(urth) Green is Urth Redux
Gerry Quinn
gerryq at indigo.ie
Wed Jan 12 10:40:48 PST 2011
From: "Lee Berman" <severiansola at hotmail.com>
>
>>Jeff Wilson: What does the technology-based power source provide that an
>>enclosed terrarium could not?
>
> We take it for granted and ignore that a terrarium relies on the presence
> of earth's massive gravity
> field which allows a thick atmospheric blanket to surround the terrarium.
> Atmospheric pressure keeps water
> from boiling off into space, regulates temperature, filters harsh
> sunlight, etc. etc.
>
> The power source could duplicate Urth's gravity allowing an atmosphere on
> a small planetary body. Or it could
> create a forcefield to hold in the atmosphere, I guess. But such a power
> supply would be great and would have
> to be maintained. I get the impression that humanity in Urth's time is
> occupied with matters other than
> maintaining the massive amounts of energy it would require to make plant
> life habitable on a moon-sized Lune.
How much power does it take to maintain an atmospheric-retention forcefield?
Are some models more efficient than others?
But there is always the more lo-tech option of giant pressurised
greenhouses, dome-shaped or otherwise. Maintaining the integrity of such a
physical structure requires NO POWER AT ALL. And the temperature inside
will be similar to that of Urth (warmer if the builders consider it
appropriate).
> Maybe Lune is planet-sized. It is a simple, elegant solution to the
> puzzle. Not without its own problems, but
> hey. No such thing as a problem-free theory. We'll each keep supporting
> the solution we like at a gut-level and
> keep sniping and hacking at the one which makes us feel icky inside.
An Urth-sized Lune is silly in too many ways to count, as well as being
effectively contradicted in the text.
> Ain't no universally "right answer". If there were, we'd all just choose
> that one and move on. Our choices are
> based on emotion. There is no escaping this truth. Resistance is futile.
> :- ).
There's no one write answer. But there are countless wrong answers.
- Gerry Quinn
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