Whats the next step after commercial fusion reactors?Can/will antimatter ever be superior to fusion as a practical electricity source?

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Whats the next step after commercial fusion reactors?


Can/will antimatter ever be superior to fusion as a practical electricity source?













4












$begingroup$


I'm trying to write some science fiction where they've had nuclear fusion working for quite sometime, interplanetary travel is no problem, and they're debating making the next step to a radical new, more efficient energy solution to run their space stations. What would that solution be? Antimatter reactors?










share|cite|improve this question









New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • $begingroup$
    Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
    $endgroup$
    – Solar Mike
    9 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
    $endgroup$
    – lalala
    8 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
    $endgroup$
    – EL_DON
    7 hours ago















4












$begingroup$


I'm trying to write some science fiction where they've had nuclear fusion working for quite sometime, interplanetary travel is no problem, and they're debating making the next step to a radical new, more efficient energy solution to run their space stations. What would that solution be? Antimatter reactors?










share|cite|improve this question









New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






$endgroup$











  • $begingroup$
    Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
    $endgroup$
    – Solar Mike
    9 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
    $endgroup$
    – lalala
    8 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
    $endgroup$
    – EL_DON
    7 hours ago













4












4








4





$begingroup$


I'm trying to write some science fiction where they've had nuclear fusion working for quite sometime, interplanetary travel is no problem, and they're debating making the next step to a radical new, more efficient energy solution to run their space stations. What would that solution be? Antimatter reactors?










share|cite|improve this question









New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






$endgroup$




I'm trying to write some science fiction where they've had nuclear fusion working for quite sometime, interplanetary travel is no problem, and they're debating making the next step to a radical new, more efficient energy solution to run their space stations. What would that solution be? Antimatter reactors?







energy nuclear-physics fusion nuclear-engineering






share|cite|improve this question









New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|cite|improve this question









New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|cite|improve this question




share|cite|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago









Qmechanic

109k122081281




109k122081281






New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 9 hours ago









ForeverNoobieForeverNoobie

233




233




New contributor



ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




ForeverNoobie is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • $begingroup$
    Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
    $endgroup$
    – Solar Mike
    9 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
    $endgroup$
    – lalala
    8 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
    $endgroup$
    – EL_DON
    7 hours ago
















  • $begingroup$
    Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
    $endgroup$
    – Solar Mike
    9 hours ago






  • 1




    $begingroup$
    Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
    $endgroup$
    – lalala
    8 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
    $endgroup$
    – EL_DON
    7 hours ago















$begingroup$
Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
$endgroup$
– Solar Mike
9 hours ago




$begingroup$
Nobody knows what is likely to be next - the advantage of science fiction is you could possibly be right. However, if you say things are not possible then you are likely to be wrong... Someone said once that no-one would need more than 256K of ram...
$endgroup$
– Solar Mike
9 hours ago




1




1




$begingroup$
Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
$endgroup$
– lalala
8 hours ago




$begingroup$
Next big thing would be getting rid of all the nuclear waste (contrary to popular believe, fusion produces quite a big, due to neutron capture of the steel hull of the reactor).
$endgroup$
– lalala
8 hours ago












$begingroup$
The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
$endgroup$
– EL_DON
7 hours ago




$begingroup$
The steel in the reactor isn't really that big, and waste disposal for a decommissioned spaceship reactor could just be dumping the thing in some useless orbit. The real trouble with the neutrons is you have to carry additional radiation shielding if your reactor makes them.
$endgroup$
– EL_DON
7 hours ago










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$

The answer is still fusion, but with different fuels. The easiest fusion reaction to do, and the one current research focuses on, is deuterium + tritium. But tritium has a 12.5 year half life and doesn't occur naturally. It has to be transmuted from lithium inside the power plant, right next to the reactor. This is a huge added complexity. The D+T fuel also emits high energy neutrons, which irradiate the surrounding materials and require shielding. You could pick a harder fusion reaction like hydrogen plus boron. Then the reactor itself has to be way higher tech, but things like fuel and shielding get a lot easier. There's also helium3 + deuterium to look into.



If you want to get really stupidly exotic, try to steal rotational energy from a rapidly spinning black hole, which is like the one thing you can take from it.






share|cite|improve this answer









$endgroup$




















    2












    $begingroup$

    Fusion isn't likely to be a very efficient way to harvest electrical energy in the physics sense (efficiency = energy harvested per energy consumed) even today. It is so popular an idea because it is a promise of a cheap and limitless energy production, not an efficient production.



    If what you are after is efficiency, hydropower plants are already close to 90% efficiency today, much better than fusion is hoped to be. If you can make the station so big that you have lots of water, gravity and water cycle powered by Sun in it, then you can put a hydroelectric power plant there.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$












    • $begingroup$
      You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
      $endgroup$
      – EL_DON
      7 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
      $endgroup$
      – Ján Lalinský
      7 hours ago











    • $begingroup$
      That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
      $endgroup$
      – EL_DON
      7 hours ago










    • $begingroup$
      This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
      $endgroup$
      – EL_DON
      7 hours ago


















    0












    $begingroup$

    Forget about antimatter as a fuel; the problems of producing it in quantity & storing it safely are insuperable. I suppose in science fiction anything is possible,but in the real world,much of science fiction fantasy is impossible & always will be. I'm afraid interstellar space travel falls under that heading too. As for energy to run the space station,all space stations are likely to be in the inner solar system,so what's wrong with solar energy? To have a fusion reactor on board a space station is likely to be very tricky,so why not have it on Mars or somewhere similar & beam the energy up to the space station by laser? On the other hand a nuclear fuelled (radio isotope) generator is quite feasible,& for safety reasons could be some distance away & connected to the station by cable.Then there is the question of avoiding space maladies like muscle & bone wastage,so why not insist that all astronauts go for a run on a treadmill every day & use the power generated? Or if you had a classical,wheel shaped space station,the running track could circle the perimeter & if all astronauts were made to run in the same direction,the space station would rotate in the opposite direction. This would create artificial gravity which would make life more normal for everyone.






    share|cite|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      2












      $begingroup$

      The answer is still fusion, but with different fuels. The easiest fusion reaction to do, and the one current research focuses on, is deuterium + tritium. But tritium has a 12.5 year half life and doesn't occur naturally. It has to be transmuted from lithium inside the power plant, right next to the reactor. This is a huge added complexity. The D+T fuel also emits high energy neutrons, which irradiate the surrounding materials and require shielding. You could pick a harder fusion reaction like hydrogen plus boron. Then the reactor itself has to be way higher tech, but things like fuel and shielding get a lot easier. There's also helium3 + deuterium to look into.



      If you want to get really stupidly exotic, try to steal rotational energy from a rapidly spinning black hole, which is like the one thing you can take from it.






      share|cite|improve this answer









      $endgroup$

















        2












        $begingroup$

        The answer is still fusion, but with different fuels. The easiest fusion reaction to do, and the one current research focuses on, is deuterium + tritium. But tritium has a 12.5 year half life and doesn't occur naturally. It has to be transmuted from lithium inside the power plant, right next to the reactor. This is a huge added complexity. The D+T fuel also emits high energy neutrons, which irradiate the surrounding materials and require shielding. You could pick a harder fusion reaction like hydrogen plus boron. Then the reactor itself has to be way higher tech, but things like fuel and shielding get a lot easier. There's also helium3 + deuterium to look into.



        If you want to get really stupidly exotic, try to steal rotational energy from a rapidly spinning black hole, which is like the one thing you can take from it.






        share|cite|improve this answer









        $endgroup$















          2












          2








          2





          $begingroup$

          The answer is still fusion, but with different fuels. The easiest fusion reaction to do, and the one current research focuses on, is deuterium + tritium. But tritium has a 12.5 year half life and doesn't occur naturally. It has to be transmuted from lithium inside the power plant, right next to the reactor. This is a huge added complexity. The D+T fuel also emits high energy neutrons, which irradiate the surrounding materials and require shielding. You could pick a harder fusion reaction like hydrogen plus boron. Then the reactor itself has to be way higher tech, but things like fuel and shielding get a lot easier. There's also helium3 + deuterium to look into.



          If you want to get really stupidly exotic, try to steal rotational energy from a rapidly spinning black hole, which is like the one thing you can take from it.






          share|cite|improve this answer









          $endgroup$



          The answer is still fusion, but with different fuels. The easiest fusion reaction to do, and the one current research focuses on, is deuterium + tritium. But tritium has a 12.5 year half life and doesn't occur naturally. It has to be transmuted from lithium inside the power plant, right next to the reactor. This is a huge added complexity. The D+T fuel also emits high energy neutrons, which irradiate the surrounding materials and require shielding. You could pick a harder fusion reaction like hydrogen plus boron. Then the reactor itself has to be way higher tech, but things like fuel and shielding get a lot easier. There's also helium3 + deuterium to look into.



          If you want to get really stupidly exotic, try to steal rotational energy from a rapidly spinning black hole, which is like the one thing you can take from it.







          share|cite|improve this answer












          share|cite|improve this answer



          share|cite|improve this answer










          answered 8 hours ago









          EL_DONEL_DON

          2,4332827




          2,4332827





















              2












              $begingroup$

              Fusion isn't likely to be a very efficient way to harvest electrical energy in the physics sense (efficiency = energy harvested per energy consumed) even today. It is so popular an idea because it is a promise of a cheap and limitless energy production, not an efficient production.



              If what you are after is efficiency, hydropower plants are already close to 90% efficiency today, much better than fusion is hoped to be. If you can make the station so big that you have lots of water, gravity and water cycle powered by Sun in it, then you can put a hydroelectric power plant there.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$












              • $begingroup$
                You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
                $endgroup$
                – Ján Lalinský
                7 hours ago











              • $begingroup$
                That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago















              2












              $begingroup$

              Fusion isn't likely to be a very efficient way to harvest electrical energy in the physics sense (efficiency = energy harvested per energy consumed) even today. It is so popular an idea because it is a promise of a cheap and limitless energy production, not an efficient production.



              If what you are after is efficiency, hydropower plants are already close to 90% efficiency today, much better than fusion is hoped to be. If you can make the station so big that you have lots of water, gravity and water cycle powered by Sun in it, then you can put a hydroelectric power plant there.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$












              • $begingroup$
                You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
                $endgroup$
                – Ján Lalinský
                7 hours ago











              • $begingroup$
                That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago













              2












              2








              2





              $begingroup$

              Fusion isn't likely to be a very efficient way to harvest electrical energy in the physics sense (efficiency = energy harvested per energy consumed) even today. It is so popular an idea because it is a promise of a cheap and limitless energy production, not an efficient production.



              If what you are after is efficiency, hydropower plants are already close to 90% efficiency today, much better than fusion is hoped to be. If you can make the station so big that you have lots of water, gravity and water cycle powered by Sun in it, then you can put a hydroelectric power plant there.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$



              Fusion isn't likely to be a very efficient way to harvest electrical energy in the physics sense (efficiency = energy harvested per energy consumed) even today. It is so popular an idea because it is a promise of a cheap and limitless energy production, not an efficient production.



              If what you are after is efficiency, hydropower plants are already close to 90% efficiency today, much better than fusion is hoped to be. If you can make the station so big that you have lots of water, gravity and water cycle powered by Sun in it, then you can put a hydroelectric power plant there.







              share|cite|improve this answer












              share|cite|improve this answer



              share|cite|improve this answer










              answered 8 hours ago









              Ján LalinskýJán Lalinský

              17.1k1543




              17.1k1543











              • $begingroup$
                You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
                $endgroup$
                – Ján Lalinský
                7 hours ago











              • $begingroup$
                That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago
















              • $begingroup$
                You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
                $endgroup$
                – Ján Lalinský
                7 hours ago











              • $begingroup$
                That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago










              • $begingroup$
                This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
                $endgroup$
                – EL_DON
                7 hours ago















              $begingroup$
              You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              You could just capture the solar energy used to drive the water cycle directly instead of wasting power on all that.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago












              $begingroup$
              Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
              $endgroup$
              – Ján Lalinský
              7 hours ago





              $begingroup$
              Direct conversion of solar energy into electric energy is not very efficient. Capturing part of it that gets stored into potential energy of water is.
              $endgroup$
              – Ján Lalinský
              7 hours ago













              $begingroup$
              That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              That's a small part, though. I think this solution will be far less efficient than direct capture if you normalize to the same total as used for direct solar.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago












              $begingroup$
              This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago




              $begingroup$
              This solution also suffers from lower power density. You could make a more compact nuclear solution or a thin photovoltaic array. An artificial water cycle machine would be enormous. This would only be practical if you were making some sort of garden art project with low population density.
              $endgroup$
              – EL_DON
              7 hours ago











              0












              $begingroup$

              Forget about antimatter as a fuel; the problems of producing it in quantity & storing it safely are insuperable. I suppose in science fiction anything is possible,but in the real world,much of science fiction fantasy is impossible & always will be. I'm afraid interstellar space travel falls under that heading too. As for energy to run the space station,all space stations are likely to be in the inner solar system,so what's wrong with solar energy? To have a fusion reactor on board a space station is likely to be very tricky,so why not have it on Mars or somewhere similar & beam the energy up to the space station by laser? On the other hand a nuclear fuelled (radio isotope) generator is quite feasible,& for safety reasons could be some distance away & connected to the station by cable.Then there is the question of avoiding space maladies like muscle & bone wastage,so why not insist that all astronauts go for a run on a treadmill every day & use the power generated? Or if you had a classical,wheel shaped space station,the running track could circle the perimeter & if all astronauts were made to run in the same direction,the space station would rotate in the opposite direction. This would create artificial gravity which would make life more normal for everyone.






              share|cite|improve this answer









              $endgroup$

















                0












                $begingroup$

                Forget about antimatter as a fuel; the problems of producing it in quantity & storing it safely are insuperable. I suppose in science fiction anything is possible,but in the real world,much of science fiction fantasy is impossible & always will be. I'm afraid interstellar space travel falls under that heading too. As for energy to run the space station,all space stations are likely to be in the inner solar system,so what's wrong with solar energy? To have a fusion reactor on board a space station is likely to be very tricky,so why not have it on Mars or somewhere similar & beam the energy up to the space station by laser? On the other hand a nuclear fuelled (radio isotope) generator is quite feasible,& for safety reasons could be some distance away & connected to the station by cable.Then there is the question of avoiding space maladies like muscle & bone wastage,so why not insist that all astronauts go for a run on a treadmill every day & use the power generated? Or if you had a classical,wheel shaped space station,the running track could circle the perimeter & if all astronauts were made to run in the same direction,the space station would rotate in the opposite direction. This would create artificial gravity which would make life more normal for everyone.






                share|cite|improve this answer









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                  Forget about antimatter as a fuel; the problems of producing it in quantity & storing it safely are insuperable. I suppose in science fiction anything is possible,but in the real world,much of science fiction fantasy is impossible & always will be. I'm afraid interstellar space travel falls under that heading too. As for energy to run the space station,all space stations are likely to be in the inner solar system,so what's wrong with solar energy? To have a fusion reactor on board a space station is likely to be very tricky,so why not have it on Mars or somewhere similar & beam the energy up to the space station by laser? On the other hand a nuclear fuelled (radio isotope) generator is quite feasible,& for safety reasons could be some distance away & connected to the station by cable.Then there is the question of avoiding space maladies like muscle & bone wastage,so why not insist that all astronauts go for a run on a treadmill every day & use the power generated? Or if you had a classical,wheel shaped space station,the running track could circle the perimeter & if all astronauts were made to run in the same direction,the space station would rotate in the opposite direction. This would create artificial gravity which would make life more normal for everyone.






                  share|cite|improve this answer









                  $endgroup$



                  Forget about antimatter as a fuel; the problems of producing it in quantity & storing it safely are insuperable. I suppose in science fiction anything is possible,but in the real world,much of science fiction fantasy is impossible & always will be. I'm afraid interstellar space travel falls under that heading too. As for energy to run the space station,all space stations are likely to be in the inner solar system,so what's wrong with solar energy? To have a fusion reactor on board a space station is likely to be very tricky,so why not have it on Mars or somewhere similar & beam the energy up to the space station by laser? On the other hand a nuclear fuelled (radio isotope) generator is quite feasible,& for safety reasons could be some distance away & connected to the station by cable.Then there is the question of avoiding space maladies like muscle & bone wastage,so why not insist that all astronauts go for a run on a treadmill every day & use the power generated? Or if you had a classical,wheel shaped space station,the running track could circle the perimeter & if all astronauts were made to run in the same direction,the space station would rotate in the opposite direction. This would create artificial gravity which would make life more normal for everyone.







                  share|cite|improve this answer












                  share|cite|improve this answer



                  share|cite|improve this answer










                  answered 8 hours ago









                  Michael WalsbyMichael Walsby

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