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17 answers

Eventually sure, but it's going to take baby steps. Starting with a colony on the Moon. Which is the best place to begin. If we make any mistakes, the Moon is closest to home. Even the It will be difficult, if not impossible to get help to respond in time. After the Moon would be Mars, then maybe some mining colonies in the asteroid belt. Next we'd have to select which moons around the outer planets are best suitable.

2007-12-21 21:19:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We will probably be able to live on other planets. However, I doubt that it would be happen in our lifetimes. It is hard to know when this will happen. I might think it's in the next 2 centuries or maybe longer. I might be wrong.

Other planets must have a atmosphere and air suitable for us. Planets also must be at the right temperature when water is liquid. That is, water is not solid ice nor gas phase.

If suppose I was given the opportunity to move to another habitable planet, then I would do it in a heartbeat. But I am not going to ruin the other planet's natural habitat and environment. I don't want the planet to be destroyed. We humans ruin the Earth's environment by causing pollution, destroying the habitats and oceans, and causing possible extinction of many animal species. If by any chance humans were to move to another planet, I hope they will not do the same thing as they did on Earth.

In another planet, I hope that everyone there is nice. And everything is free, no rent, no money, no fees, no war, no racism nor crime, no need to find a job to survive, making friends would be as easy as seeing strangers in public, and there's complete harmony. That would be a heavenly paradise.

2007-12-25 15:38:05 · answer #2 · answered by caltam84 3 · 0 0

Assuming Armageddon never happens, some disease that science has no cure doesn't become an epidemic, and a meteor doesn't crash on earth and kill everyone like it did with the dinosaurs, I would guess between 75 to 100 years from now. I have nothing to support this, but I do agree that traveling across distant space at speeds faster than the speed of light is a strong possibility. These UFOs are doing it, so the technology needs to be developed. The most important technology are artificial gravity (the Russian cosmonauts proved we can't survive zero gravity for long periods at a time), and traveling faster than the speed of light.
The planet we should colonize will most likely be in another star system. Spectroanalysis of all the moons and planets in our system shows the environment is too hostile for humans to survive.

2007-12-22 00:32:28 · answer #3 · answered by Big-shot CEO 4 · 0 1

As you are probably aware, people are slowly wrecking this planet. When the world becomes too crowded and polluted it's fair to assume that some people will want to live elsewhere, just as today there are people who prefer to live away from over-urbanised areas.

If these people have enough influence and carry enough votes, they will make a political case to open new and unspoiled lands for colonisation. As this world has finite land area, colonisation efforts will have to turn spacewards.

The actual tecnicalities of living on other planets will be solved by the time honoured method of throwing sufficient money at them. You see, people on a political, business or social mission see technical issues as obstacles to be overcome by the machinery of accountancy and economics, fueled by a suitable election campaign and public relations program.

This will all come to pass when the value of unspoilt land without native title becomes known to enough people, combined with the fear that others may get there first. There are signs that this is happening already.

2007-12-22 00:51:11 · answer #4 · answered by Quadrillian 7 · 0 0

Yes, no change that, Definetly, I really dont think that humans are going to live on this planet for all that long once it is plundered of its resources. Example: Oil, food, (not resource but) : overpopulation, ect.

I dont really know why everyones saying we will be moving in 100 years, i mean yes people (astronauts) will be obviously, but not humans in large numbers themselves. Probably in the next millenia (1000 years) or less by calculating what was being done in 1007 A.D to now, that is a very good estimate if you ask me =).

But yes, technology does have ALOT to do with moving and such, but none of these things will be happening for a long time.

2007-12-22 01:21:55 · answer #5 · answered by 99 2 · 0 0

Yes, I think so. When? Mars could be the first some century ahead. Then we will go to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn. Two or three centuries from now. Eventually we will earn how to travel to the stars. But this is very very far in the future.

2007-12-22 00:22:05 · answer #6 · answered by Asker 6 · 0 0

Actually, pat on your shoulder for your question.

There are almost billions of solar systems in our galaxy, where theoretically only one or two of the planets revolving around those stars(sun) have the ability to support life(have oxygen, water & other life-supporting milieu.

We can almost tell by our telescopical surveys and direct visits that other satellites & planets in this solar system do not have the conditions to support life.

It can be concluded that we will have to find the nearest solar system and the appropriate planet with earth-like conditions to make our move...

Its not that near & our scientists will find ways of sustaining in our earth itself.

2007-12-22 00:49:10 · answer #7 · answered by Sound brain 2 · 0 0

Nibiru

http://www.disclose.tv/viewvideo/2165/Are_You_Ready_/

2007-12-22 00:19:19 · answer #8 · answered by Real Deal 2 · 0 1

I think we'll eventually go to Mars because of overpopulation, climate change or the lack or resources. This might happen in about 100 years.

2007-12-22 00:54:40 · answer #9 · answered by «●тнє яєтυяи●» 7 · 0 0

Of course! Within 50 years there will be a manned colony on Luna, and shortly after there will be hotels there. Within 100 years there will be the same facilities on Mars.

2007-12-22 00:22:16 · answer #10 · answered by screaming monk 6 · 0 0

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