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I think it's reasonable to say that we could probably build a fleet of ships containing tardigrades in their dried-out tun state (which is biologically inert, up to tens to hundreds of thousands of years, and extremely resilient to radiation and vacuum), launch them with enough mass to reach a nearby (up to 10 LY at 0.001c?) solar system with a planet that has water, and deliver the payload to the water, such that the tardigrades would revert to their normal living state.

It would cost a lot of money. It would take a very long time (hundreds of thousands of years). Nobody alive today would see the results. There are any number of systematic and non-systematic failures that could occur. building things that work autonomously for 100Kyears is nontrivial. Even if you succeeded- say, 100Kyears from now, one out of a thousand of your samples crash-lands onto a remote planet and revives- congratulations, you've maybe just contaminated an otherwise unknown ecosystem.

The story gets more interesting if earth has fusion, stable government and research funding, then you could make humans into tuns that can travel for 10K years, and have advanced propulsion (.01-.1c), pre-deliver full infrastructure...



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