• someone [comrade/them, they/them]
    ·
    3 months ago

    Fun space fact: perchlorates are one of the two reasons why The Martian can't happen as written/filmed. Martian soil is loaded with them. This was only discovered after the book was written. Local soil would have to be decontaminated before growing crops on it.

    The other reason is that the wind storm at the start simply can't happen. Thanks to the thin Martian atmosphere, the strongest storms on Mars have about the force of a gentle summer breeze on Earth. The average cardboard box would make a stormproof bunker on Mars.

    Neither takes away from the story in my opinion. It's really about mental health and problem-solving in adverse condition, not technical nitpicks.

    • ClimateChangeAnxiety [he/him, they/them]
      ·
      3 months ago

      I remember the wind storm being pointed out at the time and the author being like “Look, I know, but I needed a reason for him to be stuck on Mars, give me a break”

      • LocalOaf [they/them, ze/hir]
        ·
        3 months ago

        Does Mars have seismic activity? Maybe a marsquake could trigger a landslide that fucks up the spacecraft instead? idk

        Given it was a Sorkin project, he probably would have made Russian hackers crash a satellite orbiting Mars into the NASA crew in the surface if they didn't want the storm thing

      • someone [comrade/them, they/them]
        ·
        3 months ago

        I'm absolutely willing to overlook that for the sake of genuinely good science fiction. Especially when the story is about an astronaut with a realistic mindset and problem-solving approach. Out of all the NASA astronauts in fiction I've seen or read about, Mark Watney is by far the most psychologically realistic. He's exactly the sort of person that NASA selects for.