Thanks for clarification re Moon --  has a two-week night, while one
of its poles is always dark -- so surface temperatures get low
anyplace it's dark for over a day -- that's how it can hold plenty of
H2O as ice within the highly insulating dusk on the surface.

I saw a reference to a paper by an expert that proposed energy flow
from 300 degree Kelvin to much colder solar system mirror matter could
run a practical heat engine -- apparently there is enough heat
transfer for it to work -- if the cold mirror matter was at 20 degrees
Kelvin, even if it was mirror CO2 or mirror H2O,  it could have a
strong fractal microstructure, like a ceramic, with a bit of C
impurity, and be placed as a thin layer on a thin metal surface of
ordinary matter, so then it is possible that there will be useful
thermal transfer from the ordinary metal to the much colder mirror
matter layer, which would radiate its mirror IR into the very cold
mirror dust and gas, still bound by gravity to orbit around the Sun,
but not heated by the Sun's IR and light output.
The very interesting mirror matter web sites will lead you to it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_matter

I'm now imagining creatures that evolved as floaters in the organic
clouds of gas giants,  gradually evolving to absorb and use mirror
matter with their normal matter nanostructures, using the mirror
matter as heat sinks to allow their metabolism to be driven by light
from the distant Sun, and even the galactic background IR, as their
balloons become larger and very thin, filled with normal H2 at just a
little over the pressure of the supporting gas layers, until they are
actually able to sail on the solar wind and light pressure to slowly
build up speed, becoming living spacecraft -- not so unlikely, when we
watch a bird that can fly, float on water, dive, walk on land, and
sleep in nests on trees, changing its shape radically when flying.

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