Showing posts with label manmade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manmade. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2020

Space1 Artificial Planet Power Generation


Space1 Artificial Planet Power Generation
Enter the new man-made planet created by SPACE1 to enable Earthlings to become a multiplanetary species and experience the power of the future

Spectacular SPACE1 2020 power generation hub and network provide all energy requirements for the city, its inhabitants, and global planetary operations. Power reserves are designed to function for the evolutionary life of the planet and are rechargeable. Power in 2020 has beaming, and can be projected from one location to another. Experiments will proceed in beaming power from the Earth to the artificial planet along with use of power storage units. Recharging power can come from the sun or other stored power sources. 

Monday, February 17, 2020

Space1 Planet XTREME

The potentials of spectacular living inside a SPACE1 XTREME Artificial Panet. Colonization
takes place on the inside of sphere, protected from solar radiation and meteors, self
containing a pressurized atmosphere and insulated for regulation of temperature and heat
distribution. Composed of Duridium, the deluxe planetary build contains waterways and the

opportunity to enjoy areas of weightlessness. The spinning planetary ball planet creates its own
gravity strongest across its equator by use of centrifugal force. Gravity is regulated by the spin
rate through spin-grav generators.
Space1 Planet XTREME
SPACE1 has developed Planet XTREME

The SPACE1 Planet XTREME is an experimental DIY man-made planet that lofts into space via the massive SPACE1 Super Rocket and lives out its evolution with space colonists inside the global planetary sphere according to the rules of infinitesimal geometrics and the compression of space time.


A SPACE1 XTREME artificial planet eclipsed by the Earth and back illuminated by the Sun,
depicted in this artistic rendition. XTREME planets are observed through special high
technology telescopes like the upcoming XAPT XTREME Artificial Planet Telescope that tracks
various trajectories, infinitesimal geometrics, and evo time compression periods.

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Space1 Not Starlink SpaceX

Mapping artificial planets in space will cover the exterior but not the ulterior where the colonists
plan their habitation. This view shows the great continental divide and a mapping effort to

delineate topography. From shared gravity, four launched planets will stay in formation as a
group and undergo forced space time compression. Communications with the planet's
inhabitants will require a time compression decoder.
Space1 Planets Not Starlink SpaceX
SPACE1 is launching multiple planetary satellites into space, though these are not SpaceX Starlink satellites

Much controversy exists over placing large quantities of communications satellites in orbital space as the claim is they could have visible disruption to the astronomy community. However, there are already tens of thousands of space objects in space and the astronomical community has not put much emphasis on demanding a solution prior to SpaceX and Starlink. As the SpaceX satellites moved to a higher orbit and are produced with anti-reflective materials, it is believed the problem will be solved for the most part.

On a different spin, SPACE1 is launching multiple planets into space, potentially viewable by the astronomical community as new planets, which should add to the excitement of astronomy and not detract from it. Man-made artificial planets can supplement planet Earth, offload colonists and settlers to new worlds, and provide very exciting space tourist vistas. Such planets can include motels, colonies, and vast cities above the earth, and run exampling methods of moving to other planets.

SPACE1 is looking at launching planets in threes, with no plans similar to the eventual traffic load of thousands of communications internet satellites planned by SpaceX. The SPACE1 planet is an experiment on several fronts:

1) Time Compression
2) Changed Geometry
3) Planetary Colonization
4) Robotics and AI
5) Communications
6) Observational Results