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  1. Oct 30, 2020 · Then select "Line" and press down on Olympus Mons and let go on the western edge of Valles Marineris. Then the distance is shown and if you press the "Submit" button you get the elevation profile from Olympus Mons to Valles Marineris. If you choose the most north-western edge of the canyon of Valles Marineris the distance will be about 2888 km.

  2. Nov 26, 2014 · 1. Atmosphere is a plus for landing. The lower 27 km of Mars atmosphere can shed about 4 km/s. This aerobraking cuts needed propellent mass by more than half. It is taking off where an atmosphere is a pain. A maglev up the slopes of Olympus Mons is an interesting idea.

  3. Aug 27, 2015 · For the most part, they appear very featureless (See photo from HiRISE of Olympus Mons) There are other areas of Mars that show more interesting chemical compounds, etc, that just don't show up on the mountain. Thus, they are higher priority. I suggest if you are curious then look up HiRISE images from Olympus Mons.

  4. Feb 3, 2015 · Therefore, aerodynamically speaking, launching from the top of Olympus Mons with a mass driver is absolutely possible. As the density of the atmosphere at the surface of Mars is 0.02 kg/m2, the dynamic pressure at the surface would be 8079 N/m^2; therefore, launching from the surface (technically called the Mars datum surface, or average surface elevation) is also possible.

  5. Mars has a very high mountain, Olympus Mons (25 km), while Hellas Planitia is a 9 km deep crater. How much would the weight of a person weighing 100kg on Earth, change between the highest peak of the Olympus Mons and the Hellas Planitia crater's deepest point?

  6. Olympus mons is 27km high-more than three times the height of Mount Everest. Mars needs human landing so would we get a benefit if we landed on olympus mons as our first landing?

  7. Apr 30, 2021 · Its pressure ranges from 72 Pa (0.0104 psi) on the top of Olympus Mons to 1240 Pa (0.18 psi) in the Hellas Basin. Since this is quite a difference, I'm curious on both scenarios: how long would astronauts' footprints remain on Mars in case astronauts land on Olympus Mons, and in case they land in the Hellas Basin?

  8. However, on Mars Olympus Mons provides an altitude advantage of 21 kilometers (something with no analog on Earth) and near Mars' equator at 19° North. In this case, how much of an advantage would this be for a launch for a given vehicle? 1% in payload mass? 10%? For balance, answers are welcome to point out the challenges and disadvantages as ...

  9. Oct 25, 2020 · The most difficult challenge might be distinguishing life transferred from Earth to Mars in the last 50 years by bacterial spores on space probes from life transferred from Earth to Mrs in the last billion years by bacterial spores on meteorites, or even native life which seeded Earth 4 billion years ago by bacterial spores on meteorites.

  10. Q&A for spacecraft operators, scientists, engineers, and enthusiasts. Stack Exchange Network. Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q&A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers.