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Proposed tube-like space habitat From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A topopolis is a proposed tube-shaped space habitat, rotating to produce artificial gravity via centrifugal force on the inner surface, which is extended into a loop around the local planet or star. The concept was invented by writer Patrick Gunkel.
A topopolis has been compared to an O'Neill cylinder, or a McKendree cylinder, that has been extended in length so that it encircles a star. A "normal" topopolis would be hundreds of millions of miles/kilometers long and at least several miles (kilometers) in diameter.
Topopoles can be looped several times around the local star, in a geometric figure known as a torus knot. Topopolises are also called cosmic spaghetti.
A topopolis with big enough diameter could theoretically have multiple levels of concentric cylinders.
Larry Niven (1974) mentioned the idea in a much-reprinted magazine article "Bigger Than Worlds".[1][2]
Iain M. Banks (2008)[3] depicts a topopolis that loops its system star many times in various braidings, and houses trillions of sapient residents. The topopolis was so massive that stray gases from the system collected within the major spacing within the braids by gravitation alone, producing a slight atmosphere between the strands, that the author describes as a "haze".
Dennis E. Taylor (2020)[4] in the book Heaven’s River features an alien civilization inhabiting a topopolis.
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