MARS COLONIZATION THREAD

>researching the effects of long term partial gravity

NASA or whoever needs to get some spinning shit up ASAP. They could have several labs dedicated to different force levels going, all at once, for more immediate results.

Fake.
The shuttle could never lift something so big since it would never fit.
You can see bubbles occasionally.

we arent going to mars we are just going to show that earth is flat then kill everybody and send the reaction to nasa

this webm is so sad
he is completely 'normal' mentally, but his body looks like he just ascended from the 6th layer
one day we'll fix you, bendy man

It looks like the guy decided to look up at a heavy object as it was falling down on him.

Skylab launched on a Saturn V rocket, not in a Shuttle. What do you mean by bubbles? do you really think people underwater move like the guys in the video?

Centrifugal motion could prevent gravity health problems, but requires human inhabitants remain in orbit. Maybe it would be best to master this kind of habitation in Earth orbit, then move into orbit around Mars. Robotic laborers could take up perminent residence on Mars and send minerals into orbit for processing.

He probably thinks the camera and set (skylab) are rotating while the man jogging is at rest with respect to earth's gravity.

The shuttle didn't even launch for the first time until a few years after Skylab had already fallen back to Earth.

>bubbles

At what time and where in the video?

The only thing humans need is living space. That can be done in any location with proper spin or gravity. It is the worst hurdle. Everything else is easy, even if you need 20 feet of shielding to do it. For all the other needs, robotics can perform that and perhaps at most a rotating skeleton crew. The only thing needed to be sent to where people live are finished products.