Terraforming in Context of the Evolving Space Infrastructure
From The Space Library
Author - M. Hempsell
Co-Author(s) -
JBIS Volume # - 58
Page # - 385-391
Year - 2005
Keywords - Terraforming, space infrastructure, space habitats, space stations, population growth
JBIS Reference Code # - 2005.58.385
Number of Pages - 7
Abstract
Most discussion of terraforming planets considers the subject as an isolated activity that is independent of all other space activity. In practice only a society with a very large space infrastructure already in place could possibly undertake such projects and terraforming would be a part of the overall development of space. Also only a society with a continually expanding population would have a requirement for terraformed worlds. From this viewpoint terraforming could be seen as one stage in a progression of habitable space facilities that grow in size and sophistication as the space infrastructure expands. The paper outlines such a progression of fixed manned space infrastructure elements from simple platforms thorough to ultra- planets with habitable environments. This step by step perspective places terraforming into a wider context and provides an insight into some of the issues involved with it. It highlights that they may be a stopping point at the colony level (with a population of a few million) and expansion is then achieved by building more colonies rather than moving to more ambitious proposals such as terraforming.
To BUY this paper click here
JBIS is © 1934-2013 British Interplanetary Society -