darthgently Posted December 9 Share Posted December 9 The day length on Venus has to make for some strange wind patterns and insolation and temperature extremes up in the clouds. One would definitely want any cloud floating station to be able to determine its position, rapidly, at all times. If the winds are crazy strong that may not be feasible given the drag on a huge structure Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted December 11 Share Posted December 11 On 12/9/2024 at 9:24 PM, darthgently said: The day length on Venus has to make for some strange wind patterns and insolation and temperature extremes up in the clouds. One would definitely want any cloud floating station to be able to determine its position, rapidly, at all times. If the winds are crazy strong that may not be feasible given the drag on a huge structure Day length adds an more serious problem power during the night, on the moon you can just bury an small nuclear reactor and night is shorter. You do power intensive stuff like making fuel during the day. But yes docking airships together is another challenge, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted December 11 Share Posted December 11 (edited) 1 hour ago, magnemoe said: Day length adds an more serious problem power during the night, on the moon you can just bury an small nuclear reactor and night is shorter. You do power intensive stuff like making fuel during the day. But yes docking airships together is another challenge, Maybe having Cloud City with enough maneuverability that it could hold station near the terminator would be a solution for temperature control and power generation but I think this is possibly where wind speed would generally be highest as it would bridge bordering high and low pressure areas of vast size. I think, given the very slow rotation, that a fairly stable toroidal convection cell could develop encircling Venus at the terminator. Maybe there is a relatively low wind speed zone ring inside the tube of the toroidal cell analogous to the eye of a hurricane? Stuff like this compels me to favor orbitals Edited December 11 by darthgently Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Piscator Posted December 12 Share Posted December 12 Actually, the atmosphere of Venus super-rotates in about four days, so the day length for anything carried along by the winds would not be crazy long. 48 hours of daylight at twice the insolation would be somewhat harsh but probably not the most difficult of the technical problems you would have to solve. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted December 12 Share Posted December 12 1 hour ago, Piscator said: Actually, the atmosphere of Venus super-rotates in about four days, so the day length for anything carried along by the winds would not be crazy long. 48 hours of daylight at twice the insolation would be somewhat harsh but probably not the most difficult of the technical problems you would have to solve. I’m humbly corrected. My thought experiment failed horribly wrt how much surface velocity and atmospheric velocity could differ. I partially attribute to KSP for simplifying my unconscious thoughts on this, but I can only blame myself. I appreciate the clarification. In related news, it appears that Venus may never have had vast oceans as previously thought and climate theories about what happened there are in limbo again: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted December 13 Share Posted December 13 Without the magnetosphere and close to the UV source, it's hard to keep some water. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted December 13 Share Posted December 13 12 minutes ago, kerbiloid said: Without the magnetosphere and close to the UV source, it's hard to keep some water. Exactly. I’m merely remembering when a hypothetical oceanic Venus was the poster child of how runaway global warming turned it into the hell it is today and that we earthlings should be extremely fearful of the same process here. But it is complete apples and oranges and was, and is, a silly comparison for argument. But it still comes up now and then https://x.com/i/grok/share/W4NZpF4vL7ujGMr8NtXKXSGLw Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoeSchmuckatelli Posted yesterday at 03:03 PM Share Posted yesterday at 03:03 PM All of this reminds me of how lucky we are in having a ridiculously large moon in comparison to the size of the wet rock we abide upon. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted yesterday at 03:19 PM Share Posted yesterday at 03:19 PM 13 minutes ago, JoeSchmuckatelli said: All of this reminds me of how lucky we are in having a ridiculously large moon in comparison to the size of the wet rock we abide upon. If the earth-moon system were discovered in a blurry image of another star we’d probably call it a binary planet system. Though I think it might technically depend on how close the barycenter is to the more massive body. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kerbiloid Posted 3 hours ago Share Posted 3 hours ago Without the Moon, we would never know, when to plant carrots, when to plant cabbage, when to dig out potatoes, when to cut hair, and many other things! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darthgently Posted 2 hours ago Share Posted 2 hours ago 1 hour ago, kerbiloid said: Without the Moon, we would never know, when to plant carrots, when to plant cabbage, when to dig out potatoes, when to cut hair, and many other things! You jest but it is hard to characterize how much the creation of ocean-land tidal zones from lunar tides affected the evolution of life. Carrots? Maybe. Bugs Bunny? Maybe not Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fizzlebop Smith Posted 35 minutes ago Share Posted 35 minutes ago 1 hour ago, darthgently said: You jest but it is hard to characterize how much the creation of ocean-land tidal zones from lunar tides affected the evolution of life. Carrots? Maybe. Bugs Bunny? Maybe not So very true.. but this is present with all natural phenomenon. I love the ancient philosophers of old. During this period science and religion were one. This is very hard for me to articulate well and explain my love of these past visionary. The Gods were not devised because man wanted to belive in some higher authority. Zues did not predate the lighting and thunder. The natural phenomenon of the world was observed as repeatable. If something repeats the same way every single time.. it is Divine. The universe is Divine. The gods devised were attempts at Hypothesis and eventuality resulting in the separation of religion / science. As they begin to acknowledge that consciousness is a state of entanglement..the idea of a soul reimerges. I always enjoyed the BBC special by Joseph Campbell. He would look at various commonalities of culture and use trade routes to show spread of belief and later ideologies. I am working on a body of work that will (hopefully) precipitate a fantasy novella. The world is tidally locked. While breathable atmosphere / and friendly magnetospheres would not exist in such a place I do enjoy trying to imagine how an absence of night would effect cultural developments. These kinds of threads are usually what make me love this forum all that much more. Thanks folks for giving me something to read while I lay around sick AF. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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