Forming terresterial worlds like ours

In Soviet Russia, we don't worry about acid rain. I kid, I do think dowsing it with water will lower the PH
I think you need oxygen molecules for it to react to it so as long as you keep them seperate the sparks won't ignite inside your habitable capsule which defeats the purpose of living on other planets

I mean moon in this case.

I rechecked and amend my statement, temperatures on Titan are actually much more "temperate" than I thought, avetaging - 128C. Still cold, but definitely survivable. Besides Titan is inside Saturn's geomagnetic ring, protecting it from ultraviolet rings. It's atmospheric pressure is about 5 times Earths at sea level, which is bearable without pressure suits and also allows for habitats to be pressurised very closely to the outside atmosphere, greatly simplifying construction.
The 3 big problems of Titan are cold, a toxic atmosphere and low gravity. Out of these only low gravity will be a serious obstacle to colonisation imho.
You'd need oxygen for that, of which Titan has not a lot. Unless you plan to bring along much more oxygen than is needed to survive inside habitats, it shouldn't be a problem.

I was recently reading some articles which give an interesting lead for life on Europa. We've managed to more or less reconstruct the physics of the KT impact (the meteor that killed the dinosaurs) and it seems that as a result of the impact, quite a lot of debris has managed to reach escape velocity and enter an irregular orbit around the sun. Now the catch is that according to current probability calculations at least some of those rocks harbored single celled organisms. And many of these eventually crashed into various Solar bodies, including the moons of gas giants. Its a long shot, but if life exists on Europa, could it be our distant cousins?

This is now a Soviet Military Power thread

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and so on and so on

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and so on

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LONG HARD METAL TUBES FULL OF COMMUNIST SEAMEN UNDER THE WAVES OF EUROPA

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*sniff*

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Good point, well made; that oversight was retarded of me. The gravity would make it worth living there; just look at the effort ISS astronauts have to make in order to stay healthy and the microgravity still causes permanent eye damage.

You're still going to need a full suit outside that habitat, though.