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Floating Cities On Venus

Posted by Soulskill on Mon Jul 21, 2008 10:58 PM
from the brain-candy dept.
Geoffrey.landis writes "Some of you may have heard me talk about colonizing Venus. Well, for those who haven't, Universe Today is running story about floating cities on Venus. It's a reasonable alternative for space colonies — after all, the atmosphere of Venus (at about 50 km) is the most Earth-like environment in the solar system (other than Earth, of course). '50 km above the surface, Venus has air pressure of approximately 1 bar and temperatures in the 0C-50C range, a quite comfortable environment for humans. Humans wouldn't require pressurized suits when outside, but it wouldn't quite be a shirtsleeves environment. We'd need air to breathe and protection from the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere.'"
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  • by Mesa MIke (1193721) on Monday July 21 2008, @10:59PM (#24284261) Homepage

    Just move closer to the Sun.

  • uhh huh (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 21 2008, @11:00PM (#24284263)
    Yes yes, and while we're at it, why don't we get IPv6 rolled out too, hmmmm?
  • One question (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Tubal-Cain (1289912) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:03PM (#24284287) Journal

    And our reason for going to Venus is...?

    We can mine the Moon and possibly Mars, but what does Venus offer us? Fuel? I would think it is too hot for mining the surface (robotic miners capable of operating in the heat may not be cost-effective)

    • by HomerJ (11142) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:07PM (#24284311)

      Just think of the limericks!

      There once was a man on Venus..

      • by rubycodez (864176) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:40PM (#24284607) Homepage

        there once was a man upon Venus
        her angry he was the wrong genus
        as a mortal peon
        cursed for an eon
        the goddess to give cunnilingus

      • by OldManAndTheC++ (723450) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:30AM (#24284959)

        There once was a man upon Venus
        Who'd originally been born on Minas
        He came a long distance
        With cheery persistence
        But alas! His bride had a ten inch dick

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:46AM (#24285091)

        Why not a song for the rest of us pastafarians! Arrr, maties!

        Aboard the good ship Venus,
        You really should have seen us,
        With a figurehead of a whore in bed,
        And a mast of a phallic penis.

        The captain of the lugger,
        Was known as a filthy bugger,
        Declared unfit to shovel shit,
        From one ship to another.

        The cabin boys name was Chipper,
        A Randy little nipper,
        He made a pass with a broken glass,
        And circumcised the skipper.

        The first mate's name was Morgan,
        By gosh, he was a gorgon,
        From half past eight he played till late,
        Upon the captain's organ

        The captain's wife was Charlotte,
        Born and bred a harlot,
        Her thighs at night were lily white,
        By morning they were scarlet.

        The captain's daughter, Mabel,
        Though young, was fresh and able,
        To fornicate with the second mate,
        Upon the chartroom table.

        The captain's younger daughter,
        Was washed into the water,
        Her plaintive squeals announced that eels,
        Had found her sexual quarter.

        The ship's dog's name was Rover,
        We turned that poor thing over,
        And ground and ground that faithful hound
        From Teneriff to Dover.

        And when we reached our station,
        Through skillful navigation,
        The ship got sunk, in a wave of spunk,
        From too much fornication.

        I am glad that slashdot has a/c

      • by Cassander (251642) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @04:45AM (#24286321)

        There once was a man on Venus
        Who decided to play with his penis
        But the sulfuric acid
        Made it far worse than flaccid
        And he was left with no cock for his genius

    • by mrbluze (1034940) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:16PM (#24284407) Journal

      And our reason for going to Venus is...?

      Well.. from the summary:

      We'd need air to breathe and protection from the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere.'"

      Some people might be feeling nostalgic and remember life in down-town Tokyo or New York or something, but just want to live in a new neighbourhood.

    • by RuBLed (995686) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:18PM (#24284429)
      Not enough vespene gas.
        • by TheLink (130905) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @01:57AM (#24285509) Journal
          But why bother even to colonize Mars or Venus? That's like trying to run or jump before learning to stand.

          What we should do is learn to build practical and sustainable space stations with artificial gravity (the classical spinning wheels, or the tethered ones, or whatever that _works_).

          It's not as difficult as colonizing another planet since:

          1) you don't have to fight yet another gravity well.
          2) you can do it just "outside" your planet - much cheaper.

          And you're going to have to do it anyway. If you send people to Venus/Mars - it will take months for them to get there, where will they live during those months? My answer is a space station. Not a NASA Suicide Vessel.

          Once you've worked out how to build a practical and sustainable space station, you can use such space stations to go elsewhere in the Solar System - Mars, Venus, the asteroid belts and beyond. There is no _rush_ then. And it stops sounding like a "one way" trip.

          To me it is a really stupid idea to try to colonize other planets before we figure out how to do space colonies.

          Once people work out how to do space colonies, I bet most colonizers would rather live in a space station than live on inhospitable planets in something that is just as restrictive as a space station ( if not more so - it's trapped on the planet and can't move) - it's not like you'd be able to walk outside in Venus without a protective suit. So what's the difference?

          If you want to send people on one way trips to other planets, maybe you should start with certain politicians (you could hold a reality show - Vote Them Off The Planet or something), in that case there could be a significant benefit ;).

          Anyway, I find it telling that the NASA and other "space" people keep talking about sending humans to Mars without seriously developing and advancing space station technology. So many stupid people making stupid decisions.

          Learn to stand first, then walk, then run, then jump. Not the other way round.
          • by Ihlosi (895663) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @02:48AM (#24285765)
            What we should do is learn to build practical and sustainable space stations with artificial gravity (the classical spinning wheels, or the tethered ones, or whatever that _works_).

            "Artificial" gravity does have some really weird effects. Coriolis force and all that.

            1) you don't have to fight yet another gravity well.

            I'd put "not having a gravity well" at the top of the list of disadvantages of space stations. If you have a gravity well, you can have all sorts of amenities known from Earth, such as a _real_ kitchen, plumbing, _real_ toilets, _real_ showers, and once the planetary outpost can support luxury items, maybe even a swimming pool.

            • by TheLink (130905) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @03:13AM (#24285865) Journal
              If the tether is longer then the Coriolis effect won't be as strong, and the Coriolis effect in the space station is unlikely to kill you (whereas hurricanes and tornados do kill people ;) ).

              Build a big enough space station and you can have a swimming pool. Maybe even a 0.5G swimming pool - which could be amusing (if people can avoid killing/crippling themselves), and maybe even a "flying room" - where you can strap on wings and fly about for fun.

              Whatever disadvantages space stations have, talking about building planetary outposts without knowing how to build sustainable space stations, is like talking about building space stations without knowing how to get off the Earth.

              After all with current tech it is still going to take months to travel to another planet, and if you go down to the planet's surface, how are you going to get back up?
            • by RsG (809189) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @03:29AM (#24285939)

              You can simulate comfortable gravity easily enough on a large station. Coriolis force is less of an issue further out from the center axis. Build yourself a ring or cylinder big enough, and you'd never know the difference.

              On a station using centrifugal force (OK, centripetal force for the pedantic), you can even choose the gravity level most appropriate to the task you desire - closer to the axis of rotation for low-G, closer to the outer hull for earth-G. And zero-G is just outside the nearest airlock.

              You can't simulate lack of gravity on a planet though. Nor can you change the gravity from whatever the local value is to what you want/need it to be.

              Zero-G is advantageous most of the time from a tech perspective (gravity is just another design constraint), and from the perspective of using the station as a jumping off point for the rest of the solar system, since there's no need to climb out of yet another gravity well. The main need for gravity is keeping people's bones healthy, and making sure they can cope with the return home one day - spin gravity will cover these.

              Not that those are reasons not to go build aerostats on Venus, but they are strong arguments in favor of orbitals for the nearer future. Plus, if we ever want to tap into the resources of this system, the asteroid belt is our best bet by far, and putting stations out there (either by converting existing rocks, or building completely man-made habs) is feasible.

          • by IICV (652597) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @03:48AM (#24286047)
            This is actually my personal theory about why aliens have never visited Earth, the Fermi paradox notwithstanding. Assuming no FTL travel, by the time you've got the technology you need to send ships the dozens of lightyears required to explore new stars, you've already got the technology you need to build colonies in interstellar space. After all, once you can last out there for fifty years, you might as well just set up shop and call it home - nevermind exploring all those distant stars.
          • by invid (163714) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @08:00AM (#24287921) Homepage

            There are 3 major disadvantages to space stations: gravity, temperature regulation, and atmospheric pressure. These problems don't exist on Venus City. If we are going to talk about a significant population of humans living off the Earth (I'm talking thousands) I would bet on cloud cities on Venus before space stations. A hull breach on a space station would be a much more significant problem than on the floating city. However, Venus city has 3 major problems: distance from Earth, gravity well, and raw materials. What is needed prior to building Venus City is a space based infrastructure. This would include large space stations, perhaps built along the Stanford Torus model. I don't see those supporting more than a few hundred humans each, though. There could be orbiting space stations around Venus and Skyhooks for transfering raw materials. As far as building materials go, the atmosphere has plenty of carbon so your basic building blocks could be carbon nanotubes (I'm not sure how they hold up against sulfuric acid though). There is no shortage of solar energy at 50k up, you would get almost as much solar power from the clouds below you reflecting sunlight up as you would from above you. You would still need to import oxygen, hydrogen, and a few other important elements. Mercury could be mined and materials sent to Venus. The only alternative to large scale human colonization of space that would allow for Earth gravity and life style would be Oneillian Space stations (think Babylon 5) which I think would be a step up in difficulty.

            People ask why should we go into space and try to colonize it. There are 2 good answers: energy and economies of scale. Energy is abundant and cheap in space (in the inner solar system). Once you are established outside of the Earth's gravity well, transportation is really cheap per kilometer traveled. If an economy of scale is built in space, the material needs of humanity would be taken care of in a way that could sustain billions of humans without polluting the Earth. The wealth generated in space could be rained down on the people of the Earth.

  • by nizo (81281) * on Monday July 21 2008, @11:07PM (#24284313) Homepage Journal

    We'd need air to breathe and protection from the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere.

    Well, we'd need all that plus the floating cities. Plus a way to get there would be nice, and a regular ferry to keep the supplies like food and such arriving. But aside from all that we are ready to move in.

  • by thatskinnyguy (1129515) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:08PM (#24284323)
    ...that turn to goo in a few months!
  • Only? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Malevolyn (776946) <signedlongint AT gmail DOT com> on Monday July 21 2008, @11:09PM (#24284343) Homepage

    We'd need air to breathe and protection from the sulfuric acid in the atmosphere.

    It's so simple!

    Wait a minute...

  • by Brain Damaged Bogan (1006835) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:09PM (#24284347)
    they'll betray you and freeze you in kryptonite as soon as the empire comes knocking on their door.
  • Argumentative. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by geckipede (1261408) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:10PM (#24284355)
    It is always this way. I've been saying that we should attempt manned missions to Venus using balloons for years, and now that somebody else suggests it I feel compelled to start poking holes in the idea.

    It is quite nice as a there-and-back science mission but for a long term colony it's a terrible environment. The local resources are incredibly difficult to get hold of if you have to send a balloon down to get them, remember that the record for longest lasting machine on the Venusian surface is slightly over an hour.

    The only reason to go there and take humans along is if space travel has become cheap and easy enough that you can do it on a whim.
  • Rather than try to change planets, it may be easier to genetically engineer people who are resistant to sulfuric acid ( or they may evolve naturally in China if nothing is done about their acid rain which is reaching a pH of 3.5 )

    [ Please, no jokes about acid-resistant Chinese overlords ]

  • So we'd need to... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rakishi (759894) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:13PM (#24284383)

    1) Wear suits to protect us from the poisonous atmosphere and lack of oxygen.
    2) Stay under cover to protect us from the various radiation (no magnetic field as I understand it).
    3) Keep a complex life support system functioning in a complex artificial environment where failure means death.

    So how exactly is this different from the moon, mars or even space itself? It actually seems more difficult and worse environment for humans than any of those.

  • by HomerJ (11142) on Monday July 21 2008, @11:15PM (#24284395)

    I think before we talk about other places, we should probably get the kinks out of everything by putting something on our own moon. A lot of science could be done on a moon base, as well as learning just HOW to put something on another large rock. Lots of reasons why the moon is reasonable:

    1) We can already get to the moon. We've been there already. So there's not real jump in tech needed to get there.

    2) We can get OFF the moon. The big gotcha with any other landing. Go to Mars? Yeah, could probably get there and land now. Getting off is the hard part. Don't have that problem with the moon.

    3) It's speedy to get there. No months of travel. Need to swap people out or something goes horribly wrong--can get there pretty quickly.

    Landing on Mars, or floating cities on Venus sound nice. But I'd like to see something a bit more practical in my lifetime of a moon base. It's possible, but there haven't been any major plans to do it.

    • I think before we talk about other places, we should probably get the kinks out of everything by putting something on our own moon.

      How about building cities that float in the oceans on earth first? We can already go there, and even do go there all the time. We can get back to land just as easily as we can get to the ocean. It's very fast to get there, weeks or hours depending on whether your city is large enough to have an airport. Going to the moon sounds nice, but we should make and follow through on plans to do something more practical first.

    • Getting off is the hard part.

      Actually, getting off could be easier on Mars. (minds out of the gutter, people!)

      In situ propellant materials are definitely available on the moon, but in solid form, and even there the best alternatives look like aluminum with oxygen (hard to turn into a solid rocket) or hydrogen with oxygen (but in rare dirty ice form). So until we're ready to create a moon colony (i.e. with mining and manufacturing/refining equipment) rather than just a moon base, the only way to get off the rock is to do like Apollo did and bring all the rocket fuel you need all the way from Earth.

      On Mars, on the other hand, carbon dioxide is most of the atmosphere - no need for mining equipment to bake O atoms out of rock, just an air filter to pull them in CO2 molecules out of the sky. We've already tested the sort of compact equipment that would let even a small mission turn that into carbon monoxide and oxygen. You can burn those together directly, or if you want higher performance you can bring your own H2 (which is only a small fraction of your total fuel+oxidizer needs by weight) and burn it directly against local oxygen or bulk it up into methane first using local carbon.

      Your other points are all well taken, though. We've made enough flubs in Low Earth Orbit alone that it seems clear that we should practice walking before we run.

  • by ShooterNeo (555040) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:02AM (#24284759)

    While possible in theory, I think it is incredibly unlikely that humans will build any kind of colony on other planets. Simply put : the projected technological growth curve suggests that we will have self replicating robots (and possibly artificial intelligence smart enough to control them) within a century.

    Why would we go to the hassle of creating compromise habitats on other planets (moon, mars, the rest) when we could simply place linear accelerators (aka railguns) to launch raw materials into orbit? Self-replicating factories on the moon would mine materials and manufacture more robots and parts. The finished bots as well as raw materials would be launched into orbit, to be used to manufacture gigantic rotating habitats.

    The habitats would be MUCH posh-er than anything that could be made on a planet, with near perfect control of the internal environment.

  • by 4D6963 (933028) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:39AM (#24285041)

    As many people have pointed out this is obviously infeasible in the foreseeable future (and I believe we're talking at the very least 50 years here), however it may be an interesting idea as a space probe. Technically gets there like a lander probe, except that at some point during the descent after the parachute slowed things down enough the probe would inflate a blimp, and thus float in the atmosphere at tolerable temperatures and pressures.

    That would be good to study the atmosphere and also study the surface a bit closer, but what would be really really neat is if it could be the "aircraft carrier" for a UAV or two specially designed to go fly close to the surface, take pictures, and come back for a refuelling, which would be electrical, the source of energy being the solar panels on the blimp (or "solar paint") during day time (which would last I believe about 120 days). It should work fairly well because the skies must be pretty clear at a 50 km altitude, and a blimp can be pretty large so if its entire surface can be covered in "solar paint".. And during night the whole thing could stay idle.

    Scientifically this would be very interesting as it would allow to study the atmosphere in situ for an extended period of time (several Venus days) on distances (since the blimp would be carried by the winds, but also the UAVs would explore up and down thereby teaching us so much about the atmosphere, its temperatures, pressures, winds, clouds, chemical compositions) and also we would get to see a lot of Venus' geology thanks to the UAV that would fly close enough to the ground. The question would be how hard would it be to conceive an electrical UAV that could fly in such an atmosphere with the chemistry it has under pressures of up to 95 bars and temperatures of up to 500 C? If it's impossible, would there be any chance to have a camera on the end of a 50 km long cable? (the question being I believe how much would such a long cable weight, considered it can't melt at 500 C or be corroded)

  • by ianm.phil (1140173) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:49AM (#24285117)
    I think if humans are going to one day seriously consider terraforming other bodies in the solar system (we've already been doing that to our own for about 12,000 yrs) we ought to start long term terraformation on Venus as soon as possible.

    Venus, although nearly identical in gravity, size and distance from the sun to Earth, does not contain any native water and has severe atmospheric issues. Mars, has water and serious atmospheric issues (such as insufficient gravity to retain one) and no magnetic field.

    To successfully transform Venus would require first to construct large scale reflectors to reduce the sunlight reaching Venus thus cooling it down, implement a process to sequester the excess carbon in the atmospher, direct large numbers of comets at Venus to introduce sufficient water and then seed the planet with simple anaerobic biotic life to begin to oxygenate the atmosphere. Of course these are outstanding complex and far-future possibilities, but not impossible so far as I know.

    In the long run (thousands of years or even tens of thousands), I speculate Venus will likely be Earth II to a greater extent that mars will; it may take Venus a bit longer to become habitable, but once it does payoff in quality of environment would be significant. All the more incentive to encourage twin terraforming endeavors rather than simply focus on Mars.
  • by Saffaya (702234) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @01:27AM (#24285325)

    The author, Yukito Kishiro always documents himself a lot before drawing and has the humans on Venus use floating cities in the "Last Order" series of his manga.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Angel_Alita:_Last_Order [wikipedia.org]

  • Hell yes! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sckeener (137243) <sterling@texaske ... s.org minus poet> on Tuesday July 22 2008, @07:57AM (#24287905)

    I'm surprised I haven't seen a copy & paste from a wiki...this is my favorite topic and I frequently refer people to this link:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colonization_of_Venus#Aerostat_habitats_and_floating_cities [wikipedia.org]

    Geoffrey A. Landis has summarized the perceived difficulties in colonizing Venus as being merely from the assumption that a colony would need to be based on the surface of a planet:

    "However, viewed in a different way, the problem with Venus is merely that the ground level is too far below the one atmosphere level. At cloud-top level, Venus is the paradise planet."

    He has proposed aerostat habitats followed by floating cities, based on the concept that breathable air (21:79 Oxygen-Nitrogen mixture) is a lifting gas in the dense Venusian atmosphere, with over 60% of the lifting power that helium has on Earth.[4] In effect, a balloon full of human-breathable air would sustain itself and extra weight (such as a colony) in midair. At an altitude of 50 km above Venusian surface, the environment is the most Earth-like in the solar system - a pressure of approximately 1 bar and temperatures in the 0ÂC-50ÂC range. Because there is not a significant pressure difference between the inside and the outside of the breathable-air balloon, any rips or tears would cause gases to diffuse at normal atmospheric mixing rates, giving time to repair any such damages. In addition, humans would not require pressurized suits when outside, merely air to breathe and a protection from the acidic rain. Alternatively two-part domes could contain a lifting gas like hydrogen or helium (extractable from the atmosphere) to allow a higher mass density[5].

    Cloud-top colonization also offers a way to avoid the issue of slow Venusian rotation. At the top of the clouds the wind speed on Venus reaches up to 95 m/s, circling the planet approximately every four Earth days in a phenomenon known as "super-rotation".[6] Colonies floating in this region could therefore have a much shorter day length by remaining untethered to the ground and moving with the atmosphere. While a space elevator extending to the surface of Venus is impractical due to the slow rotation, constructing a skyhook that extended into the upper atmosphere and rotated at the wind speed would not be difficult compared to constructing a space elevator on Earth.

    Since such colonies would be viable in current Venusian conditions, this allows a dynamic approach to colonization instead of requiring extensive terraforming measures in advance. The main challenge would be using a substance resistant to sulfuric acid to serve as the structure's outer layer; ceramics or metal sulfates could possibly serve in this role.

    Landis has suggested that as more floating cities were built, they could form a solar shield around the planet, and could simultaneously be used to process the atmosphere into a more desirable form. If made from carbon nanotubes (recently fabricated into sheet form) or graphene (a sheet-like carbon allotrope), the major structural materials can be produced using carbon dioxide gathered in situ from the atmosphere. The recently synthesised amorphous carbonia might prove a useful structural material if it can be quenched to STP conditions, perhaps in a mixture with regular silica glass. According to Birch's analysis such colonies and materials would provide an immediate economic return from colonizing Venus, funding further terraforming efforts.

    Some of the difficulties that /. posters have mentioned have been dealt with in the wiki, but there are some others that have not been mentioned that the wiki deals with.

    Personally I think the most difficult aspect would be mining the surface (and that is mentioned in the wiki.) Until we get more data I think this is a pipe dream (that I really want to happen.)

    Speaking as someone t

    • by EdIII (1114411) * on Monday July 21 2008, @11:20PM (#24284455)

      100 years?

      There are places that are like that NOW. You just don't hear too much about it on a regular basis.

      I have actually been to China, and I can tel you.. I BELIEVE that 16 out of 20 of the worlds most polluted cities are in that country.

      We don't need to go to Venus to have to take those kinds of precautions. I think we will need to take similar precautions in 25 years in certain parts of the world. Actually, scratch that. Those parts of the world will have people that cannot AFFORD to take those kinds of precautions.

      Considering the cost of colonizing Venus though, I highly doubt that "regular" people will get to go at all.

      • by 4D6963 (933028) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:12AM (#24284823)

        Those parts of the world will have people that cannot AFFORD to take those kinds of precautions.

        Which means that they will eventually die or move out and thus the pollution will diminish a level of equilibrium again.

        The invisible hand of free market will once again make everything come right!

    • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Funny)

      by snuf23 (182335) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:59AM (#24285185)

      aciiiiiiiid raaaaaaaaain
      on venus in your lungs it causes pain

      aciiiiiiiiid raaaaaaaaain
      to colonize some say is just insane

      aciiiiiiiid raaaaaaaaain
      see cities well they just don't fly like planes

      • Re:Huh? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by jd (1658) <imipak.yahoo@com> on Monday July 21 2008, @11:25PM (#24284493) Homepage Journal
        CO2 will react with all sorts of things. The reaction with water produces carbonic acid. Add something alkaline and you get salt + water. Using lime water (a saturated calcium hydroxide solution) is the shortcut version (you get calcium carbonate + water). Once artificial photosynthesis is developed, you can always turn the CO2 into O2 - no shortage of sunlight.
    • by LaskoVortex (1153471) on Tuesday July 22 2008, @12:23AM (#24284917)

      Do we know enough about the atmospheric dynamics of Venus? Is there something similar to a jet stream

      Yes, Venus has her Quintessential Upper Electroionosphere Enchanted Fluvial (QUEEF) zone. Most people don't think its air you can breath safely, but that mostly comes from old wive's tail. Some think you would be fortunate just to be in the area of an honest-to-god Venus QUEEF zone.