Space science is an all-encompassing term that
describes all of the various science fields that are concerned with
the study of the
Universe, generally also
meaning "excluding the Earth" and "outside of the Earth's
atmosphere". Originally, all of these fields were considered part
of
astronomy. However, in recent years the
major sub-fields within astronomy, such as
astrophysics, have grown so large that they are
now considered separate fields on their own. There are eight
overall categories that can generally be described on their own;
Astrophysics, Galactic Science, Stellar Science, non-Earth
Planetary Science, Biology of Other Planets, Astronautics/Space
Travel, Space Colonization and Space Defense.
The Library of
Congress
and Dewey Decimal
System have a major classification "Descriptive Astronomy"
which they use instead of placing descriptive works into their huge
"Geography" collections.
Astronomy
Astronomical methods

Palomar Telescope.
Astronomical methods are the equipment and techniques used to
collect data about the objects in Space. Galileo's first
astronomical method was to find and buy the best telescope of the
time and then point that telescope to the heavens. Methods can be
categorized according to the wavelength they are attempting to
record.
Radio astronomy includes
radio telescopes; devices that receive and
record radio waves from outside the Earth. They record
cosmic microwave
background radiation resulting from the
Big
Bang,
Pulsars and other sources.
Optical astronomy is the oldest kind of
astronomy.
X-ray observatories
include the
Chandra X-ray
Observatory and others.
gamma
ray includes the
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory
and others.
Neutrino astronomy
observatories have also been built, primarily to study our Sun.
Gravitational wave observatories
have been theorized.
A
space telescope is a telescope
orbiting or travelling from the Earth, such as the
Hubble space telescope.
RXTE is Long Exposure Time Astronomy used to study
millisecond pulsars and
pulsar deceleration.
Spectroscopy
Astronomy teaching tools include
Planetariums and others.
Further information can be found at Library of Congress
Classification QB1-139 General Astronomy (Dewey 520),QB140-237
Practical and spherical astronomy (Dewey 522), (Observatories Dewey
522), QB468-480 Non-optical methods of astronomy
Descriptive astronomy
Galileo's second astronomical method was to describe what he saw in
the telescope. Descriptive Astronomy is the highest sub-category of
Astronomy used by the Library of Congress and Dewey Decimal systems
to classify any knowledge related to describing celestial objects.
Because we are seeing today portions of the Universe as they
actually looked millions or billions of years ago we should have a
historical section within Descriptive astronomy:
History of
The Universe includes the size, shape and structure of the
historical universe),
Cartography of The Historical
Universe,
Early Universe and
others.
The Current Universe includes size shape
and structure of the current Universe, cartography of the current
Universe and others.
Cartography of Space Bodies. Recording
photographic or similar images of the Earths surface from space is
a well developed science, yet still expanding because of advances
in the actual resolution of images taken from space or atmosphere
and because of advances in digitizing and manipulating the images.
Most of these advances are being applied to the cartography of
space-located bodies, even though acquiring the original images of
those bodies is extremely complicated and expensive, usually
requiring long distance probes to carry the cameras. Further
information is available at Library of Congress Classification:
G3190-3191 Celestial maps.
Visible matter in the universe is apparently organized
geographically into structures with large amounts of space between
them; either the space between planets, the space between stars or
the space between galaxies. Even galaxies themselves are not spread
uniformly but appear to be located in filaments. Therefore The
Universe can be divided geographically into regions that follow
this structure
The Filaments of Galaxies are the
furthest visible structures.
Those filaments are made of
superclusters, tending to line up in filaments.
Our Milky Way Galaxy is a galaxy in what is called the
Our
Supercluster of Galaxies by the National Geographic
Society. Some 150 million light-years across, Our Supercluster is a
great aggregation of perhaps thousands of smaller clusters of
galaxies. The largest of these smaller clusters is called the Virgo
Cluster. According to National Geographic, The Virgo Cluster
contains the center of mass of Our Supercluster. Although The Milky
Way Galaxy is a part of Our Supercluster, it is not a part of the
Virgo Cluster. Our Milky Way Galaxy is part of a cluster called the
Local Group. Gravitationally, our Local Group plays a small role in
Our Supercluster because it is a small and distant cluster from the
center. A much larger cluster within in Our Supercluster is the
Ursa Major Cluster. The following objects are located within Our
Supercluster but not within the Local Group; they are objects
100,000,000 light-years to 10,000,000 light-years from the Sun:
M49,
M51,
M58,
M59,
M60,
M61,
M63,
M64,
M65,
M66. National Geographic magazine has produced a
very good drawing of this region in its Map of the Universe
Supplement, October 1999 issue.
Local Group: Our Milky Way Galaxy is one of about
30 galaxies called the Local Group. The Local Group is about 4
million light-years across. In the Local Group our Milky Way Galaxy
plays a large gravitational part because our galaxy is the second
largest galaxy in our Local Group, second only to the Andromeda
Galaxy. All of the other galaxies in our Local Group are
gravitationally bound either to the Andromeda Galaxy or to our
Milky Way Galaxy. Inside of our local group but outside of our
Galaxy are objects 4,000,000 LY to 1,000,000 LY from the Sun:
M31,
M32,
M33.

Image of the Orion and neighbouring
arms
Milky Way Galaxy: Our Milky Way Galaxy is a
massive mass-containing structure 100,000 light-years across and
30,000 light-years tall. Most of its billions of suns are organized
into several structures called "arms". Our Sun is located in what
is called the "Orion Arm". The next arm outside of us is called the
"Perseus Arm". The Crab Nebula
M1 is
located in the Perseus Arm. The arm outside of the Perseus Arm is
called the Outer Arm. Palomar 1 is located in the Outer Arm. The
next arm inside of us is called the Sagittarius Arm. The Ring
Nebula
M57 and the Carina Nebula (NGC
3372) are located in the Sagittarius Arm. The next arm inside of
the Sagittarius Arm is called the Crux Arm. The inner arms are much
shorter, obviously from being shifted by gravitational forces. Arms
beside each other today may have at an earlier time been one.
Orion Arm: The Orion Nebula
M42 is located in our Arm.
Celestial
Objects 1000 LY to 100 LY from the Sun:
M39,
M44,
M45.
Celestial
Objects 100 LY to 16LY From the Sun.
Celestial
Objects less than 16 LY from the Sun:
List of nearest stars
Nearby-Stars Solar Systems: By measuring the
extremely small movements of nearby stars astronomers have been
able to prove that there are planets going around these Suns,
therefore these suns have become "Solar Systems".
Solar system includes
Scientific Study of Solar System Planets,
Venus,
Mercury,
Saturn,
Jupiter,
Uranus,
Neptune,
Mars, and
Moon
Further reading can be found in the Library of Congress
Classification QB495-903 Descriptive astronomy (Dewey 523)Galileo's
second astronomical method was to describe what he saw in the
telescope.
Physics of the universe / Astrophysics

Timeline of Origin of Space.
After first looking at the planets, then second describing what he
saw, Galileo's third astronomical method was to theorize about the
reasons for what he saw in the telescope, specifically to theorize
that the Earth goes around the Sun. The Physics of the Universe can
be divided into several broad categories:
Astrophysical Theory includes
general relativity and others.
Astrophysical Processes includes
baryonic and others.
Physical Processes, General includes
Mechanics,
Electromagnetism,
electromagnetic forces,
Statistical Mechanics,
Thermodynamics,
Quantum Mechanics,
relativity,
gravity and others.
Origins Of The Universe Universe Theories of the Origins of the Universe,
Big Bang Theory, Early Universe, Evidence,
Cosmic Microwave
Background, Dark Ages,
Interstellar Medium ,
voids, Filaments of Galaxies,
galaxy clusters and others.
Astrophysical Plasma includes
plasma and
quasineutrality and
others.
Cosmic Plasmas Between Stars, (Diffuse Plasmas)
includes
intergalactic space,
intergalactic medium,
interstellar medium,
interplanetary medium,
heliospheric current sheet,
interplanetary medium,
Solar wind and others.
Cosmic Plasmas Inside Stars, (Dense Plasma)
includes
Stars,
plasma physicists,
active galactic nuclei,
fusion power,
magnetohydrodynamic,
X-rays ,
bremsstrahlung,
Cosmology ,
reionized,
ambipolar diffusion,
Particle Physics and others.
Further information can be found at Library of Congress
Classification QB460-466 Astrophysics, QB349-421 Theoretical
astronomy and celestial mechanics, and QB980-991 Cosmogony.
Cosmology (PHYSICAL COSMOLOGY ONLY),(Dewey "Theoretical Astronomy"
521)
Cosmology

Galaxies in the Hubble Deep
Field.
Physics can explain the underlying physical science of any galaxy,
yet many aspects of galaxies are not best described through their
physics.
Galactic physical science is the general
term for all physical sciences that can be applied to any galaxy in
the Universe or to a particular galaxy.
Galaxy Formation and Evolution includes
Galaxies,
elliptical
galaxies Giant Galaxies,
Spiral Galaxies,
M31 The
Andromeda Galaxy and others.
Intra-Galaxy Processes, General includes
Black Hole,
Globular
Clusters,
Satellite Galaxy,
Retrograde Rotation, Halo
stars,
High Velocity
Clouds,
Monoceros Ring,
accretion disc,
Gravitation,
Angular
momentum,
Centripetal force,
tidal effects,
Viscosity,
orbital momentum,
Accretion disk,
Active galactic nuclei,
Protoplanetary discs,
Gamma ray bursts and others.
Milky Way Galactic Physical Science is the overall
science containing all the physical sciences related directly to
the Milky Way Galaxy: Halo
stars, Milky Way
High Velocity Clouds, Milky Way
Monoceros Ring, Milky Way
accretion disc, Milky Way
Gravitation, Milky Way
Angular momentum, Milky Way
Centripetal force, Milky Way
tidal effects, Milky Way
Viscosity, Milky Way
orbital
momentum, Milky Way
event horizon,
Milky Way
black hole and others.
Stellar science

Quintuplet Cluster- Very young and
near the Galactic Center.
Physics is the underlying physical science of any star, yet many
aspects of stars are not best described through their physics.
Stellar science is the general term for ALL
physical sciences that can be applied to any star in the Universe
or to a particular star.
Solar science of the Sun
Sun is the overall science containing all of the
physical sciences related directly to our local Sun.
Stellar-Processes, General Stellar dynamics,
stars,
Stellar
Evolution,
event horizon,
black hole,
x-rays,
nuclear fusion and others. In
astronomy,
stellar evolution is
the sequence of changes that a
star undergoes
during its lifetime; the hundreds of thousands, millions or
billions of years during which it emits light and heat. Over the
course of that time, the star will change radically.
Stellar evolution is not studied by
observing the life cycle of a single star—most
stellar changes occur too slowly to be detected even over many
centuries. Instead,
astrophysicists
come to understand how stars evolve by observing numerous stars,
each at a different point in its life cycle, and simulating
stellar structure with
computer models.
Birth of stars is discussed in
Main article:
Star Formation
Stellar evolution begins with a
giant molecular cloud (GMC), also known as a
stellar nursery. Most of the 'empty'
space inside a
galaxy actually contains
around 0.1 to 1 particle per cm³, but inside a GMC, the typical
density is a few million particles per cm³. A GMC contains 100,000
to 10,000,000 times as much mass as our
Sun by
virtue of its size: 50 to 300
light-years
across.
Very small protostars never reach temperatures high enough for
nuclear fusion of hydrogen to begin;
these are
brown dwarfs of less than 0.1
solar mass. Brown dwarfs heavier than 13
Jupiter masses (M_J) do fuse
deuterium, and some astronomers prefer to call
only these objects brown dwarfs, classifying anything larger than a
planet but smaller than this a sub-stellar object. Both types,
deuterium-burning or not, shine dimly and die away slowly, cooling
gradually over hundreds of millions of years. The central
temperature in more massive protostars, however, will eventually
reach 10
megakelvins, at which point
hydrogen begins to fuse by way of the
proton-proton chain
reaction to deuterium and then to
helium.
The onset of nuclear fusion leads over a relatively short time to a
hydrostatic equilibrium in
which energy released by the core prevents further gravitational
collapse. The star thus evolves rapidly to a stable state.
New stars come in a variety of sizes and colors. They range in
spectral type from hot and blue to
cool and red, and in mass from less than 0.5 to more than 20 solar
masses. The brightness and color of a star depend on its surface
temperature, which in turn depends on its mass.
A new star will fall at a specific point on the
main sequence of the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
Small, cool
red dwarfs burn hydrogen
slowly and may remain on the main sequence for hundreds of billions
of years, while massive hot
supergiants
will leave the main sequence after just a few million years. A
mid-sized star like the Sun will remain on the main sequence for
about 10 billion years. The Sun is thought to be in the middle of
its lifespan; thus, it is on the main sequence. Once a star expends
most of the
hydrogen in its core, it moves
off the main sequence.
MaturityAfter millions to billions of years,
depending on its initial mass, the continuous fusion of hydrogen
into helium will cause a build-up of helium in the core.
The later years and death of stars:
Low-mass star Some stars may fuse helium in core
hot-spots, causing an unstable and uneven reaction as well as a
heavy
solar wind. In this case, the star
will form no
planetary nebula but
simply evaporate, leaving little more than a
brown dwarf. But a star of less than about 0.5
solar mass will never be able to fuse helium even after the core
ceases hydrogen fusion. There simply is not a stellar envelope
massive enough to bear down enough pressure on the core. These are
the
red dwarfs, such as
Proxima Centauri, some of which will live
thousands of times longer than the Sun. Recent astrophysical models
suggest that red dwarfs of 0.1 solar masses may stay on the main
sequence for almost six trillion years, and take several hundred
billion more to slowly collapse into a
white
dwarf. (S&T, 22)
Mid-sized starsOnce a medium-size star (between
0.4 and 3.4 solar masses) has reached the
red
giant phase, its outer layers continue to expand, the core
contracts inward, and helium begins to fuse into carbon. In stars
of less than 1.4 solar masses, the helium fusion process begins
with an explosive burst of energy generation known as a
helium flash.
Helium burning reactions are extremely sensitive to temperature,
which causes great instability. Huge pulsations build up, which
eventually give the outer layers of the star enough
kinetic energy to be ejected as a
planetary nebula. At the center of the
nebula remains the core of the star, which cools down to become a
small but dense
white dwarf, typically
weighing about 0.6 solar masses, but only the volume of the
Earth.
White dwarfsMain article: white dwarfsWhite dwarfs are stable because
the inward pull of gravity is balanced by the
degeneracy pressure of the star's
electrons. (This is a consequence of the
Pauli exclusion principle.) With
no fuel left to burn, the star radiates its remaining heat into
space for thousands of millions of years. In the end, all that
remains is a cold dark mass sometimes called a
black dwarf. However, the universe is not old
enough for any black dwarf stars to exist.
Supermassive stars After the outer layers of a
star greater than five solar masses have swollen into a gigantic
red
supergiant, the core begins to yield
to gravity and starts to shrink. As it shrinks, it grows hotter and
denser, and a new series of nuclear reactions begin to occur. These
reactions fuse progressively heavier elements, temporarily halting
the collapse of the core.
Neutron stars
It is known that in some supernovae, the intense gravity inside the
supergiant forces the
electrons into the
atomic nuclei, where they combine with the
protons to form
neutrons. The
electromagnetic forces keeping separate nuclei apart are gone
(proportionally, if nuclei were the size of dust motes, atoms would
be as large as football stadiums), and the entire core of the star
becomes nothing but a dense ball of contiguous neutrons or a single
atomic nucleus.
Black holesMain article: black holesIt is widely believed that not
all supernovae form neutron stars. If the stellar mass is high
enough, the neutrons themselves will be crushed and the star will
collapse until its radius is smaller than the
Schwarzschild radius. The star has then
become a black hole.
Non-Earth planetary science

Solar System Planets.
Planetary Processes, General includes
Planetary science,
Planets,
Extrasolar
Planet,
Dwarf Planets,
Comets,
Asteroids and
others.
Geophysics is the study of the
Earth by quantitative
physical
methods, especially by
seismic,
electromagnetic, and
radioactivity methods, therefore
Planetary Geophysics is the study of the
planets by quantitative
physical methods, especially by
seismic, electromagnetic, and
radioactivity methods. It includes the
branches of:
Seismology (
earthquakes and elastic
waves), planetary gravity,
geodesy,
Tectonophysics
(geological processes in the planets),
Mineral Physics and others. Geophysics can
be both a part of physics and a part of Geology.
Geodesy of The Solar System, also called
geodetics of the solar system, is the scientific
discipline that deals with the measurement and representation of
the planets of the Solar System, their
gravitational fields and geodynamic phenomena
(
polar motion in three-dimensional,
time-varying space. The science of geodesy has elements of both
astrophysics and planetary sciences. The shape of the Earth is to a
large extent the result of its rotation, which causes its
equatorial bulge, and the competition of geologic processes such as
the collision of plates and of
vulcanism,
resisted by the Earth's
gravity field. These
principles can be applied to the solid surface of Earth (
orogeny; Few mountains are higher than 10 km,
few deep sea trenches deeper than that because quite simply, a
mountain as tall as, for example, 15 km, would develop so much
pressure at its base, due to gravity, that
the rock there would become
plastic, and the
mountain would slump back to a height of roughly 10 km in a
geologically insignificant time. Some or all of these geologic
principles can be applied to other planets besides Earth.
For
instance on Mars, whose surface gravity is much less, the largest
volcano, Olympus
Mons
, is 27 km high at its peak, a height that
could not be maintained on Earth. The Earth
geoid is essentially the figure of the Earth
abstracted from its topographic features. Therefore the Mars geoid
is essentially the figure of Mars abstracted from its topographic
features.
Surveying and
mapping are two important fields of application of
geodesy.
Physics is the underlying physical science of any planet, yet many
aspects of planets are not best described through their physics.
Planetary science is the general term for ALL
physical sciences that can be applied to planets in the Universe or
else to a particular planet.
Planetary science of the
Earth is the overall physical science containing all the
physical sciences related directly to our Earth. Planetary Science
can be broadly divided into several major sciences: Geology,
Oceanography and Atmospheres.
Geology of Solar System Planets contains
Geology of Mercury,
Geology of Venus,
Geology of the Moon,
Geology of Mars,
Geology of Jupiter,
Geology of Saturn,
Geology of Uranus Geology of Neptune,
Geology of
Pluto
Geology of Other Planets Planetary geology (sometimes known as
Astrogeology) refers to the application of geologic principles to
other bodies of the solar system. However, specialised terms such
as
selenology (studies of the
Moon),
areology (of
Mars), etc., are also in
use. Most of the geological sciences related to the Earth can be
directly applied to the study of non-Earth planets:
Geology
Fields or related disciplines Structural geology,
Geomorphology.,
Economic geology,
Mining
geology,
Geodetics,
Geomorphology,
Geophysics,
Historical geology,
Hydrogeology or
geohydrology,
Mineralogy,
Paleoclimatology,
Sedimentology,
Seismology,
Stratigraphy,
Structural geology,
Volcanology,
Hydrology.
Geothermometry (heating of the earth, heat
flow,
volcanology, and hot springs),
Hydrology (ground and surface water,
sometimes including
glaciology).
Extrasolar Geology is currently a young science
because only recently have extrasolar planets been found.
Atmospheres of Solar System Planets refers to the
application of meteorological principles to other bodies of the
solar system including the application of:
Atmospheric electricity and
terrestrial magnetism (including
ionosphere,
Van Allen belts,
telluric currents,
Radiant energy, etc.),
Meteorology and
Climatology.
Aeronomy
the study of the physical structure and chemistry of the
atmosphere.
Atmosphere of Planets of The Solar
System includes
http://www.astronomy.org/astronomy-survival/outer.html
Mars
Atmosphere includes
Mars
Atmosphere,
Venus
Atmosphere.
Jupiter Atmosphere [4811] Jupiter
AtmosphereGreat Red Spot Great Red
Spot http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/galileo/mess44/promysso.html,
Atmosphere on Jupiters-Moons,
Atmosphere on Saturn
http://www.nasm.si.edu/ceps/rpif/saturn/saturn.html
http://www.physics.purdue.edu/astr263l/SStour/saturn.html
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s872839.htm.
Atmosphere on Urnaus
http://www.physics.purdue.edu/astr263l/SStour/uranus.html
Atmospheres of Extrasolar Planets is currently a
young science because only recently have extrasolar planets been
found. Astronomers are currently theorizing that the recently
discovered extrasolar Jupiter-sized planets have continuous surface
winds of many thousands of miles per hour caused by their highly
elliptical orbit which brings them close to their parent
star.
Exobiology / Extraterrestrial life
Earth telescopes can resolve some surface features of the nearby
planets and so far, no life can be seen through the telescopes.
However, Earth telescopes cannot resolve the surface features of
any planet outside the solar system, so the search for life on
other planets continues. While no incontestable evidence has been
found for life outside of Earth, the scientific study of the
theoretical basis for life on other bodies is progressing. Some
scientists are trying to theorize which kinds of stars would have
planets that hold life. Because life has overall fragile parameters
for survival the general consensus is that only older stars would
have planets circling them with life. From this they theorize which
sections of our Milky Way Galaxy would most likely hold life. Other
scientists theorize the quantity of civilizations that might exist
in a galaxy and others are actually listening for the possible
radio chatter of extraterrestrial technical civilizations.These
sub-sciences of exobilogy can be categorized as follows:
Habitable Zone Astrobiology is discussed in
Galactic Habitable Zone and
Solar System Habitable
Zone.
Astrobiochemistry Exogenesis Most scientists hold that if
extraterrestrial life exists, its
evolution would have occurred independently in
different places in the
universe. An
alternative hypothesis, held by a minority, is
panspermia, which suggests that life in the
universe could have stemmed from a smaller number of points of
origin, and then spread across the universe, from
habitable planet to habitable planet.
These two hypotheses are not
mutually
exclusive.
Alternative biochemistry includes
Alternative Carbon Biochemistry where water is not
the Solvent of Carbon Chains: Life forms based in
ammonia rather than water are also considered,
though this solution appears less optimal than water.Also included
is
Alternative Non-Carbon Biochemistry: Non-carbon
based chemistry
Silicon is usually
considered the most likely alternative to carbon, though this
remains improbable. Silicon life forms are proposed to have a
crystalline morphology, and are theorized to be able to exist in
high temperatures, such as planets closer to the sun.
Astrobiosphere is the entire area of a planet that
supports life and includes
Biosphere,
Theory of Biosphere,
Planetary
Habitability Extrasolar
planets Astronomers also search for
extrasolar planets that would be
conducive to life, especially those like
OGLE-2005-BLG-390Lb which have been
found to have Earth-like qualities.
Plants On Other Planets
includes Extremophiles,
Theoretical Astrobotany, Life On
Jupiter, Life on Mars scientific theory,
Independently in 1996 structures resembling bacteria were reportedly discovered in a
meteorite, ALH84001
, thought to
be formed of rock ejected from
Mars. This report is also controversial and scientific
debate continues. (See
Viking biological
experiments.)
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets includes
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets Origins- Speculations And Scientific
Theory
Panspermia. Extraterrestrial life
along with the biochemical basis of extraterrestrial life, there
remains a broader consideration of
evolution and
morphology.
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets Technical Civilizations
includes Humanoids-On-Other-Planets Technical-Civilizations,
Speculation And Theory.
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets Technical-Civilizations,
Migrations Most scientists hold that if extraterrestrial
life exists, its
evolution would have
occurred independently in different places in the
universe. An alternative hypothesis, held by a
minority, is
panspermia, which suggests
that life in the universe could have stemmed from a smaller number
of points of origin, and then spread across the universe, from
habitable planet to habitable
planet.
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets Technical-Civilizations,
Quantity of Drake
Equation
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets-Civilizations On Local
Stars includes Search For
Humanoids-On-Other-Planets-Civilizations On Local-Stars,
SETI
Space exploration through space travel
.jpg/250px-Orion_ISS_(Sept_2006).jpg)
Orion approaching the ISS.
Astronomy is exploration of space through instruments based on
Earth. Space Exploration through space travel is exploration of
space by travel through it, either in person or by drone. Closely
associated with Space travel is Space Station, either manned or
unmanned. All man-made satellites are a form of unmanned or manned
space stations.
Unmanned Space travel includes the sciences of
Spacecraft Propulsion,
Rocket launch technology,
Rocket,
Astrodynamics,
Unmanned space missions, and
others.
Manned Space travel further includes the sciences
of
Microgravity
environment,
Space transport,
Manned space missions,
Interplanetary travel,
Interstellar travel and
Generation ship.
Unmanned space station
There are
Astronomical
satellites,
Biosatellites,
Communications satellites,
Miniaturized satellites,
Navigation satellites,
Reconnaissance satellites,
Earth observation satellites,
Earth observation
satellites and others. There are many different kinds of orbits
possible for these devices.
Manned Space Station includes the sciences of
Space Station and
Floating cities.
Further information can be found at Library of Congress
Classifications TL787-4050 Astronautics, TL780-785.8 Rocket
propulsion, TL787-4050 Space travel.
Space colonization
Space colonization is a colossal science that includes all of the
scientific disciplines needed to be able to build colonies on
non-Earth planets and planetoids.
Space Colonization Justification includes the
sciences of
Space and
survival.
Space Colony Research And Development Man can
practice living on other worlds by building permanently inhabitable
cities in extremely hostile environments of the Earth: The poles
and the deserts.
This is discussed in the articles Biosphere 2
and BIOS-3.
Currently
manned Earth hostile-environment stations include Amundsen-Scott
South Pole Station
, Devon
Island
, Mars Arctic Research
Station, Mars Desert Research Station
, climate, underwater
structures for planets with oceans or very heavy atmospheres and
others.
Space Colony Location is the science of figuring
out the best planets and the best locations on those planets for
colonization. Because water is such a necessity for human survival
most searches are for locations close to some kind of water. These
issues and other related issues are discussed in the articles
Colonization of Mars,
Mars Society,
Colonization of Mercury,
Colonization of Venus,
Venusian terraforming,
Colonization of the Moon,
Artemis Project,
Europa,
Phobos,
Colonization of the
asteroids and others.
Space Colonization Habitat science includes
Space habitat,
Human adaptation to space,
Manmade closed
ecological system,
Planetary
habitability,
Domed city,
Ocean colonization,
Underground city and other sub-sciences.
Further reading is available at Space Industrialization Dewy
629.44.
Space Colonization Health (Space Medicine Dewey
616.9)
Space Colonization
Agriculture includes Biosphere 2
and BIOS-3 and
others.
Space Colonization Food Processing includes
Space food and others.
Space Colonization Housing includes
International Space
Station.
Space Colonization Clothing includes
Space suits
Space Colonization
Construction includes Orbital Megastructures,
station-keeping, Amundsen-Scott
South Pole Station
, Devon
Island
, Mars Arctic Research
Station, Mars Desert Research Station
, climate, underwater
structures for planets with oceans or very heavy atmospheres and
others.
Space Colonization Transportation includes
Lunar rover
Space Colonization Materials includes
Recycling
Space Colonization Energy includes
Renewable energy
Space Colonization General Manufacturing includes
Space Manufacturing
Space Colonization Economics includes
Space Frontier Foundation ,
Private spaceflight and
space tourism,
solar power satellites,
Asteroid mining,
space manufacturing,
Space Colonization
Operations includes space
agencies, Space advocacy,
Colonize the Cosmos, Artemis Project , National Space Society, Planetary Society, robotic exploration , search for extraterrestrial life, Space Settlement Institute,
Students
for the Exploration and Development of Space, NASA
, ESA
, Project Constellation
Space Colonization Law and Protection includes Space Law
Space defense

Space Lasers.
Space Defense is the science of defending the Earth from natural or
unnatural threats from Space. Natural threats include
Near Earth Asteroids and similar. Other
issues are discussed in
Missile
Defense Command,
United
States Army Space and Missile Defense Command,
Department
of Defense Manned Space Flight Support Office,
European Aeronautic
Defense & Space and
Joint Defense Space
Research Facility.
Further information can be found at Library of Congress
Classifications UG1500-1530 Military astronautics, 0UG1500-1530
space warfare, (Dewey 358).
See also
References
- daviddarling.info Ammonia based
life
- The Goldilocks Zone
External links