NASA Studying Energy Shields for Spacecraft 76
Shafe writes "SPACE.COM posted an article concerning enhanced shielding technologies research for futuristic spacecraft en route to Mars. One particularly interesting goal is essentially an energy shield known as a 'multipole electrostatic shield' that would deflect both radiation and micro-meteoroids. We're one step closer to Star Trek: shields up!"
I wanted to... (Score:5, Funny)
If it already died, then: "OMGz!! YOU'VE SLASHDOTTED SPACE!!!1"
Re:Now that they have shields, (Score:5, Funny)
I forgot to add "in a tight spandex uniform".
Re:Now that they have shields, (Score:2)
warping of space... (Score:5, Interesting)
Simple, just as soon as we can manipulate space and time like LSD manipultes the mind with the skill and artistry of Davinci and at speeds aproching that of light.
--
echo "ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EAAAABJQAAACB7VnbesvfvrFgPBW+7ZBQdV
And then you get... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:warping of space... (Score:5, Insightful)
(Am I absolutely sure such space warping can't be used for travel? Technically, no. Then again, I'm not absolutely sure that when I drop this apple, it will fall to the ground, either; there's an ever so small chance that it won't, even under conventional QM as I understand it. But unless something really strange opens up at the string theory level, with as I said, no reason with current evidence to believe that it will, you're not getting any of this. You're welcome, as so many Slashbots are wont to do, to post an angry reply saying "How do you know this is impossible? We broke the speed of sound, didn't we?" (Which itself betrays a serious misunderstanding of history, reason why left as an exercise for the reader.) But be aware, the evidence is on my side; FTL has reached the point where we need something magical to make it work, and I don't hold my breath waiting for magic.)
Re:warping of space... (Score:2)
Might I remind you - suckers is an improper choice of word. More like - Black holes are massive gravity wells, forcing particles inwards.
Better now, isnt it?
Re:warping of space... (Score:2)
We know alot, there is still a great deal we don't know and VAST amount we are guessing at and the evidence is straws stacked on top of guesses which may or may not be any better.
We like to pretend physics as we know it is all based around a simple set of guesses which have proven true again and again. Reality is that although there are an initial set of gue
Re:warping of space... (Score:4, Insightful)
You're entitled to your opinion so I won't jump on the rest of your post like I kind of want to.
However, note that teleportation in the conventional sense remains impossible. AFAIK, to date, only single photons have been "teleported" (actually, their quantum state was transferred which still doesn't match most people's mental model; there was still a photon on one end and a photon on the other), and the way in which it was done strongly indicates the impossibility of teleporting anything macroscopic... or for that matter, microscopic. In theory, it's just an "engineering problem"; in reality it's an insurmountable one.
Teleportation, as most people use the word, is more unlikely seeming now then it was fifty years ago. Which brings me to the other nit I'll pick...
I guess what I'm saying is that there is more we don't know than we do know,
Yes, but what we do know increasingly keeps making the probability of ever having certain things continue to recede. More knowlege isn't bringing us closer, it's showing us the uncrossable chasm in increasing detail.
Sure, maybe there's this little string flung across it somewhere, but we've searched more and more of it and we keep finding no such string. Eventually, you have to conclude that it either isn't there, or even if it is, it's so delicate as to be useless.
It's a case of the infinity fallacy: "If we knew an infinite amount of stuff, we'd know how to do X." (A similar argument is often made for "a really, really lot".) But that's a fallacy; an infinite set can still not contain certain elements. The infinite set of all odd numbers does not contain 2, no matter how many of them you examine. To me, it's looking more and more like "how to travel FTL" or "macroscopic teleportation" or a number of other sci-fi concepts ("science-fiction forcefields" (as opposed to the real things, of course, which are entirely different), "time travel" (again in the science fiction senses)) simply isn't in the set of things you can know about the universe, so looking harder isn't going to help. We've been looking harder, and we haven't found any meaningful loopholes to date. The number of places those things can hide is shrinking.
(After all, we're not searching the entire set of knowlege about the universe, which you seem to imply; the fact that I don't know the weather on a planet on the other side of the galaxy does nothing to make FTL possible. The vast sum of knowlege is entirely irrelevant. We're searching a rather narrow domain, and we're running out of places to look.)
Re:warping of space... (Score:2)
I suppose we simply disagree. I don't really see any argument in your post, just your own view.
Personally I don't believe we've uncovered either the smallest
Re:warping of space... (Score:1)
Re:warping of space... (Score:1)
So come back in about two days for the prototype...
Re:warping of space... (Score:1)
Re:warping of space... (Score:2)
Actually, the thing that worries me is that someday we'll be visited by [Aliens|Vulcans|Wookies|Bugs|Centauri|Other], and they'll say to us "No wonder you don't have a warp drive, you still believe in XYZ" where XYZ is something silly, like Schrodengers Cat, Photons, gravity waves, etc..
OB MIB Quote
A person is smart.
People are dumb panicky dangerous animals and you know it.
1500 years ago everybody "knew" the Earth was the center of the universe.
500 years ago everybody "knew" the Earth was flat.
5 minut
SCI-FI hits it again. (Score:4, Insightful)
It really never amazes me when they think up something out of a Roddenberry or Asimov story. They are good ideas, just not possible at the time.
Technically, nothing is impossible....given time
Re:SCI-FI hits it again. (Score:2)
Having said that, Asimov's really just interpersonal relationship hack in outer space. You could take the SF elements out and the story would change only tiny little bit.
article short on details about construction/energy (Score:5, Insightful)
My other question is what sort of energies are we talking about here since protons are fairly massive? I would guess in the 100+ GeV range (ie. particle accelerator size). Any thoughts or better links?
Re:article short on details about construction/ene (Score:5, Informative)
There's no metal spheres involved, just some sort of electrostatic field:
"We have recently observed, however, that the physics and the shielding problem possess certain asymmetries which may be exploited in order to obtain the intended shells of isotropic protection without deploying radially-symmetric charge around the spacecraft. The basic concept is to leverage a multipole expansion of the fields, assigning a different function to different terms in the expansion. As shown in Fig. 1, a positively-repulsive quadrupole term may protect the region closest to the spacecraft from high-energy protons and HZE particles, whereas a weaker but slowly decaying monopole field may deflect thermal electrons away from the larger region of space. The result is that the significant fluxes of both negative and positive particles may be deflected away from the spacecraft using the same electrostatic field. This has the potential to create isotropic protection with a significant reduction in spacecraft mass."
No Trees? (Score:1, Offtopic)
No trees were killed in the sending of this message. However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
That is extremely and profoundly incorrect. Trees were killed. In fact, streams, valleys, and even entire mountains and watersheds were destroyed so that you could send this message. See for yourself.
Here [appvoices.org] and Here. [ohvec.org]
Re:No Trees? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Congratulations, you're a bleeding heart hippie.
P.S. There are only a few places you can economically get coal from. Telling them to stop this sort of mining is impossible as long as people are buying it. On the other hand, coal-fired powerplants are horrific polluters, and there are numerous other ways to generate electricity, which any respectable power company could switch t
Re:No Trees? (Score:1, Offtopic)
I'm impressed, you managed to use this guy's inoffensive and amusing signature to segue into an unrelated environmentalist tirade.
Tirade??? Wow. If you think that was a tirade then you've led an extremely sheltered life. I simply and politely pointed out the fallacy that the poster seemed to believe. The fallacy is that electricity is an environmentally benign energy source. The reality is far, far to the opposite extreme, so I believe it deserved a correction.
Congratulations, you're a bleeding hea
Re:No Trees? (Score:2)
Oh and you gave me
Re:article short on details about construction/ene (Score:1)
Re:article short on details about construction/ene (Score:3, Informative)
Actually when it comes to cosmic rays, the spectrum extends to the EeV range and even beyond. Here's an energy spectrum [uchicago.edu]. In fact I'm doing my PhD on the study of cosmic rays at energies 10-1000 EeV, much higher energies than can be achieved in current particle accelerators.
Shielding (Score:4, Informative)
IIRC, bombarding lead with cosmic rays (high energy radiation) produces secondary radiation, not particles. In terresterial radiation shields, a series of layers of metals is needed to provide protection: shield metal layer n+1 absorbs the secondary radiation from layer n.
Of course, such shields are too heavy for space.
Re:Shielding (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Shielding (Score:1)
Re:Shielding (Score:1)
Re:Shielding (Score:1)
Re:Shielding (Score:1)
You have a point... (Score:2)
Re:Shielding (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's too bad... (Score:1)
The real reason for nacells (Score:5, Interesting)
Outriggers? So the real reason for the nacells on Star Trek is to generate electrostatic fields?
Re:The real reason for nacells (Score:1)
Thats a very brief explanination, you can read a hell of alot more about it [physicsguy.com] if you have the time. I sadly, had that time...
Flexin' the nerd muscles... (Score:2)
Re:Flexin' the nerd muscles... (Score:1)
To answer your question, the sheilds were generated from emmitters all over the ship. When they said something like "forward shields flucutating" it means one or more emmitters was having problems (ie, not enough energy to cope with attack, emmitter was lost and others had to compensate, etc). Atleast thats what I think I remember reading from my frie
Re:The real reason for nacells (Score:1)
I imagine the reason for the nacells on Start Trek is somebody thought they would give the ships a cool futuristic look.
another solution for Mars colonists (Score:5, Interesting)
those survivors might be more resistant to radiation, and could possibly pass on that resistance to their offspring, and so on.
evolution is the key to colonizing other environments.
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:1)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
Simple, Addict them to Crack and make sure you never send coke plants up there.
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:1, Funny)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
That said, I still think it's an interesting idea.
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:2)
Re:another solution for Mars colonists (Score:1)
For the suits on mars (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:For the suits on mars (Score:3, Interesting)
The other problem is that while this plan might be able to stave off bone loss in high-load areas of your skeleton (ie, legs, portions of spine), it doesn't affect the acceleration felt by muscles and bones not directly impacted by a higher load from where the suit contacts your body. It also doesn't
Re:For the suits on mars (Score:2)
good response though, thanks.
Re:For the suits on mars (Score:1)
Re:For the suits on mars (Score:2)
Start rounding up the Scottish (Score:4, Funny)
It will take some careful screening, but who else could keep all of the hardware required for this working?
Re:Start rounding up the Scottish (Score:1)
How would a starship operate without such a captain at the helm?
water. (Score:2, Interesting)
in other words, all this effort to make a spacecraft, when in fact we need to a) blow a very big bubble of water, b) put crew in it, c) shove it off i
Re:water. (Score:2)
Re:water. (Score:2, Interesting)
The problem is that this requires putting a lot of mass into space, a
Re:water. (Score:1)
okay, with regards to the former, i believe we could put a hell of a lot more water into LEO if we just tried (hell, make it a line-item for future World Bank Loans, or some such ficken thing...), and on th elatter, once you push, its no longer a shove. as long as its in the direction you want to go
personally, in a few years time, if there is a 'water is key to space epxloration' e
Re:water. (Score:1)