Are garbage moons possible?











up vote
6
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favorite
1












The civilization in question here has colonized the solar system. They have established settlements on most solid planets. Of course, a space-faring people generates plenty of trash, but they have a few ideas.



Is it possible for this trash to be sent into space, and formed into an artificial moon? Could humans potentially live on it?










share|improve this question




















  • 4




    Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
    – StephenG
    Dec 6 at 9:03






  • 3




    This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
    – user6760
    Dec 6 at 9:08






  • 1




    Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
    – RonJohn
    Dec 6 at 10:32










  • Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
    – Antinous
    Dec 6 at 15:12










  • Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
    – mxmissile
    Dec 6 at 15:21















up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1












The civilization in question here has colonized the solar system. They have established settlements on most solid planets. Of course, a space-faring people generates plenty of trash, but they have a few ideas.



Is it possible for this trash to be sent into space, and formed into an artificial moon? Could humans potentially live on it?










share|improve this question




















  • 4




    Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
    – StephenG
    Dec 6 at 9:03






  • 3




    This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
    – user6760
    Dec 6 at 9:08






  • 1




    Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
    – RonJohn
    Dec 6 at 10:32










  • Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
    – Antinous
    Dec 6 at 15:12










  • Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
    – mxmissile
    Dec 6 at 15:21













up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1






1





The civilization in question here has colonized the solar system. They have established settlements on most solid planets. Of course, a space-faring people generates plenty of trash, but they have a few ideas.



Is it possible for this trash to be sent into space, and formed into an artificial moon? Could humans potentially live on it?










share|improve this question















The civilization in question here has colonized the solar system. They have established settlements on most solid planets. Of course, a space-faring people generates plenty of trash, but they have a few ideas.



Is it possible for this trash to be sent into space, and formed into an artificial moon? Could humans potentially live on it?







space waste






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 6 at 11:27









Renan

41.6k1194210




41.6k1194210










asked Dec 6 at 7:52









Adrian Zhang

646316




646316








  • 4




    Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
    – StephenG
    Dec 6 at 9:03






  • 3




    This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
    – user6760
    Dec 6 at 9:08






  • 1




    Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
    – RonJohn
    Dec 6 at 10:32










  • Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
    – Antinous
    Dec 6 at 15:12










  • Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
    – mxmissile
    Dec 6 at 15:21














  • 4




    Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
    – StephenG
    Dec 6 at 9:03






  • 3




    This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
    – user6760
    Dec 6 at 9:08






  • 1




    Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
    – RonJohn
    Dec 6 at 10:32










  • Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
    – Antinous
    Dec 6 at 15:12










  • Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
    – mxmissile
    Dec 6 at 15:21








4




4




Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
– StephenG
Dec 6 at 9:03




Similar to Gas Giants as waste disposal sites. The answers and comments would seem immediately relevant to your question.
– StephenG
Dec 6 at 9:03




3




3




This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
– user6760
Dec 6 at 9:08




This is supposedly type 1 civilization and they consume energy directly from the star, at this level they should not be producing lots of unusable/unrecyclable materials but anyhow it would likely be a safe haven for all politicians...
– user6760
Dec 6 at 9:08




1




1




Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
– RonJohn
Dec 6 at 10:32




Obligatory Futurama reference: theinfosphere.org/A_Big_Piece_of_Garbage
– RonJohn
Dec 6 at 10:32












Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
– Antinous
Dec 6 at 15:12




Given enough time this would strip your planet bare...
– Antinous
Dec 6 at 15:12












Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
– mxmissile
Dec 6 at 15:21




Reminds me of this: youtube.com/watch?v=bL5TRaI9u0k see background, wonder if they are doing just that.
– mxmissile
Dec 6 at 15:21










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
14
down vote













The main obstacle to what you propose is cost.



Just look at what happens today in every city of this world: transportation is cheap, yet we barely move our garbage few km out the door and throw it in some landfill. Garbage has no value, and whatever one does with it has to be dirty cheap. No long distance transportation, no fancy things.



Same would hold for your civilization: why using fuel, ships and launch windows just to discard garbage? If your people are traveling space, it means more of the planet is available for landfill and garbage storage, where it won't risk impacting some transiting space ship.



Even worse, building up a moon requires additional effort to set up and control its orbit. Just dump it on the planet.






share|improve this answer





















  • "Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 15:17












  • I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
    – opa
    Dec 6 at 15:21






  • 2




    @Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
    – Matthieu M.
    Dec 6 at 15:39










  • @MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 16:17










  • We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:37


















up vote
4
down vote













Using this as a reference for amount of rubbish generated, averages to about 281.5 kg/person per year.



Our moon has a mass of 7.342×10^22 kg, so doing the math, the current population of earth would need 34.63 billion years in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed to create a moon with the mass of our own. See here for a few more details. Also keep in mind that our moon (or other planetary objects with similar mass/size) won't be able to hold an atmosphere, so having humans living on the Trash Planet (ignoring other issues) would mean it would need to be much larger.



Since your civilization is a space faring one, with populations on a number of different planets, it's logical to assume there's quite a few more of them. Taking that into account, we could calculate the total population needed in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed in a more feasible amount of time. So if say, you wanted to build it in the span of 200 years, you'd need a population of 1.304×10^18. That's about 170 million Earths worth of people. Considering this all takes place in the future, you would assume waste would be somewhat reduce (hopefully recycling and such). You could of course have the future people go in the complete opposite direction (what with rubbish being needed for the Trash Planet construction) and have them produce more rubbish, but even doubling the amount of rubbish per person and doubling the construction time to 400 still means you need roughly 44 million Earths worth of people.



All that aside, making an artificial world also seems somewhat tough, at least according to this thread. While you're not really looking to make a whole planet, making it habitable in any form (even with Moon bases etc) seems unfeasible given the timespan needed to get it to settle down.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 13:30






  • 1




    @Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
    – DRF
    Dec 6 at 14:03










  • Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 14:26










  • Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
    – b.Lorenz
    Dec 6 at 15:03










  • Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:39











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
14
down vote













The main obstacle to what you propose is cost.



Just look at what happens today in every city of this world: transportation is cheap, yet we barely move our garbage few km out the door and throw it in some landfill. Garbage has no value, and whatever one does with it has to be dirty cheap. No long distance transportation, no fancy things.



Same would hold for your civilization: why using fuel, ships and launch windows just to discard garbage? If your people are traveling space, it means more of the planet is available for landfill and garbage storage, where it won't risk impacting some transiting space ship.



Even worse, building up a moon requires additional effort to set up and control its orbit. Just dump it on the planet.






share|improve this answer





















  • "Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 15:17












  • I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
    – opa
    Dec 6 at 15:21






  • 2




    @Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
    – Matthieu M.
    Dec 6 at 15:39










  • @MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 16:17










  • We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:37















up vote
14
down vote













The main obstacle to what you propose is cost.



Just look at what happens today in every city of this world: transportation is cheap, yet we barely move our garbage few km out the door and throw it in some landfill. Garbage has no value, and whatever one does with it has to be dirty cheap. No long distance transportation, no fancy things.



Same would hold for your civilization: why using fuel, ships and launch windows just to discard garbage? If your people are traveling space, it means more of the planet is available for landfill and garbage storage, where it won't risk impacting some transiting space ship.



Even worse, building up a moon requires additional effort to set up and control its orbit. Just dump it on the planet.






share|improve this answer





















  • "Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 15:17












  • I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
    – opa
    Dec 6 at 15:21






  • 2




    @Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
    – Matthieu M.
    Dec 6 at 15:39










  • @MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 16:17










  • We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:37













up vote
14
down vote










up vote
14
down vote









The main obstacle to what you propose is cost.



Just look at what happens today in every city of this world: transportation is cheap, yet we barely move our garbage few km out the door and throw it in some landfill. Garbage has no value, and whatever one does with it has to be dirty cheap. No long distance transportation, no fancy things.



Same would hold for your civilization: why using fuel, ships and launch windows just to discard garbage? If your people are traveling space, it means more of the planet is available for landfill and garbage storage, where it won't risk impacting some transiting space ship.



Even worse, building up a moon requires additional effort to set up and control its orbit. Just dump it on the planet.






share|improve this answer












The main obstacle to what you propose is cost.



Just look at what happens today in every city of this world: transportation is cheap, yet we barely move our garbage few km out the door and throw it in some landfill. Garbage has no value, and whatever one does with it has to be dirty cheap. No long distance transportation, no fancy things.



Same would hold for your civilization: why using fuel, ships and launch windows just to discard garbage? If your people are traveling space, it means more of the planet is available for landfill and garbage storage, where it won't risk impacting some transiting space ship.



Even worse, building up a moon requires additional effort to set up and control its orbit. Just dump it on the planet.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 6 at 8:43









L.Dutch

73.5k23178355




73.5k23178355












  • "Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 15:17












  • I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
    – opa
    Dec 6 at 15:21






  • 2




    @Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
    – Matthieu M.
    Dec 6 at 15:39










  • @MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 16:17










  • We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:37


















  • "Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 15:17












  • I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
    – opa
    Dec 6 at 15:21






  • 2




    @Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
    – Matthieu M.
    Dec 6 at 15:39










  • @MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
    – Aaron
    Dec 6 at 16:17










  • We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:37
















"Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
– Aaron
Dec 6 at 15:17






"Garbage has no value" right, but what about the space it occupies? It might still make economical sense in a world with extreme population density. Not sure these worlds really make sense themselves, but they're a common trope in science fiction anyway.
– Aaron
Dec 6 at 15:17














I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
– opa
Dec 6 at 15:21




I thought I saw it was economical for some companies to mine for precious resources and materials in old garbage dumps in europe.
– opa
Dec 6 at 15:21




2




2




@Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
– Matthieu M.
Dec 6 at 15:39




@Aaron: Actually, I would argue the value of garbage increases with the scarcity of space => if space is so scarce you cannot dump garbage, how do you get raw materials in the first place? By recycling garbage, of course. And in this case, it's counter-productive to throw it at the moon.
– Matthieu M.
Dec 6 at 15:39












@MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
– Aaron
Dec 6 at 16:17




@MatthieuM. I expect garbage would be recycled as much as possible but that there'd still be some unrecoverable waste you'd need to deal with. If that's indeed the case, maybe you could export your waste to places where storing it / trying to squeeze the last sliver of value out of it would make more economical sense. Or maybe there would be some ways to dump it into space that would have a low-ish operational cost (maybe a space elevator?). In any case I agree it's hard to find a sensible reason to aggregate it into a moon.
– Aaron
Dec 6 at 16:17












We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
– Bill K
Dec 6 at 17:37




We will put garbage on a platform and send it down river. If we had anti-gravity space garbage platforms that could lift it for free into space, there wouldn't be a cost.
– Bill K
Dec 6 at 17:37










up vote
4
down vote













Using this as a reference for amount of rubbish generated, averages to about 281.5 kg/person per year.



Our moon has a mass of 7.342×10^22 kg, so doing the math, the current population of earth would need 34.63 billion years in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed to create a moon with the mass of our own. See here for a few more details. Also keep in mind that our moon (or other planetary objects with similar mass/size) won't be able to hold an atmosphere, so having humans living on the Trash Planet (ignoring other issues) would mean it would need to be much larger.



Since your civilization is a space faring one, with populations on a number of different planets, it's logical to assume there's quite a few more of them. Taking that into account, we could calculate the total population needed in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed in a more feasible amount of time. So if say, you wanted to build it in the span of 200 years, you'd need a population of 1.304×10^18. That's about 170 million Earths worth of people. Considering this all takes place in the future, you would assume waste would be somewhat reduce (hopefully recycling and such). You could of course have the future people go in the complete opposite direction (what with rubbish being needed for the Trash Planet construction) and have them produce more rubbish, but even doubling the amount of rubbish per person and doubling the construction time to 400 still means you need roughly 44 million Earths worth of people.



All that aside, making an artificial world also seems somewhat tough, at least according to this thread. While you're not really looking to make a whole planet, making it habitable in any form (even with Moon bases etc) seems unfeasible given the timespan needed to get it to settle down.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 13:30






  • 1




    @Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
    – DRF
    Dec 6 at 14:03










  • Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 14:26










  • Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
    – b.Lorenz
    Dec 6 at 15:03










  • Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:39















up vote
4
down vote













Using this as a reference for amount of rubbish generated, averages to about 281.5 kg/person per year.



Our moon has a mass of 7.342×10^22 kg, so doing the math, the current population of earth would need 34.63 billion years in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed to create a moon with the mass of our own. See here for a few more details. Also keep in mind that our moon (or other planetary objects with similar mass/size) won't be able to hold an atmosphere, so having humans living on the Trash Planet (ignoring other issues) would mean it would need to be much larger.



Since your civilization is a space faring one, with populations on a number of different planets, it's logical to assume there's quite a few more of them. Taking that into account, we could calculate the total population needed in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed in a more feasible amount of time. So if say, you wanted to build it in the span of 200 years, you'd need a population of 1.304×10^18. That's about 170 million Earths worth of people. Considering this all takes place in the future, you would assume waste would be somewhat reduce (hopefully recycling and such). You could of course have the future people go in the complete opposite direction (what with rubbish being needed for the Trash Planet construction) and have them produce more rubbish, but even doubling the amount of rubbish per person and doubling the construction time to 400 still means you need roughly 44 million Earths worth of people.



All that aside, making an artificial world also seems somewhat tough, at least according to this thread. While you're not really looking to make a whole planet, making it habitable in any form (even with Moon bases etc) seems unfeasible given the timespan needed to get it to settle down.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 13:30






  • 1




    @Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
    – DRF
    Dec 6 at 14:03










  • Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 14:26










  • Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
    – b.Lorenz
    Dec 6 at 15:03










  • Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:39













up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









Using this as a reference for amount of rubbish generated, averages to about 281.5 kg/person per year.



Our moon has a mass of 7.342×10^22 kg, so doing the math, the current population of earth would need 34.63 billion years in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed to create a moon with the mass of our own. See here for a few more details. Also keep in mind that our moon (or other planetary objects with similar mass/size) won't be able to hold an atmosphere, so having humans living on the Trash Planet (ignoring other issues) would mean it would need to be much larger.



Since your civilization is a space faring one, with populations on a number of different planets, it's logical to assume there's quite a few more of them. Taking that into account, we could calculate the total population needed in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed in a more feasible amount of time. So if say, you wanted to build it in the span of 200 years, you'd need a population of 1.304×10^18. That's about 170 million Earths worth of people. Considering this all takes place in the future, you would assume waste would be somewhat reduce (hopefully recycling and such). You could of course have the future people go in the complete opposite direction (what with rubbish being needed for the Trash Planet construction) and have them produce more rubbish, but even doubling the amount of rubbish per person and doubling the construction time to 400 still means you need roughly 44 million Earths worth of people.



All that aside, making an artificial world also seems somewhat tough, at least according to this thread. While you're not really looking to make a whole planet, making it habitable in any form (even with Moon bases etc) seems unfeasible given the timespan needed to get it to settle down.






share|improve this answer












Using this as a reference for amount of rubbish generated, averages to about 281.5 kg/person per year.



Our moon has a mass of 7.342×10^22 kg, so doing the math, the current population of earth would need 34.63 billion years in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed to create a moon with the mass of our own. See here for a few more details. Also keep in mind that our moon (or other planetary objects with similar mass/size) won't be able to hold an atmosphere, so having humans living on the Trash Planet (ignoring other issues) would mean it would need to be much larger.



Since your civilization is a space faring one, with populations on a number of different planets, it's logical to assume there's quite a few more of them. Taking that into account, we could calculate the total population needed in order to produce the amount of rubbish needed in a more feasible amount of time. So if say, you wanted to build it in the span of 200 years, you'd need a population of 1.304×10^18. That's about 170 million Earths worth of people. Considering this all takes place in the future, you would assume waste would be somewhat reduce (hopefully recycling and such). You could of course have the future people go in the complete opposite direction (what with rubbish being needed for the Trash Planet construction) and have them produce more rubbish, but even doubling the amount of rubbish per person and doubling the construction time to 400 still means you need roughly 44 million Earths worth of people.



All that aside, making an artificial world also seems somewhat tough, at least according to this thread. While you're not really looking to make a whole planet, making it habitable in any form (even with Moon bases etc) seems unfeasible given the timespan needed to get it to settle down.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Dec 6 at 9:30









Steven Mills

1913




1913








  • 1




    Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 13:30






  • 1




    @Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
    – DRF
    Dec 6 at 14:03










  • Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 14:26










  • Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
    – b.Lorenz
    Dec 6 at 15:03










  • Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:39














  • 1




    Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 13:30






  • 1




    @Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
    – DRF
    Dec 6 at 14:03










  • Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
    – Matthew
    Dec 6 at 14:26










  • Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
    – b.Lorenz
    Dec 6 at 15:03










  • Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
    – Bill K
    Dec 6 at 17:39








1




1




Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
– Matthew
Dec 6 at 13:30




Presumably putting that amount of rubbish into orbit would have a pretty substantial impact on the source planet too... How much of it would be from surface layers, say (very little rubbish comes from the planetary core!)?
– Matthew
Dec 6 at 13:30




1




1




@Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
– DRF
Dec 6 at 14:03




@Matthew It would mean a 1.2% loss of mass for Earth. That is actually quite substantial.
– DRF
Dec 6 at 14:03












Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
– Matthew
Dec 6 at 14:26




Basically the entire crust - that would definitely impact life on the planet
– Matthew
Dec 6 at 14:26












Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
– b.Lorenz
Dec 6 at 15:03




Of course, a spacefaring civilization would utilize planets it is not living on. We are quite far from being a mature spacefaring civilization, and yet we have proposals tool dissasemble mercury...
– b.Lorenz
Dec 6 at 15:03












Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
– Bill K
Dec 6 at 17:39




Our moon is exceptionally big compared to the size of our planet, we are practically a twin-planet. What about "a" moon with the relative size of one of the moons of Jupiter or Saturn?
– Bill K
Dec 6 at 17:39


















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