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Calculations for the Console research article: How will the internet work on Mars? An exploration of interplanetary networking.

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How will the internet work on Mars: Calculations

Author: David Mytton, Console.

Correspondence: david@console.dev.

There are many challenges to building human settlements on Mars. The most efficient launch opportunity windows only arise every 2.2 years when Mars is closest to Earth. Best journey times are 3-6 months. The atmosphere is primarily CO2, and it is very cold.

Once we have figured out how to get there and how to reliably support human life (some are aiming for this decade), questions of quality of life become relevant. This includes producing water and food, staying fit and healthy, socialising and entertainment. Normal things humans like to do.

One of the resources we have come to take for granted is access to the internet. Whether to look up information, send email or watch a video, internet access is now fundamental to modern life. However, all of these services are based on Earth. The internet was designed based on a number of assumptions that will no longer be true if we want to offer the same experience to citizens of Mars.

In this article we examine those assumptions, discuss the challenges and consider possible solutions to setting up the internet on Mars. Read on the Console website.

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The calculations notebook walks through the calculations used in the article.

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CC-BY-4.0 i.e. feel free to use the material and calculations but please include a credit back to Console.

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Calculations for the Console research article: How will the internet work on Mars? An exploration of interplanetary networking.

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