My knowledge about these things are kind of superficial, but I came to think about something interesting, Some things I have learned that together forms some interesting oportunities.
1) Fusion power puts hydrogen under pressure until it bursts. The bi-product of this reaction is helium, and a lot of energy that can be used to produce electricity.
2) The universe is made out of mostly hydrogen. A lot of gas-giants contains mostly hydrogen, and many stars throws a lot of it into space.
3) If you have electricity and enough space, you have pretty much what you need in a spaceship. All kinds of things can ve recycled, so Im certain that a spaceship can be made almost, or very independent as long as it has a good energy source.
4) Hydrogen can be used for propulsion as well. Isnt it possible to make hydrogen-plasma rockets that are more efficient than our hydrogen-oxygen burners? It will take fusion power to heat up off course - that also runs on hydrogen.
5) A lot of other stars around us have gas giants who contain lots and lots of hydrogen as well (not only Jupiter).
Conclusion:
If we evolve fusion power we should concider putting a big space-ship/station in orbit around Jupiter. The ship must have a few shuttles (minimum two, one on duty, one reserve) that dives into the atmosphere of Jupiter every now and then and takes with it hydrogen up to the station/ship in orbit. We should test out the system for fifty years or so, see if we can cut the string to Earth, so that they manage to live on their own. If it works this ship can set into space with a huge hydrogen tank. When it gets to the next system, it can find another gas giant with hydrogen in it, fill the tanks and move on, or stay if there are any nice rocky planets hanging around.
One problem is that babies born onboard will grow long and thin (Or so I have heard, if so we might want to concider creating a gene that represses this so that the standard human shape is remained) unless they have gravity, something that will make colonization of anything with a earth-style gravitational pull difficult. It might also be that we end up producing a kind of space-faring race that have little interest in planets as anything but places to harvest resources that is then used up in the space-craft, a spacecraft that they never intend to leave, except if some of them build another one and splits up off course.
But to create a pure space-faring race will also be interesting because it would greatly boost the prospect of human survival into the distant future.
Thats my thoughts on this anyway.
1) Fusion power puts hydrogen under pressure until it bursts. The bi-product of this reaction is helium, and a lot of energy that can be used to produce electricity.
2) The universe is made out of mostly hydrogen. A lot of gas-giants contains mostly hydrogen, and many stars throws a lot of it into space.
3) If you have electricity and enough space, you have pretty much what you need in a spaceship. All kinds of things can ve recycled, so Im certain that a spaceship can be made almost, or very independent as long as it has a good energy source.
4) Hydrogen can be used for propulsion as well. Isnt it possible to make hydrogen-plasma rockets that are more efficient than our hydrogen-oxygen burners? It will take fusion power to heat up off course - that also runs on hydrogen.
5) A lot of other stars around us have gas giants who contain lots and lots of hydrogen as well (not only Jupiter).
Conclusion:
If we evolve fusion power we should concider putting a big space-ship/station in orbit around Jupiter. The ship must have a few shuttles (minimum two, one on duty, one reserve) that dives into the atmosphere of Jupiter every now and then and takes with it hydrogen up to the station/ship in orbit. We should test out the system for fifty years or so, see if we can cut the string to Earth, so that they manage to live on their own. If it works this ship can set into space with a huge hydrogen tank. When it gets to the next system, it can find another gas giant with hydrogen in it, fill the tanks and move on, or stay if there are any nice rocky planets hanging around.
One problem is that babies born onboard will grow long and thin (Or so I have heard, if so we might want to concider creating a gene that represses this so that the standard human shape is remained) unless they have gravity, something that will make colonization of anything with a earth-style gravitational pull difficult. It might also be that we end up producing a kind of space-faring race that have little interest in planets as anything but places to harvest resources that is then used up in the space-craft, a spacecraft that they never intend to leave, except if some of them build another one and splits up off course.
But to create a pure space-faring race will also be interesting because it would greatly boost the prospect of human survival into the distant future.
Thats my thoughts on this anyway.