From: Robert J. Bradbury (bradbury@www.aeiveos.com)
Date: Sun Aug 29 1999 - 07:46:31 MDT
On Sat, 28 Aug 1999, Ken Clements wrote:
>
> If you are interested in using solar energy, there is no need to be
> limited to what you can build on some piece of land.
<snip>
This was followed by a nice discussion of how to use swarm
agents to generate an island of your own to solve the problem
of real estate taxes that I had left hanging to some degree.
I can think of a couple of problems:
(a) You need the "rights" to the land you are going to develop
otherwise you may need a large collection of designs for
nanodefenses. I'm not sure how the UN handles "claiming"
new volcanoes at this time (or whether it has ever come up.)
(b) Unless you allow the large scale construction of the island
to take a very long time, you are going to have to exceed
the 10 kg nanobot operating limit. Now the oceans have a
huge ability to serve as a sink for this, but warm them up
too much and I think you destabilize the methane hydrates
causing a rapid release that causes a huge increase in the
greenhouse effect. Scientists believe this may be the
explanation behind some of the previously unexplained
warm periods.
Which points out a general rule that I think needs to be invoked
when we consider what to do with nanotech -- we must "play nicely",
this could also be called: "don't piss in the sandbox if you want
to play in it tomorrow".
>
> You may also see from this discussion that the process of transforming the
> surface of a planet like Mars is much the same. You need to get some nanotech
> seeds sent there. Once there they can grow on solar energy until they get to
> the point to be able to switch to planetary thermal energy (most scientists
> think Mars has a hot core, although probably cooler than the earth). Once the
> energy is available, there is plenty of sand on Mars from which to extract
> oxygen.
If you are going to play with Mars, it makes more sense to dismantle either
Mercury or the asteroids first, turn them all into solar collectors and
use most of the solar output to completely dismantle the planet. Time
for Mars disassembly: 12 hours. Then turn the material into O'Neill
colonies and give one to everybody.
> Cooperation among people using this will be the limiting problem.
> Also, if everyone starts making his or her own island (each intent to have
> the biggest) the thermal and displacement impacts on the oceans and global
> weather could be undesirable.
Exactly.
I think it would be nicer to live on some nice, moderately
small vista close to your friends, while supervising the assembly
of nanotech reefs that could serve a shelters for small fish to
promote the repopulation of the oceans?
Robert
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