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Wow, you're zipping through space in a large ship as big as three New York City Central
Parts.
There's a lot of commotion going on.
No, it's not some alien invading the spaceship.
It's a very important day.
The date is January 22nd, 2700.
You've just been born outside of the Earth's atmosphere.
Happy birthday!
There's a medical team attending to everything.
The realistic gadgets help out with every aspect.
And the view from the giant spherical glass ship is nothing but the incredible vastness
of space.
You can't even see Earth anymore.
The spaceship is flying to a new destination millions of miles away.
ETA on reaching that new host planet decades.
Fast forward a bit.
You're 25 years old.
And this spaceship's the only home you've ever known.
So far.
You've learned all the ins and outs of the ship.
You search your day in your door, which has all the essentials.
A small compact bathroom, a mini kitchen, a bunk bed, and a magnificent view of the stars
and planet outside the ship's reinforced glass.
And you never need to worry about space radiation.
The ship has an everlasting magnetic shield that reflects space radiation, so it doesn't
seep its way onto the ship.
Otherwise there'd be big problems.
The ship was designed to have artificial gravity.
It's normally loose one to two percent of their bone density every month they're up
in space, since they're just floating around all the time.
But now, I mean in the future, in deep space travel, they're able to solve this problem.
You make your way out of your dorm, and see a wave of fellow crew members making their
way to work.
They're all gliding through on their advanced many hoverboards, and everyone's wearing
different colors, a space aid uniform.
Yours is blue.
So you hop on your board and join the blue wave.
You get to the underpass of the space transport and begin your work.
As an engineer on board, your job is super important, maintaining the ship and keeping it running.
But something's wrong.
Numbers are flashing all over the panels, and the dreaded red light won't stop blinking.
You alert your co-workers, but they don't know what's happening either.
Quick, you keep checking the logs and all the complicated equations, but nothing adds
up.
Quick starts to spread throughout the ship.
The hair on your arms is standing on end.
You try to click on as many buttons and switches as you can.
The buzzing keeps getting louder and louder.
The light is flashing brighter.
Some of your colleagues make a break for it, and you're all alone in the red room.
Suddenly, finally, your supervisor rushes down to help.
After a while, the two of you figure it out.
Whew!
That was close.
You still have a lot to learn about managing the ship.
In your early years, you were assigned to work as an engineer.
You were graded physics, chemistry, math, all those sciencey things.
It's just another day in the office.
But on this ship, you may make captain one day.
After work, you get a call from your friends wanting to hang out.
And when I say call, I mean a phoneless device that lets you communicate with anyone while
seeing all their info through a hologram projection that only you can see.
You can also use it to listen to old tunes from Earth.
Pop music has now become classical music, and movies are now 3D projections of your own
imagination.
You make your way out of the underpass and go up to the space plaza, as where everyone
hangs out when they have time off.
Some cafes, restaurants, a barber shop, even a nice cream parlour.
You've never hung out anywhere else.
The space transport is essentially a small city, which has all the important things
society needs.
That includes a biosphere full of animals and plants from different climates on Earth.
Many tropical forests, many deserts, many rainforests, you name it.
The biologists on board make sure to keep it all healthy so you feel like you're at home.
Not that you've ever set foot on Earth.
You enter the wild savannah and see some gazelles galloping around.
A few wildebeests seem to be rummaging around and a small pack of lions are on the prowl.
On the jungle, you feel the humidity and the thick leaves and bushes all around.
Some mountain gorillas are playing, and there are little tree frogs here and there.
And lurking in the trees, making its way down for a sip of water, is a jaguar.
Over in the dry desert, you see some roaming camels, a little rattlesnake slithering its
way out of the heat, and some little scorpions crawling around in the sand.
You learned a whole lot of biology these last 25 years.
You know all about Earth, but you've never been there, weird.
After the tour of nature's habitats, you hear an announcement on the PA, it's the captain.
The new planet is hours away, earlier than anticipated, everyone assumed positions for landing.
Everyone on the ship rushes to the dormitories, except the key crew members needed to run the
ship.
You strap into your bunk bed that turns into a seat with fancy interstellar seat belts.
You look at your window and see a blue dot in the distance.
It gets bigger and bigger, and it looks a whole lot like Earth, from far away at least.
That didn't take all that long, only 25 years.
What in what's going under the hood of that spaceship?
You look back at your life and space, knowing this first part of it is coming to an end.
It's kind of like living at the South Pole.
At the bottom of the world lives a small community of scientists who work between winter and summer,
doing all kinds of research, from climate and geology to meteorology and astronomy.
Their lives must be similar to living here in outer space.
They have their own bunkers, scientific labs, and even recreational rooms for sports and
music.
The nature on the planet you're approaching is unlike anything on Earth.
Tropical trees soaring higher than the highest skyscrapers.
Oceans that are so wild, there are hurricanes that last for years just roaming about.
The pilot announces the landing, it's all good, time to get to work.
You unstrap yourself and head outside to see the new planet for yourself.
Walking on land feels like, well, like arriving on a new planet.
The humidity is thick and the wind is warm.
The ship landed on the tropical side of the planet, where study show is the best place
to begin a brand new settlement.
It's not going to be easy.
Humans usually begin new settlements next to lakes and rivers.
Think of the Mesopotamians, the ancient Egyptians, the Aztecs, the list is endless.
They began as small settlements until they grew to be fully functioning megacivilizations.
By trading and exploring, they were able to advance their technology, learn new languages,
and discover awesome cooking recipes.
Hey, I could go for some pasta and sushi right about now.
According to scientists, being born in space could alter the way humans look.
And heads could be bigger within thousands of generations, who knows.
There's no way to simulate it on Earth.
We can even have different new skin colors, since we would need more melanin, that pigment
stuff that protects us from sun radiation.
Being closer to the sun or any hot burning mass of fire, might mean we'd produce more
or different kinds of melanin to protect us.
We might turn dark brown, purple, gray, or even green.
We'd have to wait a couple of million years to find out.
With no gravity, humans would have to get used to having a lower bone density, kind of
like birds have.
That means we'd probably be weaker than our old Earth human cells, and have some slightly
odd physical things going on.
Gravity is essential for our balance, and mobility is one of the key factors for human
survival.
So, without gravity, we most likely have exoskeleton suits for walking and running, or taking out the
trash.
Now, nothing like this is going to happen for a very long time.
We're still brainstorming how to bring someone into this world, or out of this world.
Technically speaking, outer space is considered to be 62 miles above sea level from any continent
on the world, beyond that endless possibilities.
Bright Side Universe
