What We Know About Life On Mars [4K] | Zenith | Spark

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  • Опубліковано 30 тра 2024
  • Early in the life of the solar system Mars appears to have had Earth-like conditions. Planetary researchers have been targeting Mars to gain insight into how our own planet developed.
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    Zenith explores the different aspects of space, including the planets, the technologies for us to explore the planets, and the future of space exploration.
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  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 377

  • @adrianabonitaaziz
    @adrianabonitaaziz Рік тому +4

    I lost the count of how many times I watched this wonderful video 😍 Wow ! It just blows my mind !

  • @vadymbrykalov8733
    @vadymbrykalov8733 Рік тому +7

    Best images of Mars I've ever seen. And I've been looking at Mars for a couple of years now. I'll be thrilled to see you cover Perseverance images & discoveries.

  • @davidarbuckle7236
    @davidarbuckle7236 Рік тому +11

    Great historical perspective of the successes and failures. Thank you for this.

  • @bannapwns
    @bannapwns Рік тому +42

    I never understand when it's said that certain things are essential for life and that without them, life couldn't exist. I presume the caveat of "as we know it" is implied, but it just seems like that could very well be an important distinction.

    • @michaell.445
      @michaell.445 Рік тому +4

      That distinction is referred to about half the time. Solar energy USED to be on the "required" list for example.

    • @Jimarillion
      @Jimarillion Рік тому

      @@michaell.445 Just because life exists on Earth that does not require sunlight directly, does not necessarily mean said life does not benefit from the suns energy indirectly.
      Creatures in the deepest part of the oceans may never see light to any degree however they still feed on the remains of life from above.

    • @michaell.445
      @michaell.445 Рік тому +5

      @@Jimarillion what makes you think I didn't know that already. There's also life there that doesn't do that at all.

    • @nicothenu8903
      @nicothenu8903 Рік тому +1

      I think it’s not about that astrobiologist’s say life that’s different can’t exist, but that we increase finding other life by searching for life that looks like life we already know. If we look to needles in haystacks and we don’t know how many needles there are ore how all of them could look like it’s smart to look to needles that looks like the needles we already know. :-)

    • @angimayo4388
      @angimayo4388 Рік тому

      We are composed of 4 atoms. Oxygen hydrogen nitrogen & carbon. They say these are the most common elements in the universe. ... I guess ya gotta know how mix 'em the rite way ..?

  • @mutaistudios
    @mutaistudios 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for this! Im going to do my 6th yr architectural project discussing a small population sustaining itself on mars.Super excited!!!

  • @cheecharron1244
    @cheecharron1244 Рік тому +13

    Very interesting. I learned a lot thanks!

  • @Bleakh
    @Bleakh Рік тому +1

    Sliding into the DMs like 7:36 :D

  • @sanchosantaana2170
    @sanchosantaana2170 Рік тому +10

    Im so lucky to be alive and be able to watch these humans amazing achievement its amazingly rewarding experience...

    • @Irades
      @Irades 15 днів тому

      Are you a human yourself?

  • @L98fiero
    @L98fiero Рік тому +28

    Clickbait, this is a history of Mars probes and landings, it says essentially nothing about what we know about life on Mars.

    • @vast634
      @vast634 Рік тому +5

      The conclusion is the same: no life found yet, just a lot of small indicators about a watery past, and some process that still produces methane and ammonia.

    • @victory2115
      @victory2115 Рік тому +2

      The fact is ,there is no proof of life anywhere outside of earth.

    • @L98fiero
      @L98fiero Рік тому +2

      @@victory2115 And conversely, there's no proof there isn't either, something that no one can prove either way, ever!

    • @peterpiper5914
      @peterpiper5914 Рік тому

      Thanks for the heads up I will put a 👎 immediately!!

    • @adrianabonitaaziz
      @adrianabonitaaziz Рік тому +1

      @VAST And the clays are wonderful discovering as well .

  • @solarisnova4811
    @solarisnova4811 8 місяців тому

    Great video. Soothing narrator’s voice and calm background music makes an enjoyable experience for this type of content. I am a now a subscriber. Thank you!

  • @1SA999999
    @1SA999999 Рік тому +2

    Got the good knowledge, thanks a lot!

  • @StarlitJourneys
    @StarlitJourneys 10 місяців тому

    True exploration is not the land it covers but the journey it inspires!

  • @pop5678eye
    @pop5678eye Рік тому +7

    8:55 Mars Odyssey was not the first artificial satellite to Mars to have used aerobraking. Mars Global Surveyor already did the same thing years before.

  • @ajitkulkarni6565
    @ajitkulkarni6565 Рік тому +6

    Best channel. Best voiceover. Best graphics.

  • @ViezeFurrrrr
    @ViezeFurrrrr Рік тому

    Amazing vid!

  • @Woodman-Spare-that-tree
    @Woodman-Spare-that-tree Рік тому +9

    I suppose if our telescopes had detected Martian people walking about on the surface, we would only have started a war with them.

    • @seanbowmen8265
      @seanbowmen8265 Рік тому +4

      Probably, we can't get along with ourselves so finding life out there like that will cause a whole host of problems that we are not equipped to deal with.

    • @ted331
      @ted331 Рік тому +2

      According to H.G.Wells they started it first

    • @katiecanaday768
      @katiecanaday768 Рік тому

      Ye of little faith

  • @lumbiniashutoshtambat5871
    @lumbiniashutoshtambat5871 Рік тому +13

    Wonderful video, appreciate your efforts!

  • @victoriagonzalez5774
    @victoriagonzalez5774 Рік тому +7

    Such an inhospitable place, it would be a hellish existence.

    • @shasha1873
      @shasha1873 Рік тому +5

      There is no life on Mars. It is not possible for life to exist. The information for life does not exist there.

    • @TommyTCGT
      @TommyTCGT Рік тому +1

      Mars was once was home to tens of millions of humans, as was Milona, which was destroyed in a local war about 200K years ago, that chucking Mars into it's inhospitable orbit.. daya from moc.ylfyeht, written in reverse.

    • @taunteratwill1787
      @taunteratwill1787 Рік тому +5

      @@TommyTCGT Are you feeling alright? 😂

    • @leriku2270
      @leriku2270 Рік тому

      @@TommyTCGT nigga go take ur meds

    • @distantthunder12ck55
      @distantthunder12ck55 Рік тому +1

      @@shasha1873 You have literally no idea what you are talking about. Life is extremely tough, extremely versatile and literally exists 100s of metres below the surface of our planet. Life most certainly existed on Mars 4 billion years ago at around the same time as it appeared on Earth. Materials were exchanged between the two worlds in that time since and life would have also been transferred within rocks. Once life exists it is incredibly hard to extinguish. If Earth turned into Mars tomorrow, much of the life beneath our feet, deep within the Earth would persist. Ignorance is bliss for some, I guess. And the information does exist. Organics have been discovered within rocks by Curiosity, methane and oxygen spikes detected.

  • @mybuddys1
    @mybuddys1 Рік тому

    Excellent

  • @emmabrooks1310
    @emmabrooks1310 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting

  • @richardanderson8627
    @richardanderson8627 Рік тому +13

    A slick production piece . Doubtful that it tells all that is truly known about Mars !

    • @wooddogg8
      @wooddogg8 Рік тому +3

      Very doubtful as it's been a busy 4 years since this was made, lol.

    • @seankash8546
      @seankash8546 Рік тому +2

      It’s been a busy 50 years since the Mars Colony Corporation was established in 1971 as a US/UN Unacknowledged Special Access Program.

  • @jonathankennedy1715
    @jonathankennedy1715 Рік тому +5

    Beautiful, undeniable evidence of intelligent design.

  • @skrayraja
    @skrayraja Рік тому +8

    How deep did the thermal sensor go. Did it detect any heat coming from inside Mars, like from a molten iron or at least a hot iron ore?

    • @sgill4833
      @sgill4833 Рік тому +8

      Mars core has cooled. No longer molten. Which is why it lost its magnetosphere protecting it atmosphere.

    • @abacus749
      @abacus749 Рік тому +2

      Was a daily logbook kept of the day and night temperatures on each of the missions.? Did the extreme temperatures affect the air precipitation in any way.? How did the COMPASS work given than a normal compass would not work in the absence of earth's gravity? Is there any footage of any of the vehicles being exposed to the sandstorms?

  • @covid546
    @covid546 Рік тому +31

    Meanwhile in the another universe: What Do We Know About Life On Earth So Far

    • @tropicsalt.
      @tropicsalt. Рік тому

      Earthians are the worst.
      Such prima-donna's

    • @budwhite9591
      @budwhite9591 Рік тому +4

      Haven’t found any intelligence yet

    • @kevinkram9260
      @kevinkram9260 Рік тому

      May I ask, how do you know there "is" another Universe? I believe, your just talking jibberish

    • @covid546
      @covid546 Рік тому +2

      @@kevinkram9260 yes of course i am talking gibberish, man. It is just a joke lol

    • @Ren_Kichu777
      @Ren_Kichu777 Рік тому

      It's still the same the volcanic phase !!
      In another galaxy it seems to host large animals !!
      In another galaxy it's very much a water world .
      Another galaxy it's just an ice world
      In another galaxy i can see only the green plants !!
      All of them "let them have their time"
      Our time when they finally reach us
      Mars?!

  • @GoDodgers1
    @GoDodgers1 Рік тому +3

    Star trek dreams....

  • @claudelebel49
    @claudelebel49 Рік тому +7

    This video although just uploaded seems to be pre-2020 from the commentary.
    Very well done though.

    • @alexlabs4858
      @alexlabs4858 Рік тому

      Just like medicine and technology today, if you’re watching something even 1 year old it could be completely out of date. Pretty scary to think about. Cool, but also scary.

    • @claudelebel49
      @claudelebel49 Рік тому

      @@alexlabs4858 Why scary?

  • @garethhamilton
    @garethhamilton Рік тому

    these videos are fascinating amazing engineers them at nasa

  • @noobolten772
    @noobolten772 Рік тому +1

    I honestly think in 2056 we will be on Mars. But not all of us. Like think about a really expensive holiday. It would be super cool though

    • @kevinwatkins6615
      @kevinwatkins6615 25 днів тому

      Yes. I am getting the deluxe vacation package with all meals included

  • @NieR.Amanda
    @NieR.Amanda Рік тому +4

    For decades scientists have looked at Mars, and thought "Shall I get this or a Snickers?"

  • @no-bozos
    @no-bozos Рік тому +4

    Without an electro-magnetic field NOTHING can live on Mars.

    • @kostas6621
      @kostas6621 Рік тому +1

      Exactly!

    • @mdarifulislamhridoy9147
      @mdarifulislamhridoy9147 Рік тому

      Why not?

    • @no-bozos
      @no-bozos Рік тому

      @@mdarifulislamhridoy9147 - The electro-magnetic field deflects the sun's gamma radiation. Without that field any organic material gets disintegrated and blown off the planet. Which is what happened to any water on Mars. It was blown into space.
      A human being would be exposed on the trip to Mars and would be dead, or almost dead before they even arrived, and the shielding it would take would be impossible to send there.

    • @mdarifulislamhridoy9147
      @mdarifulislamhridoy9147 Рік тому

      @@no-bozos I see....thanks

    • @no-bozos
      @no-bozos Рік тому

      @@mdarifulislamhridoy9147 - You're welcome.

  • @brandonm7867
    @brandonm7867 Рік тому +11

    They call it the red planet but it's actually a tan brown planet similar in color to the Sahara desert with a Crimson blue sky like what we see on earth during the winter season's.

    • @bugstomper4670
      @bugstomper4670 Рік тому +1

      Blue sky has high Nitrogen & Oxygen. Red sky has high Carbon Dioxide. ... Mars looks red, because of Iron Oxide mixed in an all over it's ground.

    • @brandonm7867
      @brandonm7867 Рік тому

      @@bugstomper4670 there is no iron oxide at the Martian surface it is only present however at about 1 to 2ft below a tan brown crust and carbon dioxide does not turn an atmosphere red, however dust scattered by the wind into the sky can but this subsides daily now the atmosphere of mars is composed of trace gases such as nitrogen,oxygen and methane and two of these gases are naturally blue in color when lit under a flame and in every reprocessed photo of mars I have seen the sky remained blue. now if want to see real pictures of the planet just go to justin cowarts collection of mars photo's.

    • @bugstomper4670
      @bugstomper4670 Рік тому

      Look it up. Research it. Don't just blow BS out of your mouth!

    • @brandonm7867
      @brandonm7867 Рік тому +1

      @@bugstomper4670 you didn't even bother looking.

    • @bugstomper4670
      @bugstomper4670 Рік тому

      @@brandonm7867 Yes I did. But it's not some conspiracy site run by flat earthers.

  • @brianwilliams9431
    @brianwilliams9431 Рік тому +5

    Why not put the equivalent of a windshield wiper on the solar panels to clear off the dust just a thought but what do I know 🤔

    • @jamespeters2859
      @jamespeters2859 Рік тому +1

      Genius idea! Why didn’t they think of that.

    • @ted331
      @ted331 Рік тому +3

      @@jamespeters2859 they could just wait at the traffic lights. And some Martian will try to clean it weather they want it or not

  • @JohnSmith-yh5bd
    @JohnSmith-yh5bd Рік тому +1

    3:11 It's times like these that make it clear how lucky we are today. I can't imagine all that effort, time, waiting, and money just to get that fuzzy black-and-white thing they have the nerve of calling a photo.

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention Рік тому +4

    Nothing because we've never searched below the surface, there is a temperate zone under the entire surface of earth that stays at an optimal temperature... I hypothesize there is also a similar effect under mars, best part is no one knows and I may be right.

    • @shanepatrick641
      @shanepatrick641 Рік тому

      Gosh. Imagine coming back saying you were right all along? 🤞🏻

  • @alfredstaggs9137
    @alfredstaggs9137 Рік тому

    We should be sending bodies to Mars. We would be there if we never stopped. There are plenty of volunteers for a good cause.

  • @lawrence1318
    @lawrence1318 Рік тому +3

    Concerning food supply, there's probably millions of Mars Bars just below the surface.

    • @ted331
      @ted331 Рік тому

      If you run out of Mars Bars there's plenty of flying Saucers

    • @knockedoutloaded279
      @knockedoutloaded279 Рік тому

      And galaxies and milky ways

  • @marykumargurung4654
    @marykumargurung4654 Рік тому

    Time Will tell with that, yes or no time is very very important 🌹⏰🌹

  • @slaphappy9433
    @slaphappy9433 Рік тому

    we are bond to earth

  • @robertcraig156
    @robertcraig156 Рік тому

    Someone tell me What is filming the landing, of the rovers from the falling balloons until they hit the surface of the planet?

  • @probegt75
    @probegt75 Рік тому +2

    Didn't realize how old this video was

  • @user-nk3yz8uj9e
    @user-nk3yz8uj9e Рік тому +1

    WWWWWOOOO,BRAVO,BRAVO,THENKS THENKS,💯💯🌎👈🌎👈💯💯.

  • @Rallysolo
    @Rallysolo Рік тому

    If you put powder on a hard or glass service and blow it around it would look like those sand dunes or dust dunes on mars but that dust is like fine rust blowing around.

  • @surajkamble3538
    @surajkamble3538 Рік тому +2

    Why planet like Mars has thin atmosphere than that of moons like Enceledous, titan, europa???

    • @vast634
      @vast634 Рік тому

      More solar radiation I suppose, blowing off the gases. Titan is much further away from the sun.

  • @426superbee4
    @426superbee4 Рік тому +1

    Can you imagine a Martian watching this Alien thing. Landing, unfolding! Then moving off. Marvin the Martian> he heee where my laser gun

  • @brucelee5576
    @brucelee5576 Рік тому

    Why would it take weeks to get the image when we have the images from the impact satellite.

  • @felixkhithie7574
    @felixkhithie7574 Рік тому

    Is this the real surface of Mars or its just another film shots in the hollywood studios..!!?? I'm curious who is taking the shots of landing, the bouncing, the zooming etc..??

  • @user-zd8dp2re8k
    @user-zd8dp2re8k Рік тому +2

    Give us internet in space and we have no problems living on mars

  • @MaxB6851
    @MaxB6851 Рік тому +1

    Having six legs a rover could be programed to walk out of a sand bog like a spider, then revert to rotating its wheels.

  • @northeast9162
    @northeast9162 Рік тому +3

    Imagine a human civilisation on Mars send me over .

    • @tiffenb.pickering2375
      @tiffenb.pickering2375 Рік тому

      It's small & underground, research the Mars Jump Room. I have family N the U.S. Military

  • @montanafreeman1895
    @montanafreeman1895 Рік тому

    They found a city on Mars last Friday night. The rover staff won’t let us watch it.

  • @tempustempus9073
    @tempustempus9073 7 місяців тому

    I volunteered to go to Mars 17 times

  • @lung_licker
    @lung_licker Рік тому

    will you look at the ✨LAWMAN✨
    beating up the wrong guy👀👀👀

  • @duckhive
    @duckhive Рік тому

    what music is used at the 23 min. mark?

    • @raybin6873
      @raybin6873 Рік тому +1

      That is the sound of an old school dial up modem...the first method used to log onto the internet. High pitched audio signals were transmitted thru a telephone handset microphone (fax machines also worked this way)...the receiving end "read" the audio signal converting to a digital format that the receiving computer could understand. It was VERY SLOW...just a simple photo image would take several minutes to gradually fill the monitor screen.

  • @user-ly7rg9hb4r
    @user-ly7rg9hb4r Рік тому

    მოგესალმებით. შეიძლება ჩვენი მოსაზრებაც გამოიყენოთ მარსის გაცოცხლებაში?

  • @michaelanderson3096
    @michaelanderson3096 Рік тому

    START DIGGING DEEP TO WHAT IS THERE.

  • @precisiont5188
    @precisiont5188 Рік тому +2

    How can we know which images are actually from Mars out of all the videos and images in this video?

    • @BURDYMAN777
      @BURDYMAN777 Рік тому +2

      You can't really *know* 100% what is real and what is cgi nowadays, but a good way to tell if it's likely a real image or likely a cgi recreation is: If you see the rover or satellite in the clip, then its probably a cgi demonstration/recreation showing how the rover landed or what the satellite looks like flying around mars. If you only see the mars surface without seeing the equipment then its more than likely a real image from the cameras on the rovers/satellites. Hopefully the way I worded all of that is understandable.

    • @shanepatrick641
      @shanepatrick641 Рік тому

      @@BURDYMAN777 I understand, thanks man 😊

    • @joeolguin1511
      @joeolguin1511 Рік тому +1

      Why don't we hear any any of these mars cities On the TV news????

    • @joeolguin1511
      @joeolguin1511 Рік тому +1

      Right!!!!!?

  • @banditt18
    @banditt18 Рік тому

    what i never understood is why they made all the rovers drive so bloody slow? kind hard for them to look for life if they cant even move at a good enough speed to get from point a to point c

  • @rickrick2094
    @rickrick2094 Рік тому

    Breaking news! Life found in our solar system and it's here on earth. Zero money spent on this discovery!

  • @nargesgolforosh
    @nargesgolforosh Рік тому

  • @dereklyons1533
    @dereklyons1533 Рік тому

    I have always thought we have travelled from mars when it started dying

  • @user-vs9hz6mj7n
    @user-vs9hz6mj7n Рік тому

    วัเสาร์วัน

  • @wayneparkinson4558
    @wayneparkinson4558 Рік тому

    Good thing about building on mars is that you can build higher and stronger with that low gravity high iron planet so I suppose it make sense to build another slum city

    • @banditt18
      @banditt18 Рік тому

      you have a point. but i hope if you went to mars you was not planning to return to earth cause sadly you could never come home cause of that low gravity you would eventually become used to and the moment you steped foot on earth all you're bones everything would be crushed by our gravity

    • @wayneparkinson4558
      @wayneparkinson4558 Рік тому

      @@banditt18 He can Just come back as a couch potato what's the problem he wouldn't feel out of place, Martian like, He should fit in nicely with the other earthling

  • @BGTuyau
    @BGTuyau Рік тому

    Source of the videos?

  • @arttaggerr2233
    @arttaggerr2233 Рік тому +6

    Why doesn’t NASA put a container on Mars that the rovers and helicopters can go inside of during dust storms to protect them.

    • @arttaggerr2233
      @arttaggerr2233 Рік тому +1

      @Growseth Jones I get it, my apologies, a rover wouldn’t be much of a rover if it stayed in one area.
      How about a light weight built in shield that folds around the solar panels when the rover isn’t operating? Doesn’t that sound reasonable?

    • @abacus749
      @abacus749 Рік тому

      How would they navigate back to it?

    • @sherrilynnevonch4036
      @sherrilynnevonch4036 Рік тому +1

      Hey you know what your ideas (both actually are a good idea. Maybe they can make a canvas umbrella that pops up in the center and uses spider style unfolding to temporarily cover it and then fold back in again?!

    • @sherrilynnevonch4036
      @sherrilynnevonch4036 Рік тому +1

      Wait canvas is to heavy nm. But I am sure they would have some form of material thats sturdy and light.

    • @arttaggerr2233
      @arttaggerr2233 Рік тому

      @@sherrilynnevonch4036 Just need to apply a little ingenuity.

  • @magictorch234
    @magictorch234 Рік тому +2

    This presentation is drier than the Martian surface

  • @jwarmstrong
    @jwarmstrong Рік тому +3

    No UFO was harmed in the making of this video - scientist think Joe & Pelois were born on Mars when water oceans flowed

  • @426superbee4
    @426superbee4 Рік тому +1

    Mars get hits by to many Meteors and Asteroids! Until it get a Atmosphere, for a shield. Its the only place we have to go to! If we destroy our beautiful world, we live in! I Love Earth! What God has Made for us > Its so prefect

  • @ProlificInvention
    @ProlificInvention Рік тому +5

    All they have to do is dig down 20 feet, there may be a temperate zone such as on earth. Here on earth if you dig down 20 feet the temperature is a steady 50-55 degrees Fahrenheit all the time no matter the surface conditions.

  • @peter8488
    @peter8488 Рік тому

    If Tardigrades can survive space, if bacteria lives by eating rocks, if ice worms live in glacier ice, I say there is a high probability that life is probably there.

  • @ristube3319
    @ristube3319 Рік тому +4

    Wouldn’t something similar to a windshield wiper be useful for multimillion dollar tech powered solely by solar panels on a well known dusty planet?!

    • @seanbowmen8265
      @seanbowmen8265 Рік тому +2

      There's a reason but I can't remember it. Smart people stuff.

    • @banditt18
      @banditt18 Рік тому

      no cause the windshield wiper has to many moving parts and there in it's self get jammed with all that dust and debre and eventually the whipers themselves would tear. but i like where you're going with this thought tho

  • @AmateurHistorian999
    @AmateurHistorian999 8 місяців тому

    Best Mars exploration documentary I've seen.

  • @narnie244
    @narnie244 Рік тому +1

    I believe something apocalyptic happened . That's where we came from or some of us, if not where why do some have the rhesus protein and some don't the rh protein can be traced back to the ape, if I'm not mistaken , what does it trave back to if its not there

    • @gordonpkm7560
      @gordonpkm7560 Рік тому

      The Rh positive is rhesus monkey, an Endemic to Earth ...The Rh negative, began arriving from Venus, 50k yrs ago, with modern humans 1st Ancestors the Bacchi an Pre-Adamites

    • @shanepatrick641
      @shanepatrick641 Рік тому

      I think you’re genuinely onto something 🤔

  • @jediknight73
    @jediknight73 3 місяці тому

    All those issues w😅sand blocking solar panels you think that they would invent something to brush it off like a arm with a broom 😂

  • @garyharstvedt9784
    @garyharstvedt9784 Рік тому +2

    To be inferior let's me in for creative ideas. What kind of chemical reaction would make the evaporation of moisture on Mars less ?

    • @psycronizer
      @psycronizer Рік тому +4

      that's not the issue. The problem is a lack of a magnetic field, which would stop the sun's solar wind from literally blasting away the air and water vapor at higher altitudes, no magnetic field means it all gets stripped away from the atmosphere over millions of years, a slow process but a certain one. It might be possible to create, and then maintain an atmosphere, by replenishing it , shouldn't be too hard to do once it is re-established.

  • @RobertsfunWords
    @RobertsfunWords Рік тому +3

    Well done, although the "life" suggestion is similar to the expeditions. If we find it it will be from Earth. We are alone in the universe. The odds of any life existing elsewhere are close to zero - as evidenced by all experimentation and observation. The idea is useful in fundraising.

    • @ted331
      @ted331 Рік тому +1

      Wrong there's enough planets in the universe that have had, have now or will in the future have life of some kind. The problem is they're too far away ever to get to, as we'll never get to Go faster than the speed of light

    • @gordonpkm7560
      @gordonpkm7560 Рік тому

      Big foot are pets of terrestrials living on Earth ..
      Your neighbor could be from Andromeda

    • @ted331
      @ted331 Рік тому +1

      @@gordonpkm7560 I fly around the universe my Probing stick in hand
      Looking for a quiet spot where I can safely land
      Ignoring the Prime Directive I go my merry way
      Probing fat American’s across the U S A

    • @shanepatrick641
      @shanepatrick641 Рік тому

      @@ted331 😂😂

    • @mohairsam9705
      @mohairsam9705 Рік тому

      @@ted331 that's every 2nd American

  • @carlawalkee8477
    @carlawalkee8477 Рік тому

    Hans Kammler Build Rocket Ship & Clash Landed on Mars in June 4 1954 But All On Broad Live He Made Little Camp with Population of 30,573 Now On Mars they have Grow to Now

  • @battlethebollocksrodgers9173

    That's funny The red cloud storm isn't visible in today's pictures...
    "We could go to the moon again in a nanosecond but we've lost that technology..." Don pettit

  • @geromingonzales4678
    @geromingonzales4678 Рік тому

    Who is taking the video when the rover is shown in motion...?

  • @gulutaalan8845
    @gulutaalan8845 Рік тому

    The only words about the three Viking experiments (never repeated) is "they had limitations". Think a doc on this topic should've devoted at least a few minutes to them, as controversially as they were.

  • @tobymurray.740
    @tobymurray.740 Рік тому

    Mars and it's two moons are structured as helium atom.

  • @TUBESPECIFIC1
    @TUBESPECIFIC1 Рік тому +3

    This is pretty kool though is cgi like a video game. They're looking to understand why by looking at the geologic activity and history. We need something bigger than a Tonka toy to excavate up there as well as things like humanoid robots that can perform work and tasks much like we can do. They'll probably find the core went cold some years ago for it the planet doesn't get enough solar energy and is a bit smaller than Earth. So with a cold core, it lost magnetic energy and gravity to hold the atmosphere and surface water becoming the most inhospitable desert. Awesome water and oxygen were discovered so high tech machines can be used to mine that if and when people are to be there though I'm sure the novelty of being there will wear off quick for all people that are to go there so far from home.

    • @shanepatrick641
      @shanepatrick641 Рік тому

      Yep I agree. And there’s only so much water ice as well.

  • @pieterlagemaat611
    @pieterlagemaat611 Рік тому +1

    Nice CGI

  • @trumanthomas4253
    @trumanthomas4253 Рік тому

    Every planet was hot at some point.

  • @Tomkat55
    @Tomkat55 Рік тому +5

    Clickbait!

  • @ModernAmplification
    @ModernAmplification Рік тому

    So, this is not the CBC show

  • @JohnDoe-tx8lq
    @JohnDoe-tx8lq Рік тому +6

    When we've colonise Mars and retrieved the Rovers, they should be able to power up and carry on. We'll be able to send them back to Earth to find if theres any life down here after the Climate Apocalypse. 😎👍

    • @markmiller6402
      @markmiller6402 Рік тому +1

      Good idea, recycling and repurposing 😂😂

    • @markmiller6402
      @markmiller6402 Рік тому

      @Atheism Rocks! . We might fuck it up like we did here

    • @lawrence1318
      @lawrence1318 Рік тому +1

      You're a real lefty activist aren't you Mr Doe!. There's no climate problem on earth. Everything is normal.

  • @aeonikus1
    @aeonikus1 Рік тому

    Too bad that chinese mars expeditions and rovers weren't covered. They made very good progress regarding planetary exploration.

  • @tanthiennguyen9308
    @tanthiennguyen9308 11 місяців тому

    Manchmal bringen Sie solcher Situationen Beachtenswert als Psychologie Bestrafung bis Heute noch am Lebenden mit Bedürfnissen Weltweite Reiseveranstalter ohne Begleiterin dabeihaben..............................!

  • @jerrilehane7815
    @jerrilehane7815 Рік тому

    I found people & animals on Mars 2004,I designed Mars rovers 1987 as Ghostwriter for Star Trek.See pics Jerry Lehane Mars.

  • @luctres
    @luctres Рік тому

    Six years of curiosity on Mars ahhaha! This is an old old video.

  • @adamsteele6148
    @adamsteele6148 Рік тому +3

    Matt Damon

  • @phumlayawli6723
    @phumlayawli6723 Рік тому +2

    Let us not become like Mars people who perish. We can do better than them. Love is an amazing tool just open your heart 💖💖💖💖

  • @Gssilver49B
    @Gssilver49B Рік тому +2

    What about the city on Mars and the train .They was pics on Google mars white wagon and withe track they change the pics nasa did not want to show that , So they lie to us so i'm not interest anymore.

  • @robertlarimore5558
    @robertlarimore5558 Рік тому

    I lived on mars 4 years 304a in Clearwater Florida like a stranger in a strange land wtf

  • @goojedooje660
    @goojedooje660 Рік тому

    The u s a sent one rocket to Mars in 1965 it took pictures of it not mentioned here

  • @arturoperez7182
    @arturoperez7182 Рік тому

    California

  • @piglex1
    @piglex1 Рік тому +3

    Answer? There is no life on Mars , OK?

  • @ronammologist16
    @ronammologist16 Рік тому

    A simple "there aint none" will do.

  • @tanthiennguyen9308
    @tanthiennguyen9308 11 місяців тому

    Wer nehmen der Projekt Mars bringen zum Erreichen können haben bitteschön......................?

  • @Trigger200284
    @Trigger200284 Рік тому +2

    that thermal probe was never successful, wtf