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 Space / 21293
    How would you move a planet? —Jon Palmer
   Unlike my earlier post about the cables and reels, this does not directly have anything to do with an upcoming MOC, but I thought it would be a fun discussion nonetheless. Now moving a giant body from one place to another is obviously a sci fi (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Brandon Harris
     (...) Probably mobile gravity feild generators spaced out in *front* of the planet to pull it out of the gravity well it belongs in already. A pied-piper of planets. Bear in mind that you're *really* going to screw up the solar system with this. (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Mark Sandlin
     (...) I think I would ask it nicely. "Come on, I've never felt this way about a planet before." Well, it IS Valentine's Day. :D ~Grand Admiral (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Trevor Pruden
     (...) hmmmm... > < - hmmmmm...but would such a think lead to the cracking of the planetary crust and a possible collapse of the planet's upper mantle? What about the fuel source of the engines? I think you would have to some silly Trek thing, like (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Chris Giddens
     (...) 1) Everyone to the left of the international date line JUMP! 2) Large planetwide Mexican buffet. 3) Planetary Barry White Music Fesitival. 4) Dangle Carrot in front of planet... yell "giddyyap Planet" from behind. 5) Moonsized bottle of Exlax. (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —John P. Henderson
      (...) I was about to post a reply to Jon's interesting topic, maybe suggest something about how it would depend on what type and size planet, or how detonating a nearby star would move it (but also destroy its environment). But then, after laughing (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Jason Ellis
     Along the same lines... Maybe if the planet's annoying relatives keep dropping by and mooching of it and just causing a general dysfunctional environment the planet will get sick and tired of it and move on its own and not tell its relatives where (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Jeff Jardine
     (...) Gravity: If you're hyperspace-capable, you could put one or more ships (as massive as possible) in space and let them free-fall toward the planet in the opposite direction you want the planet moved. Before your ship crashes, hyper-jump back to (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Adrian Drake
     (...) Be like Q, and just change the gravitational constant of the universe. Duh :) Adrian -- (URL) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Paul Hartzog
     I'd move a planet by crashing another planet into it, like happened w/ mars and the asteroid belt hasn't anyone in here played billiards? or did you mean move it and keep everyone alive? :-) -paul (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Jonathan Mizner
     (...) the plane of the planet's orbit). Right as the planet reaches the correct position in it's orbit, deploy an immense graviton shield around the planet (or along the side of the sun, perhaps very close the sun blocking a cone of space, if you (...) (22 years ago, 14-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Scott McQueen
     well... the hirosha and nagasaki A-bomb explosions affected earths orbit slightely, i suppose if you made some sort of large 'indestructible' dishes that you could use to detonate H-bombs. you would need about 5 dishes placed at points that would (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —James Powell
      (...) Ah you mean something like a giant Project Orion? Go and dig for yourself (google it) James (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —James Brown
     (...) I would do it the same way (roughly) that they move the space station. :) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Jeremy H. Sproat
     ...One dumptruck load at a time. I think it'd be seriously less expensive to dismantle an entire planet, move it in chunks, then use its resources to construct a new one elsewhere, than it would be to tug the whole shebang at once. If you want your (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Mike Petrucelli
     How to move a planet. That's easy just use the Death Star. Now if you want to move it in one piece that is another matter entirely. :-) (...) The Federation has NO understanding of tactics. First Contact for example, they needed Piccard to tell them (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Nick Kappatos
     1) On the only Futurama episode I've ever seen, they revealed that their delivery ship works by actually standing still, and moving the universe around it. I bet that could be scaled down.... I need to watch more of that show. 2) I saw Superman (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Erik Olson
     (...) Easier than watching Futurama. (You've got it backwards: add velocity to Earth to make its orbit further out, then you're done.) Actually NASA now has this contingency plan for moving Earth. It does involve borrowing energy from the outer (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Nick Kappatos
     Good catch! I wasn't thinking in terms of "escape velocity", I was thinking more "if Earth stops spinning, we all fly off into space". Somewhere in that I made the association Earth=star and people=planets, but the translation doesn't really work, (...) (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Ross Crawford
     (...) "Give me a place to stand and a lever long enough, and I will move the Earth." Archimedes (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Mark de Kock
     (...) Now you tell me you want to move it some other place? Just point where you want it to go, close your eyes and I'll tell you when we get there. Mark "ungratefull lot, them earthlings" de Kock On a more serious note: how about just pretending (...) (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Andrew Verner
     In lugnet.space, Jon Palmer writes: <snipped> You could always ask the Decepticons. They moved a planet around once or twice. I think they used the aforementioned giant rockets. -Andrusi && Sanity not included. (22 years ago, 15-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Jeff Szklennik
     (...) Spacebridge Jeff (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Marlon Smith
     Make the giant turtle on which the disk rides travel in a different direction. Disk World (Author?) Since the world is attached to the hub by cable, simply fire the control engines in the hub. Ring World (Larry Niven) Ok...the whole molten core and (...) (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Mark de Kock
     (...) Terry Pratchett. The turtle is called The Great A'tuin and she just swims through the milky-way in the direction SHE wants :-) (...) Good one. (...) Nop, not as far as we know. But we could just punch a hole in the thin earth crust and have (...) (22 years ago, 17-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —Jon Palmer
     "Markassius" <mark.de.kock@NOSPAM.home.nl> wrote in message news:HAGs8u.F4q@lugnet.com... (...) earth (...) Now I have this image of a planet thhhhpppptttttt-ing around in space like a balloon losing air. Thanks :-) [ j o n ] -- | Lego - (URL) (...) (22 years ago, 17-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
    
         Re: How would you move a planet? —James Brown
     (...) Please allow me to recommend not living on said ballon. :) James (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Jeff Szklennik
     (...) mortgage rate somewhere else. Seriously, I'd use a controlled mobil singularity in 'front' of the planet to lead it where you want to go. Jeff (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        How would NASA move a planet? —Paul Hartzog
     just in case anyone can find it NASA actually wrote a proposal last year that recommended changing the earth's orbit as a solution to global warming. if they actually try it they should be tortured slowly if any of us are left alive at all. -paul (...) (22 years ago, 16-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Allister McLaren
     (...) Two ideas spring to mind. 1) Wait - It'll move all by itself, although probably not where you want it. 2) Miniaturise it a la 'Fantastic Voyage' down to handy pocket size. Allister (22 years ago, 17-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Anthony Babington
     I think the gravity idea would be our best bet. I remember in the book "Ringworld" (where the idea for the setting of the game "Halo" was stolen from), an alien civilization packed up their entire solar system. they pulled all of the inhabited (...) (22 years ago, 17-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Steven Lane
     (...) I'm almost surprised no one thought of this earlier. Simply use a net to catch passing asteroids or comets and sooner or later you would build up enough speed to go somewhere. I'd better clarify. A net might be a bit week and would be punched (...) (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Tony Alexander
     (...) Jon, My high school physics teacher talked a lot about "frictionless grease spray", which made many hypothetical conundrums more thetical. All you'd need to do is spray this stuff on the bottom of the planet, stand behind it on a friction mat (...) (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Joel Kuester
     (...) hmmm. I am shocked no one mentioned the Planet Jackers. I mean, they do this sort of thing all the time to doomed little sad planets like this earthan earth Orb you call Earth. Hk.jk 9 _ fY` ~ Gir! Get off the keyboard! Its easy really you (...) (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Gil Shaw
     Well, Khan attested the the destruction of one planetary body in a system can shift the orbit of the remaining planets. Of course, Ceti Alpha 5 was laid wasted and infested with disgusting, space ear roaches that turn you into a helpless minion of (...) (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Mark Mueller
     (...) LOL! I can so see that. To funny Mark M. (22 years ago, 18-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
   
        Re: How would you move a planet? —Tom Sciortino
    "Jon Palmer" <jon@zemi.net> wrote in message news:HABBIM.81H@lugnet.com... (...) The William Randolph Hearst Method: Take it apart piece by piece and put it back together where you want it. The Relativity Method: Leave the planet where it is. Move (...) (22 years ago, 19-Feb-03, to lugnet.space)
 

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