Jump to content

Terraforming Venus


sh1pman

Recommended Posts

7 minutes ago, Jacke said:

It's going to be over 800 years.  There's no new technology that can cause Venus to radiate heat faster than a black body, that's the physics of the universe as it is.  As Venus is not a black body and it radiates into an interplanetary medium that is warming than absolute zero, it will take longer for it to cool.

I understand that thermal radiation can not transfer faster than Weins displacement law allows, except when the temperature is over about 10 million K, but predicting what the future can or can not overcome is impossible. Flying was impossible at one time, hovercars were supposed to be the norm in 2000, and noone predicted the affects of deep sea ocean currents on the arctic ice.

 

One day we may be able to move a vast amount of an extreme heat absorbing mass at near light speeds using machines of planetary mass and scale to accomplish the impossible. Cutting the cooling time in half or more. Some great new cosmic thermal radiator. Or maybe not. Regardless, I still wonder why Venus or two other better candidates.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, Dientus said:

Flying was impossible at one time

The flying doesn't contradict the thermodynamics.

They need some thermodynamical artifact to turn the Venusian thermal energy into some form of informational entropy-related thing.

Some megacubic-rubic self-shuffling and then jumping away at relativistic speed, taking away all excessive heat energy and relative entropy.

(Ten million years later it hits somebody's galactic black hole, and a whole galaxy explodes).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

9 minutes ago, kerbiloid said:

The flying doesn't contradict the thermodynamics.

They need some thermodynamical artifact to turn the Venusian thermal energy into some form of informational entropy-related thing.

Not trying to change the rate of heat transfer, trying to move the medium that absorbs that heat much faster through longer and larger surface areas. Much much larger and longer. Planet sized larger and longer. Or maybe instantaneously transport the medium, liguid or gas or whatever to a distant larger radiator.

 

Or maybe we can just ALT+F12 :sticktongue:

Edited by Dientus
out of likes again LoL
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, StrandedonEarth said:

Keep slamming it with iceteroids from the Kuiper belt to simultaneously spin it up and cool it down, while delivering more H2 it probably needs.

Welp, considering the low amount of mass in the Inner Solar System Asteroid Belt, I suspect there's not much more mass in the Kuiper Belt.  I think the upper limit, even considering there'd be more ices, would be 10 times the mass of the Asteroid Belt.

My gut feel is even with dropping all of both belts on Venus, there wouldn't be enough mass and thus angular momentum to change the spin of Venus sufficiently or even marginally.

Also, the problem with dumping ices including water ice on Venus is Venus doesn't have a cold trap, which Earth does at about 21km.  Water freezes out there and it's lower than the ozone layer, thus keeping most water protected from the hard ultraviolet that will break water apart, leading to the hydrogen escaping.  Water in Venus's atmosphere will diffuse up until it gets exposed to hard ultraviolet, where it's broken up and the hydrogen lost.

Even avoiding future hydrogen losses, I don't know if there's enough water in the Kuiper Belt to bring the amount of water on Venus up to Earth levels.  The amount that would be absorbed into the crust and how fast is very variable.

Edited by Jacke
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Imho, only a teleportal to a cold gas giant can help.

Teleport the cold hydrogen from Saturn or Neptune into the Venusian air.
Even if it's getting lost, no problem, the Saturn is big.

So, thousands of gates on the Maxwell Mountains will exhaust cool hydrogen (or first process it with CO2 into water and coal).
Thousands of gates will be floating under balloons in the Saturnian atmosphere.

This also can bring some angular momentum to force the proper rotation.

Cover the whole Venus with water (except the Maxwell Mountains), bring the algae, fishes and other water things.

According to wiki, the total atmosphere mass is 4.8*1020 kg, mostly CO2.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmosphere_of_Venus

CO2 = 12 + 2 * 16 = 44, so it's 32/44*4.8*1020 =  3.5*1020 kg of oxygen, which can give 18/16*3.5*1020 = 3.9*1020 kg =  390 mln km3 of water.

The Venusian surface = 460 mln km2.

So, an estimated ocean depth = 390/460 ~= 0.85 km ~= 1 km.

Spoiler

As we can see, there will be an equatorial continent, a subarctic continent, and various islands.

 

Centuries later it will be a tropical spa.

The only disadvantage is: first you need to invent the teleportation. But you anyway need it for greater good.

Edited by kerbiloid
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, Jacke said:

Even avoiding future hydrogen losses, I don't know if there's enough water in the Kuiper Belt to bring the amount of water on Venus up to Earth levels. 

Mine Europa for water ice, it has twice as much water as Earth.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, kerbiloid said:

The water is a poor option, because the CO2 stays or dissolves and turns the ocean into acid.

Hydrogen is required.

First remove CO2, then bring water. Use some water to make hydrogen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, kerbiloid said:

But why remove the precious C when it can be used for local plants.

Ok, remove CO2 but leave some of it nearby (in orbit). CO2 ice asteroids. Deorbit these asteroids when C is needed for plants.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting note, about 56 km (35 miles) from the surface, the atmosphere is the most Earth like in the solar system. With the heavier gases sinking, and O and H rising (not breathable still mind you) 

If it wasn't for those high winds, floating cities may be another future viable option. Shame the wind speeds at the surface are low, and the winds higher up are unbelievable instead of the other way around.

Edited by Dientus
clarification
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Dientus said:

If it wasn't for those high winds, floating cities may be another future viable option. Shame the wind speeds at the surface are low, and the winds higher up are unbelievable instead of the other way around.

Why is the wind speed such a problem? You can just ride it on your floating city and then the day/night cycle becomes 4 days long instead of 200+. Already the air is habitable enough in a balloon full of breathable air, as long as adequate acid protection is present.

Edited by cubinator
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 minutes ago, cubinator said:

Why is the wind speed such a problem? You can just ride it on your floating city and then the day/night cycle becomes 4 days long instead of 200+. Already the air is habitable enough in a balloon full of breathable air, as long as adequate acid protection is present.

I  guess it would depend entirely on HOW you were floating, relative speed and all.

If there were a way to make glass balloons strong enough we may have a winner, how do you think floating/flying should be accomplished to combat the obvious? That is, excluding tech that is too sci fi, such as anti-gravity.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Dientus said:

I  guess it would depend entirely on HOW you were floating, relative speed and all.

If there were a way to make glass balloons strong enough we may have a winner, how do you think floating/flying should be accomplished to combat the obvious? That is, excluding tech that is too sci fi, such as anti-gravity.

I'm no balloon expert, but I think certain chemical coatings could do the trick. They do make gloves and lab coats to resist acid, after all. Probably something shaped more or less like a typical balloon, with denser habitation areas and rooms hanging below, and a large, mostly-open common area above. Trees and plants could be planted there for closed-loop life.

Perhaps the balloon could be made to contract or expand to control altitude, although that would require some tremendous strength that could tear it apart if something broke. Of course, venting air to lose altitude is a less than optimal solution. Fins and sails on the outside could control the motion of the city.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, sh1pman said:

Mine Europa for water ice, it has twice as much water as Earth.

14 hours ago, kerbiloid said:

The water is a poor option, because the CO2 stays or dissolves and turns the ocean into acid.

Hydrogen is required.

14 hours ago, sh1pman said:

First remove CO2, then bring water. Use some water to make hydrogen.

This shows that terraforming is complex.

The actual needed steps to change this are likely complex.  Add water now and it goes into vapour and becomes exposed to extreme ultraviolet and loss of hydrogen.  Venus likely needs to be cooled first, but doing so without changing the whole planet's orbit is likely too hard.  And that cooling is still going to be over 800 years, likely a lot over.

First, even the whole of Europa may not be enough water to leave some on the surface as water will go into the rock.  Second, the shear amount of carbon dioxide is from a dry crust without any water, especially as the crust appears to not have any plate tectonics to recirculate rock to absorb the carbon dioxide.  The lack of plate tectonics may also be due to little water in the crust.

And without moving Venus, it's still close to the Sun.  And due to the Sun getting brighter over its lifetime (as all main sequence stars do, due to the accumulation of helium in the stellar core), the Sun is brighter now that what it was in the past when it drove Venus into a runaway greenhouse effect.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...
This thread is quite old. Please consider starting a new thread rather than reviving this one.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...