10 things you should know before seeing 'The Martian'

the martian
YouTube/20th Century Fox

You can now see actor Matt Damon "science the s--t" out of Mars in a movie adaptation of "The Martian," a best-selling sci-fi novel by Andy Weir.

Advertisement

In the movie, Damon plays the character Mark Watney, an astronaut who relies on engineering, chemistry, and botany to survive after his crewmates leave him for dead on Mars.

With so much science at every turn in the film, we think you'll enjoy it more with a little background knowledge. Thus, we've compiled this handy guide of essential Mars science, NASA trivia, and other key details to know before seeing film.

Keep scrolling, and don't worry; we've kept it as spoiler-free as possible.

Advertisement

1. How to get to Mars

hermes the martian
YouTube/ARES: Live

The first scene in "The Martian" takes place on Mars, but how would humans even get there?

NASA estimates it would take about six to eight months with space-travel technology we have now. In "The Martian," Watney and the rest of the crew use the fictional Hermes spacecraft to reach the red planet.

Hermes is "the most complex and expensive object ever built," astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson says in a promotional video for the film.

On a real trip to Mars, we'll have to worry about the astronauts losing muscle mass and bone density while spending so much time in a microgravity environment. Space is also filled with dangerous cosmic radiation that can rip through a human's very DNA.

The Hermes has artificial gravity and a radiation shield to make the journey more comfortable for the crew. NASA is working on developing both of those things, but it has a long way to go.

Advertisement

2. What it's like on Mars

mars
NASA

Here's what Mars is like, according to NASA:

- Mars has a reddish-orange glow during the day from all the dust.

- Sunrises and sunsets appear blue because Mars has almost no atmosphere.

- One day, or "sol," on Mars is a few minutes longer than an Earth day.

- One Martian year is nearly two Earth years. That's because Mars is much farther away from the sun than Earth is, so it takes a lot longer for the red planet to complete its orbit.

- The average surface temperature on Mars is a chilly minus 80 degrees Fahrenheit. But temperatures can swing from a low of about minus 195 degrees Fahrenheit in winter to a comfortable 68 degrees Fahrenheit during the summer.

- Gravity on Mars is only about 40% that of Earth's, so you'd be 60% lighter (but not moon-bouncing light).

- Mars has barely any atmosphere — about 1% of the density of the cozy atmospheric blanket around Earth. That's hardly enough to protect the surface from dangerous space radiation.

- Dust storms can envelop the planet for days at a time.

It's a pretty inhospitable place. Good luck, Watney.

Advertisement

3. Martian dust storms

Dust storms on Mars happen often, and they can occasionally produce lightning. The wind in a real dust storm on Mars looks nothing like it does in the above clip from the movie.

The air on Mars is simply too thin for the wind to do that much damage, Jim Greene, NASA's planetary science director, told The New York Times. Even a scary-sounding gust of 100 mph carries almost no force.

Advertisement

4. Keeping time on Mars

the martian spacesuits
Aidan Monaghan

Mars is a different planet with its own orbit and rotation, so days are measured differently there than they are on Earth.

One solar day on Mars, called a "sol," is about 40 minutes longer than an Earth day, according to the Planetary Society.

Watney measures the time he spends stranded on Mars not in days but in "sols," which is how NASA keeps track of time on Mars in real life.

Advertisement

5. Shelter on Mars

the martian
YouTube/20th Century Fox

The tent-like shelter Watney spends most of his time inside is called a "hab" — short for Mars lander habitat.

NASA already has working prototypes of Mars habs, complete with oxygenators, water reclaimers, and airlocks to protect astronauts from the nearly airless, radiation-bombarded surface of Mars.

The space agency also recently hosted a competition to see who could design the best 3D printable Mars hab. Some of the designs look really cool, and the winner might actually end up on the red planet some day.

Warning: The next slide has spoilers.

Advertisement

6. Farming on Mars

the martian plant life
20th Century Fox

Warning: This slide has spoilers.

In "The Martian," Watney grows his own food by planting potato eyes in the ground. He fertilizes the plants with human waste and creates liquid water for the crop out of rocket fuel.

Given what we already know about Martian soil, there's no reason this wouldn't work in real life, Bruce Bugbee, a botanist who has worked with NASA, told Tech Insider.

NASA is already making progress on farming in space. Earlier this year, for the first time, astronauts aboard the International Space Station tried some of the lettuce they grew in microgravity.

Advertisement

7. NASA's plutonium batteries

plutonium pellet
Department of Energy

Watney digs up a radioactive power source in "The Martian." It's called a radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG), and NASA relies on devices like it for long-distance space missions.

RTGs are essentially batteries powered by radioactive plutonium-238. As the plutonium naturally decays, it generates heat, and the battery casing turns the escaping warmth into electricity.

Plutonium-238 is pretty much impossible to turn into a nuclear weapon, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. It's also not the kind of dangerous, skin-piercing radiation that humans have to worry about (unless it gets inside our lungs).

Still, a nuclear battery is dangerous to have around because it's very hot.

Advertisement

8. Communicating with Mars from Earth

the martian
20th Century Fox

Mars is so distant that it takes 15 to 20 minutes for a message sent from Earth to make it there.

That's because a communication signal like a radio wave travels at the speed of light, and nothing can travel faster: Mars is about 140 million miles away from Earth, and the speed of light is about 671 million mph.

When you see the movie, see if you can tell whether "The Martian" sticks to this immutable law of physics.

Warning: The next slide has spoilers.

Advertisement

9. A brief history of NASA's Mars spacecraft

pathfinder the martian
20th Century Fox

Warning: This slide has spoilers.

In the movie, Watney has no way to communicate with NASA, so he finds and digs up Pathfinder — a spacecraft NASA really launched to Mars back in the 1990s. After a little hacking, he uses the robot to communicate with NASA using a replica back on Earth.

In the real world, NASA builds a working replica of every spacecraft in case something happens to it after launch. That way, engineers can troubleshoot problems and come up with fixes on Earth.

A real-life Pathfinder replica would need to be "turned on and dusted off," Green told Tech Insider, but it does exist. So NASA really could theoretically use it to communicate with a stranded Martian astronaut.

Advertisement

10. The true origin story of NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab

control room at nasa jpl
NASA/JPL

A key scene in "The Martian" claims NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab was founded after a few Caltech students accidentally blew up their dorm room.

Well, that story is true. It happened in the 1930s, when a group of graduate students known as "the rocket boys" blew up part of their building during a fueled rocket test. They were booted off the Caltech campus and started calling themselves the "Suicide Club," according to NASA.

Thankfully the club didn't live up to its name, and the rocket boys mastered building rockets. They eventually returned to Caltech and were booted out again (we're assuming for more explosions) — but this time to their own laboratory. By the 1940s the group had funding and an official name: the Jet Propulsion Lab.

Advertisement

Remember that the "The Martian" is a science-fiction film — it won't get all the science right.

the martian matt damon
20th Century Fox

But it comes much closer than any space movie of our lifetimes.

Space
Advertisement
Close icon Two crossed lines that form an 'X'. It indicates a way to close an interaction, or dismiss a notification.