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Any cure for all cancers?

2006-08-20 20:55:18 · 18 answers · asked by dennis h 1 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

18 answers

yes

2006-08-20 20:59:53 · answer #1 · answered by Phillip G 2 · 0 3

Maybe there is life on mars, but even if there is life we will still colonize it, humans can and will live on mars in the very near future after all there is more than one country that has shown an interest in the red planet, as for the cure for cancer i think they already have it, but there making to much money off of the illness to even want to put the cure on the market, after all if you cure the problem then there is no more need for cancer drugs and treatments, and they would lose a very large market and might even go out of business.

2006-08-22 06:58:47 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes there was life exhisting on Mars long ago.
Scientific life like microscopic life & water amoba etc called micro-organisms .
Biology is what it is called, biological life thrived
on Mars . Till the climate changed drastically .

As far as humans living there .. No .

Because we could never survive it's ( deadly to us ) atmosphere . If we are looking today on Mars we can notice that its atmosphere is absolutely transparently and very thin. We don't see any clouds of water vapor. Clouds that are found on the planet surface are made mainly from carbon dioxide and dust.

It's atmosphere is to weakened.why Mars has this weakened atmosphere ?

To get an answer we have to get back to the most critical moments of Mars history. The collisions which large cosmic bodies. Those collisions have made radical changes on Mars surface. In this time were made gigantic impact craters Argrye and Hellas, the huge volcanic caldera Alba Patera was moved up, vulcans from the Tharis massive and Olympus Mons have been activated. Moreover, the gigantic rift valley Valles Marineris was created. Impacts have had also an influence on the internal structure of the planet. Nucleus, probably primary considerably cooled, was heated again thus providing off the heat which has been made under a friction with body(ies) that have penetrated Mars interior. Perhaps it was the cause of the destruction of original planet's magnetic dipole, and in long time this supporting heat in martian interior, self-contained its activity but with small intensity. That could have worsened conditions to the point that the planet was unable to hold a dense heat atmosphere.

2006-08-23 20:26:07 · answer #3 · answered by spaceprt 5 · 0 0

Well, they are not sure if life ever existed on Mars, right now they are studying it to see if water ever existed on the planet, once they detirmine if water existed, then they will probably do studies to see if life existed. In the near future, I don't think humans will live there, it will be at least 30 years, however I read a story where they were designing a way of doing that. it would be 2 shuttles that rotate every three years, flying to a docking station in Mars' atmosphere, then there would be elevators that would lower to the surface, where they end up in the biosphere on the surface.

2006-08-24 18:18:04 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, I've read somewhere that a single cell is already a source of life and it is the very foundation of life. I could not recall what they call that single cell.

Humans has the possibility to live in Mars as for a start, scientists have already experimenting to live inside the man made modules in a controlled atmosphere.

There is a cure in cancer as the greatest cyclist, Taylor and among others lived through it.

2006-08-24 16:00:07 · answer #5 · answered by wacky_racer 5 · 0 0

I got this answer from Microsoft ® Encarta ® Premium Suite 2005:
Mars
Unpiloted spacecraft have allowed scientists to determine that Mars’s atmosphere is mostly made up of carbon dioxide (CO2), with small amounts of nitrogen, oxygen, and water vapour. Owing to the thinness of the atmosphere, daily temperatures often vary by as much as 100° C (180° F). Surface temperatures are too cold and surface pressures too low for water to exist in a liquid state on Mars, so the planet resembles a cold, high-altitude desert. This view is centred on the Valles Marineris, a great chasm some 4,000 km (2,500 mi) long.

2006-08-20 21:46:45 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

RollingStone magazine had this awesome article on the realities of going to Mars. And if you consider all the problems involved in going to Mars, landing on Mars and existing on Mars, you could see how it won't happen anytime in the near future.

First of all there is the problem of power. How would a spaceship/space shuttle be powered for a flight to Mars?

Then, there is the problem of physical stress. Human muscles would atrophy (get weak and lose mass) over a nine month flight to Mars.

And then there is the psychological problem. You're in space for nine months, surrounded by total darkness (real space travel won't be like on Star Trek, it's black out there). How long before you go absolutely crazy?

And then, there's the problem of sex. If you get horny on the way to Mars, how are you going to handle that? The space ship is only so big. No privacy=no spanky.

When (and if) you finally get to Mars, you aren't strong enough to walk on the surface because your muscles have atrophied and basically turned to jelly.

And then there are all these other problems:
How are you going to get back?
Are you going to stay on Mars permanently?
How are you going to eat?
What are you going to use as a source of energy to take care of daily needs?
If you do manage to get off the planet, will you have enough power to get back to Earth?
If you make it back to Earth, will you survive the re-entry to the planet?

And many, many more problems.

Now for your first question. Is there life on Mars? No. NASA scientist found the ancient existence of water--and that's all.

Cure for cancer? It was probably in the South American rainforests before farmers and companies mowed it all down.

2006-08-20 21:11:32 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Chances of live on mars is almost 0...Mars lost its magnetic field and because of that its atmosphere was blown away by solar winds. So it would be pretty tough for something to survive there.
We could probably live on mars, but not like your thinking of...It would have to be some kind of outpost and would (if at all) not be very soon.
About the cancer thing...I hope so.

2006-08-20 21:02:15 · answer #8 · answered by Stopwatch 2 · 1 0

there may be life on mars, but probably not anyone you could talk to. Humans could not live on mars without sealed habitats--that's expensive and unlikely in the near future.

sorry, no all-cancer cure yet, but they've developed a vaccination for cervical cancer.

2006-08-20 21:03:21 · answer #9 · answered by lee m 5 · 1 0

There might be a possibility for humans to live in Mars, because they found water in Mars. beside that, there aren't any life forms in Mars, beside microbes brought by human astronauts.

2006-08-24 10:57:55 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No life on mars, I think and as for terraforming it or something, I doubt it. May take many lifetimes. As for the cure of cancer, I thought nanotechnolgoy was working on that cure? Something about nanocells or something targeting cancerous cells...don't know.

2006-08-20 21:00:50 · answer #11 · answered by pacific_crush 3 · 1 1

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