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Hey, are you writing sci-fi here?
If you're willing to go for a compromise, make it tidally locked. You could at least have half a planet with permanent daylight that way, and therefore entire ecosystems that never saw night ; Here's some interesting climate simulations for tidally locked Earths)
What about rings? Some ring or rings, perhaps made of the right things (maybe water, maybe SiO2 or something similar) might bounce light around the planet somewhat. A couple large and/or reflective enough rings might do it.
Metherion
Not a clue. If I had to guess for effects on the day side on a planet with rings reflective enough to ensure permanent day (or at least twilight) across the whole planet, I would probably expect:That's an interesting idea as well. Would it cause te actual side experiencing day any side-effects?
if we were locked in daylight we would never see the stars and be aware generally of the world of astronomy.
Being an evolutionary biologist and a certified pedant, I tried to make my non-human sentient species make sense, but beyond a certain point I just went "screw that, they're that way because it's cool."Technically fantasy, but I hate just saying "magic" as an excuse for anything. Thanks for the link.
(Seeing as I write in a no-magic world, I'm not sure that was a great idea, but then again, the likelihood of anyone else beyond me reading that stuff is pretty low...)And then we'd end up like the Krikkiters.if we were locked in daylight we would never see the stars and be aware generally of the world of astronomy.
Another thought, how do plants grow in complete sunlight? Do some plants do better with periods of darkness? As I recall, corn engages in respiration at night. My memory is pretty hazy, but I believe I remember it as being of some importance to the growing of corn. If corn were to grow poorly, we might have to replace it with another food source. Corn is pretty huge. Maybe wheat or rice could step up to the plate.
I think plants would actually be fine in complete sunlight provided they get enough moisture. I don't know about corn, but the reason many plants in hot and dry habitats "breathe" at night is to conserve water.Another thought, how do plants grow in complete sunlight? Do some plants do better with periods of darkness? As I recall, corn engages in respiration at night. My memory is pretty hazy, but I believe I remember it as being of some importance to the growing of corn. If corn were to grow poorly, we might have to replace it with another food source. Corn is pretty huge. Maybe wheat or rice could step up to the plate.
Another thought, how do plants grow in complete sunlight? Do some plants do better with periods of darkness? As I recall, corn engages in respiration at night. My memory is pretty hazy, but I believe I remember it as being of some importance to the growing of corn. If corn were to grow poorly, we might have to replace it with another food source. Corn is pretty huge. Maybe wheat or rice could step up to the plate.
Well again, I'm not going for complete daylight. More of a dusk/evening type of effect. I had decided on that, rather than complete daytime, because people do better when sleeping in darkness, rather than having excess light in the room.
For the sake of argument, let's say the world's the same size as Earth, with the distance from the sun and rotation.
Now, is there something that could, in theory mind you, allow it so that the planet never experiences a complete night/absence of sunlight? Like something in the atmosphere which causes a refraction of the sunlight so that there's a dusk/twilight effect until the sun rises the next day?