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How can I make it so that an otherwise colonizable planet (or moon) can (entirely naturally) seem uninhabitable from a certain point on its surface?

Background: There are a series of immovable gates scattered across the galaxy by an unknown race. Each gate has access to thousands (at minimum) of other gates; enough that there is no danger of running out of new planets anytime soon. A majority of these gates are on planets, moons, and asteroids. These gates are used by other races to colonize and exploit planets. Just about any environment that a human in a space suit could survive in is a good candidate for colonization. Exciting or valuable planets are snapped up by corporations or polities, while less interesting planets are noted and eventually sold to other groups. Planets with extreme conditions or that present obvious hazards are passed over and blacklisted, and unless there is reason to do so, are generally not explored far beyond the gate. A robotic civilization examines planets on this blacklist in greater detail, looking to colonize planets that not as uninhabitable as they seem to be. Planets like this would seem to be bad candidates for colonization or mining within a ~100-kilometer radius from the gate, but would be more habitable beyond that. Ideally no more than a quarter of the planet would be completely infeasible to colonize.

I'm looking for almost any sort of hazard that would make a planet (incorrectly) seem dangerous or hostile enough to someone stepping through one of these gates that it's inadvisable or not worth the effort to exploit, with three stipulations:

1. Nothing interesting: There can't be anything that would make mining or research seem to be worth the risk. Obvious signs of abundant rare elements, scientific anomalies, alien civilization (no matter how primitive), or native life would all be too interesting. I want anyone who discovers that the planet is inhabited to wonder why the inhabitants bothered. Planets with really unusual dangers are cool, but I want explorers to be saying "Wow, this place sucks!" rather than "Wow, I wonder what's up with this place!"

2. Gate access: The inhabitants need to be able to occasionally access the gate, both for initial colonization and for import/export purposes. The gate being inaccessible a majority of the time would work, as would having gate conditions be lethal within a matter of hours. Sticking the gate in the middle of an ocean of lava would not.

3. Novel: I already have a tidally-locked planet with the gate on the terminator, which discourages colonization with high winds, ash storms, and the occasional rain of semi-molten rock carried over from the hot side. Weather-related answers are fine as long as they're dissimilar enough from this. I also have a planet in a white dwarf system where the gate receives enough ultraviolet radiation to destroy even hardened electronics in a matter of hours.

I have a few ideas of how this could work.

  • Dangerous system: A planetary system that appears to be on the verge of suddenly planetary catastrophe would not be worth doing anything with unless there was something worth the risk. A star that looks like it's about to go nova, a large asteroid belt likely to send asteroids at the planet, or an x-ray binary likely to sterilize the planet would all make potential colonists turn and run. The difficulty would be how to make it quickly obvious that the planetary system would probably kill you, while allowing further research to conclude that it won't.

  • Volcanic activity: Frequent volcanism can rearrange landscapes and kill without warning. Given time, it could be studied and predicted, but on an otherwise unremarkable planet, that generally wouldn't be worth the effort. Unfortunately, it would be hard to limit the volcanism such that it's intense enough in certain areas to scare off explorers, but mild enough elsewhere that permanent structures can be built. Additionally, major volcanism would be likely to bury the gate in rock, as well as potentially making surface conditions too similar to those of Venus.

  • Planetary purge: Some frequent event that, while apparently unpredictable, can be predicted and allow the inhabitants to bunker down to survive it without much issue.

An ideal answer would include an explanation that passes a reality check, but if necessary I can just make a follow-up question to ask how it could be made to work.

Edit: Made it more obvious that I'm looking for an apparently dangerous planet, not just an uninteresting one.

Edit2: To clear up confusion, 'colonizable' means the following:

  • Temperatures between -250° and 200° C.
  • Surface pressure ranging from vacuum to 3 atms.
  • Gravity at or below 2.5g.
  • No conditions that would frequently destroy buildings dug into the crust.
  • At least 75% of the time, external conditions wouldn't cripple or kill a human in a hardened space suit.
  • Flooding, tides, or underwater land aren't an issue unless the liquid would be hazardous long-term to a deep-sea submersible.
  • The presence of enough metals and carbon for at least low-scale industry, and enough power options (solar, geothermal, volatiles, fusion, etc.) to support a colony.

Edit3: Again, 'colonizable' is a relative term. Habitability for unaugmented humans without extensive technological support isn't a concern. If a Mars rover can trundle around on the surface of the planet without summary destruction, consider it to be well within the bounds of colonizable.

Edit4: In response to a question. The gates are two-way and have been demonstrated to be able to reassemble in a matter of weeks from anything short of the detonation of an antimatter bomb. There have even been (inaccessible) gates that appear to be located deep in the atmospheres of gas giants. More information on the gates can be found here and here.

Edit5: Please do not have your answer involve aliens in any way. Please do not have your answer involve life in any way. Please do not have your answer make the planet unusual enough that either native life or alien intervention are the most likely explanation for how it came to be that way. The only exception is if it would take extended and in-depth exploration and research on the planet to figure out that that the conditions didn't arise naturally

emo bob
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  • I want to make sure I understand: you want scenarios causing human explorers to go through a gate, look around a bit and then blacklist the planet. But, the planet needs to later be evaluated by the robots as useable by them or by the humans? Who is going to be the final colonists of this planet--robots or people? Because things that seem unihabitable to humans could easily be inhabitable by robots. – Thom Blair III Dec 07 '16 at 19:13
  • And, another thought I just had was why would humans not send robot probes to evaluate blacklisted planets, after seeing the robots do it? Do the humans not know about the robots profiting from the incorrect human evaluations? – Thom Blair III Dec 07 '16 at 19:19
  • @Thom Blair III - Yes. The humans explore the planet with the help of probes, but give up quickly since it seems like exploiting the planet would be too much hassle for not enough payoff. They could look into it further, but there are so many other planets available that it's more efficient to just dial up another planet to explore. Later on, the robots secretly explore the blacklisted planets to see if they might be colonizable after all. If one is, they colonize it and set up outposts in the hazardous zone, so that anyone who visits the planet just sees some idiots who are barely... – emo bob Dec 07 '16 at 19:26
  • ...surviving on a hostile planet that they were dumb enough to try to live on. Meanwhile, the robots have a much more prosperous colony in the friendlier area of the planet. – emo bob Dec 07 '16 at 19:26
  • Ah hah. Ok, I think I've got it now. :) – Thom Blair III Dec 07 '16 at 19:28
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    To make a planet uninhabitable? Stick the 4chan banner all over it. Most people will keep a really safe distance from it. – Mermaker Dec 07 '16 at 19:50
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    @Thales Pereira - True, but the people it doesn't keep away are exactly the type of people you don't want to have visiting your brand new colony! – emo bob Dec 07 '16 at 19:54
  • What can the gate survive, and is it a one way portal? – Xavon_Wrentaile Dec 08 '16 at 00:36
  • @Xavon_Wrentaile: Good question! The gates have been demonstrated to be able to reassemble in a matter of weeks from anything short of the detonation of an antimatter bomb. And yes, the gates are two-way; hence the mention of import/export. More information on the gates can be found here and here. – emo bob Dec 08 '16 at 00:44
  • Put the gate at a pole, where the conditions are much harsher? – Kat Dec 08 '16 at 06:26
  • I take it that the gates are located at the surface of the planet (and not in space)? – Jacco Dec 08 '16 at 08:11
  • @Jacco - Yes. The intent of this question is to have the gate be on the surface of a planet or moon. – emo bob Dec 08 '16 at 13:11
  • Put the planet within the event horizon of a black hole. It could be perfectly habitable. As long as the black hole is big enough to not have any non negligible gradients of acceleration locally and it is not in the process of eating something large (creating massive radiation). This would certainly create somewhat of a threshold for establishment... – Stian Jan 24 '18 at 13:32
  • Is it acceptable for it to look worse than it is because someone intentionally made it look worse than it is? For example, perhaps someone engaged in illegal or otherwise opposed activities found this rock first, then set something up to make it look uninhabitable so no one would look close enough to find their hide-out. If you need that someone to no longer be in the picture, it's easy enough to say whomever it was, got caught elsewhere by the enemies they used this place to hide from, but those who caught them never found out where they'd been hiding. – Matthew Najmon Jan 28 '19 at 05:18

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The amount of resources expended to determine the habitability of a new planet is inversely proportional to the number of gates/planets they have access to. If there are thousands of options then the criteria for exclusion will be low, but if there are only 4-5 options, then they will be very thorough in evaluating each planet, especially if they have competition for colonization.

In light of this, I'm assuming there are many planets, several hundred at least, so human explorers will not spend more than a few days at most surveying the local area around the gate and do not have the ability (budget) to bring in rockets to launch satellites into space or drones that can do more than patrol a few dozen km around. I'm also assuming that the robotic explorers may visit this list some time afterwards, so conditions could have changed. And they do have the ability to launch satellites and durable drones for a wider recon of the system.

  1. The gate opens into an area underneath a hole in the ozone (or ozone equivalent) such that there is an unacceptably high level of radiation. Without journeying outside of that area (which could be hundreds of km in diameter) the explorers wouldn't know that the rest of the planet is more protected and safer. The radiation exposed area would be devoid of life.

In order to jack up the levels of radiation penetrating the atmosphere, the planet wouldn't have a spinning iron core able to generate a protective magnetic field. So the atmosphere is very thick and dense, able to shield the surface in most places, but a naturally occurring ozone hole above the gate leads the humans to assume the entire planet is bombarded.

In addition the planet (moon, in this case) could normally be protected by the magnetic field of a nearby large planet, but it has an elliptical orbit that periodically takes it out of the field. This could explain an abnormally high level of solar exposure through the ozone hole (particularly if there is a Van Allen belt equivalent around the larger planet and the moon is currently travelling through it, but normally the moon isn't exposed to much solar radiation, allowing it to maintain an atmosphere and better conditions elsewhere.

  1. The planet is currently passing through a dense asteroid field or comet tail (like our annual Perseid meteor shower but much worse). So the planet is being bombarded with impacts and it looks like there will be more coming. Without sticking around to monitor the solar system there would be no way to know how often such showers occur.

Now normally this would make the planet VERY attractive, as all these impacts deliver all sorts of cool heavy elements to the planet. But obviously nearby impacts would destroy any mining/colonization attempts. So humans don't bother to wait around, but robots could spend the resources to determine the frequency of impacts and determine that there are significant periods of time without impacts such that they could conduct operations and perhaps erect a meteor defense system before the planet passes through the comet tail again.

  1. The local star just happens to be undergoing a rare super flare. Again, this is dangerous to the explorers and they have no way of determining the length and frequency of such solar outbursts.

To spice this up, perhaps this is a binary star system, with one star producing all the flares. The planet in question is part of it's own paired orbit with another planet that frequently shields it from the flares from the star, but it happens to be out of the shadow of this planet when the humans visit. So normally the gate planet is livable, with light coming from a less active star (so solar power is available) while it is in the shadow of the other planet to block solar flares from the other star.

  1. The planet is exiting an ice age with melting glaciers. The gate site is frequently submerged by meltwater floods that remold the surface, making construction difficult. It is possible that if the robots survey the planet a few decades later, the glaciers and flooding could have withdrawn from the area around the gate, making it a more inhabitable spot. The amount of flooding could have also been transiently increased due to a meteoric impact that precipitated flash flooding (much like some folks think occurred to Earth 12,000 years ago), such that conditions improve just a few years later.

  2. The planet is close to a black hole and experiences significant time dilation (like the planet in Interstellar). This makes colonization by humans very difficult as there is effectively no two way communication, humans on the planet can't come back through, there is no way for them to build up facilities in any kind of time line that would allow for mass immigration through the gate or to bring anything back. Robots may not fear such an isolating phenomenon though, since they have a much longer lifespan.

  3. The gate connection is very erratic, with significant periods of disrupted connections that either prevent gate travel or destroy whatever is going through. Psychologically this would be devastating for humans, but robots may not mind.

Jason K
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  • and 5. violate the restrictions that I listed. But 1. shows real promise, especially if combined with something else. For instance, the star could be unstable and high in UV and x-rays. The atmosphere would block a decent portion of it, but the hole area would end up scorched and highly irradiated. The difficulty, of course, is in figuring out how to make that work realistically, but that's a matter for another question.
  • – emo bob Dec 07 '16 at 21:51
  • 6.: more likely not inhabitable by robots and habitable by humans becouse of corrosion. Depends heavily on the tech level and kind of your robots (gold or platinum circuit doesnt rust, but whole robot? :)) Also, most of "natural" O from the big bang made compound with H, (and there is so much more H then there is O (1000:1) in our universe) so "too hight O2 planet" will be jungle planet or extremely exceptional planet worth of planet-scale resource gathering. – Jan 'splite' K. Dec 08 '16 at 12:16
  • 1 doesn't seem really feasible, unless the whole planet has too much radiation. A spacesuit or some kind of vehicle or building would be able to block the UV quite easily. #6 might be possible, as it is thought that Earth used to have higher O2 making the large dinos possible, and lots more fires. Fire loves O2. – MikeP Dec 08 '16 at 15:49
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    You're allowed to post multiple answers. So please, for the love of the site, don't post six skeleton answers that masquerade as a single fleshed out answer. – Samuel Dec 08 '16 at 18:20
  • After much deliberation, I've decided to mark this as the answer. I'll probably end up using parts of multiple answers, but this one was the most thorough and had the largest number of ideas that I'm interested in. – emo bob Dec 09 '16 at 15:44
  • Robots may not fear such an isolating phenomenon though, since they have a much longer lifespan.I'd say robots may not fear. In general. – xDaizu Dec 28 '16 at 16:34
  • I was going to go with number one, except in place of ozone hole above I was going to go with radium deposit below. – Ash Oct 09 '17 at 17:26