Broomstick wrote:You can utilize plants that serve multiple functions.
To act as a backup that must keep people alive for anything more than a few hours, the plants must be enough to keep them alive indefinetly, and that is pretty space-hungry.
If instead of wasting space in plants you place backups of your critical equipment, k-rations and oxygen pressure tanks, you don't have to worry about failures threatening your well being.
They occupy much less space, which is the reason I'm using machinery. I can place much more backups in much less space. Wich means much more safety.
Biological ecosystems start to get way safer IF big enough, like planetwide (if the idiots don't pollute too much), but on any realistic-sized station (at best a few hundred km wide in the habitable section) you don't have all the surface needed to make an ecosystem anywhere as big, thus fault-tolerant, as a planet. Ecosystems don't scale down well.
If you have a Ringworld or a Dyson shell (that isn't torn apart by its own gravity), then yes, ecosystems are a far better choice.
Oxygen in pressure tanks also helps in case you need to vent some of the atmosphere in space or there is a hole, since machinery recycles wastes, but doesn't
create oxygen out of pure energy.
Having some tanks of nitrogen would help a lot too.
Anyway, just to clarify, in the "mechanical systems" I include algae tanks with waste reclamation systems. Yeah, I know it is wrong, but I tend to mentally classify algaes as "machine" more than "plant".
building small "pods" for hyro or aeroponics
While that is awesome for food production, I wouldn't say it is a much safer system than what I'm talking about. You are adding a whole bunch of machinery to keep plants alive. If the "plant support system" fails you're screwed. Then you will need backups to the backups.
Major powerline facilities are secured with fences... and the fact that screwing around with high voltage can kill the curious and/or malicious.
Secured with
fences?
You need active security to stop an intelligent threat (like a guy cutting them or climbing them). Anyway, to take down the average power line you don't need to get anywhere close to the cables. Demolition charges or thermite-like stuff on the truss tower will take it down, with the cables, in complete safety for the malicious guy.
I think power lines on Earth are so ill-defended since it isn't so critical. Most hospitals or places that need power have backup generators anyway.
On an orbital, though, a power failure can be lethal. If your air recycling system is entirely power-dependent lack of power will kill you.
Well, if each air recycling system has double or triple redundancy and you have dispersed power generation, the odds of enough power plants (or life support) to doom you suddenly fail together are rather low.
It's more likely to die all by collective heart attack.
That's all costs and mainteneace rising, I know. But plants must be baysitted too or the station's ecosystem goes wrong. And they are no less cheap.
Also, without power nothing will manage heat distribution anymore. Something will melt and something else will freeze.
The solution is more or less the same as on Earth today. Multiple power plants not operating at anywhere near full capacity, able to compensate eventual losses or provide spikes of power when needed.
That's true of any system on Earth vs. on an orbital.
Uhm. In my previous posts I was making comparisons with Earth mostly for social issues. But this seems like a misunderstanding.
I'm not advocating orbitals as better than Earth.
Earth remains the cheapest, easiest although maybe not the safest solution to human habitation (you know, disasters like floods, tsunaims and hurricanes/tornaodes or earthquakes, random diseases and the odd volcano we lose millions each year for them).
But if for some
yet unknown reason we may decide to colonize the solar system, then orbitals remain the most cost-effective idea. Imho of course
.
So the comparison would have to be with a domed city or a terraformed planet.
It's
plain obvious Earth wins hands down in this contest.
Of course escape pods need to be built, supplied, maintained... another one of those good safety systems, but not without some cost. Also, they won't be as useful in more remote colonies.
If you have the level of space exploitation needed to build
anything at all in space, an escape pod is trivial to do. Still, that society has a money and people to spare for that.
Air Force and Navy, and most tank and artillery divisions are useless on an orbital, ICBM silos are overkill in space, and most civilian vehicles are not needed at all (freeing up most people usually working on them here on Earth).
I question the need for "remote colonies". Earth orbital space is mindboggingly HUGE, why for the Emperor's sake are you building a colony in any other place?
Mining? Bots can do that, slower but orders of magnitude cheaper.
Industry? Maybe. Most industry will be in Earth orbit though, simply beacuse it is vastly cheaper to ship ores than to bring workers far.
Scientific research? This is the only very good reason to stay far for a long time. If only Titan had something resembling alien life...
That doesn't mean the victims of such an attack deserve to die, which is what you implied.
That statement holds true if you are acting alone, taking responsibility for your actions. If someone else is responsible for your safety, then matters get more complex, but the general idea is the same. If they as a whole don't take the fuss of having a decent security in critical areas (wich means asking just that to their politicians), then they shouldn't be amazed that a couple ill-equipped dissidents blew up everything.
Nobody "lets" known terrorists run around - the problem is that you won't know who they are until they do something - and if they are successful the first time then people suffer or die.
That's why an intelligence agency exists, they look if people start doing suspicious activities by infiltrating suspicious organizations and keeping good information networks. A lot of terrorist cells were stopped and arrested
before they were able to do any real damage.
Being just reactive is ok for law enforcement, but not for an intelligence agency. They exist to be one step ahead of the threats and prevent them before they do any harm.
You can look at what CIA and FBI did in the past.
No civilization can survive without an intelligence agency/secret services/ninja/Chuck Norris, because human intelligence can only be fought effectively with human intelligence. Or maybe with AIs or advanced expert systems in the future.
An atmosphere thick enough to support human life will also tend to moderate temperature extremes,
I think this comes from the same misunderstanding as above. This is true, but only Earth has an atmosphere with those requirements.
Pretty much any other planet requires you to build an atmosphere like that from scratch, while what is already there either cools you down fast or heats you up fast.
Placing some space radiators is trivial in comparison.
And in space you have micrometerorites, not so micrometerorites, radiation, and so forth.
Micrometeorites aren't a huge problem for a so big space station, bigger stuff can be detected easily and shot onto with lasers to deviate its course, asteroids can hit a planet much more easily than a space station.
Radiation is the same in orbit as on the surface of most other celestial bodies.
Well, maybe not on venus or gas giants, but those have worse problems.
But I still hope GCR dose can be safely compensated by human body unaided. There is people living in pretty irradiated environments
without bad effects.
Then you just have to shield for solar activity, which is much less.
Uncluttered wrote:Domes provide protection against radiation and micrometeorites.
Well, to provide enough radiation protection as Earth they either need an artifical magnetic field that can be used on space stations too or have so much mass on them to be effectively underground.
Domes can keep large portions of Mars "Wild", so future generations can enjoy the natural mars.
I've never seen domes as a way to let people enjoy the "natural mars" if they want. But the idea merits some credit. That will surely attract more tourists than a terraformed mars.
Domes can act as energy gathering surfaces. I.E. transparent photovoltaics.
Beware of dust storms.
Overall I agree with the other points you make.
Domes are a good choice, while terraforming doesn't seem to be a choice at all.