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If there was a life-supporting planet that was cubical rather than spherical, would it be feasible for there to be a unique but similar civilisation on each 'Plane'?
I know that cube planets are impossible for a whole bunch of reasons involving centrifugal force, gravity and such, but in this case I want to try and justify it.
Planet Box was originally a Death Star-like megastructure created by an advanced alien race, shaped like a giant cube. The original alien race long since died out, but the megastructure remained. After a few billion years floating around in space and a lot of interstellar collisions, the megastructure fell into an orbit and became a planet in its own right. However, the original metal frame of the megastructure remains sturdy enough to support the planet in a vaguely-square shape, despite the orbital forces that try to flatten it into a sphere.
Planet Box orbits in a habitable zone around a sun, with a suitable gravity mass. It has rocks, water, and forests growing on each of its Faces. After a while, from the primordial soup, life and civilisation arise. The native Box People all live on a flat surface.
Of course, the Box People don't think that their world flat. Gravity, being what it is, is noticeably stronger at the centre of each Plane than at outskirts. Their world doesn't appear flat to them - because of the change in gravity with landscape, their perception is that it goes uphill. When you're on the edges, rain falls at an angle. To the native Box People, they would instead think that they are living in the bottom of a bowl.
See this post for where I got concept come from: https://gizmodo.com/how-gravity-would-be-different-if-the-world-were-a-cube-1492018223
All of the water and oceans pool in the very middle of the face. The edges of the Box World rise into unpassable six mountains that go higher than the atmosphere. On each Plane, there's a circle of livable terrain surrounding a huge ocean where life can survive.
This is my (very high-quality) sketch of how I imagine the geography of each Plane:
And, because Box World is a cube, there are 6 separate Planes. Life on each Plane is completely isolated - none of the native civilisations would have any idea about the other 5 sharing their planet. To them, the flat earth theory is just a crazy idea proposed by radical astronomers, when anyone sensible knows that the world is concaved. Absent of space travel, there would be no easy way for them to know otherwise.
So, two questions, both related to each other:
Would life on a cube-shaped planet be broadly feasible (i.e. allowing an acceptable dollop of handwavium)?
Would it ever be possible for a civilisation on one Plane to encounter life from another? No space travel allowed.
Even though the world is square and the corners rise higher than the atmosphere, would it be possible (with a great deal of difficulty) for any of the Box People to cross onto a different face? Could there conceivably be a channel between Planes that's low enough that someone might endure the high altitude and mountain climb across? Or could there be a deep enough tunnel that they end up crossing the edge underground to reach a different side?
Planet Box doesn't have to be strict cube - it could be a cube with rounded edges. It does, however, have to have six distinct faces.
Edit: This question is different from the linked previous one in the comments as it asks more specifically about travel and possible interaction between civilisations on different faces of the cube.


4It's primarily gravity trying to make it round, along with minor details like erosion. – Separatrix – 2019-10-23T13:29:35.707
14FYI, lease note that while the rock will be a cube, both atmosphere and ocean will try to be a ball, or rather a dome over the center of each plane. With enough atmosphere, the edges might be within it, and hence be passable without breathing gear. Otherwise, you need a tunnel under the edge. And you kinda hope that atmopshere pressure is same on both planes that it connects. – Bald Bear – 2019-10-23T15:05:54.817
I think astronomers could figure out that their world wasn't just a sphere because their world would be spinning around an axis that lies "behind" the bowl and that distance would be exactly half the size of the bowl. They would know there was more, maybe not what it is, but that it is there. – Muuski – 2019-10-23T21:53:28.663
2You should pick up a copy of the Dodec duology by Dave Duncan (Children of Chaos and Mother of Lies), which features a dodecahedral world, which has many of the same issues at play as a cubic one. While the story is fantasy, with magic etc. Duncan paid a decent amount of attention to getting the physics of a planet with "faces" correct. The plot also deals with various groups crossing the edges (a phenomenally difficult, but not impossible task). – rsandler – 2019-10-24T00:27:05.940
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Possible duplicate of How would a civilization that has been living on a "cube" Earth differ from one on a "spherical" Earth?
– dot_Sp0T – 2019-10-24T05:30:51.210Such a planet would surely have 4 simultaneous days going on, since of how time works on a cube. You know, exactly like how this works on our planet but everybody is too dumb to realise it :P PS: the time cube website still lives on.
– VLAZ – 2019-10-24T07:26:16.7275
Just note that by definition of planet, this could NOT be called a planet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IAU_definition_of_planet)
– Zizy Archer – 2019-10-24T07:44:32.0771One easy way how they can meet (and have evolved similar): Strafing asteroids have carved canyons/breaches into the edges of the cube. This means that between (select) faces, there is a (somewhat) easy connection. The depth of this ravine basically allows you to determine how early they meet – Hobbamok – 2019-10-24T11:23:46.337
1https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/130789/whats-the-biggest-cube-you-could-have-before-gravity-rounded-it/ – Foo Bar – 2019-10-24T14:21:46.087
Does this cube-world have a size and mass similar to Earth's? – RBarryYoung – 2019-10-24T14:47:34.683
1Downvoted because A) this is not a planet, and B) its not physically plausible – Stefan Karlsson – 2019-10-24T16:33:43.860
1There would eight mountain peaks, not six. – ApproachingDarknessFish – 2019-10-24T16:33:45.130
@ZizyArcher For one thing, it's not orbiting our sun, which is necessary to qualify as a planet. I'm not sure if there is a scientific group or society that has put forth a definition of "exoplanet". – nasch – 2019-10-24T20:16:01.037
1If the sides are that isolated, I'm not sure life would spontaneously generate on multiple sides at all. More likely, there would only be life on one side. That said, the only way to "tunnel" through an edge would be if somebody actually found a way to enter the original superstructure. Could be some interesting sci fi there.... – Stephen R – 2019-10-24T21:12:14.187
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A read of https://arxiv.org/pdf/1206.3857.pdf is indicated...
– DJohnM – 2019-10-25T04:25:54.427An obvious problem would be, if life evolved completely independently on each of the 6 faces, that it's unlikely that more than one would have an intelligent species at the same time. If an intelligent species arises, they would need to remain in technological stasis for millions of years, otherwise one would discover space travel before any intelligent species evolves on the other faces. – vsz – 2019-10-25T06:18:35.733
Actually, at the middle of the edges of the cute, the mountains would still only have a slope of 45% with regards to the gravity's direction. We can climb that, and have been able to climb that since the invention of legs. The only thing that could stop people from crossing over if it's either blocked non-steeply (glaciers might work), or if the air gets to thin up there. – Gloweye – 2019-10-25T12:57:30.517
You haven't defined the rotation axis of the cube. If the axis pass by 2 of the corners (so imagine a diamond spinning), then all faces will have day/night (and with a bit of precession they'll even have seasons). If the axis pass by the centers of 2 planes (and no precession), then the top and bottom planes will be forever in a cold dark. – Hoki – 2019-10-25T15:11:30.767