Spacecraft Made From Ultra Thin Foam Could Reach Proxima Centauri In 185 Years (newsweek.com) 155
An anonymous reader quotes Newsweek:
A hypothetical spacecraft made from an extremely thin layer of a synthetic foam could technically make it to our closest neighboring star Proxima Centauri in just 185 years, scientists have said. If Voyager were to make the same journey, it would take around 73,000 years, according to NASA.
In a study that is due to be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, René Heller from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Germany, and colleagues, propose the spacecraft as a precursor to interstellar travel — beyond our own solar system. They estimate a prototype would cost around $1 million, while the launch of an interplanetary mission would be around $10 million.
The spacecraft would be made from aerographite. This is a carbon-based foam that is around 15,000 times more lightweight than aluminium. It is versatile and light enough that it could be used to create solar sails — "which harness energy from the sun for propulsion, a process called solar photon pressure... In most cases, photons would have little impact on an object. But if the target is an ultralight material, such as aerographite, then the target can actually be pushed to significant speed," he said.
"We found out that a thin layer of aerographite, with a thickness of about 1 millimeter (0.04 inches), can be pushed to speeds that are sufficiently high to let it escape the solar system. Once it has gained an initial push from the solar radiation pressure, it will simply float through space...."
Heller said these spacecraft could travel far faster than any probe ever sent by humans before.
In a study that is due to be published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, René Heller from the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Germany, and colleagues, propose the spacecraft as a precursor to interstellar travel — beyond our own solar system. They estimate a prototype would cost around $1 million, while the launch of an interplanetary mission would be around $10 million.
The spacecraft would be made from aerographite. This is a carbon-based foam that is around 15,000 times more lightweight than aluminium. It is versatile and light enough that it could be used to create solar sails — "which harness energy from the sun for propulsion, a process called solar photon pressure... In most cases, photons would have little impact on an object. But if the target is an ultralight material, such as aerographite, then the target can actually be pushed to significant speed," he said.
"We found out that a thin layer of aerographite, with a thickness of about 1 millimeter (0.04 inches), can be pushed to speeds that are sufficiently high to let it escape the solar system. Once it has gained an initial push from the solar radiation pressure, it will simply float through space...."
Heller said these spacecraft could travel far faster than any probe ever sent by humans before.
At 4300 miles per SECOND... (Score:4, Interesting)
...hitting anything more massive than a puff of gas would turn it into a cloud of fragments.
And, even in the ultra-high vacuum between stars, there's enough little bits and pieces floating around to do that, over the course of several light-years.
Would it though? (Score:4, Interesting)
hitting anything more massive than a puff of gas would turn it into a cloud of fragments.
Why wouldn't it simply puncture a hole in the extremely thin material? It seems like it's so thin, there is very little surface area to propagate any kind of shock wave from an impact...
I'd be more worried about potential micro-collisions subtly altering course over such a long time and distance. In the middle of the journey since it's just floating, it seems like it would not be able to course correct without some heavier gear than just the big sail.
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Only if the thing it hit was a very small, very dense object, and only if there was only one or two hitting it.
The other problem is that the material they're using would necessarily be incredibly stiff for its size, and incredibly stiff things tend to not do very well with high-speed impacts.
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Only if the thing it hit was a very small, very dense object, and only if there was only one or two hitting it.
Wouldn't anything out in interstellar space be very likely tiny and rare though? Running into any sizable anything much less a lot of it seems like it would be extremely unlikely.
The other problem is that the material they're using would necessarily be incredibly stiff for its size
I don't think that would be the case being so thin, the whole thing would be so light the panels would not have to be
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Wouldn't anything out in interstellar space be very likely tiny and rare though?
Or, you can use your brain instead of being a mouth breathing ignorant. More planets than stars, more moons than planets, more asteroids than moons,
Its the rule of numerous small and its NOT FUCKING NEW AT ALL.
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I have to say, your strange, confusing and kind of ignorant rant which ignores the basics of solar systems does not make me more interested in your newsletter at all and I would not like to subscribe. :-/
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More planets than stars, more moons than planets, more asteroids than moons, ....
Its the rule of numerous small and its NOT FUCKING NEW AT ALL.
And all next to nothing compared to the space they occupy.
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Wouldn't anything out in interstellar space be very likely tiny and rare though?
No. No, that is not at all how that works. It isn't even close enough to shake loose an explanation, either. You declared the universe to be a solid.
Re: Would it though? (Score:2)
Of course it's solid - if space were a vaccuum you wouldn't have all those piu-piu noises of laser cannons and loud explosions during every single outer space battle ever committed to film between two starships! :)
sci-fi wouldn't lie for dramatic effect, surely.
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*sigh*
You're trying to be smart, but you forgot that:
1) those aren't lasers, you're confusing etymology with meaning; you can see them move from one side of the screen to the other, so you have no excuse for this mistake
2) firing projectile weapons that use an explosion to force the projectile out of a barrel would make noise in space, just a different noise.
3) explosions make sound in space. If you don't have sound, you don't have an explosion. The timing of who hears it when is very different, but there i
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You have a Hollywood sense of what space is like. Even in the inner solar system, the odds of an accidental collision when traveling across the asteroid belt are astronomically small (one in a billion or so). The Oort Cloud is even more ridiculously sparse - it's vastly larger and not confined to a plane. You'd need to make a real effort to touch an object there.
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"Filled with": no. The volume of space the Oort Cloud exists in is huge: from 2,000 out, to 200,000 AU. For all practical purposes, that can be treated as a sphere on the order of radius 100k AU, which is to say a volume (10**5)**3 = 10**15 times the volume contained within Earth's orbit. Whatever mass there is out there is spread out over that region, with a mass of the outer Oort Cloud estimated at 5xEarth, concentrated in chunks of around 1km**3 (taking this data from the Wikipedia article you referen
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and it is most decidely filled with NOT tiny things, in fact just the opposite its filled by big icy things which is where we believe our long period comets come from.
Complete hogwash, it isn't like that at all, read a fucking book for once in your damn life. That is stupid and simplistic.
It is a dust cloud. A very thin dust cloud. It isn't "filled" at all.
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ok, if you're so certain, and this is in a book, how about a citation?
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Wikipedia is over there somewhere. You shouldn't be so credulous that you need people in a conversation to tell you where to find information. If you do that, people will fill your head with various things. Instead, learn how to use books. Then you'll be able to find the book, in order to look up the information.
In fact, he even linked the wikipedia above, that he didn't understand. It says, for example, that the outer Oort cloud has "neighboring objects tens of millions of kilometres apart" and a combine
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Wouldn't anything out in interstellar space be very likely tiny and rare though?
We really do not know. And therein lies the real value of such a probe: Probing the interstellar medium.
Even if it doesn't get to Alpha Centauri in operable condition, knowing how it was destroyed, or the rate at which such craft are destroyed, or the mean distance one could travel, is very valuable data and will likely help pave the way to design the next generation of interstellar craft.
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Why does it have to be stiff? It's a solar sail. It can flex.
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Assuming deviating 100 million miles on arrival making any (unlikely camera pics) pointless, you'd need an orthogonal mph shift of 62 mph to deviate that far in ~180 years.
Not very likely.
would it be a kinetic weapon at that point (Score:3)
I'd be worried about sending a kinetic weapon their way.
Shouldn't a craft with solar sails large enough to be accelerated by our own sun, also slow the craft down substantially as it approached the other solar system? Assuming the craft design does not decide to discard the solar sails mid journey.
But even if it didn't slow down on approach as well, the craft is so light I would think even going far faster, it would be inherently less dangerous than the normal debris floating around any solar system.
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I'd be worried about sending a kinetic weapon their way.
Shouldn't a craft with solar sails large enough to be accelerated by our own sun, also slow the craft down substantially as it approached the other solar system? Assuming the craft design does not decide to discard the solar sails mid journey.
Solar sails are directional. If the sails are pointing in the direction of travel towards the target system, then without thrusters or reaction wheels it won't be able to turn the sail around. I'm sure that one could engineer the sail to be effective in both directions, but that would significantly affect the weight.
But even if it didn't slow down on approach as well, the craft is so light I would think even going far faster, it would be inherently less dangerous than the normal debris floating around any solar system.
Energy is doubled when mass is doubled, but energy is quadrupled when velocity is quadrupled. So given a target significantly more massive than the projectile, faster projectiles are capable of
Plastic waste (Score:2)
This is great.
Now the Alpha Centaurians need to worry about interstellar plastic waste?
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Voyager gave us the first real data on the edge of our solar system. It has maybe 5 more years of life and is 300 years from where we suspect the thing called the Oort Cloud is. What every exploration of space has indicated is that reality is often divergent in some significant way from hypothesis. Voyager re
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I suppose they'd put the equipment in pretty small packages, probably several of them scattered around. So the chance of an impact hitting one of those packages--much less all of them--would be small.
Only ten million? (Score:2)
What are we waiting for?
Seriously. We've shat out four trillion dollars in federal spending in just the last four months, with another 1-3 trillion coming soon. Ten million is like the car dealer refusing to give you the complementary air freshener after you put down $50K on a new pickup.
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"what benefit would we receive from having done it?" Think like a congress critter: think of all the jobs it would create (in your congressional district, of course). That's how NASA's Space Launch System continues to eat dollars.
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This comment is actually more insightful than it looks.
From a political perspective, it appears much better to voters to say "I gave 200k USD to this marginalized community" than to say "I gave 200k USD to this university-educated person". If the real goal is the betterment of mankind, than having rulers selected by popularity contest voted on by people whose only information about the candidates is what they've either sought out themselves or been fed by media, is not the way to do it.
Just Do It (Score:4, Interesting)
If all you need is $10 million, just Kickstart it and promise to send along an etched object with all the backer names on it.
I wonder if that includes the launch costs to get it into orbit?
Why? (Score:4, Interesting)
The other issue is whether we'll get there faster by waiting for better technology. Voyager was launched ~50 years ago and would have taken 73,000 years. Today we can launch an empty shell which will take 185 years. In another 50 years time, it is entirely possible that the travel time will have dropped by far more than 50 years.
Why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
What's the point of sending something like this that cannot report back whatever it finds at Alpha Centauri?
Your lack of desire to have something like this flying through interstellar space, is as baffling to me as my desire to se it out there is to you.
People leave me flyers for stuff on my door all the time. There is still some value in sending stuff out and letting others know we are here, so they can come find us.
But basically, it's just cool to have it out there...
Let the court of Kickstarter decide,
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letting others know we are here, so they can come find us.
4 light years is outside delivery range for most takeout.
Send Photons: Cheaper and Faster (Score:2)
There is still some value in sending stuff out and letting others know we are here, so they can come find us.
Then why not send some photons? They are a lot cheaper to manufacture, they travel a lot faster and they will be a lot easier for anyone out there to detect.
If someone on Alpha Centauri had the same idea as this and set a tiny, lightweight plastic shell to our solar system it would pass right through without us ever noticing: space is big. We would have far more chance to pick up a broadcasted radio signal thanks to projects like SETI but even this is far from easy.
I want to get out into the galaxy a
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What's the point of sending something like this that cannot report back whatever it finds at Alpha Centauri?
What the article didn't mention was this large, flat surface was also going to serve as a intergalactic billboard for Prime Two-Day Shipping.
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You would send one a year. Or even one a month.
They would receive the signal from the previous one and repeat it to the trailing one.
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Heller said the biggest challenges of building an aerographite spacecraft would be to construct something thin enough while also maintaining its structural integrity—especially during the launch into space. They would also have to build tiny, gram-sized, on board electronics that could transmit information back to Earth.
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In another 50 years time, it is entirely possible that the travel time will have dropped by far more than 50 years.
Dyson already did that some 60 years ago.
Transmission received... (Score:3)
Kuiper belt a better use? (Score:2)
What's the minimum weight needed to send back useful info? Test the idea on Kuiper belt objects and send data back.
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Even if you could... (Score:2)
Foam to another star (Score:2)
Indeed, that was my thought as well. Without a payload - a scientific collection package, it's basically useless.
For a probe to be useful, I think that it'd need, at a minimum, a transmission system to send findings back home, and probably a telescope system to do local survey work. Might want a few landing probes as well for any planets.
We can't, yet, make that stuff that lightly, nor so durable that it can be expected to work after 2 centuries in vacuum.
Plus, of course, in the intervening 2 centuries or
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Voyagers and Pioneers are close to 70 years old and work perfectly fine.
70 year old craft (Score:2)
Actually, no, they don't "work perfectly fine" anymore. They still work, but are on the ragged edges of failure, even for their limited mission set at this point. A lot of their equipment has outright failed.
And you still need to figure that they're only at 1/3rd of the necessary endurance.
So, no, we don't have the proven ability to build them at the necessary lightness and endurance for such a mission.
Re:Even if you could... (Score:5, Funny)
ET Foam Home
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Like all thought experiments, if you can't manage to think up a reason to do it, you're just not capable of the thoughts involved.
Re: Even if you could... (Score:2)
So that /. can herald its arrival with a news item, but instead of composing an all-new item, they will reprint this story about the proposed launch, and my teenage clone can post a comment about lazy editors printing a 185-year old dupe!
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to inflict foam on *their* oceans, instead of ours--of course!
hawk
Mars more interesting, at 60 days (Score:2)
60 days to Mars is remarkably fast. The fastest trip from earth to mars was Mariner 7, which took 128 days. The most recent trip in 2011 took 204 days.
Speed is essential, as Mark Watney/Matt Damon can tell you. ;D
Pointless "thought experiment" (Score:5, Interesting)
Many things make this a joke in the real universe we live within. First, and as others have pointed out, such a flimsy vehicle would not be structurally sound enough to withstand the trip - consider hitting even a particle of sand at those speeds. That's far from the only issue however. For the probe to have any value it would need some sensors, a computer, a radio for sending data back home and getting commands from home, systems for orienting the spacecraft and its antennas, etc. This all adds mass, and there needs to be structure linking the solar sail to that mass and spreading the load. That structure has mass too. Then you need to add heaters to keep the systems warm enough in deep space so that systems do not fail for thermal reasons. Then you need to add power supplies for those systems and the heaters, and fuel for the engines used to orient the spacecraft, and more structure to support all that...
Of course, then you need a computer that will run without failure for 185 years. We all know Windows won't do that, but even Linux fanatics have no empirical evidence that their fave OS will run for 185 years without issue. Will modern semiconductors run for 185 years? There's no data on that, but we DO know that modern lead-free solders are guaranteed to fail in far fewer years (look up "tin whiskers").
Remember: You cannot use solar power in deep space, and batteries need a power source to charge them.... so you either need some fuel source that you burn to generate power or a nuclear power source - both have significant mass - and that means more structure which adds more mass...
Then consider the size of the antenna on the spacecraft: if there's no antenna, then there's no data returned to Earth and therefore no point to the proposed mission. Consider that for probes within our solar system, a large dish is needed on the probe and a massive dish at a place like the Goldstone site [wikipedia.org] is needed. A probe in interstellar space might well need a Goldstone-sized dish and an array of such dishes, possibly in a grin on the moon or in orbit might be needed at our end - a signal that's usable might be that weak at those distances. There are a huge number of unknowns here, and none of them likely will go in favor of making this idea easier to implement.
I've only scratched the surface here; the point is that this is not a serious proposal and those proposing it know it. They clearly did not launch it as an actual scientific thing but as a pure day dream fantasy that's valuable only in a college dorm room beer-fueled bull session.
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I always wondered about how much power is needed to communicate back from that far? Somebody smarter there combine Shannon-Hartley with today's receivers capabilities and predict power/antennae system to communicate form that far (at reasonable speed)?
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I can read the message now: ...---...
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In theory the data bandwidth of a channel is proportional to signal-to-noise ratio. So possibly by lowering data rates the power required is lowered. But is there a practical limit though? (I suppose at some level and distance the density of photons go low enough that they start missing the receive antennae but practically the current receivers would have problems before that despite being cooled to lower the thermal noise.?).
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dpille *did* show how the Mars orbiter comparison is pointless: he said "Voyager 1 has a 22.4-Watt transmitter", which is two orders of magnitude less powerful than the Mars orbiter. Also, Voyager 1 is currently nearly 150 AU away, more than 50 times as far away as Mars at its most distant. (dpille didn't give the distances, I guess he was leaving that to our imagination) So it would seem the power we're receiving from Voyager is about 50*100 = 5000 times less than the power from the Mars orbiter.
The dat
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If you don't expect to be able to track it all the way to its destination, it lowers the cost considerably.
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Thinking a bit more (Score:2)
It doesn't have to communicate back from deep space. It would be fine waiting until it arrives to fire up the electronics.
Communicating back isn't the only option. It would be interesting to communicate forward. It could arrive at the star, and just start up a low power beacon... just enough for whoever might be listening to locate the thing. Like Voyager, leave some instructions for how to call us back if they are interested.
We'd probably never hear from it again, but for the price it would be an inter
Here's a workable method (Score:2)
We'll build all the machinery needed into an asteroid, and then fling that out of the solar system. In a little while (on a cosmic scale) it will pass through another solar system, do its measurements, and startle the natives.
The asteroid provides a platform to build on, and you can use as much mass as you like with redundant systems and everything. It also provides shielding from impact, especially if you could pick a long, thin one, and orient it with most of its mass in front of the instruments, relative
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I vote for the asteroid-based spacecraft Giordano Bruno, which suffered a high speed impact en route to Alpha Centauri.
Not interesting without instruments (Score:4, Interesting)
We could also send a gold nucleus at near the speed of light if we wanted to. I think the threshold for interesting is when the object has some way so send some information back.
Fun theoretical, but aside from that.. (Score:2)
Sadly, without faster-than-light everything, ideas like this are in the realm of scie
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Voyager would take 5 days (Score:2)
Meh. I don't know where NASA gets its data from, but even cruising at warp 5, Voyager would only take 5 days to reach Alpha Centauri from Earth.
foam? 185 years? (Score:2)
Show me a foam that wont disintegrate long before 185 years.
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Most foams today are made either cheap and disposable or environment friendly, if you avoid that it can be made extremely durable.
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It's a carbon tube graphite foam.
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Disintegrate? From what? It's not like it's going to be sitting out in the rain and snow and sunlight (at least it won't be in significant sunlight for long).
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Temperature extremes, vibration, impacts, etc. Its not like getting it off of earth and to a point where it can sail through space is a gentle process, it has to ride a controlled explosion or two first. And its not like space is a super clean place, its not really an empty void. When you are travelling at great speed in a brittle structure it doesn't take much to cause a lot of damage, once that damage starts there will be nothing to stop it.
Get there and stay, or just get there? (Score:2)
185 years? (Score:2)
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For laymen a parsec is about 3 light years ... and if you where interested how much it is exactly you had googled it or looked at Wikipedia.
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Is that you, Han?
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'We'll build a MONORAIL!' ... or solar sail (Score:2)
This solar sail keeps getting brought up regularly like some snake oil.
Despite numerous attempts it hasn't proven to work and prominent scientists have suggested the idea is wrong. https://arxiv.org/abs/physics/... [arxiv.org]
It really looks like this is a scam, someone is convincing suckers to invest in this idea.
Engineers vary in their opinion (Score:2)
Back in the 80s, they were saying a 50g probe with a 50 km solar sail would reach 1/4 light speed by the edge of the solar system.
That's not a hundred year journey.
In other news... (Score:2)
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As a proof of concept actually sending it to Proxima Centauri is unnecessary. We can just do this within out solar system. Maybe run it into something - an asteroid perhaps - and watch it explode to time the transit.
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Re: Ultra light weight (Score:2)
Your comment doesn't make sense to a sailor. If you are running (sailing term)from the wind "sun" then you are keeping it to your back. Square rigged boats like what pirates used kept the wind to their back quarter s as much as possible. Now modern Bermuda riggings do swing into the wind and work best st a closer angle. But that is load /weight distribution to consider.
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First you'd need to prove the concept that solar sails actually work.
First of all: no you do not need. It is a no brainer, obviously a solar sail works.
Secondly: oops, we already had a solar sail test mission a few years back, and it worked great.
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Re the test mission, I assume you're referring to this: https://spacenews.com/solar-sa... [spacenews.com]. It's not totally clear to me what it proved: the average orbital height did not increase, only its eccentricity did. That's not encouraging, if your goal is to get to another star. And it's not clear to me that the effect it did experience was due to the pressure of sunlight, rather than (say) the effect of the solar wind. Granted, the test sail was not as light-weight as this proposed one would be, but that's sor
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It does raise some interesting (to me) questions about how far the technique could be scaled up to send larger (and more useful) spacecraft outwards at high speeds.
For example, if we parked a nuclear reactor in solar orbit with enough Big Frickin Lasers (tm), could we send a more reasonably-equipped probe to another star? Or would we just end up incinerating the poor thing?
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Think McFly, Think....
IF the problem is weight, the vehicle weight is but a small portion of the overall total if you want to do something useful. And just being able to fly enough power to track this thing as it wanders through deep space is going to be a significant amount of weight. THEN when you consider what a nuclear power source weighs, along with the heat dissipation area required to dump the waste heat overboard....
Now if you just want to toss some space junk off that way... Why spend millions?
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But what happens when you start piling on [various shit]
You don't, you pay attention to the thought experiment, and notice that it must not include those things. Duh.
Re: Solar Sails? (Score:2)
Re: Solar Sails? (Score:2)
Stolen? Does science want those ideas back?
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Not all of them. You can keep the mirror universe for example.
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Re: Solar Sails? (Score:2)
There double helix DNA was also mirrored
Re: Solar Sails? (Score:2)
There's a currently credible "multiverse theory", which essentially says that our universe is one of an infinite number of universes constantly popping up out of " nothing". This has gone on since forever, and will go on forever, so by definition, for statistical reasons, every combination of every quantum interaction that can ever happen has already happened - infinitely many times. So there are an infinite number of doppelgaenger universes that are exact replicas of ours, down to every single bird, hedge
Re:Solar Sails? (Score:4, Informative)
Wasnt this taken from an episode of Star Trek DS9?
Not unless they're talking about tachyons.
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If it was, then DS9 recycled it from Star Trek IV when one of the disabled ships communicates back to earth that they are attempting to assemble a makeshift solar sail.
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Either it is 15,000 times more heavy than aluminum, or else it is 1/15,000 less heavy than aluminum. "More" indicates greater, not less.
"More lightweight" is in fact grammatically correct.
And since when does Newsweek -- a US publication -- use the British spelling "aluminium" instead of the American spelling "aluminum"?
When the author is from the UK.
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"This is a carbon-based foam that is around 15,000 times more lightweight than aluminium." That sentence makes no sense.
Either it is 15,000 times more heavy than aluminum, or else it is 1/15,000 less heavy than aluminum. "More" indicates greater, not less.
And since when does Newsweek -- a US publication -- use the British spelling "aluminium" instead of the American spelling "aluminum"?
Now look up crystalline structure of matter and discover that there is a variable other than mass that contributes to hardness.
LOL