Antimatter Space Drive 383
sckienle writes "Space.com has an article on using anti-matter for propulsion in space. It isn't true Star Trek warp stuff, in fact it is a variation on an fusion based pellet design I saw in the late 70's, but interesting concept. The concept is still somewhat of a dream, as stated in the article: 'The real hub is the storage [of antimatter]. There's a lot of technology between here and there.' Later on it also mentions that we can't produce a lot of antimatter efficiently yet. Still it might be worth the effort if the theoretical acceleration proves out." The BBC has a story about studying antimatter in a lab.
Interesting (Score:4, Funny)
That is quite possibly the most circuitous way I have ever seen someone admit that something is impossible. Fascinating.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
In a DS9 novel, they talk about transferring antimatter between holding tanks by using tightly confined magnetic field beams and piping the antimatter through their magnetic pipes from one place to the other.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Isn't that sort of how plasma is handled today?
I think the holy grail technology will be a forcefieled that is powered by the anti-matter that it contains. As long as it's not powered by an external field, it should be safe. (That is provided the field itself is generated by components that don't wear down easily.)
Okay, maybe that suggestion wasn't that helpful heh.
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:3)
Oh God, much too much ST
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
-B
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Informative)
Depends on how the magnetic containment works. Faraday proved that no static assemblage of magnetic, gravitic, and electric fields can be stable; in other words, a non-dynamic system that depends on only the above three fields will fall apart.
Faraday did not know about two things, though, and that's diamagnetics and antimatter. All materials are either ferro-magnetic, meaning they can take and hold a magnetic field, paramagnetic, meaning they attract magnets, or diamagnetic, meaning they repel magnets. A google search will tell you more.
Faraday's proof doesn't work for diamagnetic materials. However, most materials are only very slightly diamagnetic. Water, bismuth, and a certain kind of graphite are the most diamagnetic. I have succesfully levitated a very small slice of graphite using permanent magnets.
Someone once levitated a frog. That magnet was a 10 Tesla magnet, though; there are no permanent magnet technologies that can get anywhere close to that magnetic strength.
The only way you could do it with permanent magnets is if antimatter happens to be diamagnetic. This would be the case if, for instance, we find that antimatter's magnetic fields respond oppositely to that of normal matter; anti-steel, for instance, would not be paramagnetic but strongly diamagnetic.
If that's not the case, then you HAVE to use big honking electromagnets.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry Mr. Spock, think you missed the point of what he was saying.
"The real hub is the storage," Howe says. "There's a lot of technology between here and there."
What he means is that it's not as simple as a gas tank.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Insightful)
Indeed. It's like saying that an exoflop (or op) supercomputer is impossible.
It is. Right now.
However, give us 20 years, then easily you'll have it.
After all, it's just technology between here and there.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Funny)
When people say things are impossible, without qualifiers, they mean it's impossible forever.
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Funny)
The technology to do that cannot be that far off. Today it's possible for the human body to convert a burrito from one state of matter into another. If the human body can turn a solid into a gas, then it's possible to have an anti-matter burrito one day.
Re:Interesting (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Re:Interesting (Score:5, Funny)
This is like saying that the only impediment to being rich is all the money you don't have yet.
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
If the guys who built the foundations of the Net back in the Sixties and Seventies had said, "there's a lot of technology between here and there" -- which would have been a perfectly accurate statement at the time -- would you have told them that they were admitting that what they were trying to do was impossible?
Re:Parent: +1 Insightful. (Score:2)
Out of curiousity, I checked the link in his
Re:Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing so interesting, IMHO -- it's just a garden case of someone not reading what someone else said very carefully, or possibly not understanding it well. <wry grin>
A scientist or engineer who claims that there is a "lot of technology" between here and there is merely saying that we can't do it now, with today's technology. Given the rate of change in technology over the past hundred years, saying that something can't be done today is hardly the same as saying it can't be done at all.
While no physicist expects Star Trek-like warp drive any time soon (or at all), we've known that anti-matter exists since the late 1920s, when Paul Dirac developed the equations that showed that it had to exist. We first "saw" real anti-matter in the mid-1930s, when Carl Anderson observed a positron, or anti-electron. Both of these men won Nobel prizes for their work -- this is not exactly news to anyone who keeps up with science and especially physics.
Antimatter isn't the brainchild of some writer with lots of imagination and little grasp of science. It exists. It is real. Further, its properties are widely understood -- we know how it behaves.
More to the point, we know that, to produce and keep large quantities of it, we must determine how to isolate it from regular matter. We know that, to use it in an engine, we must expose it to regular matter in a controlled fashion, and harness the energy released when it and the regular matter annhilate each other.
In other words, we already have the basic science in hand. What we haven't figured out yet is how to do what needs to be done economically and reliably -- we don't have the technology in hand.
This doesn't sound impossible to me. It sounds like it will take time and effort, probably quite a bit of time and effort, but as technology goes it isn't sufficiently advanced to be indistinguishable from magic. (Five mod points to anyone who identifies that reference.) ;>
Hm (Score:5, Funny)
Are you sure those aren't tracers from the bad acid you took back in the late 70's?
Come in, Capt'n Kirk, please respond ... (Score:2)
(in voice that gets more and more mouse like as we keep speeding up towards the speed of light)
Capt'n Kirk, she's flying appart
-- Scotty
That is what we'd be saying once this thing was traveling faster than the speed of light!
C'mon people, some simple physics here!! We can not travel that fast! Also, consider that with the nuclear blasts they are talking about, which would blow the sail right off of our little space craft!
Damn kids and their buzz words!
The cost of antimatter... (Score:5, Interesting)
The cooling ring only helps you once you have antiprotons to cool down to antihydrogen. Right now the production of antiprotons itself is just too expensive.
Re:The cost of antimatter... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The cost of antimatter... (Score:3, Insightful)
I know that's an issue, but I'm not convinced that's the biggest issue. The biggest issue is safety. Anti-matter is hard to contain. Imagine if gasoline violent explodeded when exposed to air. Nobody'd wanna put that into their cars.
However, if Anti-matter were capable of powering ships capable of say... travelling to one of Mars or Jupiter's moons for the sake of bringing back large quantities of valuable minerals, then you'd find a great deal of effort going into anti-matter generation.
When safety goes up and demand goes up, the price will magically fall as a bunch of places jump on board to start extracting it. (or converting a better word? I can't remember how anti-matter is generated.)
Re:The cost of antimatter... (Score:2)
But then, it killed a lot of enemy pilots, as well.
There weren't a lot of pilots who could have been killed by jet fuel in WWII, were there? Perhaps the more generic term 'aviation fuel' would have been more accurate?
Social justice would reduce the cost considerably. (Score:5, Funny)
In a just society, where the wants of the underprivileged are not left unattended-to, in a truly accepting and broad-minded multicultural community where spiritual values and emotional resonance are cherished and rewarded, it's clear that the hierarchically-constrained "male physics" which enforces today's high antimatter prices would cease to obtain.
I invite you all to contemplate the joys and rewards of a non-judgemental, people-centered physics, which takes emotional and spiritual considerations are factored into every equation. With such a "physics of the heart" taught as a scientifically acceptable and morally rewarding alternate truth -- for there are always many mutually exclusive and identically valid truths, especially in matters of radiation -- adequate supplies of antimatter would be within the reach of all! Imagine every child having enough antimatter to dream and to grow, to achieve his or her full creative potential as an individual, regardless of his or her astrological sign!
Is it truly so radical, to contemplate making science the servant of humanistic values, rather than their enemy? Is it really necessary for antimatter, like the so-called "Western literary canon", to be the exclusive province of dead white males? I think not.
What about teleportation and quantum entagglement? (Score:2)
I remember reading about it several times here on slashdot and it sounds very star trekish. Could someone with a physics background tell me if its possible to have one anti-proton and a regular proton that can change to an anti-proton through quantum entagglement?
Perhaps we could replicate anti-protons and anti-electrons using this technology on standard particles.
I believe this was already demonstrated in 2000.
Re:The cost of antimatter... (Score:3, Interesting)
Let us also assume that the human race will continue to expand.
With a population of 10billion+, we'll need to spread out from earth. Space colonies in orbit, on mars, the moon, and jupiter's moons should all be possible by 2500, no problem. Given my 2 assumptions it's inevitable.
With that size civilisation, it's not a far strech to belive we could build as many orbiting solar satelites that we want. On board each station, convert solar energy into anyimatter. OK, you might get a 0.001% efficency rate, however with a large enough surface area, at a similar height of Mercury's orbit, you would produce 9E21W of energy, wirh 0.001% efficeny we could produce 1kg of antimatter a second. Thats a lot of antimatter.
Of course what would we use antimatter for? Answer: Convert to energy.
All antimatter is, in the long run, is an energy source. If we have a very effiecent battery, which can pack an enourmous punch for its mass, then theres no need for anti matter for general power production. For the times we specifically need antimatter, produce it in situ. Wont be as efficent (solar -> "battery" -> antimatter), however it will be a lot easier then hauling even a minute amount of antimatter arround the solar system.
And in 20 years.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:And in 20 years.... (Score:5, Funny)
Sorry, I think you typed a '(' where you meant to type a ')'
" We'll see antimatter missles
I'm excited to!
Re:And in 20 years.... (Score:3, Informative)
Not at all true.
Loki would have loved to get his hands on something like this, if for no other reason than to scare the shit out of the other gods (explode a dozen simultaneously while the gods were asleep). Actually, getting more towards Ragnarok, he'd have gladly used these to blast his fellow gods into oblivion. I liked him more when he was a simple trickster.
What are the mods thinking??? (Score:5, Funny)
I mean, come on - why not post Linux vx. MacOS X and Emacs vs. vi stories while you are at it.
Re:What are the mods thinking??? (Score:5, Funny)
Grrr.. (Score:5, Funny)
We'd be able to produce tons of it by now if the frickin' Vulcans didn't hold us back!
Re:Grrr.. (Score:3, Informative)
And the funny thing, I know all that while at the same time really not like the show at all.
Re:Grrr.. (Score:2)
Star Trek is probably the closest thing to real that the Sci-Fi world has ever had even remote interest in.
Re:Grrr.. (Score:2)
For pretty much every piece of technology that has ever been the show [...] someone somewhere has a viable theory as to making something like that work.
Huh? An obvious example would be Warp Drive (wormholes are not FTL travel). Unless I haven't seen it, I haven't seen any viable theories about usurping Einstein.
Also as far as I know, there is no viable theory as to how to make a transporter work (quantum-level effects notwithstanding).
Re:Grrr.. (Score:2)
Look up Miguel Alcubierre. Whether his idea would actually work is questionable, but he is at least a reasonably respected scientist and not a crackpot or Trek writer.
Also as far as I know, there is no viable theory as to how to make a transporter work (quantum-level effects notwithstanding).
There was a Scientific American (I think) article a couple years back discussing some theories about how quantum teleportation might be feasible. Again, maybe or maybe not really possible, but at least within the realm of theoretical discussion.
hmm .. hamster power = anti-matter? (Score:2, Funny)
so are they feeding those hamsters special pellets to make them run faster on the little wheel pushing the craft or are the waste pellets used for powering and propelling the ship?
Antimatter costs far more than it's worth... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Antimatter costs far more than it's worth... (Score:2)
Re:Antimatter costs far more than it's worth... (Score:2)
All fuel by definition uses more engery to produce than it stores. Even in the Star Trek era (24th century), the Technical Manual says they only get around 20% efficiency when creating their antimatter. It is the compactness of it that makes it usefull, much like the compactness of energy in cars is more usefull than solar power.
Re:Antimatter costs far more than it's worth... (Score:3, Insightful)
it costs more energy to produce than it actually stores
I'd certainly hope so. Otherwise, we're going to have to reconsider quite a lot of modern physics!
Better than what? (Score:5, Funny)
Faster, better, and cheaper than all the other antimatter drives we have already produced?
Insterstellar travel is still centuries away (Score:5, Insightful)
The closest star is Tau Ceti, which is 4.7 Light years away, would still take a decade to reach and a decade to return even with a very, very, very advanced anti-matter engine -- a space shuttle with chemical engines, in comparsion, would take 100,000 years to reach there.
Anti-matter still costs approximately 40 quadrillion dollars per gram to make, and storing it and dealing with the gamma rays is quite another thing.
Sorry, sci-fi fans: we will never visit another star system in our lifetimes, and probably not even Mars with the amount of funding that goes to space.
Re:closest star (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:closest star (Score:5, Funny)
Re:closest star (Score:2)
Actually, that's one thing I've been wondering for a long time: what are the orbital periods for the Alpha Centauri system?
Re:Insterstellar travel is still centuries away (Score:2, Informative)
This is incorrect; the closest star is Proxima Centauri; 4.24 LY. Tau Ceti is 11.35 LY away (Source [216.239.51.100])
Re:Insterstellar travel is still centuries away (Score:2)
Alpha Centauri C (to use a more official designation) is indeed marginally closer to us than Alpha Centauri A and B. But at absolute magnitude 15 you would have to be just about standing on it to see it.
I can't see much exitement in going all that way just to see a red dwarf...
...laura
Re:Insterstellar travel is still centuries away (Score:3, Interesting)
Here's what he said so you don't have to click the links
Voyager is not travelling all that fast, and we could go faster with sufficient time and engineering effort.
First cab off the rank is probably the Orion drive. Build a really big plate, attach it with really big springs and dampers to a heavily radiation-shielded spacecraft, and detonate atom bombs behind the plate. The basic technology exists right now, all you need is a pile of cash and be prepared to violate the space weapons treaty. Maximum speed is about 1-2% of the speed of light, so you're still taking a couple of centuries to Proxima Centauri.
Next option is a fusion engine. We can't generate power with controlled fusion yet, but ITER probably will if and when it gets built. ITER is, er, rather large and heavy, and doesn't really produce much net power, so a practical space fusion power plant is a fair bit of engineering development down the road. Anyway, the idea is quite simple. Release the "exhaust" of the reaction out the back of the engine, just like a normal rocket except the exhuast is a hell of a lot hotter and travelling a lot faster. Maximum speed maybe 10-12% of the speed of light.
Alternatively, use a light sail powered by a really big laser. All you need is to scale up laser and telescope technology a crapload (so, again, considerable engineering development required). Maximum speed? Somewhere between 10 and maybe 30% of the speed of light, depending on just how big you can make your mirror (and consequently how far you can keep accelerating).
The other big issue with interstellar spacecraft is the question of how much debris is out there. If there's a lot, as you go faster you'll need one hell of a shield to protect you.
Finally, there's there's also the possibility of using antimatter-matter reactions to power a ship. Antimatter is kinda powerful stuff to have around, and you could theoretically use it to power a ship to near the speed of light. However, there is no known natural source, and manufacturing it requires milllions of times more energy put in than you get back when you "burn" it. It, therefore, is a really long-term option from when humanity has such astounding energy generation capacity it can afford to use it to power antimatter-powered spaceships.
All in all, there are some possibilities, but most are still a fair bit of technological development away. Let's get to the rest of the solar system first :)
Antimatter (Score:2)
This work is important because it will enable us to understand why there is any matter at all in the Universe. This is one of the great mysteries.
Yes indeed, the antimatter-matter is interesting also because - it makes use remember that a big part of our current understand of science is based on just assumptions. Rules, that exist because they have made sense (so far). One day, when we learn more, many of these rules might get obsolete.
It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2, Funny)
Faster than light!
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
(start anal-retentive nitpicking here)
I thought it was 186,284 miles per second
I suppose I could be wrong.. hehe
If light were 186,000 miles per HOUR, maybe (Score:2)
Again, please note, the max speed was 260,000 mph, an acronym for miles per HOUR.
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
Re:It truly is sci-fi stuff.. (Score:2)
I don't think so.
c = 300,000 km/sec, which converts to roughly 6.71*10^8 miles/hour.
To the editors: I was thinking about modding this post, but I realized there's really no way to do so. Redundant? Troll? It's times like these that I wish there was a [-1: Incorrect] moderation option...
Space.com math (Score:5, Interesting)
Would it kill them to be a little more precise on:
Re:Space.com math (Score:2)
You're looking at average distances between objects moving faster than you (or I) can imagine, being pushed/pulled by 4 different forces eminating from an unimaginable number of masses.
In other words, give them a break.
(For those wondering - and this is off the top of my head... Nuclear strong, Nuclear weak, electromagnetic, and gravitational)
Re:Space.com math (Score:5, Funny)
It comes out a little closer for extremely large values of 5.
Antimatter Space Drive (Score:5, Insightful)
Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
People keep talking about this like cost is an issue. As we all know from Star trek, in 100 years, after the end of WOrld War 3, when around a quarter of the world is killed a nulclear war, people realize that money *isn't* really there, and that it means jack squat. Then people just start being all lovey dovey and feeding the world and doing things for the advancement of knowledge, not for money. Thus we eliminate hunger, eliminate war, and eliminate cost of making antimiatter!!! Of course all this free antimatter comes in handy when Cochrane invants the warp drive in the same time period, thus allowing us to meet the Vulcans.
So if Star trek is right (as it HAS TO BE!!!), no interstellar travel in our life times, but in our kids maybe.
</humout>Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Re:Cost is no issue! (Score:2)
Everyone says that he says it's impossible but... (Score:2, Funny)
Maybe I'm way off but... (Score:2)
Alright, geekdom time! (Score:2)
Basically, warp drives are run off antimatter -- but dilithium is the only known substance that doesn't react to antimatter, when subjected to an EM field. So the dilithium just processes the antimatter.
Re:Maybe I'm way off but... (Score:2)
Bonus! (Score:2, Funny)
This is for REAL! (Score:4, Funny)
It topped out at 3,492,901 MPH, and then the impact of space dust turned their little umbrella thingy inside out. Now they're trying to figure out how to stop the damn thing, by firing a cold fusion cannon out the front...
Production?? (Score:4, Interesting)
1. The amount of antimatter currently visible in the known universe is negligible compared to the amount of matter.
2. However, in the big bang, antimatter and matter are supposed to have been created in equal amounts. So where did antimatter go?
3. QED equations for antiparticles are exactly the same as those for normal ones if you reverse the direction of time.
The only conclusion that *I* can draw from this is that there is no antimatter left nowadays because it is travelling in the opposite direction in time, whatever that means.
That in turn gives a simplistic explanation of why it is hard to create antimatter - there is no causal relationship normally. According to my weird intuition, you can only create antimatter in a material universe by violating 'normal' causality.
PS. I am *not* a physicist.
Re:Production?? (Score:2, Insightful)
Silly me.
Re:Production?? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Production?? (Score:4, Informative)
As far as difficulty in production, it happens that most of the particle-pair interactions that decay into antimatter particles only occur at very high energies compared to what our accelerators can achieve, and even then at low probabilities. Then there is the matter of containment. Current methods involve redirection with magnetic fields or trapping with lasers, both of which are extremely difficult and therefore expensive.
As usual, the big problem with this bit of physics is the funding. Going out on a limb, particularly in longterm scientifics, is not promoted as a safe or particularly clever business strategy. This leads to what is not exactly the most logical method of pursuing progress, but I digress in my bias.
The ultimate plan to gain on antimatter (Score:2, Funny)
Ultra-sexy fantasy technology vs. close to real (Score:2, Interesting)
It would be workable to pump the megawatts into a bank of lasers and let the lasers push on the probe's small light sail. (And you could tap the military budget for a good hunk of the cost of those space-based laser batteries.)
Political difficulties (Score:3, Insightful)
The issue is that anything inolving nuclear power is a political impossibility, at least for another generation. Antimatter drives have exactly the same issues (hum... or maybe this is not widely understood... 'antimatter' sounds much better than 'nuclear'...)
Tor
antimatter HARDdrive.. (Score:2)
i guess one shouldn't be staying up too long after donating blood.
Sorry for yet another Star Trek reference, but... (Score:4, Interesting)
Since matter/antimatter reactions cause 2 gamma-frequency photons to be thrown off at right predictable angles to the impact vectors of the original matter and antimatter particles, an engine could be designed that ensured that one of the 2 photons always exited from the engine exhaust port to propel the ship. What of the other one? Position a crystal in the appropriate location to catch the second photon. Depending on the structure of the crystal, the result would either be mechanical (heat or vibration) or electrical energy which could be converted and/or stored as needed.
Re:Sorry for yet another Star Trek reference, but. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Sorry for yet another Star Trek reference, but. (Score:3, Funny)
how do you stop the damn thing... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:how do you stop the damn thing... (Score:3, Informative)
You very quickly pile up speed too. If you accelerate at 1g for a year, you get rather close to c. If you ever want to return home tho, you'll have to be careful: at 0.99999999996c, you can cross the galaxy in 12 years of your own time, but 113 000 years will pass for us back here.
Re:how do you stop the damn thing... (Score:4, Informative)
Some of the Russian Venera and Luna probes took the first approach--deliberately crashing into Venus or the Moon, respectively. NASA's Voyager craft did a tremendous amount of good science with just flybys. Galileo (the spacecraft, not the Italian scientist) dropped a probe into Jupiter's atmosphere and then settled into two years of orbiting the planet.
Re:won't work (Score:2)
Warp Drive works by pushing space against itself through the use of warp fields, has nothing to do with matter.
Didn't you take warp field theory 1000 at Starfleet Academy?
Sure it will! (Score:2, Insightful)
in the case of antimatter propellant, instead of a reactive force, the propellant will just annhilate the surrounding matter
While this reasoning is completely valid. They are not proposing simply injecting antimatter into a combustion chamber. The point is that they will use antimatter in combination with matter (similar to the way they use both oxygen and nitrogen in today's spacecraft). That way the inject matter and the inject antimatter ahihilate each other, causing a large release of energy which propels the spacecraft forward.
neurostarRe:won't work (Score:4, Informative)
Example: a dude sitting on a sled on a frozen pond, with a sackful of bricks. When he throws a brick off the sled in one direction, the sled moves in the other direction. Because there is very little friction between the sled and the ice, the sled keeps moving. Throw more bricks, and the sled will go faster.
To make everything clear: the sled is like a rocket, the bricks are like fuel, and space has even less friction than a frozen pond. Because the total momentum of the system must be conserved, as fuel is burned and exhaust is generated, the rocket moves forward.
Re:won't work (Score:5, Funny)
Te ice breaks and he sinks....thus, never posting about his high school physics class again.
Re:won't work (Score:2, Interesting)
No.
The protons and antiprotons would react, producing two photons. Figure out how to reflect the gamma rays in one direction, and the ship will be accelerated in the other direction. Light has momentum (E=pc).
This is why they are using a sail on this design. Spread the reaction out over a large surface and the the radiation intensity won't be as bad.
Re:won't work (Score:2)
While I have not read the details of this idea, it is not theoretically impossible with an antimatter drive.
There is no higher law of nature that says that antimatter must be anihilated in our world - it is just the likely outcome if it comes within the proximity of normal matter. It the antimatter is handled with enough sophistication (for example, kept at bay by EM forces) it could be eventually be thrown out of the spacecraft (thus propelling it by Newton's 3rd).
Even if the antimatter was anihiilated the resulting energy could be harnessed to throw away something else (for example ions in an ion propulsion system).
Tor
Re:Take about 20 years (Score:2, Funny)