There is probably not a single child out there who has not looked up to the sky and wondered about how life could survive on another planet. More specifically, how humanity could move to Mars or Venus and set up an entire civilization that is completely sustainable. No man has ever set foot on another planet, but that could be changing soon enough. There are some scientific ideas on how to colonize the solar system, and here are the six most insane, yet thrilling ideas.
6. Cloud Cities On Venus
6. Cloud Cities On Venus
Venus has a surface temperature of around 900 degrees Fahrenheit, making it completely inhospitable to mankind. The pressure on the ground alone is about 92 times that of our planet, so we cannot settle there. There is a proposition for a colony of air ships, dubbed cloud cities, to float on the planet’s surface.
5. Paraterraforming Ceres
5. Paraterraforming Ceres
Ceres, a dwarf planet located within an asteroid belt in between Mars and Jupiter, is a bit bigger than Argentina. Ceres could be a mineral-rich planet, so terraforming the surface to make it hospitable could see big returns.
4. Concrete Homes On The Moon
4. Concrete Homes On The Moon
Not a single human being has set foot on the moon since the final Apollo landing in 1972. Being the closest “planet” to Earth, the Moon would be the perfect location to setup camp. A $10 billion project could see concrete homes built on the surface.
3. Kuiper Disk Cities
3. Kuiper Disk Cities
Freeman Dyson truly believes we can build disk cities on the Kuiper Belt. This newfound metropolis would become a city colony, and be linked together with long tethers and revolve slowly around the center.
2. Subsurface Ocean Pods On Europa
2. Subsurface Ocean Pods On Europa
Europa recently became the most likely place in the entire solar system to harbor some form of alien life. NASA is preparing an unmanned mission to explore the planet, but building atop the planet could take some more time. Subsurface ocean pods has been the best idea thus far.
1. Bubbleworlds
1. Bubbleworlds
Bubbleworlds are similar to Free-Floating O’Neill Cylinders. An asteroid made of mostly metal would be required, which is easy enough to locate. Drilling a tunnel through a center of the asteroid, the mass would be filled with water. The hollowed interior could be used to house humans.