The universe is full of strange habitats very different from our
familiar planet. Let us look at different habitats in the universe,
and how life would be different for you if you had been born in one
of these places.
If You Had Been
Born on an Ice World
A planet revolving around a star can only support life if the planet
has an orbit that is neither too close nor too far from the sun.
Planets with such an orbit are said to exist in the habitable zone.
Many planets must exist on the outer edges of the habitable zones of
the stars they orbit. Many of these planets must be ice worlds –
worlds that could have been like Earth if they had only been a little
closer to their sun.
If you had been born on an ice world, your planet might have many
large oceans, but the tops of every sea, ocean, and lake would be
frozen solid. On your planet, people could not grow crops the way
they do on Earth. Your planet would be too cold for that. How would
you get food? You would presumably do that by ice fishing. Life for
you and your family would revolve around fishing, and hunting other
animals that ate fish. You would probably live rather like an Eskimo,
perhaps living in a house like an igloo. So would every one else on
your planet.
If You Had Been
Born on an Ocean World
There is no reason why a planet within the habitable zone has to have
a mixture of continents and oceans such as Earth has. Some planets
must consist almost entirely of oceans, with only a few isolated
islands.
If you had been born on an ocean world, you might live on some tiny
little island, and never leave that island for your whole life. If
you ever wanted to travel somewhere else, you might have to go on a
long sea voyage for hundreds of miles, before coming to some other
tiny little island. You would probably never ride in a train or
drive on a large highway. The civilized population of your planet
might only be a few thousand people, or perhaps a few million people.
Life on your planet would be much simpler than life on Earth.
If You Had Been
Born on a Super Earth
Scientists are now using the term Super Earth to refer to a rocky
planet a few times larger than our planet. Life can presumably exist
on such planets when they are inside the habitable zone, but the
gravity of a Super Earth would be much higher than on our planet.
If you had been born on a Super Earth, you would probably be much
more careful about walking around than you now are. You would know
that one good fall from a height as small as five meters would kill
you. On your planet there would be no very tall buildings such as our
planet has. You would probably have short legs much thicker than a
human's legs, and your neck would probably be shorter and thicker.
You might never go on a plane trip, because air travel might be
extremely difficult and expensive on your planet. As the atmosphere
on your planet would probably be quite thick, you would probably have
just a tiny slit for a nose, which would be all that you needed.
If You Had Been
Born on a Mini-Earth
A mini-Earth can be defined as a planet significantly smaller than
Earth in the habitable zone of a star. Because it is easier to detect
larger planets than smaller ones, the Kepler Space Telescope hasn't
yet detected any habitable mini-Earth planets. But it is expected
that such planets will be detected by the Kepler Space Telescope's
successor.
If you had been born on a mini-Earth, you might have thin long
legs. You would be able to jump much farther than a human being,
perhaps as long as 30 meters. Your lungs and nose would probably be
much bigger to help you breathe the rather thin atmosphere on your
planet. It's quite possible that you could fly just by putting on
some wing-like attachments to your arms. On your planet you would see
trees grow to astonishing heights. Your civilization might be able to
build buildings hundreds of stories tall.
If You Had Been
Born on a Tidally Locked Planet
When a planet is tidally locked in relation to the sun, one side of
the planet always points toward the sun which the planet revolves
around. The other side of the planet always points away from that
sun. Life could exist on such a planet, but it would be confined to a
ringlike band between the hot side of the planet and the cold side of
the planet. Scientists think that there are many tidally locked
planets within habitable zones of stars, particularly red dwarf
stars.
If you had been born on a tidally locked planet, the winds on your
planet would probably be much greater than the winds on our planet.
If you ever wanted to keep one of your possessions, you would never
leave it in your back yard overnight, because by the time you woke up
the object would probably have blown away, perhaps traveling for
miles. There would be a good chance that everyone on your planet
would live underground. There might be a huge network of tunnels
that would allow people to travel for many miles underground. If
you traveled more than a little way to the East or West, you would go
to one of the parts of your planet that was too hot or too cold. So
when people would travel on your planet, they might go on long trips
to the North and South, but they would only go on short trips in a
direction of East or West.
If You Had Been
Born on an Arid World
Life requires water, but that does not mean that life can only exist
on a planet with liquid water visible from space. In theory life and
possibly even intelligent life could evolve on a very arid world, as
long as there was underground water or oases scattered around here
and there.
If you had been born on an arid world, your language might have no
word meaning boat or ship or ocean or river. You might have extra
bodily organs allowing you to store a gallon or more of water, so you
could live weeks without drinking any. You would regard a small
garden stretching ten meters long as the most extravagant type of
paradise, suitable only for a king. Your people might fight battles
or wars over water. When one of your fellow citizens died, your
people might use some extraction process to squeeze out every drop of
water from the body, and would then bury only dust and bones.
If You Had Been
Born on a Moon Revolving Around a Gas Giant
We should not at all assume that intelligent life exists only on
planets. We know that Jupiter has a moon named Ganymede that is
larger than the planet Mercury, and Saturn has a moon named Titan
that is also larger than Mercury. It is likely that many stars have
gas giant planets within their habitable zone, and a certain fraction
of these should have moons that are large enough to support civilized
life.
If you had been born on a moon revolving around a gas giant in the
habitable zone, the moon would probably be tidally locked with the
gas giant. So there would be a 50% chance that you would see a
glorious sight in your sky: an object that looked perhaps 10 or 15
times larger than the moon looks in our sky. This object would
probably always appear in the same part of the sky, but it would have
phases like the phases of our moon. The reflected sunlight from this
planet would be so great that you might not see any stars in your
sky, or only a few. If, on the other hand, you had been born on the
other side of your moon, you would never see any planet in your sky,
and you would see plenty of stars in your sky. You might hear tales
of how people on the other side of your moon world could see a giant
planet filling a good fraction of their sky. You might not believe
such tales, thinking them too fantastic. Or perhaps you would spend
lots of money to travel to the other side of your moon world, so you
could see this glorious sight, as a once-in-a-lifetime treat.
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