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assuming that artificial gravity was present on the spacecraft that takes the humans to mars.

2007-06-06 21:34:54 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

7 answers

Swapan G is telling absolutely crap ! However, there, of course is a bad effect, due to lesser gravity we lose matter of muscles, of all muscles, also the heart itself. Somebody coming back from a long misson to mars, so to speak someone who was in space for more than 2 years, needs to undergo a very tough daily traioning routine on board the spacecraft to prevent that kind of damage, otherwise, that one would return to earth and probably die from a weak heart.

2007-06-06 23:38:06 · answer #1 · answered by jhstha 4 · 0 0

properly, ..., no i does not. the exterior temperature of Venus is +800F. Rivers of molten led run over the exterior. So without some important re-engineering the planet does not in any respect be hospitable for human beings. Mars on the different hand is plenty greater perfect to human beings. we've discovered water locked in ice there and we ought to stay in below floor caves by remaining off lots of the organic platforms that exist already there. additionally, it could b much less annoying to Terra type Mars. Venus must be Terra shaped as properly. putting a great asteroid at a Lagrange element between the solar and Venus ought to shrink the solar's heat and lightweight. finally the the run away greenhouse result could sluggish and the planet's rotation may even revert to a common east to west. the project for the two Mars and Venus are the two exhibit very just about non-existent magnetic fields. we'd ought to make your strategies up a thank you to kick start up their own inner magnetic fields or generate one on our own earlier we ought to stay on the exterior of the two. yet, presently, Mars may be the simplest to inhabit an artwork with. Venus is in simple terms too warm!

2016-12-12 13:58:49 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Since blood pressure is is balanced by air pressure, gravity , definitely lower gravity affect man adversely . But these are taken care by artficial prtective atmosphere and clothing of astronauts.

2007-06-06 21:41:21 · answer #3 · answered by Swapan G 4 · 0 1

the assumption is that you'd be coming back to Earth's 1G field.......now, if you're a colonist emigrating to Mars........your body adapts, there's less strain on the heart, once we get an atmosphere going you could strap on wings and fly....

see Kim Robinson's Red Mars Green Mars and Blue Mars for how we might colonize Mars...assuming we get there before the Chinese for I doubt they'll let us land.......

2007-06-07 02:32:06 · answer #4 · answered by yankee_sailor 7 · 0 1

gravity would affect a human in time since our bones and muscles would atrophy. when they came back to earth they might not be able to move at all. there would need to be special exercise equipment to counteract this

2007-06-06 21:43:05 · answer #5 · answered by Tim C 5 · 0 1

astronauts live in the ISS for months at a time, with only bone loss, as a serious side effect...

2007-06-11 08:03:03 · answer #6 · answered by Lexington 3 · 0 1

Yes, eventually their muscles would waste away.

2007-06-11 07:40:19 · answer #7 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

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