Ringworld Planet

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
This is actually a Stanford Torus, much smaller than an actual ringworld.

One of the World Shapes more often found in Science Fiction than in Fantasy, a Ring World Planet is a world that is a world in the shape of a concave cylinder. The horizon curves up, not down, but only in one dimension. The sides of the cylinder will be walls, with or without a "ceiling." These can range in size from a true Dyson Sphere to a cylindrical space station. These variants of worlds usually at least pay some lip service to the known laws of physics, since a spinning ring generates a centrifugal force that could be used instead of gravity. However to exist for real, particularly large ones would have to be made of some variety of Unobtainium as no currently known real-world material would have the needed strength.

Note that it would always be "day" in such a cylindrical world unless measures are taken to simulate day and night, either through sun shades, mirrors, or some combination of the above.

These were formerly referred to as "Niven's Rings" by physicists, astronomers, and science fiction writers, after the creator of the concept, author Larry Niven (who thought it up as a mid-point between a Dyson Sphere and a planet), in his novel Ringworld.

Examples of Ringworld Planet include:

Anime and Manga

  • Actual ring-shaped colonies (Known as the "Stanford Torus" or "Island 2" model) are common in the Gundam Wing continuity, and one also shows up in Gundam Unicorn, which was apparently the first ever built in the UC-verse and promptly got blown up.
  • Voices of a Distant Star has the Lysithea briefly dock at a ring-shaped structure apparently built around one of Jupiter's moons. Words of Love/Across the Stars states that it's Europa.

Comic Books

Film

  • You see one for a little bit in Revenge of the Sith.
  • The eponymous space station of Elysium is a Stanford Torus where the rich have gone to escape the conditions of overpopulated Earth.

Literature

  • Larry Niven's Ringworld is set on a world shaped like a vast ring with a sun at its centre. It's made of Unobtanium called scrith and is so massive that its geographical features include 1:1-scale maps of several planets (including Earth). These maps are significantly less than 1% of the ring's surface area.
  • The Culture of Iain M Banks's novels builds Ringworld-style Orbitals (but smaller) as housing for many of its citizens. They have a few full size, fits-round-a-star Ringworlds too but they're much rarer, since you can get more usable area by using the same mass to build orbitals so most of the Culture regards them as tacky.
  • The protagonists of Gregory Benford's Beyond Infinity spend a brief time trapped in a Tunnelworld after an encounter with some 4-dimensional aliens. It was a closed loop, so traveling in any direction for a long enough time would return you to your point of origin.
  • Earth in Ilium and Olympos by Dan Simmons is surrounded by two huge ever moving rings. They are not fun places.

Tabletop Games

  • Sigil from Dungeons & Dragons Planescape setting is this. It's also a sort of hub that connects to all the other planes of existence.

Video Games

  • Halo takes place on a world (Installation 04) resembling Banks' Orbitals at the midpoint between a gas giant and its moon. All of the other Halos appear to orbit gas giants as well.
  • Startopia has you turn one of these into a profitable space station.
    • Several, actually. Apparently, all known races use the same exact design for their space stations, right down to the color scheme.
  • EV Nova has several of these, mostly ring-around-a-planet style. Though one is (for all intents and purposed) the Ringworld. (The Polaris use that one for effectively infinite farmland.)
  • In Mass Effect, the Citadel is one of these. In particular, the Presidium is a huge ring with its own biosphere and simulated sky at one end of the space station.
    • The Alliance's Arcturus Station is described as a Stanford Torus.
  • You can make these in the Space Empires series. A Dyson Sphere is better, though.
  • Some of the planets in both Super Mario Galaxy and Super Mario Galaxy 2, such as the planet in which you fight Megahammer (a Humongous Mecha piloted by Bowser Jr.) on in the latter, actually look like these.
  • You can build these in Star Ruler, admittedly as a lategame option. They are Capital-H Huge, larger than some planetary orbits.
  • Shores of Hazeron has ancient ringworlds which can be colonized. The ringworlds are almost exactly like those from the Ringworld novel, with mountains flanking the inner walls, and with shadow squares creating day/night cycles on the surface.

Web Original

Real Life

  • The page illustration is a representation of the "Stanford Torus", a design inspired by both Gerard K. O'Neill's work and the classic "wheel-and-hub" space stations.