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Living Off the Land in Space: Green Roads to the Cosmos

By addebook • Jun 24th, 2008 • Category: Astronomy & Geography Get in Amazon

Living Off the Land in Space: Green Roads to the Cosmos


Living Off the Land in Space: Green Roads to the Cosmos
By Gregory L. Matloff, Les Johnson, C Bangs
Publisher: Springer
Number Of Pages: 250
Publication Date: 2007-06-06
ISBN-10 / ASIN: 0387360549
ISBN-13 / EAN: 9780387360546
Binding: Hardcover


Human civilization has evolved to the point at which we can consider tapping space resources and expanding beyond Earths atmosphere. The Introduction surveys possible motivations for large-scale human emigration to space. Since our early ancestors began to move out of Africa, humans have constantly expanded their range. Today, the pattern of human settlement extends from pole to pole. Humans regularly visit the upper troposphere and ocean floor and technology has enabled a few to even reside above the atmosphere in space stations.

For the next few millennia at least (barring breakthroughs), the human frontier will include the solar system and the nearest stars. Will it better to settle the Moon, Mars, or a nearby asteroid and what environments can we expect to find in the vicinity of nearby stars are questions that need to be answered if mankind is to migrate into space.


Summary: Living off the land in space
Rating: 5

This is a good book for those interested in the behinds the scenes of space exploration. This book gave enough technical information for background. The authors brought in their experience and first hand knowledge of this on going effort as well as the path forward. This has some of the stuff sci-fi books are based on.

Summary: Wade through the tech-talk to visit the garden of possibility!
Rating: 4

Living off the Land in Space. It conjures biodomes, algae-growing, ‘clean’ fuels, and a 1970s Original Star Trek view of the infinately hospitable worlds out in the black yonder for us to exploit - er, I meant explore…

Really, how often did you see Kirk in an enviro-suit and oxygen mask whilst cannodling on the surface of Virgos V?

Now, back to the book -

To my slight disappointment, however, there is much more technological discussion, and much less fantastical futuristic musings. Oh well.

Strangely, despite my lack of techie impulses, once I resigned myself to a bit of a slog through the ‘hard’ side, I did find myself intrigued by the reasoned discussion of various propulsion systems (chem-fuel, ramjets, magnetic-electric tethers, solar sails, ion! drives and more), an explication of the really really really unimaginably vast distances of SPACE (as in roughly 7,000 years - years! worth of travel (at our best modern rates) to reach Alpha Centauri - our nearest stellar neighbor), and a strange little inserted list explaining the levels that ideas, theories, and prototypes all go through before floating off towards our planetary neighbors, handily illustrated by even more interesting types of hardware that most people don’t know we’re developing.

The book (freely admitted both at beginning and end) is a bit dated, which is both good and bad. Good, because that means that our current levels of space interest are high enough to make this book outdated by the time it hits the presses; bad in that even the casual reader can smile sadly when he comments on the Japanese mission probe “which will return with asteroid samples in June of 2007″ … or not.

Lastly, the neo-hippy vibe of the title does not carry through the book. The exact idea - utilizing resources from space or from our various destinations - is the focus of the book. But - the reason for that focus seems more economic than environmental. There are myriad explanations throughout on the relative efficiency of newer (or less explored) travel options, but not many comments on the lessened environmental impact. And, in a staggering sense of cross-purpose, please note the many casual suggestions about mining the moon and Mars - although not, he does allow, if there is native life.

This juxtaposition was the only real sour note in the book, which was ultimately an entertaining romp through the technologies and theories which will get us into space

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