A research roadmap for assessing the feasibility of warming Mars
E. S. Kite, A. Essunfeld, M. H. Hecht, M. A. Mischna, R. Wordsworth, H. Mohseni, A. Boies, N. Averesch, S. Ansari, M. I. Richardson, E. A. DeBenedictis, D. Stork, A. L. Bamba, C. J. Handmer, C. Jourdain, R. Ramirez, C. E. Mason, A. Kling, A. S. Braude, A. Dumitrescu

TL;DR
This paper proposes a research roadmap to evaluate the feasibility of non-biological methods for warming Mars, focusing on local, site-specific, and global approaches with associated risks and technical challenges.
Contribution
It identifies three promising research pathways—greenhouse membranes, orbiting reflectors, and enhancing Mars' natural greenhouse effect—and outlines key near-term experiments and decision points.
Findings
Local warming via greenhouse membranes could aid resource extraction.
Orbiting reflectors require large-area deployment for effective warming.
Strengthening Mars' natural greenhouse effect remains a complex, yet promising, approach.
Abstract
This roadmap outlines research pathways to determine whether Mars could be warmed with non-biological methods. It does not presuppose that warming Mars is desirable; its purpose is to identify what would need to be true for Mars to be warmed, what it would cost, and what could go wrong. Three complementary research tracks appear promising. Solid-state greenhouse membranes offer local warming, aiding water harvesting, food production, and oxygen supply near human bases. Orbiting reflectors can warm key sites such as bases and CO-ice reservoirs, although a large combined area would be required. Strengthening Mars' natural greenhouse effect might warm large regions or the globe, although many aspects remain to be worked out. Each approach carries scientific and technical risks that research must address. Near-term priorities are on-Earth testing of key parameters that will determine…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
