Trolldor said:
AccursedTheory said:
Trolldor said:
But to sustain life, you have to be like earth. At least for anything above the cellular level.
No, you don't. To support life as it is on Earth you need a planet like Earth. We don't know what the conditions for 'life' are.
Name a conceivable organic life form that can be sustained in a non-Terra like environment that can be seen with the naked eye.
EDIT; Don't mean to be rude. But really, please. (I really don't mean to be mean).
Carl Sagan's Bloaters, beings that could live in a Jupiter-like planet.
All I can find is a possible bacterial life on Europa, Jupiter's moon. I can find no mention of bloaters (or at least google can't).
True, they think that in a couple hundred million years, Europa may be able to sustain tiny fish, its based largely on assumption and theory.
While this may, I must admit, prove that I was wrong, it brings up another interesting point... even places capable of sustaining life that are not Earth like (Or at least planet Earth like. It seems Europa is an exact copy of Deep ocean, minus oxygen content), it would appear such locations are incapable of more than one, possibly two types of eco systems.
Something to look into on a slower day.
Valate said:
Bohemian Waltz said:
How would you terraform a magnetic field or proper gravity? Atmosphere and elements for life seem reasonable enough, but transforming magnetic fields and gravity please explain because you might know something I don't.
The magnetic field is easy if we had the aforementioned requirement met. And if that is met we would *Need* singularity control (only feasible way to manipulate time space) Which, could simulate a gravitational field.
magnetic fields, from my knowledge, are the result of an entire planets composition. To generate a magnetic field in this way, we'd need to rebuild a planet from scrap.
Or generate artificially, which would require such massive amounts of energy, I question the whole point of the endeavor.