Many fictional space stations and spacecraft use a rotating design.
Rotating wheel stations 1936: In
Alexander Belyaev's novel
KETs Star, a circular space station provides pseudo-gravity of about 0.1
g by its rotation.
1958: The film
Queen of Outer Space features a rotating space station that gets blown up.
1968:
Arthur C. Clarke's novel
2001: A Space Odyssey was developed concurrently with
Stanley Kubrick's film version of
the same name. In it, the rotating Space Station V provides artificial gravity and features prominently on the book's first-edition cover. The Jupiter mission spacecraft
Discovery One features a centrifuge for the crew living quarters that provides artificial gravity.
1968: In the six part
Doctor Who TV serial
The Wheel in Space, the titular station is the main setting of the story.
1985: The novel ''
Ender's Game'' features a multi-ringed station called "Battle School" with varying levels of simulated gravity. As the characters move through the station towards the center, there is a noticeable decline in the feeling of gravity.
1993: The computer game
Frontier: Elite 2 and
its sequels feature rotating wheel stations. They and their predecessor
Elite also feature other, non-wheel designs that produce artificial gravity by rotating.
1999: The main story of the Japanese
manga and
anime Planetes is set in "The Seven", the seventh wheel orbital station, and a ninth is under construction by 2075.
2003: In the re-imagined series
Battlestar Galactica.
Ragnar Anchorage is a three-ringed weapons storage station, and the civilian ship
Zephyr is a luxury liner featuring a ringed midsection.
2007: The "Presidium" sector of the Citadel space station in the
Mass Effect series of video games comprises a rotating toroidal section connected to a docking ring, with five large "wards" radiating out from the central ring like a flower's petals. In addition, Arcturus Station, the human seat of government on the galactic stage (not shown in the games, but described in detail), is also mentioned as being a rotating
Stanford torus.
2010: In the
OVA Mobile Suit Gundam Unicorn, the official residence for the prime minister of the Earth Federation "Laplace" is an example of a Stanford torus.
2011: Most space stations in the novel series
The Expanse make use of artificial gravity by rotation, most notably Tycho Station. Even larger celestial objects like
Ceres and
Eros have been hollowed out and spun up to generate gravitational pull for their inhabitants.
2015: Thunderbird 5 in the
ITV TV show
Thunderbirds Are Go features a rotating gravity ring section on the space station which features a glass floor to observe the Earth below. The series is set in the year 2060.
2018: The video game
Fallout 76 includes a ruined space station that has a rotating wheel on it in a location called The Crater.
2019: The video game
Outer Wilds features multiple: the base game contains a rotating gravity wheel inside of a planet to maintain a gravitational pull within the
planet's center. The 2021 DLC
Echoes of the Eye features a planet-sized, wheel-shaped starship that rotates to create artificial gravity.
2022: The
Mandalorian is shown on a rotating ring with artificial gravity in
The Book of Boba Fett.
2022: The season 3 premiere of
For All Mankind, an
Apple TV+ original series, depicts a space hotel with a rotating wheel for gravity generation which becomes important to the storyline after the rotating mechanism malfunctions.
2022: The computer game
Ixion centers around a mobile rotating wheel station named
Tiqqun, with an FTL drive named Ixion, after the divine punishment exacted on the mythological king
Ixion (being bound to a flying, spinning wheel).
Rotating wheel spacecraft 1966: Larry Niven's short story "The Warriors" (published in the 1975 collection
Tales of Known Space), the first of the
Man–Kzin Wars series, features a
Bussard ramjet colony ship with a rotating habitable section named the ''Angel's Pencil''.
2000: In the film
Mission to Mars, the
Mars II, a NASA spacecraft hastily repurposed for a recovery mission of humanity's first mission to Mars in 2020, features a rotating crew habitat whose artificial gravitational rotation is shut down using the ship's
attitude control thrusters to allow emergency repairs to the hull following a
micrometeoroid shower.
2009: The
Jaco Van Dormael film
Mr. Nobody shows an alternate timeline in which the main character travels to Mars on a large space vessel that carries the passengers in
hypersleep chambers lined up within two large spinning ring structures which provide artificial gravity.
2014: A vessel very similar in design to the NASA-designed
Nautilus-X is used in
Interstellar. The ship, known as the
Endurance, is used as a staging station also capable of interplanetary flight.
2015: The
NASA-designed
Hermes in the film
The Martian is capable of space travel to Mars.
2018: The
planetarium film
Mars 1001 shows a fictional mission to Mars employing a rotating spacecraft.
Related concepts 1970:
Larry Niven's novel
Ringworld and its sequels describe an open-roofed ring-shaped structure centered on a star, with a radius of approximately 1
AU and a habitable inner surface with an area approximately 3 million times that of Earth.
1973: Arthur C. Clarke's novel
Rendezvous with Rama involves a cylindrical alien starship (similar to a mobile
O'Neill cylinder) that enters our Solar System.
1984: The Peter Hyams-directed film
2010: The Year We Make Contact, based on Arthur C. Clarke's 1982 novella
2010: Odyssey Two, features a battleship-sized, Soviet-built spacecraft (designed by futurist artist Syd Mead), the
Leonov, which has a continuously rotating central section, providing an artificial gravity for the occupants, which is however not wheel-shaped.
1994: The humans in the science fiction series
Babylon 5 live in an
O'Neill cylinder station using rotating sections to provide artificial gravity.
Earth Alliance space stations such as the Babylon series (hence the name of the series), transfer stations such as the one at Io near the main Sol system jump gate, and
EarthForce Omega-Class destroyer spaceships made extensive use of rotating sections to lengthen deployment times and increase mission flexibility as the effects of zero gravity are no longer a concern.
1999: In the
Zenon trilogy (
Zenon: Girl of the 21st Century,
Zenon: The Zequel and
Zenon: Z3), 13-year-old Zenon lives on a rotating space station owned by the fictional WyndComm from 2049 though 2054, but it is not designed in a way that would allow for artificial gravity through centripetal force.
2001: In the video game series
Halo created by
Bungie, the title refers to a planet-sized open ring (like a
Bishop ring) that can harbor Earth-like fauna and environments by simulating gravity through its spinning.
2013: The
Neill Blomkamp film
Elysium has an enormous space station called Elysium (an open-roofed station in diameter, somewhere between a much-larger open-roofed
Bishop ring and a smaller, fully enclosed
Stanford torus). The station in the film supports a city and habitat for the privileged upper classes of Earth. ==See also==