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7 sty 2021 · Back in 2011, a company called Mars One was founded by a small private Dutch organization with a single bold claim — to land the first humans on Mars. Not only would it be landing humans on Mars, but it would have them “live, explore, and create a second home for humanity” there.
14 paź 2014 · The transportation cost for this leg of the mission alone, combined with the astronauts’ launch, would be $4.5 billion — a cost that would grow with additional crews and supplies to Mars. The researchers say this estimate does not include the cost of developing and purchasing equipment for the mission, which would further increase the ...
1 mar 2016 · We assess the lifecycle costs of life support and ISRU for the Mars One program. • Mars One plans to colonize Mars with one-way trips using existing technology. • Limitations in existing technology mean that one-way trips need continual resupply. • A growing colony incurs growing resupply needs and hence growing programmatic costs. •
After discussions with potential suppliers for each component and close examination, Mars One estimates the cost of putting the first four people on Mars at six billion US Dollar. The six billion figure is the cost of all the hardware combined, plus the operational expenditures, plus margins.
22 kwi 2013 · A project to send humans to Mars by 2023 is now under way. But there is a caveat: it’s a one-way mission. The astronauts will be chosen from around the world in an open competition, and the project will be financed by selling the rights to televise the entire mission in real time, from crew training to Mars landing.
11 wrz 2013 · One-Way Mars Colony Project to Simulate Red Planet on Earth The group started raising money through its application fees, which ranged from $5 to $75 depending on the applicant's country...
14 wrz 2023 · The most recent official figure now puts it at some $6 billion, up from some $4 billion, and a leaked report suggests that, in one scenario, it could exceed $8 billion. Cost overruns for MSR and a few other large missions have already forced NASA to squeeze or delay other science missions, and calls to rethink—or even kill—MSR have grown.