https://senseable.mit.edu/space-bubbles/


*Space bubble proposal for solar geoengineering*


If climate change has already gone too far, what could be our emergency
solutions?

Geoengineering might be our final and only option. Yet, most geoengineering
proposals are earth-bound, which poses tremendous risks to our living
ecosystem.
Space-based solutions would be safer – for instance, if we deflect 1.8% of
incident solar radiation before it hits our planet, we could fully reverse
today's global warming.

Building on the work of Roger Angel, who first proposed using thin
reflective films in outer space, we produced an innovative solution that is
easily deployable and fully reversible.

At our labs at MIT, we have tested bubbles in outer space conditions that
could be one of the most efficient thin-film structures for deflecting
solar radiation.

The bubbles could be manufactured directly in outer space, forming an
extensive deflective raft positioned at the Lagrangian Point  between the
Earth and the Sun.

We are an interdisciplinary team of MIT scientists from Architecture, Civil
and Mechanical Engineering, Physics, and Materials Science working on
technical and social aspects of this planetary-scale project.
Together, we can think radically to solve the worst case scenario.

Would you like to share your ideas? Contact us at
[email protected]

Principal Investigators

Carlo Ratti, Charles Primmerman, Daniela Rus, Gareth McKinley, Markus
Buehler

Researchers
Fabio Duarte, Nikita Klimenko, Umberto Fugiglando

Advisors
Gabriele Santambrogio, Lawrence Susskind

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