| | #11 (permalink) | ||
| Holy cow! | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
---------------- Hypography Forums Moderator IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Bovinely blessed be thee. | ||
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| | #12 (permalink) | ||
| Suspended | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Suspended | Re: Colonizing the Solar System A quick thought on colonization is that it's just an expensive form of theme park or roller coaster ride. We might do better to divert resources currently being spent on putting humans on other worlds (within our tiny solar system mind you) toward figuring out some bigger cosmological questions which themselves could help us with many other, more local and palettable, issues. EDIT: even wormhole dynamics... Last edited by InfiniteNow; 02-22-2006 at 12:51 PM. | |
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| | #14 (permalink) | |
| Ancora Imparo | Re: Colonizing the Solar System of course not! its polititians that ban drugs like RU486 - its happening here now, they are getting all ethical about an abortion drug.. and i dont want to spark up another abortion discussion! I think wormhole dynamics may be a little out of reach at the moment, but I see what you mean. If we spend money on finding better ways of doing things then it will become cheaper and easier in the long run ---------------- Jay-qu ::Hypography Moderator of.. Chemistry, Physics & Mathematics, Astronomy & Cosmology, Space and Technology & gadgets Forums Einstein said that if quantum mechanics is right, then the world is crazy. Well, Einstein was right. The world is crazy. -Daniel Greenberger Physics Guides - Physics Resources and help Last edited by Jay-qu; 02-22-2006 at 02:09 PM. | |
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| | #15 (permalink) | |||||
| Thinking | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
Also, if Heim theory is correct (or any number of others), we should be able to produce artificial gravity fields at some point in the next century. Quote:
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It would be nice to also have faster propulsion, artificial gravity fields, hyperspace travel, anti-gravity, and indefinately extended life spans... But I'll be happy with the elevators for now. We can do a lot with just that. | |||||
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| | #16 (permalink) | |
| Creating | Assume for a moment that Earth-space elevators are not achievable for the next several centuries. Despite a lot of optimistic enthusiasms for them, the engineering challenges are truly daunting, and may prove practically insurmountable. All that is really necessary for the colonization of the solar system is the creation of habitats capable of sustaining large numbers of human beings, and a launch capability comparable to our current. Once an artificial “ecological nitch” for human beings exists, humans can do there what they have historically proven to do best – reproduce exponentially. With current artificial fertilization and implantation technology, and launches of one or a few small payloads of sperm and ova, problems of viable breeding population size can be circumvented. What’s critical for the creation of livable extraterrestrial environments is large amounts of energy. Assuming that launch capability prohibits supplying extraterrestrial colonies with fissionables (eg: uranium, plutonium), that generating useful energy with artificial nuclear fusion remains beyond human capability for several centuries, and that fuel is difficult to obtain outside of earth, this leaves 2 obvious feasible sources for large amounts of energy: solar radiation, and planetary magnetic induction. These 2 energy sources reveal 2 “sweet spots” for colonization: inward, toward the sun, where solar radiation is most intense, and the vicinities of giant planets, expecially Jupiter, where the mechanical energy of the orbit of great and lesser moons is most easily obtainable through magnetic induction with the planet’s strong moving magnetic field. Mars and the asteroids are not within these sweet spots. So, while the asteroids may provide valuable, energy-efficient access to material resources, I suspect Mars is of limited value for colonization in the next few centuries, compared to the greater and lesser moons of Jupiter, or the empty space near the Sun. I’m optimistic that, even if dramatic improvements in Earth launch capabilities, such as space elevators, or dramatic improvements in compact power generators, such as controlled fusion, fail to be realized anytime soon, space colonization is still possible, by virtue of sheer human fecundity. | |
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| | #17 (permalink) | ||
| Thinking | Re: Sheer human fecundity Quote:
I agree that colonization is possible without these technologies, and in fact I think colonization is possible NOW. However, I believe you are underestimating the rate of technological advancement, which is proceeding at an exponential rate itself. A few centuries is a VERY long time for technological growth, just look at the last century... | ||
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| | #18 (permalink) | ||||
| Thinking | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
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The elevator would need to consist of several ribbons, so if one breaks we will be able to go up and repair it with relative ease. If they all break, the outer end flys off into space, and the lower end falls to the earth, causing much damage to the surrounding area. (Imagine several miles of cable and equipment falling from space...) Quote:
Glad there are so many of us on here. | ||||
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| | #19 (permalink) | ||
| Politically Incorrect | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
I'm from VanCrazy!! I think you got a great idea. Now assuming that the Tech can be implemented.. The problem becomes paying for it!??? We can't even fund schools as you well know.. Let alone some thing of this magnitude.. My solution to that is We Divert Billions from the Military Budget, and get International support as well. Robots cleaning large space debris doesn't seem that great/possible. Because of the sheer speed at which it travels. I think firing something at it,like an Electromagnetic PulseRay Like in the video game Asteroids to divert its course might be more feasible.. Interesting thread. Thought provoking! Still, I'm wondering how Han Solo walked around the Millenium Falcon?? Is there a way to induce Earth like-Gravity?? Gravity Inducer..?? ---------------- There is Truth in Wine and Children | ||
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| | #20 (permalink) | ||
| Rockin' | Re: Colonizing the Solar System Quote:
A space elevator collapse would be more of a disaster because it took a long time to build that damn thing than it would for stuff falling to earth. TFS [just picking a nit.] | ||
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