Turbinator
New member
I am 100% certain in myself that I would go on a one way mission to Mars.I'm willing to bet big-time, that when the time came you'd back out.
I would definitively go trough the training, constantly trying to rationalize my choice, and when the time came to step on the spacecraft and go, I would be there, first in line. With the mission underway, and with me in space, I would be to busy enjoying it and trying out everything I ever imagined doing in space, to think about the one way trip. And once we arrive on Mars, standing on another planet, than the one I was born on, i'd probably cry tears of joy, it would be quite emotional. Then about 3 weeks later, on the surface of Mars, once the reality of the situation settles in, I'd regret it.
Given a chance to go back in time and make the choice again, I would do the same and go again.
Having survived orbit insertion with my sanity intact, I'd likely roll into a shivering ball trying to find the furthest point from a docking port.
You know that in the International Space Station, there is nothing stopping the astronauts/space tourists from completely unlocking the airlocks? You can disengage the clamps, and release the seals, and feel really close to space, closer than being on the space station, or on a shuttle. However, nothing would happen due to one simple genius engineering design, the doors, they open inwards. Against the internal air pressure of the space station. You would need someone a 100 times stronger than Schwarzenegger was, to pull those doors open.
Now, on the space shuttle it is a different story. The man hatch opens to the outside, so if you where to open the locks, you would blow everything, and everyone out to space in a matter of seconds. And this is the reason why they bolt the doors once they get in to orbit. And only the commander has the key.
Now the question in my mind is... what happens when the commander goes crazy?

help me at this