h a l f b a k e r yFlaky rehab
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Making a second-home for humanity by cooling Venus.
Initially I had thought of just boring old space mirror to deflect some of the sunlight off it. But on reflection..
Then I thought of a very long buckytube, one end on Venus the other on Mars, conducting the heat and coolth in directions alternate.
Would need to have two hinges to let it bend to avoid the rest of the stuff in the plane of the ecliptic i.e. the planet Earth.
Finally, I realised the most logical way is to send a job-lot of sinks with a bit of cold water in them and hot water tanks that draws in heat from the atmosphere.
In this way it is possible to exploit the well-known property of sinks* that if you put in some cold water, then no matter how much hot water you put in subsequently, it never gets quite gets warm enough**.
So, by exploiting this process, Venus will be cooled down.
*and baths too
** similar to the effect of objects getting heavier the further you carry them.
864 ave F temp
http://www.space.co...us-temperature.html HOT enough to melt lead [popbottle, Mar 30 2014]
Venus
http://www.youtube....watch?v=U2DBcbZc3ck It's Shocking Blue... [normzone, Mar 31 2014]
cycle the heat sinks back & forth
Comet_20Energy_20Transport relevant? [sophocles, Mar 31 2014]
[link]
|
|
Occasionally the Sun gets between Venus and Mars.
Or, more precisely, sometimes when Mars is at one
place in its orbit, Venus has moved ahead, around
the curve of its orbit, such that it is on the far side
of the Sun, looking at it from Mars. Your buckytube
will have to deal with the fact that the Sun is a
pretty big object, rather less-easily avoided than the
Earth and Mercury. |
|
|
//the Sun is a pretty big object, rather less-easily avoided than the Earth// Tell that to a person teetering on a precipice! |
|
|
I'm bunning this just for the concept of cooling Venus,
something I've never heard proposed before. |
|
|
I do think that an orbiting sun wall is probably the
only way to do it though. Then there's that
atmospheric pressure problem, plus about a dozen
others. Not a nice place, but still, worth mulling over
just for the sake of a thought experiment anyway. |
|
|
Bun. The whole scheme should be powered by a Peltier
Device. |
|
|
//Heat sinks to cool Venus// |
|
|
Wrong - heat _rises_ _from_ _hot_ Venus. |
|
|
So put a large lens between venus and the sun. First
use it to heat the atmosphere to the point that it
expands even further, and much of it escapes the
planet. |
|
|
Then re-aim it to direct that sun away instead. The
thinner atmosphere will cause it to cool more
quickly as well. |
|
|
//Wrong - heat _rises_ from_ hot_ Venus |
|
|
The surface heat from the atmosphere will travel downwards to some extent via conduction. |
|
|
//the Sun is a pretty big object |
|
|
Well, the buckytube is only deployed at night. |
|
|
Recycle the heat sinks. Put them in a sequence
going back/forth? |
|
|
oh, & I don't consider adding a link to another
relevant HB idea "shameless" when it's relevant, &
we have nothing to gain from these fake internet
points. After 10+ years, haven't we figured out the
worth of a bun? |
|
|
//Venus has moved ahead// |
|
|
Presumably, though, it would no longer do this if the two were chained together, as proposed. The orbital skipping games which Terra might then have to play are half the fun of this idea, aren't they? |
|
|
//Well, the buckytube is only deployed at night.//
Night is rather long on Venus. |
|
| |