“Mars is really begging for a Space Elevator”

So says Rob Manning of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in this fascinating interview in Universe Today conducted by Nancy Atkinson.

In this interview, Mr. Manning discusses how difficult it is to actually land anything on Mars that is bigger than the Rovers already sent there.  This is due to both the atmosphere being too thin to be used for aerobraking as we know it today.

“’Mars is really begging for a space elevator,’ said Manning. ‘I think it has great potential. That would solve a lot of problems, and Mars would be an excellent platform to try it.’ But Manning admitted that the technology needed to suspend a space elevator has not yet been invented. The issues with space elevator technology may be vast, even compared with the challenges of landing.”

A really interesting interview – highly recommended.

3 thoughts on ““Mars is really begging for a Space Elevator”

  1. Darnell Clayton

    I think Mars would be the worst place for an SE, mainly because of the global storms that rage across the entire planet (at hurricane speeds) every three Martian (or six standard) years.

    Not to mention you would have to move the asteroid Phobos, which would involve a lot of engineering by itself.

    Mars is a very hard place to land upon (for human missions) mainly because of the atmosphere, but unless they are thinking about a skyhook (hanging down from Phobos) I do not think a Martian SE would be wise to construct.

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