Can Mars One colonise the red planet?
Alexandra Doyle has signed up for a one-way trip to Mars. What makes her, and 99 others, so ready to leave Earth behind? Meet the red planet's would-be pioneers - and the man who promises he can get them there
When Nasa's first rover set down on the surface of Mars in 1997, its streamed colour images caused an early internet sensation. After centuries of dreaming, here we were, at eye level to our closest potentially habitable neighbour, and the sight was as bleakly majestic as we could have imagined: a rocky, red desertscape on a scale entirely alien to Earth. One mountain, Olympus Mons, was the largest in our solar system (three times the height of Everest, with a footprint the size of Sweden); dune-seas swept its northern hemisphere while 7km-deep canyons veined the south.
Watching on a clunky desktop computer in the Dutch university town of Twente, 20-year-old Bas Lansdorp's first thought was one of wonder; his second of longing ("I want to go there!"), then the melancholy realisation that, being Dutch, he could never fly with Nasa. So he'd have to do it himself.
It's become an issue for my parents. I mean, it was a big step for me to move from Blackpool to London
What makes a good reality TV show? Tension, conflict. But you don't send four kooky divas to Mars!
Why send people for a holiday - when there are 200,000 applicants who don't need to come back?
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