Water covered exoplanets
The exoplanets, what is covered by oceans are a fascinating thing.
The planet what would be covered by the ocean are very interesting things, and sometimes many people, including myself, would think, what kind of places those interesting planets could be? And would it be possible to swim in those very deep oceans?
The thing is that many of those exoplanets have a very poisonous atmosphere, and that means that living in the surface or atmosphere of those planets is impossible. But also swimming in those oceans would be a quite different experience than swimming in the oceans of Earth.
Could there be animals in those oceans?
Many of those water planets are super-Earths and that means that the gravity would suck the swimmer to deep very fast, and that would cause death, even if the man is using the space suit. And the winds would make being in the atmosphere very dangerous, and at those planets is maybe not solid landmass over the ocean at all. This makes the wind speed extremely high, and in theory, the bodies of the hypothetical astronauts would be blown in pieces.
But this is the only part of the truth of those very rare exoplanets. There could be giant amoebas or Medusa in those oceans, and there is a possibility that in those planets oceans would live some kind of fishes. The thing is that the Cambrian and Ordovician periods the atmosphere of Earth was poisonous for modern animals, and against that background, we can think that in the oceans of those exoplanets could live some primitive animals like Medusa and fishes.
Maybe we sometimes travel to those planetary systems
If we would think the journey to those solar systems, the main problem of those exoplanets, which are covered by water is the gravity. That water would offer the change to fill storage, and the water can separate to hydrogen and oxygen by using electrolysis. Then those gases can connect again to water, and that process would remove every organism from that sample. The thing about the water-core exoplanets is that those planets can be a more suitable place for the hypothetical base than we ever expected before if there would be no animals or life forms.
What kind of base could be suitable for those exoplanets?
When we are thinking about the shape of the station, what can be established in the oceans of those exoplanets is that the form of the system would be like a giant ball. If the ball-shaped stations would be totally symmetrical thy can dive in the very deep, and the thing is that energy for those systems would get from the capillary tube, and the mission of those stations would be digging the minerals from the solid surface of those planets. That thing would make possible to collect the minerals for the repairing of the spacecraft, what will continue their journey or return the Earth in the trips, which can take hundreds of years.
The thing is that if those exoplanets would have a very warm atmosphere, the hypothetical colonialists could live under the surface of the oceans in the bases, that are floating in the water. Those tanks could submerge deeper if the temperature would raise too high, and the water would use to cool the surface of that system. This vision would be possible after hundreds of years, and if mankind would someday travel to the stars, we would advance by traveling from solar systems to another solar system, as the Polynesians have done, when they conquered the islands of Micronesia.
Picture I
http://www.sci-news.com/astronomy/water-world-exoplanets-06322.html
(Picture I) |
The exoplanets, what is covered by oceans are a fascinating thing.
The planet what would be covered by the ocean are very interesting things, and sometimes many people, including myself, would think, what kind of places those interesting planets could be? And would it be possible to swim in those very deep oceans?
The thing is that many of those exoplanets have a very poisonous atmosphere, and that means that living in the surface or atmosphere of those planets is impossible. But also swimming in those oceans would be a quite different experience than swimming in the oceans of Earth.
Could there be animals in those oceans?
Many of those water planets are super-Earths and that means that the gravity would suck the swimmer to deep very fast, and that would cause death, even if the man is using the space suit. And the winds would make being in the atmosphere very dangerous, and at those planets is maybe not solid landmass over the ocean at all. This makes the wind speed extremely high, and in theory, the bodies of the hypothetical astronauts would be blown in pieces.
But this is the only part of the truth of those very rare exoplanets. There could be giant amoebas or Medusa in those oceans, and there is a possibility that in those planets oceans would live some kind of fishes. The thing is that the Cambrian and Ordovician periods the atmosphere of Earth was poisonous for modern animals, and against that background, we can think that in the oceans of those exoplanets could live some primitive animals like Medusa and fishes.
Maybe we sometimes travel to those planetary systems
If we would think the journey to those solar systems, the main problem of those exoplanets, which are covered by water is the gravity. That water would offer the change to fill storage, and the water can separate to hydrogen and oxygen by using electrolysis. Then those gases can connect again to water, and that process would remove every organism from that sample. The thing about the water-core exoplanets is that those planets can be a more suitable place for the hypothetical base than we ever expected before if there would be no animals or life forms.
What kind of base could be suitable for those exoplanets?
When we are thinking about the shape of the station, what can be established in the oceans of those exoplanets is that the form of the system would be like a giant ball. If the ball-shaped stations would be totally symmetrical thy can dive in the very deep, and the thing is that energy for those systems would get from the capillary tube, and the mission of those stations would be digging the minerals from the solid surface of those planets. That thing would make possible to collect the minerals for the repairing of the spacecraft, what will continue their journey or return the Earth in the trips, which can take hundreds of years.
The thing is that if those exoplanets would have a very warm atmosphere, the hypothetical colonialists could live under the surface of the oceans in the bases, that are floating in the water. Those tanks could submerge deeper if the temperature would raise too high, and the water would use to cool the surface of that system. This vision would be possible after hundreds of years, and if mankind would someday travel to the stars, we would advance by traveling from solar systems to another solar system, as the Polynesians have done, when they conquered the islands of Micronesia.
Picture I
http://www.sci-news.com/astronomy/water-world-exoplanets-06322.html
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