Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 05:27:16 UTC No. 16168568
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 07:27:51 UTC No. 16168664
You will never be a real habitable planet. You have no magnetic field, you have no strong gravitational pull, you have no thick atmosphere. You are a glorified asteroid twisted by pop science into a crude mockery of Earth's perfection.
Billions of years of evolution have allowed life to sniff out uninhabitable landscapes with incredible efficiency. Even terraformed planets who “pass” look uncanny and unnatural to organisms.
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 07:32:45 UTC No. 16168667
>>16168566
Venus has too much atmosphere, Mars has too little atmosphere. The obvious solution is to run a really long hose between the two to equal them out.
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 07:37:54 UTC No. 16168672
>>16168566
What if there's another planet in the same orbit as Earth but we can't see it because it's always on the other side of the Sun?
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 07:51:29 UTC No. 16168678
>>16168566
To terraform an "outgassed" planets like Mars or Venus you need ~10^20 kg of hydrogen, that's a sphere of 600km or ~1 million Halley's comets...
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 07:55:15 UTC No. 16168680
>>16168678
If only such quantities of hydrogen existed in our solar system.
>but that'd take a really long time
Start shoveling then.
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 08:26:04 UTC No. 16168701
>>16168667
you could get it to jumprope the sun when they're at opposition, like how a Martian space elevator would have to swing around Phobos twice a day
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 08:27:41 UTC No. 16168702
>>16168672
it would probably pull the moon away, we'd at least be able to see its influence
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 08:28:42 UTC No. 16168704
>>16168678
yeah or one Pluto
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 18:44:48 UTC No. 16169393
>>16168672
That Lagrange point is unstable, so it would slip out of its hiding place sooner or later.
Anonymous at Fri, 10 May 2024 19:36:27 UTC No. 16169474
>>16168702
the planet would be 186 million miles away, do you know how gravity works?
Anonymous at Sat, 11 May 2024 05:45:24 UTC No. 16170320
>>16168672
You know we have satelites around the sun right?