Usquanigo
New member
Cosmic radiation (and charged particles) don't cause fatal burns on contact (AFAIK), at least not the type you are describing. Add to that the fact that even a thin atmosphere provides shielding.
For UV, you could either attempt to synthesise an ozone layer or wear sunblock or clothing.
They do. Without the protection of the magnetosphere, all life would be corrupted, and unsustainable. Consider it another type of sun poisoning, it might not kill you that day, but it WILL kill you.
The Ozone is also what made life on land possible as well. Before the Ozone layer, there were not even plants and vegetation, nothing could survive without the protection of the deep.
We can't keep ours working well, let alone generate one on another planet. And again, even with that, we still don't have a functional magnetosphere. (Apollo was a calculated risk, but LEO is relatively "safe". Consider how bad the sun wreaks havoc even with satellites inside the magnetosphere, then extrapolate to how bad it would be without one at all)
Compare a living, livable world to a dry, vacuous dustbowl and tell me how that is corrupting.
Because a green planet is not The Red Planet. We don't NEED to utterly and permenantly change a giant rock to make it livable. Even if it were possible (again, the above about ozone and magnetopshere). All of humanity has grown to see the wonders and splendors of those strange, alien worlds, which gained their very names from their traits. Traits which every future generation should be able to experience.
Here's another way to put it, let's assume space travel becomes easy and cheap enough that it's like driving a car today, everyone can zip around and make it out to the outer planets. Everyone would want to fly through Saturn's rings. Then they end up ruining the ring system, robbing all future generations of the magnificence that is the Saturn that we know.
You will not have no worries if inside a giant habitat- cosmic rays, pressure differentials and even the odd meteor impact will be an issue.
Add to that the fact that you will have to wear a spacesuit to leave the habitat (for repairs or otherwise)
Actually, the very IDEA is to leave the planet alone, and thereby wear a space suit whenever you do decide to leave it. Given the low gravity, you shouldn't be spending too long there anyway. The other point of a habitat is to provide protection from all the above. And a meteor impact will ruin your day no matter WHAT you have on the planet or live in or on. That's almost like saying "don't build a house, because it could be struck by lightning, live in caves instead".