[...] effectively the only group of people who might be doing this in 2033 would be SpaceX on a Starship.
[...] it's too short a timeframe for development and testing of the needed technology to do it safely. [...] That said, if Elon is still in charge of SpaceX in 2033, maybe his feelings on that count will be different when he is on the other side of 60.
My notes from the talk[...] - Would send humans 2028 if 2026 is successful, goal of building infrastructure - Walks that back a few sentences later, maybe two windows worth of landings with Optimus instead of humans first - No humans in any of the rendered imagery for 2026 or 2028.
Fuel depot and fuel transfer in space
SpaceX is the only substantive and active game in town for H2M. They’re going to need:1) Working Starship to/from LEO.2) Frequent, large-scale cryo propellant xfer.3) Multi-year, large-scale cryo propellant storage.4) Comms to/from Mars5) PNT at Mars6) EDL proven at Mars7) Water ice at Mars ISRU proven at Mars9) Multi-year life support Items 1-5 are needed before 6 can be tested. Items 1-5 will not be ready by the launch window at the end of 2026, so we’re really looking at the window at the end of 2028 before Item 6 can be tested.Realistically, SpaceX will need more than one bite at the EDL apple before Item 6 is checked off. Assuming the late 2028 window gets used up on (and learning from) Mars EDL failures, that means the early 2031 window before work could begin at the Martian surface on items 7-8. Like with Mars EDL, realistically, finding Martian water ice is usable form and proving out propellant production will take more than one window. If the 2031 window gets used up on water ice prospecting or and propellant production failures and it’s only after the 2033 window that there’s tanks of CH4 waiting for the return leg, then the first crews won’t be sent to Mars until the mid-2035 window.I think 2035 is a somewhat realistic, median estimate. I think 2033 and earlier requires SpaceX to get Mars EDL or water ice prospecting/propellant production right within their first windows. That seems unlikely and unrealistically optimistic.Personally, I’m even a little more skeptical than that because of the lack of details and apparent work at SpaceX on items 4/5 and 7/8 to date (unless Musk has a secret evil villain volcano base where this work has been going on). Putting StarLink sats in Mars orbit alone doesn’t provide a link to Earth. And an Optimus robot walking on the Martian surface isn’t equipped to assay water ice or process propellant. These are things where NASA experience and expertise could come in really handy so SpaceX doesn’t have to reinvent the wheel. But with the Trump/Musk fallout, that working relationship will probably not be as close as it has been. Taking that into account, I don’t think SpaceX will be in a position to send the first crews until the mid-2037 or late-2039 windows.A decade to a decade-and-a-half still to go is my 2 cents. FWIW...
7 and 8 don’t have to be figured out before they go.
SpaceX already has a life support system for HLS which is based on the Dragon capsule’s life support system, I think. This is a very reliable system. No reason this can’t work for several years, as it uses pretty basic one time use scrubbers, etc.
Note that SpacwX intends to use Starlink for Mars communications.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 06/12/2025 10:05 pm7 and 8 don’t have to be figured out before they go. Before the first crews go, the program needs tanks of LCH4 on the Martian surface for crew return options. …