I see no point. Most of the winners of the contest are variations of the Stanford Torus. We already have 3 designs that should work. Colony design isn't a problem.
The biggest problem is financing. The second biggest problem, imo, is launch systems. Of course, it would be a lot cheaper (and require less launches) to construct colonies from secret soviet moonbase solaris using the bootstrap principle.
So why don't we tackle those two obstacles first, hm?
Because, as usual, you are missing the point. This contest isn't about providing a new, revolutionary design for a space station (although that's a nice bonus), it's about stimulating people into thinking about space colonization. Specifically, people young enough to be inspired by working on such a project. It's an effort to create a base of people NASA might eventually recruit from.
That's kind of what I was getting at. What's the point in pushing the idea of space colonization if you simply can't do it because of launch costs and/or (a lack of) funding?
That just gets kids' hopes up and then crushes their dreams and aspirations.
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This is precisely why it's a terrible idea to have a residential space station. Also I'd rather see humanity consume all available resources and then die off in a nuclear war. But that's just me, and there's hardly room for an objective take on humanity's goals.
What? Do you not give a damn about the long-term survival of the human race? Disasters are lining up to wipe us out. Pollution (think about what would happen if the level of environmental estrogens got really high), flooding (global warming), superbugs, super volcanoes, nuclear war. Imagine what would happen if another Tunguska Incident occurred in New York City. All fledglings must eventually leave the nest. Humanity is no exception. We must go to space or face extinction.
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I'm curious where you two are getting this 3 billion figure. Demographers are fairly united in predicting the population will have peaked, then dropped and stabilized by 2025 as development continues in the nations primarily contributing to the population boom, but the last stabilization figure I saw was in the neighborhood of 8 billion.
Um.... permanent residential area for people, since the optimal population on earth would be about 3 billion people.
ENGAGE RANT MODE
Cite your ****ing sources. Cite them right the hell now. Then find proof for their accuracy and the accuracy of the scientific methods by which the "3 billion" number was reached.
Here's the thing though: You won't be able to. Why? Because that number, and the stuff behind it, are bull****. It's based on the belief by certain green idiots that the only way of life that is "sustainable" is that of subsistence farming. In other words, a return to preindustrial ways of life, where a majority of the population was directly involved in producing food. They think that the modern advances in farming are bad, that being able to feed a large number of people efficiently is not a good thing to have.
Also, if you are saying "there should be only 3 billion of us", I want you to make a list of the people you want dead. I want you to ask everyone you know to draw up similar lists. Because that is what this whole "sustainable population" bit entails. Now, you may be a sociopath like Nuke, or you may be a teenager (which, by and large, amounts to the same thing) who would have no problem whatsoever. Or you may actually be a normal human being, who wouldn't like this idea one bit.
Chill out, bro.
Looks like I was wrong. My environmental science textbook from last year stated that David Pimentel claims the optimum human population would be two billion. The text goes on to state that he is an extreme neo-Malthusian.
This book also gives
three stabilization projections for the human population. An optimistic one, a medium one, and a pessimistic one. It claims the UN Projection Division made these three projections in 2003.
Optimistic (good): 8 billion by 2050, back to where it is today by 2150.
Medium: 9.3 billion by 2050, stabilize at 10 billion by 2150.
Pessimistic (ugly): Continued exponential growth, 25 billion people by 2150.
OK, E, I'LL GIVE SOURCE INFORMATION FOR THE BOOK IF YOU WANT IT. YOU LIKE MLA OR APA FORMAT?Environmental Science: A Global Concern. Eighth Edition. William P. Cunningham, Mary Ann Cunningham, Barbara Saigo. 2005. Published by McGraw-Hill.
PS: 2 billion is too few. I personally believe the optimum population would be anywhere from 3 to 4 billion. I'm not going to back it up because I can't. And I'm not going to make a list of people I want dead because right now, the majority of population growth is occurring in developing nations. If the people in those countries were more educated and/or had a more secure food-and-income base, they would most likely have less kids. If that didn't do it, we could provide incentives for people to have less kids. Over time, the population would drop on its own.
Or we could just ship half the people in the world off the planet and into orbital colonies. And you already know I am a teenager.
EDIT:
the optimal population on earth would be about 3 billion people.
I agree, but by golly the solution is not to expand. We should reduce the total population to 3 billion. We don't even need mass-murder. Just stop breeding faster than we're dieing. Free contraceptives for everybody, and nobody gets to have more than two kids (simultaneously?), until the population is down to 3 billion. Anybody who tries for at third gets sterilized.
But nobody will agree to that, unless everyone agrees to it.
See my above argument about extinction.
EDIT2:
In 2001, Stephen Hawking is reported to have said: "I don't think the human race will survive the next 1,000 years, unless we spread into space. There are too many accidents that can befall life on a single planet. But I'm an optimist. We will reach out to the stars."
Y'all wanna argue with Stephen Hawking?
EDIT3: Nuke isn't a sociopath. He's just misunderstood.