rain and it will snow on Mars.

And a thicker atmosphere
will create enough pressure

so that we can
throw away those space suits.

We only need about five pounds
of pressure to survive.

Eventually, Mars will be made
to feel a lot like British Columbia.

We’ll still be left
with the complicated problem

of making the atmosphere breathable,

and frankly that could take
1,000 years to accomplish.

But humans are amazingly smart
and incredibly adaptable.

There is no telling what our future
technology will be able to accomplish

and no telling what we can do
with our own bodies.

In biology right now,

we are on the very verge of being
able to control our own genetics,

what the genes
in our own bodies are doing,

and certainly,

eventually, our own evolution.

We could end up with a species
of human being on Earth

that is slightly different
from the species of human beings on Mars.

But what would you do there?
How would you live?

It’s going to be
the same as it is on Earth.

Somebody’s going to start a restaurant,

somebody’s going to build an iron foundry.

Someone will make
documentary movies of Mars

and sell them on Earth.

Some idiot will start a reality TV show.

(Laughter)

There will be software companies,

there will be hotels, there will be bars.

This much is certain:

it will be the most disruptive
event in our lifetimes,

and I think it will be the most inspiring.

Ask any 10-year-old girl
if she wants to go to Mars.

Children who are now in elementary school
are going to choose to live there.

Remember when we landed
humans on the Moon?

When that happened,
people looked at each other and said,

“If we can do this, we can do anything.”

What are they going to think
when we actually form a colony on Mars?

Most importantly,

it will make us a spacefaring species.

And that means humans will survive
no matter what happens on Earth.

We will never be the last of our kind.

Thank you.

(Applause)

系好安全带,

我们要去火星。

不仅仅是少数宇航员——

成千上万的
人将在火星上殖民。

我告诉你
,他们很快就会这样做。

你们中的一些人最终会
在火星上从事项目

,我保证
你们的一些孩子最终会住在那里。

这可能听起来很荒谬,

所以我将与您分享
这将如何以及何时发生。

但首先我想
讨论一个显而易见的问题:

我们为什么要这样做?

12 年前,

我在 TED 上发表了关于
世界可能突然终结的 10 种方式的演讲。

我们非常容易
受到我们自己银河系的突发奇想的影响。

一颗巨大的小行星
可以把我们永远带走。

为了生存,我们必须
超越母星。

想一想,

如果人类所取得的一切
突然被抹杀,那将是何等的悲剧。

我们应该去还有另一个原因:

探索存在于我们的 DNA 中。

200 万年前,
人类在非洲进化

,然后通过进入他们视野之外的荒野,缓慢但肯定地
传播到整个星球

这东西在我们里面。

他们成功了。

文明和技术的一些最大进步

是因为我们探索而出现的。

是的,我们可以


在火星上建立一个繁荣的殖民地所需的钱做很多好事。

是的,我们都应该
更好地照顾我们自己的家园星球。

是的,我担心我们会
像搞砸地球一样搞砸火星。

但想一想,

当约翰·F·肯尼迪
告诉我们要把人类送上月球时,我们所拥有的一切。

他激发了整整一代人的梦想。

想想我们
看到火星登陆会有多大的启发。

也许那时我们会回头看看地球

,看到那是
一个人,而不是许多人

,也许
我们会回头看看地球,

因为我们在火星上努力生存,

并意识到
家园星球是多么珍贵。

所以让我告诉你
我们即将进行的非凡冒险。

但首先,关于我们要去哪里

的一些有趣的事实

这张照片实际上代表
了火星与地球相比的真实大小。

火星不是我们的姐妹星球。

远不及
地球的一半大小

,尽管
它更小,


你能站在火星上

的表面积
和你能站在地球上的表面积是相当的,

因为
地球大部分是 被水覆盖。

火星上的大气层非常稀薄——

比地球上的稀薄 100 倍——

而且它不透气,
它含有 96% 的二氧化碳。

那里真的很冷。

平均温度
为负 81 度,

尽管
温度范围很大。

火星上的一天大约和
地球上的一天一样长,

再加上大约 39 分钟。

火星上的季节和年份
是地球上的两倍。

对于任何想
戴上翅膀飞翔的人来说,

火星的重力比地球上的要小得多,

而且是那种

你可以跳过你的车
而不是绕着它走的地方。

现在,正如你所看到的,
火星并不完全像地球,

但它是迄今为止
我们整个太阳系中最宜居的地方。

这就是问题所在。

火星距离我们很远,

比我们自己的月亮还要远一千倍。

月球在 250,000 英里之外

,阿波罗号的宇航员花
了三天时间才到达那里。

火星距离我们 2.5 亿英里

,我们需要
8 个月才能到达那里

——240 天。

只有当我们
在非常特定的一天

、非常特定的时间发射时,

每两年一次,

当火星和
地球正好对齐时

,火箭
必须行进的距离将是最短的。

240 天是
与同事一起被困在锡罐中的很长一段时间。

与此同时,我们
到达火星的记录很糟糕。

我们和俄罗斯人
、欧洲人、日本人

、中国人和印度人

,实际上已经向那里发射了 44 枚火箭弹,

其中绝大多数
要么未命中,要么坠毁。

只有大约三分之一的火星任务
取得了成功。

无论如何,我们目前还没有
足够大的火箭到达那里。

我们曾经拥有那枚火箭,土星

五号。几个土星五号
可以让我们到达那里。

它是
人类有史以来建造的最宏伟的机器,

也是
把我们带到月球的火箭。

但是最后一个土星五号在 1973 年
用于发射 Skylab 空间站

,我们决定做
一些叫做航天飞机的事情,

而不是
在我们登陆月球后继续前往火星。

我们现在拥有的最大的火箭

只有一半大,
可以把任何东西送到火星。

所以到达火星并不容易

,这就提出了
一个非常有趣的问题……

第一批人类多久才能
真正登陆这里?

现在,一些权威人士认为,
如果我们在 2050 年之前到达那里,

那将是一个相当不错的成就。

这些天来,美国宇航局似乎在
说它可以在 2040 年之前将人类送上火星。

也许他们可以。

我相信他们可以在
2035 年之前将人类送入火星轨道。

但坦率地说,

我认为他们不会
在 2035 年费心向火星发射火箭,

因为我们已经在那里了。

我们将在 2027 年登陆火星。

原因是

这个人决心
实现这一目标。

他的名字是埃隆马斯克,
他是特斯拉汽车公司和SpaceX的首席执行官。

现在,他实际上告诉我
,我们将在 2025 年之前登陆火星,

但埃隆马斯克
比我更乐观——

而且这是有方向的——

所以我给了
他几年的时间。

不过……

你得问问自己

,这家伙真的能
在 2025 年或 2027 年做到这一点吗?

好吧,让我们
从一个小角度来看一下 Elon Musk 的十年。

10年前这是哪里?

这就是特斯拉电动汽车。

2005年,很多
汽车行业的人都在说,

我们
50年都不会有一辆像样的电动汽车。

那在哪里?

那是 SpaceX 的猎鹰 9 号火箭,向国际

空间站运送了 6 吨补给品

10 年前,

SpaceX 没有发射任何东西,也没有
向任何地方发射火箭。

所以我认为,

在不到 10 年的时间内彻底改变汽车行业的人以及在不到 10 年的时间里

创建了整个火箭公司的人

将在 2027 年将我们带到火星,这是一个不错的选择。

现在,你需要知道 这:

政府和机器人
不再控制这场比赛。

私营公司正在跃入太空

,他们很
乐意带你去火星。

这提出了一个非常大的问题。

我们真的可以住在那里吗?

现在,NASA 可能要
到 2040 年才能让我们到达那里,

或者我们可能比
NASA 早很长时间到达那里,

但 NASA
在弄清楚我们如何在火星上生活方面承担了巨大的责任。

让我们这样看问题。

这就是你在地球上生活所需要的:

食物、水、住所和衣服。

这就是你在火星上生活所需要的:

以上所有,加上氧气。

所以让我们先看看
这个列表中最重要的东西。

正如我们所知,水是所有生命的基础,

我们无法将
水从地球带到火星来生存,

所以
如果我们的生命要在火星上成功,我们必须找到水。

如果你看火星,
它看起来真的很干燥,

看起来整个
星球都是沙漠。

但事实证明并非如此。

仅火星上的土壤就
含有高达 60% 的水分。

我们仍然
在火星周围飞行的一些轨道飞行器向我们展示了

——顺便说一句,
这是一张真实的照片——

火星上的许多陨石坑里
都有一层水冰。

这不是一个建立殖民地的好地方。

现在,这是
凤凰号着陆器在 2008 年进行的一次小挖掘的视图,

显示
土壤表面正下方是冰

——白色的东西就是冰。

在第二张照片中,

比第一张照片晚了四天,

您可以看到其中
一些正在蒸发。

轨道器还告诉我们

,火星和冰川上有大量
的地下水

事实上,只要
火星两极的水冰融化,

地球上的大部分地区
都将在 30 英尺深的水中。

所以那里有大量的水,

但大部分是冰,
大部分在地下

,需要大量的能量
和大量的人力。

这是 1998 年在
华盛顿大学制造的设备

它基本上是一种技术含量低的除湿机。

事实证明,火星大气
通常是 100% 潮湿的。

因此,该设备可以从火星大气
中提取人类所需的所有水

接下来我们必须
担心我们会呼吸什么。

坦率地说,当我

发现 NASA
解决了这个问题时,我真的很震惊。

这是麻省理工学院的一位科学家,
名叫迈克尔·赫克特。

他开发了这台机器,莫西。

我喜欢这个东西。

它本质上是一种反向燃料电池,

它吸入火星大气
并抽出氧气。

你必须记住二氧化碳——

二氧化碳,
占火星大气的 96%——

二氧化碳基本上是氧气的 78%。

现在
,美国宇航局在 2020 年向火星发送的下一个大型漫游车将

搭载其中一个设备

,它将
能够产生足够的氧气

来让一个人无限期地活着。

但是这个秘密

——这只是为了测试——

这个秘密是这个东西
从一开始就被设计

成可扩展100倍。

接下来,我们要吃什么?

好吧,我们将使用水培法来种植食物,

但我们无法在那里种植

超过 15% 到 20%
的食物,

至少要等到水
在火星表面流动

并且我们实际上拥有 概率
和种植作物的能力。

与此同时,

我们的大部分食物将来自地球,

并将被晒干。

然后我们需要一些庇护所。

起初,我们可以使用充气
加压建筑

以及着陆器本身。

但这真的只
在白天有效。

有太多的太阳
辐射和太多的宇宙射线辐射。

所以我们真的必须进入地下。

现在,事实证明,总的来说,火星上的土壤

非常适合制造砖块。

NASA 也发现了这一点。

他们会把
一些聚合物塑料扔进砖里,然后

把它们推到微波炉里

,然后你就可以建造
墙壁很厚的建筑物了。

或者我们可以选择住
在地下的洞穴或熔岩管中

,其中有很多。

最后是衣服。

在地球上,我们有数英里长
的大气层堆积

在我们身上,这在任何时候都会对我们的身体产生 15 磅的压力,

而且我们一直
在努力抵抗这种压力。

在火星上几乎
没有大气压。

因此

,麻省理工学院的科学家 Dava Newman

创造了这款时尚的太空服。

它将使我们团结在一起,

阻挡辐射并使我们保持温暖。

所以让我们考虑一下。

食物、住所、衣服、水、氧气……

我们可以做到。

我们真的可以。

但这仍然有点复杂
,有点困难。

因此,这导致了在火星上过上美好生活的下一个重要的

——真正重要的一步

这就是改造地球

:让它更像地球,

重新设计整个星球。

这听起来很自大,

但事实是

,完成
我将要告诉你的所有事情的技术已经存在。

首先我们得把它热起来。

火星非常冷,
因为它的大气层非常稀薄。

答案就在这里,在
火星的南极和北极,

这两个地方都覆盖

着数量惊人
的冷冻二氧化碳——

干冰。

如果我们加热它,

它会直接升华到大气中,


像在地球上一样使大气变厚。

正如我们所知,

二氧化碳是一种非常
有效的温室气体。

现在,我最喜欢的做法
是竖起一个非常非常大的太阳帆

并将其聚焦——

它本质上是一面镜子——首先

将它聚焦在
火星的南极。

随着行星的旋转,它会加热
所有的干冰,使其升华,

然后进入大气层。

实际上

,火星上的温度开始上升并不需要很长时间,

可能不到 20 年。

现在,

在赤道完美的一天,

在火星的仲夏,

温度
实际上可以达到 70 度,

但随后会
在晚上降至 -100 度。

(笑声)

我们正在拍摄的
是一种失控的温室效应:

温度上升
到足以看到火星上的大量冰——

尤其是地面上的冰——融化。

然后我们得到了一些真正的魔法。

随着气氛越来越浓,
一切都变得更好。

我们得到了更多的辐射保护,

更多的大气使我们更温暖,
让地球更温暖,

所以我们得到了自来水

,这使得庄稼成为可能。

然后更多的水蒸气进入空气,
形成另一种强效温室气体。

火星会下雨,还会下雪。

更厚的大气层
会产生足够的压力,

这样我们就可以
扔掉那些太空服。

我们只需要大约五磅
的压力就可以生存。

最终,火星将
变得更像不列颠哥伦比亚省。

我们仍然会面临使大气层透气
的复杂问题

,坦率地说,这可能需要
1000 年才能完成。

但人类非常聪明,
而且适应性极强。

不知道我们未来的
技术将能够完成

什么,也不知道我们可以
用自己的身体做什么。

现在在生物学中,

我们正处于
能够控制我们自己

的基因
、我们自己体内的基因在做什么

以及

最终控制我们自己的进化的边缘。

我们最终可能会
在地球


得到一种与火星上的人类物种略有不同的人类物种。

但是你会在那里做什么?
你会怎么生活?

它会和
地球上的一样。

有人要开餐馆,

有人要建铸铁厂。

有人会
制作火星的纪录片

并在地球上出售。

一些白痴会开始一个真人秀节目。

(笑声)

会有软件公司,

会有酒店,会有酒吧。

可以肯定的是:

这将
是我们一生中最具破坏性的事件

,我认为这将是最鼓舞人心的。

询问任何 10 岁的女孩
是否想去火星。

现在上小学的孩子
会选择住在那里。

还记得我们把
人类送上月球的时候吗?

当那件事发生时,
人们面面相觑,说:

“如果我们能做到这一点,我们就可以做任何事情。”

当我们真的在火星上形成一个殖民地时,他们会怎么想?

最重要的是,

它将使我们成为航天物种。

这意味着
无论地球上发生什么,人类都会生存。

我们永远不会是同类中的最后一个。

谢谢你。

(掌声)