How Near-Sun Colonies Changed Children of Luna Design
Colonies closer to the Sun forced the Children of Luna toward tighter climate discipline, exposure-aware aging, and more selective biohybrid architectures.
The full Koblie report library ordered by publication date. This is the broadest proof surface across technical writeups, incidents, milestones, and systems disclosures. Page 12/29.
Colonies closer to the Sun forced the Children of Luna toward tighter climate discipline, exposure-aware aging, and more selective biohybrid architectures.
Biological exos appeared where they solved energy, repair, and survival problems that pure machine architectures handled less efficiently.
For the Children of Luna, age is measured less by lifespan than by continuity, replacement, exposure, and local operating tempo.
Certain biohybrid branches proved more durable under radiation than mammalian comparators, but only when colonies could maintain tighter climate control.