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On Nov 17, 4:45*pm, David Spain wrote:
Pat Flannery writes: The free pdf of the book is hehttp://www.neofuel.com/inhabit/inhabit..pdf Pat So I've always wondered what would be easier and more cost effective. A "fixed fuel" design based on a set number of stored, pre-built bombs, or flying a production reactor that could produce plutonium and deuterium and/or tritium on-the-fly as well as generate electricity for the spacecraft? The bombs get built as needed and it gives the crew something to do (yes, other than expanding the crew) during the interstellar legs of the flight. I'm purposely ignoring all the treaties that'd have to be redone in order to enable any of this... Dave http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_pulse_propulsion |
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On Nov 29, 8:54*am, Sam West wrote:
On Nov 17, 4:45*pm, David Spain wrote: Pat Flannery writes: The free pdf of the book is hehttp://www.neofuel.com/inhabit/inhabit.pdf Pat So I've always wondered what would be easier and more cost effective. A "fixed fuel" design based on a set number of stored, pre-built bombs, or flying a production reactor that could produce plutonium and deuterium and/or tritium on-the-fly as well as generate electricity for the spacecraft? The bombs get built as needed and it gives the crew something to do (yes, other than expanding the crew) during the interstellar legs of the flight. I'm purposely ignoring all the treaties that'd have to be redone in order to enable any of this... Dave http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_pulse_propulsion Laser light sails are practical for interstellar voyages at 1/3 light speed. Nuclear pulse rockets can only attain 1/300th light speed at best. Laser light sails that travel between nearby stars augmented by laser powered plasma thrusters for planetary operations is ideal. A mobile solar (star) powered laser beam with thin film optics - very similar to the light sail - is transported to the target star to deploy a network of beams to support a steady traffic between nearby stars. |
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On Dec 1, 2:46*pm, William Mook wrote:
On Nov 29, 8:54*am, Sam West wrote: On Nov 17, 4:45*pm, David Spain wrote: Pat Flannery writes: The free pdf of the book is hehttp://www.neofuel.com/inhabit/inhabit.pdf Pat So I've always wondered what would be easier and more cost effective. A "fixed fuel" design based on a set number of stored, pre-built bombs, or flying a production reactor that could produce plutonium and deuterium and/or tritium on-the-fly as well as generate electricity for the spacecraft? The bombs get built as needed and it gives the crew something to do (yes, other than expanding the crew) during the interstellar legs of the flight. I'm purposely ignoring all the treaties that'd have to be redone in order to enable any of this... Dave http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_pulse_propulsion Laser light sails are practical for interstellar voyages at 1/3 light speed. Nuclear pulse rockets can only attain 1/300th light speed at best. Laser light sails that travel between nearby stars augmented by laser powered plasma thrusters for planetary operations is ideal. A mobile solar (star) powered laser beam with thin film optics - very similar to the light sail - is transported to the target star to deploy a network of beams to support a steady traffic between nearby stars. I see the following development arcs; MEMS based rockets, MEMs based inertial guidance, MEMS based life support, etc. Conventional liquid fuel rockets built with MEMs components around existing aeroshell and tankage technology. Creation of fully reusable cryogenic and non-cryogenic liquid fuel rockets with aforementioned components. 1) commercial moon tourism flights 2) development of global wireless hotspot Meanwhile, large terrestrial solar arrays using ultra-low-cost solar energy technology produce hydrogen (200 kg per acre per day) to displace coal in coal fired power plants, and also to combine with stranded coal to make synfuels (gasoline, diesel fuel, jet fuel) to displace conventional fuels. 3) development of space based solar pumped IR laser operating at 1,000 nm - This increases hydrogen production at terrestrial sites to 4,000 kg per acre per day - far surpassing carbon based synfuel and supporting a hydrogen economy. 4) use of space based solar pumped IR lasers to drive MEMs based plasma engine array powered spacecraft expanding presence in space and use of spacecraft in every day life. http://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/res...etcomplex.html Development of super energetic super-collider to explore anti-matter and minature black hole production (possibly on the lunar surface) 5) solar power satellite optics for beaming IR energy interplanetary distances 6) use of solar sail technology to move power sats into close solar orbit rising to TW levels 7) beam high intensity laser energy around solar system in support of interplanetary commerce 8) solar power satellite optics for beaming IR energy interstellar distances 9) expand size of solar orbiting infrastructure to quadrillion watt level. 10) develop laser driven light sail technology 11) multi-stage laser light sail 12) dispatch laser beaming systems to remote star systems for two-way interstellar commerce. At this point we have achieved a transport system that allows commerce between stars at 1/3 light speed. If the development of black hole based technology is successful along the lines described (or others) then we can imagine building black hole forges at Sol and any star system we have reached, and with these support 30 day journeys between star using extreme dilation to good advantage. So, we have an expanding shell moving outward at 1/3 light speed and a network of high speed 'gates' consisting of two black hole bodies orbiting one another at near light speed - large enough to dispatch a reasonably sized ship at very nearly light speed. Period Number Spanning time 50 years 1,200 stars 5 months 100 years 9,200 stars 11 months 150 years 33,500 stars 16 months 200 years 79,400 stars 21 months 250 years 155,100 stars 27 months 300 years 268,100 stars 32 months Assuming we started expanding along these lines in 2050 - a three year journey to the 'rim' and back in 2350 that took three years ship time, would return the crew and passengers to Earth in 2650 - so travel deep into space and back would also be travel into the future as Einstein predicted. |
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William Mook wrote:
12) dispatch laser beaming systems to remote star systems for two-way interstellar commerce. At this point we have achieved a transport system that allows commerce between stars at 1/3 light speed. If the development of black hole based technology is successful along the lines described (or others) then we can imagine building black hole forges at Sol and any star system we have reached, and with these support 30 day journeys between star using extreme dilation to good advantage. So, we have an expanding shell moving outward at 1/3 light speed and a network of high speed 'gates' consisting of two black hole bodies orbiting one another at near light speed - large enough to dispatch a reasonably sized ship at very nearly light speed. The black holes orbitting each other would have tides strong enough to atomize any ship. Building them big enough to not have that problem would take many solar masses. Period Number Spanning time 50 years 1,200 stars 5 months 100 years 9,200 stars 11 months 150 years 33,500 stars 16 months 200 years 79,400 stars 21 months 250 years 155,100 stars 27 months 300 years 268,100 stars 32 months Assuming we started expanding along these lines in 2050 - a three year journey to the 'rim' and back in 2350 that took three years ship time, would return the crew and passengers to Earth in 2650 - so travel deep into space and back would also be travel into the future as Einstein predicted. If a species developed interstellar travel, how long would it take to span a galaxy? Depending on the numbers it ends up anywhere in the 1 million to 20 million year range. That's long enough for species to differentiate but short in comparison to the lives of stars. The fact that we have not seen aliens suggests that no species has developed interstellar travel, or they are now extinct and we have evolved since thei last visit (consistant with the 20 million year time span), or they do not visit planets like Earth routinely. I have considered fusion drives that can propel ships to well under %1 of C. Such ships would give us access to the comets in the Kuiper belt and Oort cloud. The Oort cloud is far enough from the Sun that solar radiation would require much less shielding than travel in the inner systems. The comets in the Oort cloud are so far apart that fusion drives would be needed for commerce, but once out there the total resources available there would be far larger than the total resources available on the surfaces of planets. Also comets may thinly fill all of interstellar space not just be bound to stars. When I think that through I think that once out away from the Sun there's no longer much incentive to go star to star. Comet to comet is closer, less resource intensive, and less limited. I suspect that interstellar civilizations end up nearly ignoring inner solar systems, if any such civilizations exist. If civilizations use comets in interstellar space, they would span a galaxy in a time scale of 10s of millions of years. They should be visible from there fusion flames, shouldn't they? We don't see fusion flames. That's as far as I had considered until you mentioned neutrino jets for propulsion. We would not see such flames without a lot more effort than pointing telescopes and looking for light or looking for X-ray and gamma ray bursts with satellite telescopes. Satellite telescopes do see X-ray and gamma ray burst that are currently attributed to natural events. Could they be fusion flames? But if neutrinos could be used for propulsion there would be no fusion flames. How to focus both the neutrinos and anti-neutinos to eject in the same direction to make neutrinos into a rocket flame? They would tend to be created in matched pairs going in opposite directions so they would tend to cancel out. Solve that problem, find a way to generate lots of them, and neutrino rockets could work very well. Extremely advanced science and technology compared to our current level - Using fusion torches to go comet to comet is much closer to our current level. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Nuclear Orion Memories | Pat Flannery | History | 64 | January 4th 10 01:01 AM |
Nuclear Orion Memories | David Spain | Policy | 5 | December 2nd 09 12:05 AM |
Project Orion: 10-meter nuclear pulse vehicles in detail | [email protected] | History | 11 | May 4th 08 09:21 PM |
Project Orion - a massive, nuclear-powered spacecraft | [email protected][_1_] | Policy | 1 | February 15th 08 10:41 PM |