Traces the history of Mars exploration and describes future plans to explore and inhabit the planet.
Eve Hartman, Wendy Meshbesher. ROCKET. SCIENCE. If you throw a baseball up into the sky, gravity will quickly bring it back down. A hot-air balloon and an airplane can stay up in the air for many hours, but they, too, will come down ...
The history-making astronaut, aerospace engineer and respected advocate for space colonization outlines a plan for taking humans to Mars within the next quarter century, posing business-specific arguments while outlining practical ...
Let's-read-and-find-out about Mars Someday people from Earth may live on Mars. In this century, we will go to the planet to learn more about it. It will become our outpost in space -- our space colony.
In Mission to Mars, Aldrin plots that trajectory, stressing that American-led space exploration is essential to the economic and technological vitality of the nation and the world. Do you dare to dream big?
The author, a former astronaut, argues that NASA should focus on a manned mission to Mars, with the long-range objective of establishing a permanent colony, and describes the physical, technical, and psychological demands of such a mission
Mission Commander Uniqua, Pablo, and Austin set off for Mars to find out the source of a strange noise, while Tyrone and Tasha stay behind in Mission Control.
What kind of data will be collected? What are the advantages of a manned flight over an unmanned? Mission to Mars discusses these questions and more in this serious, documented treatment of the not-too-distant manned expedition to Mars.
Presents facts about Mars from the viewpoint of the reader being on a mission to the planet, including what the trip would be like, how Mars is different from Earth, and how exploration is conducted.
Examines space flight to Mars.
Legendary "space statesman" Aldrin speaks out as a vital advocate for the continuing quest to push the boundaries of the universe as we know it.