Subtitles section Play video
-
Humans dream about leaving Earth and traveling through the galaxy.
-
But we were born too early to be part of it.
-
Or were we?
-
The reality is,
-
we could begin our dream by building a Moon base today.
-
We actually do have the technology
-
and current estimates from NASA and the private sector
-
say it could be done for 20 to 40 billion dollars, spread out over about a decade.
-
The price is comparable to the International Space Station
-
or the budget surplus of Germany in 2017.
-
Not that big an investment really.
-
The payoff would be immeasurable.
-
The Moon is a sandbox to develop new technologies and exploit unlimited resources.
-
It would start a new space race
-
and lay the foundation for us to spread out into the solar system and beyond.
-
It would create a vast array of new technologies to benefit us on Earth
-
and we would all be part of it.
-
So, why aren't we doing it?
-
Well, sadly, it's hard to get governments interested in long-term investments in the future of humanity.
-
Let's imagine, just doing it.
-
If we start today, how would we build a Moon base?
-
Throughout history,
-
colonization happened in phases:
-
In the first phase of the age of exploration of the new world, for example,
-
European monarchs funded expeditions to chart and discover and to stake their claims.
-
They planted a flag and set up a camp, but they didn't stay.
-
In the second phase, small missions set up outposts and settlements were founded,
-
which was still very dependent on their home countries for supplies.
-
Some failed, but others survived and established a permanent presence.
-
Only then, in the third phase, did a true colony form
-
to which tradesmen and laborers could emigrate,
-
creating new wealth and opportunities for themselves and their families,
-
sending extreme wealth back to their countries of origin.
-
When we colonize the Moon,
-
we'll go through the same three phases.
-
This time, without murdering millions of innocent people in the process.
-
The Moon is not a welcoming place for living things.
-
A Moon day lasts 29 Earth days,
-
with a difference of maybe 300 degrees Celsius between sunlight and shade.
-
There's no atmosphere to shield us from meteorites, big and small, or cosmic radiation.
-
Worse still, the lunar surface is covered in a layer of nasty jagged dust.
-
The Moon is hard.
-
But we're good at doing hard things.
-
In the first phase of lunar colonization,
-
our explorers proved it can be done
-
that a new world can be reached.
-
This face started 60 years ago with the Apollo missions.
-
Since then, satellites like the American Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter have mapped the Moon,
-
while rovers like the Chinese Yutu, have studied the composition of the lunar surface.
-
Looking for water, ice and metals.
-
Phase one is more or less complete.
-
We know what we need to know to enter phase two.
-
In the second phase,
-
astronauts will build the first Moon base and this could begin today.
-
The first small Moon base could be completed in a decade.
-
The first nation that establishes this base,
-
will be akin to the first nations building outposts in the new world 500 years ago.
-
It's expensive to send rockets to the Moon.
-
So we will send as little as possible.
-
The base will be light,
-
little more than inflatable habitats for crews of no more than 12,
-
and will be deployed somewhere with a natural shelter.
-
Options include caves, like underground lava tube tunnels,
-
or craters near the poles, where the days are six months long.
-
These astronauts will not stay long.
-
The habitat is likely to be abandoned between missions,
-
as solar panels cannot generate electricity during the lunar night.
-
But they'll do the groundwork to enable humans to stay permanently.
-
Our first crew will consist of scientists and engineers
-
who will study the composition of the Moon
-
and whose experiments will explore ways of using the available lunar material.
-
Say purifying the lunar ice and turning it into water for human use.
-
And water is important for far more than drinking.
-
They can use it to experiment with growing plants for food.
-
Hydrogen fuel cells will store power through the long night,
-
extending astronauts' days.
-
And most importantly:
-
It could be split into hydrogen and oxygen.
-
Rocket fuel!
-
By harvesting water from the Moon and putting it into orbit,
-
the Moon base will supply an orbital depot.
-
Where scientific missions to Mars and the outer solar system can refuel.
-
Compared to the Earth, it's much easier and cheaper to get things off the Moon into orbit.
-
Colonizing Mars may mean starting from the Moon.
-
But this isn't a true colony, not yet.
-
The base will be abandoned if funding stops.
-
If we want our base to grow into the third phase, into a true colony,
-
it must become self-sufficient, supporting itself via exports to Earth.
-
Now, private contractors arrive looking to get rich off lunar resources and support services.
-
If it's cheaper to produce rocket fuel in space,
-
what else can they get rich on?
-
They could extract precious metals,
-
abundant in impact craters
-
and other raw materials from the lunar regolith.
-
One promising possibility is the mining of helium-3,
-
an isotope that could one day be used in nuclear fusion reactors,
-
something the Chinese lunar exploration program is currently looking into.
-
Future colonists may export helium-3 back to Earth,
-
providing us with cheap and clean fusion energy.
-
Asteroids could be pulled into the Moon's orbit and mined.
-
With commercial exports to Earth,
-
the colony is fully in its third phase,
-
self-sufficient and economically productive.
-
Our base will begin using lunar material in its construction projects, if it's to continue growing.
-
Fortunately, lunar soil has all the necessary ingredients to make concrete.
-
Robotic mining rigs can sift the lunar dust for organic molecules
-
and could be used to build huge structures
-
way too massive to be brought from Earth.
-
While advances in 3D printing,
-
will make it possible to produce almost everything else the crews need.
-
It's hard to say when exactly the colony becomes self-sustaining.
-
Growth is gradual,
-
experiments are replaced by industry
-
and the population steadily reaches the hundreds,
-
encompassing more than just scientists.
-
Engineers, pilots and contractors representing countries and corporations will be present.
-
Two of these people will make a breakthrough.
-
Not scientific, but social.
-
They will have the first extraterrestrial child.
-
Throughout history,
-
the birth of the first child was celebrated as a moment where the seed of a colony
-
finally and irreversibly took root.
-
Here, it means that the Moon is not just a place for scientists and engineers to work,
-
it's a place for people to live, to raise a family.
-
Once this transition happens, the colony grows rapidly,
-
building more habitats and schools and farms and all the things needed to support the growing population.
-
As our colony grows, all kinds of new technologies will be invented to sustain it.
-
They might develop crops that efficiently recycle carbon dioxide,
-
or the grow with very little water.
-
They might find ways to recycle and reuse 100% of their waste,
-
technologies that are extremely valuable for Earth.
-
They could even build the first space elevator in the Solar System.
-
With a space elevator, spacecraft, astronauts and raw materials,
-
could be brought back and forth from lunar orbit, without needing to use rockets at all.
-
The Moon may become a hub for economic activity on a scale that's hard to imagine right now.
-
It's hard to say who will own the colony at this point.
-
Will the first person born on the Moon take the national identity of their parents,
-
or will a new generation melt together into a new lunar society?
-
And when existing treaties that bar any nation from owning the moon are inevitably rewritten,
-
will the colonists be given a say?
-
Will they declare independence from the Earth?
-
However it happens,
-
the Moon is a perfect sandbox to learn how to colonize the Solar System,
-
the perfect project unify nations,
-
and the only way to guarantee our survival as a species,
-
should something tragic happen on Earth.
-
If we ever want to colonize the Milky Way,
-
we'll have to start somewhere.
-
So why not start there?
-
Why not start now?
-
While unfortunately you can't jump on a spacecraft
-
and go to the Moon right now,
-
you can learn more interesting things about space and our universe.
-
And we can even help you with that.
-
Kurzgesagt and Brilliant are collaborating on a six-part video series
-
about our favorite science and space topics.
-
Kurzgesagt has worked with Brilliant for a while now
-
and we love what they're doing.
-
In a nutshell, Brilliant teaches you science and maths with a hands-on approach,
-
by solving puzzles yourself, you learn to understand concepts instead of just memorizing facts.
-
If you'd like to think more like a scientist,
-
go to brilliant.org/nutshell and sign up for free.
-
The first 698 people to use the link get their annual premium membership at a 20% discount
-
and also support our collaboration with Brilliant.