Would You Pay For a One Way Ticket To Mars? 100,000 People Already Have
There’s an old joke about sending someone you hate on a one-way trip to Mars. Now, a Dutch entrepreneur has formed a company around this concept — and it’s no joke. [b][url=http://www.mars-one.com/en/about-mars-one/team/118-bas-lansdorp-en]Bas Lansdorp[/url][/b], the 35-year-old founder of[b][url=http://www.mars-one.com/en/] Mars One[/url][/b], told [b][url=http://www.foxnews.com/]FoxNews.com[/url][/b] his company is serious about a one-way mission. The company will hold a worldwide lottery next year to select 40 people for a training team. They will then set up a mock colony in the desert, possibly somewhere in the U.S., for three months. This initial team will be reduced to ten crew members. They will then be sent to Mars, never again to return. “We will send humans to Mars in 2023,” he told FoxNews.com. “They will live there the rest of their lives. There will be a habitat waiting for them, and we’ll start sending four people every two years.” The habitat will consist of several housing structures that [b]Mars One[/b] will launch before 2023. In 2016, the company plans to launch the first supply vessel. In 2018, it plans to send a rover. Lansdorp says his four-person company will coordinate the launches, but it will work with suppliers for the ship and rockets. For example, [b]Mars One[/b] might use the SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket, which is currently being developed as a launch system for larger spacecraft. To help fund the project, Lansdorp says there could be a reality show based on the selection process and test colony. Paul Römer, the co-founder and executive producer of the show “Big Brother,” is an adviser for Mars One. Other advisers include Nobel Prize winner Dr. Gerard ‘t Hooft and Brian Enke, an analyst at the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., who studies space missions. By: John Brandon (FoxNews)