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Basically, the idea is to launch the probe at nearly the speed of light
from a particle accelerator. That gets us to Alpha Centauri in less than 5 years, and the data back in less than 10. I see big engineering challenges, but no theoretical obstacles. 1. The probe must be small enough and the accelerator big enough that they're compatible. 2. The probe must be launched in a vacuum, meaning the accelerator must be built in space. 3. The small probe must be able to transmit to earth from trillions of miles away. 4. The probe must be able to resist the magnetic & electrical fields in the accelerator. One thing that helps is that 90% of the speed of light would suffice. Thus, no Tevatron required. Comments? Am I crazy? Greg |
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#4
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#5
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![]() jcon wrote: Robert Clark wrote: I think the idea is workable with a slight modification. The problem is there would be limited science you could do with such small particles. So instead fire the small particles with the inbuilt ability to assemble themselves into a larger device. I'm thinking of particles the size of a virus or perhaps a bacterium. There have already been cases where a synthetic virus has been created from scratch. I believe there is ongoing research to create synthetic bacteria. Probably a synthetic life form with the complexity of a virus would be sufficient to be able to assemble itself and its fellow particles into their correct positions for a workable scientific instrument. You could probably fire the paricles from the ground if you had sufficient redundancy so that if some are lost on contacting the air, they could still assemble themselves into a workable device at their destination. The nice thing about this approach is that the virii wouldn't have to all have the insructions for creating the large instrument or spacecraft themselves. The complexity and size of the instrument could be built up step by step. The initial virii would only have simple instructions for coming together in interlocking pieces to form larger components. Then when these larger components are formed they would automatically have the more complex intructions and propulsion means formed to construct the full spacecraft. I think this is doable with current technology. A question though is how high is the mass that particle accelerators can accelerate particles to near light speed? I know they can accelerate helium nuclei for example. Can they accelerate uranium nuclei? How many uranium nuclei would a virus weigh? - Bob Bob, I think you need to check some of your numbers and assumptions. Your fundamental misconception is that you seem to believe there's some advantage to launching a bunch of very small things as opposed to one large thing. Yes, particle accelerators can accelerate things up to heavy neuclei to very close to the speed of light, BUT the numbers they accelerate are orders of magnitude smaller than Avagadro's Number, which is the scale you would need to assemble something macroscopic, even if you could figure out a way to do such a thing. If you could figure out a way to accelerate that many particles, then it would take just as much energy as assembling it beforehand and launching it whole. -jc Check on how accelerators work. My understanding is that they will accelerate any charged body in the device because they work by magnetic fields; large particles though will be accelerated to lower speeds. Some ref's put the number of particles accelerated in modern accelerators at the tens of trillions. So put large numbers of the synth-virii in the device and run it continuously. Bob Clark |
#6
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![]() Robert Clark wrote: jcon wrote: Robert Clark wrote: I think the idea is workable with a slight modification. The problem is there would be limited science you could do with such small particles. So instead fire the small particles with the inbuilt ability to assemble themselves into a larger device. I'm thinking of particles the size of a virus or perhaps a bacterium. There have already been cases where a synthetic virus has been created from scratch. I believe there is ongoing research to create synthetic bacteria. Probably a synthetic life form with the complexity of a virus would be sufficient to be able to assemble itself and its fellow particles into their correct positions for a workable scientific instrument. You could probably fire the paricles from the ground if you had sufficient redundancy so that if some are lost on contacting the air, they could still assemble themselves into a workable device at their destination. The nice thing about this approach is that the virii wouldn't have to all have the insructions for creating the large instrument or spacecraft themselves. The complexity and size of the instrument could be built up step by step. The initial virii would only have simple instructions for coming together in interlocking pieces to form larger components. Then when these larger components are formed they would automatically have the more complex intructions and propulsion means formed to construct the full spacecraft. I think this is doable with current technology. A question though is how high is the mass that particle accelerators can accelerate particles to near light speed? I know they can accelerate helium nuclei for example. Can they accelerate uranium nuclei? How many uranium nuclei would a virus weigh? - Bob Bob, I think you need to check some of your numbers and assumptions. Your fundamental misconception is that you seem to believe there's some advantage to launching a bunch of very small things as opposed to one large thing. Yes, particle accelerators can accelerate things up to heavy neuclei to very close to the speed of light, BUT the numbers they accelerate are orders of magnitude smaller than Avagadro's Number, which is the scale you would need to assemble something macroscopic, even if you could figure out a way to do such a thing. If you could figure out a way to accelerate that many particles, then it would take just as much energy as assembling it beforehand and launching it whole. -jc Check on how accelerators work. My understanding is that they will accelerate any charged body in the device because they work by magnetic fields; large particles though will be accelerated to lower speeds. Some ref's put the number of particles accelerated in modern accelerators at the tens of trillions. So put large numbers of the synth-virii in the device and run it continuously. Several comments: 1. Accelerators accelerate with electric fields. The magnetic fields are there only to steer the particles back around to the electric field again. 2. The rate of acceleration is roughly proportional to q/m where q is the charge of the particle and m is the rest mass. This also constrains how big the steering magnet field has to be. Thus, if you want to get the same acceleration for a particle of A nucleons as you do for a proton, then you have to give it a charge of Ae. Not doing so lowers the energy obtained AND forces the ring to be larger. 3. Giving a particle of mass A daltons a charge of Ae is conceivable for single nuclei, but would immediately disrupt the bonds of any molecule, let alone one the size of a virus. 4. A free beam of charged particles diverges naturally because of, well, their charge. This is corrected for in a storage ring with focusing magnets, but those would not be available in the long run between here and Alpha Centauri. A free beam of particles would diffuse hopelessly well before leaving the solar system. 5. Alignment in accelerator rings is done to the tens of microns and relies on firm anchoring in bedrock. (LEP saw the effect of the tides on its measurements of the Z mass.) Accomplishing this in a ring of this size in orbit would be a, let's say, costly exercise. 6. The number of particles stored in a beam is indeed (on a good day) tens of trillions of particles. That's 1E13. A store usually takes an hour to fill and ramp up. It's been pointed out to you that what would be required would be a collection of particles (all within close proximity) of order a mole. A mole is of order 1E23. That is ten billion stores, or ten billion hours, or a bit over a million years. This might work for a cute science fiction story, but not as a technical proposal. Not even on the back of an envelope. PD |
#7
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![]() Robert Clark wrote: jcon wrote: Robert Clark wrote: I think the idea is workable with a slight modification. The problem is there would be limited science you could do with such small particles. So instead fire the small particles with the inbuilt ability to assemble themselves into a larger device. I'm thinking of particles the size of a virus or perhaps a bacterium. There have already been cases where a synthetic virus has been created from scratch. I believe there is ongoing research to create synthetic bacteria. Probably a synthetic life form with the complexity of a virus would be sufficient to be able to assemble itself and its fellow particles into their correct positions for a workable scientific instrument. You could probably fire the paricles from the ground if you had sufficient redundancy so that if some are lost on contacting the air, they could still assemble themselves into a workable device at their destination. The nice thing about this approach is that the virii wouldn't have to all have the insructions for creating the large instrument or spacecraft themselves. The complexity and size of the instrument could be built up step by step. The initial virii would only have simple instructions for coming together in interlocking pieces to form larger components. Then when these larger components are formed they would automatically have the more complex intructions and propulsion means formed to construct the full spacecraft. I think this is doable with current technology. A question though is how high is the mass that particle accelerators can accelerate particles to near light speed? I know they can accelerate helium nuclei for example. Can they accelerate uranium nuclei? How many uranium nuclei would a virus weigh? - Bob Bob, I think you need to check some of your numbers and assumptions. Your fundamental misconception is that you seem to believe there's some advantage to launching a bunch of very small things as opposed to one large thing. Yes, particle accelerators can accelerate things up to heavy neuclei to very close to the speed of light, BUT the numbers they accelerate are orders of magnitude smaller than Avagadro's Number, which is the scale you would need to assemble something macroscopic, even if you could figure out a way to do such a thing. If you could figure out a way to accelerate that many particles, then it would take just as much energy as assembling it beforehand and launching it whole. -jc Check on how accelerators work. My understanding is that they will accelerate any charged body in the device because they work by magnetic fields; large particles though will be accelerated to lower speeds. Some ref's put the number of particles accelerated in modern accelerators at the tens of trillions. So put large numbers of the synth-virii in the device and run it continuously. Several comments: 1. Accelerators accelerate with electric fields. The magnetic fields are there only to steer the particles back around to the electric field again. 2. The rate of acceleration is roughly proportional to q/m where q is the charge of the particle and m is the rest mass. This also constrains how big the steering magnet field has to be. Thus, if you want to get the same acceleration for a particle of A nucleons as you do for a proton, then you have to give it a charge of Ae. Not doing so lowers the energy obtained AND forces the ring to be larger. 3. Giving a particle of mass A daltons a charge of Ae is conceivable for single nuclei, but would immediately disrupt the bonds of any molecule, let alone one the size of a virus. 4. A free beam of charged particles diverges naturally because of, well, their charge. This is corrected for in a storage ring with focusing magnets, but those would not be available in the long run between here and Alpha Centauri. A free beam of particles would diffuse hopelessly well before leaving the solar system. 5. Alignment in accelerator rings is done to the tens of microns and relies on firm anchoring in bedrock. (LEP saw the effect of the tides on its measurements of the Z mass.) Accomplishing this in a ring of this size in orbit would be a, let's say, costly exercise. 6. The number of particles stored in a beam is indeed (on a good day) tens of trillions of particles. That's 1E13. A store usually takes an hour to fill and ramp up. It's been pointed out to you that what would be required would be a collection of particles (all within close proximity) of order a mole. A mole is of order 1E23. That is ten billion stores, or ten billion hours, or a bit over a million years. This might work for a cute science fiction story, but not as a technical proposal. Not even on the back of an envelope. PD |
#8
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My idea was to launch fully assembled, yet very small probes, so beam
divergence would not be an issue. Point 5 is a very good one. Maybe build it on the moon? It also seems that at the very least, the probe could not have any moving parts, thus limiting its design. I'm not about to suggest this is a technical proposal, just an envelope back. Or better, a bar napkin. Most proposals for interstellar travel require Star Trek technology. My idea may be theoretically possible, even if it is an engineering impossibility. Thanks, Greg |
#9
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Dear PD:
"PD" wrote in message oups.com... .... 4. A free beam of charged particles diverges naturally because of, well, their charge. This is corrected for in a storage ring with focusing magnets, but those would not be available in the long run between here and Alpha Centauri. A free beam of particles would diffuse hopelessly well before leaving the solar system. If we are improving the science fiction story, the self-assembly could begin immediately after acceleration ceased. No need to wait for diffusion to occur. In fact you could direct another beam, one of electrons to neutralize the repulsive charge pf the outgoing "charged bodies"... The idea is still very broken, but this part I can "fix"... ;) David A. Smith |
#10
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Apparently there is research on table-top accelerators to accelerate
molecules up to 10,000 atomic mass units: Tabletop linear accelerator for massive molecules Creator/Author Hendell, E. ; Even, U. [Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, School of Chemistry, Tel Aviv University (Israel)] Review of Scientific Instruments ; VOL. 66 ; ISSUE: 7 ; PBD: Jul 1995 "A simple, tabletop, linear accelerator based on low duty factor square wave pulses has been developed to accelerate very heavy molecular ions (100--10 000 a.m.u.) to energies of tens of keV. The accelerator can be added to existing mass spectrometers to improve the detection efficiency (secondary electron yield) of both positive and negatively charged clusters.{copyright}{ital 1995}{ital American}{ital Institute}{ital of}{ital Physics}." http://www.osti.gov/energycitations/...osti_id=165353 Though I don't know what speeds can be achieved with these heavy molecules. These are table-top intruments. So could be ramped up to accelerate very many of these molecules. Bob Clark PD wrote: Several comments: 1. Accelerators accelerate with electric fields. The magnetic fields are there only to steer the particles back around to the electric field again. 2. The rate of acceleration is roughly proportional to q/m where q is the charge of the particle and m is the rest mass. This also constrains how big the steering magnet field has to be. Thus, if you want to get the same acceleration for a particle of A nucleons as you do for a proton, then you have to give it a charge of Ae. Not doing so lowers the energy obtained AND forces the ring to be larger. 3. Giving a particle of mass A daltons a charge of Ae is conceivable for single nuclei, but would immediately disrupt the bonds of any molecule, let alone one the size of a virus. 4. A free beam of charged particles diverges naturally because of, well, their charge. This is corrected for in a storage ring with focusing magnets, but those would not be available in the long run between here and Alpha Centauri. A free beam of particles would diffuse hopelessly well before leaving the solar system. 5. Alignment in accelerator rings is done to the tens of microns and relies on firm anchoring in bedrock. (LEP saw the effect of the tides on its measurements of the Z mass.) Accomplishing this in a ring of this size in orbit would be a, let's say, costly exercise. 6. The number of particles stored in a beam is indeed (on a good day) tens of trillions of particles. That's 1E13. A store usually takes an hour to fill and ramp up. It's been pointed out to you that what would be required would be a collection of particles (all within close proximity) of order a mole. A mole is of order 1E23. That is ten billion stores, or ten billion hours, or a bit over a million years. This might work for a cute science fiction story, but not as a technical proposal. Not even on the back of an envelope. PD |
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