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Anonymous No. 16089011

The sun is a sphere which radiates heat in all directions right?
Shouldn't there technically be a goldilocks zone in space around the sun where the ambient temperature in space itself is around Earth's temperature? Let's say 15-32 Celsius.

Could there be water just free floating around that band? Microorganisms living there? Maybe even suitable for life free floating in a man made river encircling the sun if we wanted to do so for shits and giggles?

Anonymous No. 16089015

We could maybe even jettison water into the zone in a way that it orbits the sun to make space oceans

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Anonymous No. 16089019

>>16089011
> goldilocks zone in space
LMAO

Anonymous No. 16089027

>>16089019
Yes

Anonymous No. 16089031

Wouldn't the water just dissipate into smaller and smaller bands?

Anonymous No. 16089108

>>16089011
Temperature is a result of heat within matter. Space is not matter. Only matter has heat capacity. Heat just can't float around & stay in one area, it'll go until it hits matter.

So sure. I guess you could create a goldilocks zone with something. But then it wouldn't be space

Anonymous No. 16089111

>>16089011
You also need a chance to purge that heat as well. It would be quite far, I'd think.

Anonymous No. 16089483

>>16089011
Maybe, I'm not sure. But there's a lot of radiation in space and three no magnetic field protecting the void from all the radiation from solar winds etc. It's also only a few degrees above absolute zero

Anonymous No. 16089485

>>16089483
>three
*there's

Anonymous No. 16089497

>>16089485
Would you all agree that it is hot in space right next to the sun but not exactly within its atmosphere? Like floating withing a few thousand km from the Karman line of the sun will roast you?

Why would you get roasted at that distance and not say, one billion km away from it?

Anonymous No. 16089517

>>16089011
This is the plot of integral trees.

Anonymous No. 16089527

>>16089011
>Shouldn't there technically be a goldilocks zone in space around the sun where the ambient temperature in space itself is around Earth's temperature?

Yes, and the Earth is in it dumbass. That's how this works.

Anonymous No. 16089545

>>16089527
The earth isn't in a free floating zone because it generates its own heat from tectonics. In the part of space around earth it is very cold. What I am referring to is a zone somewhere around the sun where you can expect things to generally be at a nice ambient temperature and stuff like water could be pumped directly into the space of that zone without fear of it turning to ice or steam.

Anonymous No. 16089913

>>16089011
wouldn't it just fall into the sun

Anonymous No. 16090156

>>16089913
No because you can shoot the water into orbit around the sun with the right velocity and angle.

Anonymous No. 16090182

>>16089011
it won't work. solar radiation would continuously push everything in the zone away because of radiation pressure