SpaceX Releases Posters of a Trip to Mars
The American space agency NASA made a series of tourism posters for some exoplanets that were discovered by Kelper.
Now, SpaceX has jumped into the queue and has created some really fantastic posters of a trip to Mars, which seems to be much more achievable than something located several light years away.
Elon Musk has made no secret of his plan to take his company to the Red Planet someday. These posters are just a little teaser to encourage people for a trip to the Red Planet.
The highest points and the lowest trenches included are the moons. The images have also been released Creative Commons, per Spacex's new love of the licensing.
The posters of travel trip to Mars that were uploaded to Flickr on Friday by Elon Musk’s private space company channel the classic charm of vintage travel posters for exotic earthly locations like San Francisco, Barcelona and Siam.
They evoke a pre-Space Age fascination with far-off destinations, places that fuel the imagination and remain slightly beyond the reach of the common man.
SpaceX for the posters that attribute to the Mars Colonization and Tourism Association highlighted three Martian locales i.e. The Red Planet’s twin moons, Phobos and Deimos.
Each of the three images posted online frames a part of the Red Planet in such a familiar way that Mars feels like a tourist destination you could visit tomorrow, not decades from now.
In one of the poster a man and woman gaze through the window of their Martian gondola at Olympus Mons, which the poster reminds is the solar system's highest peak.
In another one, a man in a jetpack flies over Valles Marineris the 2,500-mile-long stretch of canyons that scar the surface of Mars toward a cliff to meet his family next to some sort of futuristic Airstream.
And the third poster promotes Phobos and Deimos, the two oblong moons of Mars.