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  • {♫Intro♫}

  • In March 2020, a pair of scientists in North Dakota proposed putting the cloud on Mars.

  • You know, “the cloud,” that nebulous computerthing.

  • That storesstuff.

  • But while it might sound like just a string of buzzwords, it's a legitimate idea -- one

  • that could fundamentally change how we plan space missions.

  • Because we use the cloud here on Earth for lots of things: file storage, computations,

  • whatever.

  • And probes won't need to do all that on their own if the cloud is already there for

  • them.

  • The cloudis really just a fancy way to saysomeone else's computer”.

  • Putting the cloud on Marsis therefore the fancy version ofputting a bunch of

  • computers on Mars.”

  • It wouldn't be out there for us to use, but rather our trusty space robots.

  • See, it takes about half an hour to send a signal to Mars and back, and data transfer

  • rates aren't great.

  • It's just hard to send information-packed signals across such a big distance.

  • So a Martian cloud would be out there mainly for missions taking place on and around Mars.

  • The idea is that a company like SpaceX could send the computers there and set up the system,

  • and then NASA or anyone else could rent time on the computers to make up the costs.

  • It wouldn't be cheap to send all these computers to Mars, but here's the thing: We do that

  • anyway, for every mission.

  • They all need computers to work.

  • And space is a pretty hostile place if you're a computer.

  • Interplanetary space is full of computer-corrupting radiation, and Mars doesn't have a strong

  • magnetic field that stops that radiation from reaching the ground.

  • Then there's micrometeorites, cold, dust -- Mars just isn't a very pleasant place

  • to be.

  • All of this is why Martian probes are built with redundancy: They have multiple, heavily

  • protected computers that can step in if one breaks.

  • But doubling the number of computers and shielding them all adds weight.

  • Every kilogram sent to Mars can cost between thousands and hundreds of thousands of dollars,

  • depending on the mission.

  • So probes end up with compromises -- lighter computers that aren't as powerful they could

  • be.

  • But if we already had a bunch of computers out there that probes could tap into, the

  • probes could have access to more juice for less weight.

  • As long as the probe's antenna -- and also its backup antenna -- don't break, that

  • is.

  • If it can't talk to us, it also can't talk to the cloud.

  • Sure, there are still potential problems with getting those cloud computers to Mars.

  • And it wouldn't be cheap.

  • In that 2020 paper, published in the journal Acta Astronautica, the researchers calculated

  • that it would cost around 1.5 billion dollars to send and set up a Martian cloud, with regular

  • upkeep averaging out at something like a thousand additional dollars an hour.

  • That's a lot to sink into something nobody really asked for -- at least as far as we

  • can tell.

  • Though they also figured the costs could be made up in about five years.

  • So what would we actually do with a Martian cloud?

  • Well, whatever we want.

  • That's what we do with computers.

  • It's only a matter of time before someone configures Curiosity to run Doom.

  • Actually, though, some missions could use the cloud to store their data and transmit

  • it back to Earth.

  • A dedicated cloud system using technology that we're developing anyway might be able

  • to send data back up to a hundred times faster than current probes do, letting rovers spend

  • more time exploring and less time talking.

  • With less memory needed onboard, engineers could use the weight savings to cut mission

  • costs, or add instruments that would have been cut otherwise.

  • Others could use the computers for, you know, computations: Calculating the safest way to

  • land, say, if something goes wrong and there's no time to contact Earth.

  • But the really fun possibilities open up with missions that would use a Martian cloud for

  • coordination between multiple robots.

  • Because there are a lot of mission proposals out there that don't just feature one or

  • two probes, like we've been sending for decades.

  • Why send two robots when you could send dozens?

  • The more you have, the more ground they can cover.

  • Humans would take forever to work out paths for each of those robots.

  • But the cloud could run programs that kept the little bots from crashing into each other

  • while also accounting for the Martian terrain, toeing the always-tricky line of finding interesting

  • places that aren't so interesting they break a robot.

  • A while back, we talked about one of these ideas: HOPTERs that jump around Mars instead

  • of using wheels.

  • But that's not the only proposed multi-bot mission.

  • In 2004, a group looked specifically at three-robot teams that could help each other down cliffs.

  • A network of those around Mars would let us get into all sorts of craters that are inaccessible

  • right now.

  • In 2007, another team imagined a whole swarm of sensors so small that they could be carried

  • by the wind, like dust.

  • A cloud of computers might take in data from this cloud of sensors better than anything

  • else.

  • So, in the end, do we need to put the cloud on Mars?

  • Well, strictly speaking, of course not.

  • We don't need to go to Mars at all!

  • But we want to, and the cloud could theoretically make things more flexible, and enable new

  • modes of exploration, so hey.

  • Maybe it's worth a try.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space.

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  • {♫Outro♫}

{♫Intro♫}

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