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On May 15, 11:04 am, BradGuth wrote:
Earth is nearing an important crossroad of sustaining life as we know it. We either accept our fate and go with the flow as we adapt the best we can, or die trying. Since we can't all become rich and powerful, it's your personal choice of doing absolutely nothing or doing something constructive, even if it's merely thinking in a positive and thus constructive minset sort of way. Using that icy orb of Sedna, as being situated within Earth's L1, for obtaining a barely sufficient spot of solar shade (especially once it's thick layer of surface ice is gone), is perhaps at best a 1000+ year plan, and at the present ongoing demise of our environment and of it's badly failing magnetosphere, even if the relocation of Sedna were technically and otherwise affordably doable, I believe we do not have that thousand plus year option. Doing nothing but cleaning up our terrestrial act is also not an option unless a great deal of fusion energy or perhaps going deep for that of extracting geothermal energy becomes the norm of giving us an affordably clean 100 teraWatts to work with (on a global end-user scale, $.01/kwhr is affordable, whereas $.10/kwhr is not going to be affordable to the lower 90% of humanity). If all the "Ice Sheets Melt", we're in a whole lot deeper GW trouble than merely having to swim and otherwise eat jellyfish because, of what's coming around the corner next is anything but all that survivable, unless the evolution of our DNA becomes rad-hard, or we've become as rich and powerful as GW Bush, Dick Cheney and Exxon. I honestly believe this argument on behalf of blocking out a sufficient portion of our sun is all about sustaining and/or improving the quality of life as we know it. If that focus or motive on behalf of salvaging whatever's left of our badly failing environment takes on theGuthlose cannon form of accomplishing my LSE-CM/ISS, or that of my VL2 POOF City as part of the ultimate game plan, while our moon is gradually getting relocated to Earth's L1, then so be it. As to the perfectly valid argument(s) or honest topic jest of artificially blocking out a little more than sufficient portion of our sun, as such this substantial plan of action is all about sustaining and/or improving the quality of all life. According to my PC/CAD program, a given surface location might perceive a 7.9% reduction, however the whole of mother Earth (excluding our atmosphere) should end up with roughly -1.685% of badly needed shade (the actual solar isolation factor if including our badly polluted atmosphere should thereby become a little less than that amount, perhaps worth 1.5% or -20.55 w/m2) as derived from having our moon parked at Earth's L1, as well as having accomplished less of those pesky tidal issues, and of those remaining tides would otherwise become very consistent. The best estimate that I can accomplish thus far, is coming up with the new and improved sun + (moon at Earth L1) as becoming worth 50.4% of our existing lunar tide. A 50% reduction in tidal action is perhaps a little less important to ocean and other terrestrial life than we've been giving it credit. Most tidal accommodated life can manage to adapt, some of which getting by along with a little of our best intelligent design, as transitional habitat help wherever necessary. This moon relocation process of getting that mascon situated out to Earth's L1 (roughly 4X further away than it's current orbital trek that's doing us more harm than good) is going to take a century or more, and therefore I'm not some evil messenger from hell that's imposing an overnight change to whatever terrestrial life that we know of, that has attached its life endurance to our existing lunar cycle and ocean tidal issues. There will be some unfortunate extinctions of life which simply can not adapt, though hopefully humanity will not become one of those. However, at the very same time, other existing species that are currently finding it downright difficult or nearly impossible to survive as is, as such will likely bloom or otherwise better populate under the conditions of having less terrestrial trauma to deal with. A measured reduction in global warming (in good part due to the solar isolation afforded by the moon itself), along with having accomplished much less gravity/tidal trauma taking place (inside and out), is what should by rights benefit most all known species of life on Earth (hopefully just short of bringing on another ice age). What we honestly need for this daunting task of relocating our moon to Earth's L1, is having that spendy supercomputer running all of its parallel CPUs off the charts, doing exactly whatever's necessary for figuring out what's doable, and otherwise telling us whatever else needs to be avoided at all cost. If you should happen to have such supercomputer access, and wouldn't terribly mind running off a few of these weird ideas, as such I'd like to see a few of those what-if results in 3D animation. -BradGuth Sorry for my having to repost this little extra informative update. However, as per usual, I'm still having to make a few of those pesky corrections and otherwise add a few basic words, on behalf of my dyslexic encrypted wisdom for the sake of accomplishing proper syntax, at the same time as I'm fighting off a fairly substantial gauntlet of Usenet spermware/****ware that's trying every dirty Old Testament thumping trick in their naysay koran, in order to terminate my poor old PC. Seems rather odd that I'm apparently worth all that much trouble. For some silly robo Usenet client specific moderation reason(s), this following topic simply didn't crosspost as I'd instructed (soc.culture.usa, sci.physics, sci.space.policy, sci.astro, alt.astronomy). "Earth is going to get itself even hotter" http://groups.google.com/group/soc.c...02c25662bb6f1b - Brad Guth |
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