BigBallinStalin wrote:Life seems pretty sustainable here. That might be a plus.
Then again, would life here be sustainable to alien life? Maybe after a few changes.
Yes, but there are considerable downsides to using a planetary mass; living at the bottom of a gravity well isn't always the best way to support a population at the technology level where interstellar transportation is possible.
Even before interstellar transporation, the idea of chucking the gravity well model of habitation would be a logical one. This was the primary goal of the old L5 society. Why settle for a rare rock with all the necessary conditions when you can build this ...
[bigimg]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fc/Internal_view_of_the_Stanford_torus.jpg[/bigimg]
Or even this ...
[bigimg]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/94/Spacecolony3edit.jpeg[/bigimg]
That doesn't even consider one of the biggest obstacles to interstellar transportation; assuming you can get to speeds fast enough to reasonably cover light years, you have to get to that speed first. That requires massive acceleration and accereration is indistinguishable from gravity. Solve that problem and you have solved all artificial gravity problems. Building colonies inside large high gravity gas giants themselves would also not be a problem and they would be a better source of raw materials than small rock core inner planets.

