![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5/19/2011 1:17 PM, wrote:
Considering that the Earth hasn't been knocked out of it's orbit by a close encounter with one of these sometime during it's multi-billion year history, they might be rare in our neck of the galactic woods. Here comes Bellus and Zyra! Waste anything but time! :-) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_Wo...ide_%28film%29 Pat |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article
, Pat Flannery wrote: On 5/19/2011 10:34 AM, Orval Fairbairn wrote: Of course, blindly setting off at relatavistic speeds is a recipe for sure disaster! hitting even a pea-sized mass at that speed would release the energy equivalent of an atomic bomb. So, unless you have some kind of shielding or space-warping techniques, brute force interstellar would be a minefield. Not only that, but the more distant your target star is, the more difficult to know where exactly it will be when you arrive at it. Not only do you have the problem of knowing all the data on its position is already many years old as its light traveled to Earth, but you also have to figure out how its position has changed by gravitational effects of other stars that may have come near it over time, like a three-body problem gone mad. They never seem to discuss how the starship slows down at the end of its trip so it can get more than a few hours glimpse of the target solar system as it moves through it at near light speed. Pat Correct on both counts! In addition, navigation computers might have to resort to multiple precision calculations to accommodate the ephemeris data necessary to navigate. Numeric integration over several years can result in some pretty significant errors! |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pat Flannery ) writes:
On 5/19/2011 8:38 AM, jacob navia wrote: I always thought that warp drives work only in another dimension. Speeding within the Milky Way at almost light speed is impossible anyway since a single wandering dust of 200 grams hitting the spaceship has an energy of an atomic bomb of 1.4937 megatons... That's why you make starships by hollowing out dead white dwarf stars, so you have a couple of hundred miles of diamond between you and outer space for the dust particles to run into. Assuming the shell would support itself, everything inside this literal "star-ship" would be weightless, so you could actually make the concept work...although the hollowing out part of it might be a bit much under its surface gravity field. :-D Also you have to wait for your white dwarf to "die" (by which time you could probably have walked to wherever you were thinking of going). --John Park |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5/20/2011 6:22 AM, John Park wrote:
Also you have to wait for your white dwarf to "die" (by which time you could probably have walked to wherever you were thinking of going). You see, you look for one that's already dead using a starship. Then, once you find one, you can use it to make a starship...wait a minute...there's a problem here... Okay, if we start out with a chicken, it can lay eggs and those will hatch into more chickens...first we must make a rooster to mate with it by genetically engineering the DNA of a dinosaur found trapped in amber. Probably a smaller dinosaur like Compsognathus, as a T-Rex would be unlikely to climb up into a tree where sap could get on it. ....although a Redwood tree would be strong enough to support a T-Rex, allowing it to jump onto passing prey from three hundred feet up as it hid in the branches at the top, neatly explaining how something forty-five feet long could sneak up on its prey stealthily and at high speed. I'd write more, but I have to call Jack Horner and tell him about this new theory and check up on how his chicken/dinosaur work is going: http://www.wired.com/medtech/genetic...ne/17-03/st_qa Pat ;-) |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 20, 7:22*am, (John Park) wrote:
Pat Flannery ) writes: On 5/19/2011 8:38 AM, jacob navia wrote: I always thought that warp drives work only in another dimension. Speeding within the Milky Way at almost light speed is impossible anyway since a single wandering dust of 200 grams hitting the spaceship has an energy of an atomic bomb of 1.4937 megatons... That's why you make starships by hollowing out dead white dwarf stars, so you have a couple of hundred miles of diamond between you and outer space for the dust particles to run into. Assuming the shell would support itself, everything inside this literal "star-ship" would be weightless, so you could actually make the concept work...although the hollowing out part of it might be a bit much under its surface gravity field. :-D Also you have to wait for your white dwarf to "die" (by which time you could probably have walked to wherever you were thinking of going). * * * * --John Park Actually our 0.1 to 1% hollow moon is a very safe way to go interstellar, such as from Sirius(B) to Sol. http://www.wanttoknow.info/ http://translate.google.com/# Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet” |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 19, 9:21*am, David Spain wrote:
Well brother, just the news we need. So much for navigating through interstellar space on Warp Drive. At least until we've charted all these guys... ;-) Dave Naw. We aliens just use a fairly slow boat the only goes a thirtieth the speed of light at most so we can avoid the deadly grains of interstellar sand. Of course, life-extension techniques are vital to this approach plus semi-hibernation pods to shorten the boring trip while maintaining muscle and bone strength. the little green-grey pod person........................Trig |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 22, 3:35*am, |"
wrote: On May 19, 9:21*am, David Spain wrote: Well brother, just the news we need. So much for navigating through interstellar space on Warp Drive. At least until we've charted all these guys... ;-) Dave Naw. We aliens just use a fairly slow boat the only goes a thirtieth the speed of light at most so we can avoid the deadly grains of interstellar sand. Of course, life-extension techniques are vital to this approach plus semi-hibernation pods to shorten the boring trip while maintaining muscle and bone strength. the little green-grey pod person........................Trig Actually .1c for the crew and passengers seems technically doable, and good enough, as long as course changes are kept extremely minimal. Why are you limited to .0333c (9999 km/sec)? http://www.wanttoknow.info/ http://translate.google.com/# Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet” |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 19, 8:56*am, wrote:
"A team of astronomers has identified a novel new kind of galactic wanderer - lone, Jupiter-sized planets expelled from forming solar systems and drifting in the empty void between the stars. The researchers, led by Takahiro Sumi of Japan's Osaka University, spotted 10 such free-floating "orphan planets" in data from a 2006-7 microlensing survey of our galaxy's centre, which searched for the tell-tale sign of transiting bodies' gravitational fields distorting light from distant stars. Team member David Bennett, of the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, explained that this first sighting in a small portion of the Milky Way points to enormous numbers of orphans. He said: "Our survey is like a population census. We sampled a portion of the galaxy, and based on these data, can estimate overall numbers in the galaxy."" See: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/05/19/orphan_planets/ This could be useful for providing credible techno-babble in the remake of "When Worlds Collide." gone Hollywood.........................Trig |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 22, 8:50*am, Brad Guth wrote:
On May 22, 3:35*am, |" wrote: On May 19, 9:21*am, David Spain wrote: Well brother, just the news we need. So much for navigating through interstellar space on Warp Drive. At least until we've charted all these guys... ;-) Dave Naw. We aliens just use a fairly slow boat the only goes a thirtieth the speed of light at most so we can avoid the deadly grains of interstellar sand. Of course, life-extension techniques are vital to this approach plus semi-hibernation pods to shorten the boring trip while maintaining muscle and bone strength. the little green-grey pod person........................Trig Actually .1c for the crew and passengers seems technically doable, and good enough, as long as course changes are kept extremely minimal. Why are you limited to .0333c (9999 km/sec)? *http://www.wanttoknow.info/ *http://translate.google.com/# *Brad Guth, Brad_Guth, Brad.Guth, BradGuth, BG / “Guth Usenet” The lowest bidder developed the drives plus there are safety trade- offs or so I told. When you live nearly forever, you are more risk adverse...........Trig |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 19, 5:08*pm, Pat Flannery wrote:
On 5/19/2011 8:38 AM, jacob navia wrote: I always thought that warp drives work only in another dimension. Speeding within the Milky Way at almost light speed is impossible anyway since a single wandering dust of 200 grams hitting the spaceship has an energy of an atomic bomb of 1.4937 megatons... That's why you make starships by hollowing out dead white dwarf stars, so you have a couple of hundred miles of diamond between you and outer space for the dust particles to run into. Assuming the shell would support itself, everything inside this literal "star-ship" would be weightless, so you could actually make the concept work...although the hollowing out part of it might be a bit much under its surface gravity field. :-D Pat Since everyone seems to be absolutely convinced over FTL velocities being not achievable, due to the presence of interstellar dust particles exploding like hydrogen bombs, then it must be concluded that any interstellar location will at best be reached at subluminal velocity, which in this case seems most feasible. However, in these instances, the space between distant locations can only be reached by transversing through the plane of the galaxy, but not purely within an interference- free zone, with the 3D space that exists, as a projection into both the upper and lower halves of the galaxy, between two objects, or locations. The purest form of FTL flight would use any field that exists without interfering excitations that result in its carrying infor- mation from one location above the spiral arm thickness to another, distant location, that is still above the spiral arm thickness. This represents the ideal field of transversal. The field of transversal above or below the plane of the galaxy would also represent the type of interference-free zone that achieves instantaneous communication to anywhere in the (projected plane) of the galaxy. Of course, instantaneous communication could be achieved to anywhere within the galaxy's spiral arms, however, one would have to take into consideration the large number of repeat, brute force transmissions through this space that might rarely locate the most clear path of instantaneous communication for a few seconds, to then become blocked again by an interfering body a few light years distant. How far above or below the plane of the galaxy that an interference free zone" might exist, depends upon the maximum thickness of the spiral arms, which tend to be about 1000 LY, meaning that there is approximately 500 LY above and 500 LY below the plane of the galaxy. One should also note that this thickness increases to its maximum, as one approaches the center of the galaxy, so that the 500 LY thickness is probably more on the order of 100LY at the outer edges. American "Some rocket scientists are like the TSA of space travel - way too tight and way too much into micromanaging their own paranoia" |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Full Jupiter rotation movie, pix of Jupiter, its moons, and Uranusand Neptune | Thad Floryan | Amateur Astronomy | 2 | December 20th 10 02:40 AM |
ASTRO: Pluto leaving B92 (I hate clouds) Full size | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 3 | July 13th 10 11:37 PM |
ASTRO: M101 Link to full size image | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 9 | April 12th 07 06:29 AM |
why are interstellar planets luminous? | Steve Pope | Astronomy Misc | 1 | August 25th 06 10:40 PM |
Interstellar Dust Bunnies in Taurus: Baby Steps toward New Planets?(Forwarded) | Andrew Yee | Astronomy Misc | 0 | January 10th 06 05:56 AM |