What are the limits of interstellar travel?

In summary, the conversation discusses the challenges of sending an unmanned probe to a nearby star, including issues of speed, power, and the effects of interstellar dust and debris on the probe's hull and inner workings. One solution proposed is using a fusion rocket with pellets of deuterium/helium-3 mix, which would be ignited by inertial confinement using electron beams. The spacecraft, named Daedalus, would have two stages and would reach speeds of up to 12% of the speed of light. It would also carry sub-probes to gather information about the target star system.
  • #36
qraal said:
Self-replicators capable enough to explore space and survive would be human-equivalent or higher. Better to go ourselves than create a new species with utterly unknown consequences.

I wonder what kind of safety features we could program into self replicating probes to prevent unwanted consequences?

For example, we don't want them mining Earth in the masses. Somehow we need to make sure that if something goes wrong, they know not to mess with earth. But then there is the possibility they find an Earth like planet in another solar system with intelligent life on it, we don't want them necessarily taking them over do we?

Should we program them to only mine and build factories on bodies void of life? Maybe program them to non-invasively observe planets with life on them?

Should these probes be designed so that they cannot self program? No artificial intelligence, just a very large set of blueprints.
 
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  • #37
qraal said:
Self-replicators capable enough to explore space and survive would be human-equivalent or higher. Better to go ourselves than create a new species with utterly unknown consequences. Definitely TRL 2, since we know self-replication can work, but we can't yet demonstrate, for example, a Rep-Rap that can assemble itself from components it has stereoprinted from a tank of feed-stock.

Ok, but at THIS time the best solution would be robots, since we obviously cannot live longer than say 100 years at the max and we have not been able to harness dark matter or other exotic energy to create a possible wormhole connecting interstellar space.
 
  • #38
planethunter said:
Ok, but at THIS time the best solution would be robots, since we obviously cannot live longer than say 100 years at the max and we have not been able to harness dark matter or other exotic energy to create a possible wormhole connecting interstellar space.

Making a human-equivalent robot is no closer than life-extension technologically speaking.
 
  • #39
qraal said:
Making a human-equivalent robot is no closer than life-extension technologically speaking.

True, but what I was trying to say is that a robot can be made to withstand harsher elements than a human being can, so even if we were to be able to extend human life, it still is a fragile life in comparison to the elements that a robot can withstand.

Maybe as nanotechnology advances we will be able to send robots to a distant galaxy that will come together at a certain time to form a larger robot from smaller robots. Since their mass would be at the nano level as they travel to that galaxy, this makes their velocity faster and thus would reach their objective quicker.
 
  • #40
qraal said:
Which TRL definitions are you working off?
Not this one:
qraal said:
Self-replicators capable enough to explore space and survive would be human-equivalent or higher. Better to go ourselves than create a new species with utterly unknown consequences. Definitely TRL 2, since we know self-replication can work ...
On a scale of 1 to 9, Self replicators have a negative TRL.

Regarding VASIMR: Make almost any change and readiness suffers. Make a large change and it suffers a lot. Make a huge change (a couple orders of magnitude or more) and you are back to the drawing board. You are not using the same technology. Engineering does not scale up by orders of magnitude. You are postulating a huge, huge change in thrust, size, power, reliability, and longevity. TRL 2, maybe.
 
  • #41
Can the mass of a body be dramatically altered?
 
  • #42
"Can the mass of a body be dramatically altered?"

Not with the Physics we know, IIRC.

Possible 'gotcha' is the reported, but as yet unrepeatable, anomalous behaviour of some superconductors in magnetic fields, though even that is marginal...

FWIW, I'd like to be able to wire up an array of ambient superconducting tunnel diodes, adjust the drive phasing and evade gravity...
 
  • #43
skippy1729 said:
For simplicity consider an unmanned probe to a star in our neighbourhood say 10 to 20 LY.

Most discussions of this concentrate on speed and power. But what is the fastest realistic velocity? 40,000 MPH (~ 1/10 of 1% of light speed)? Even at this speed interstellar dust banging away at the ships hull for hundreds of thousands of years is going to be a big problem. Not to mention the occasional pebble or golf ball. The kinetic energy of the impacts increasing with the velocity squared.

If we accept hundreds of thousands of years and build a suitable hull, what about the innards? There will have to be some moving parts. Take a valve for fuel to thrusters for example. It will not be used often but can we build one that will actually function after sitting for half a million years? The conductor traces and semiconductor junctions in the ships electronics are so small that random diffusion may cause shorts and open circuits in such a time frame.

So we want to go as slow as possible to minimize hull damage while not making the trip so long as to allow the inner workings of the probe to "die" of old age. These facts alone place a maximum range for an unmanned probe, unless we want to consider a robotic ship that is capable of remanufacturing itself from extra raw material and recycled stuff. But then we are probably talking about a ship the size of a small city.

Is anyone aware of studies that consider these kind of problems.

You might question the value of an unmanned probe that takes hundreds of thousands of years to reach its target. That might be an interesting topic but I am not concerned with it here.

Skippy

Well, it depends. Engineers made the lunar lander's hull (Apollo 11) extremely thin to a fraction of an inch. So despite the dangers you would have to hope an area of space is cleared out by another massive object's gravtitation sufficiently enough to lower the risk. I have heard of micrometeorites making cracks and or impressions. I'm sure artificial space junk present an issue as well. Hopefully insterstellar gas areas might be detected beforehand for an altering of a given movement. Also let's think about unconventional flight. Bending space and time (Which is gravity in Einstein's general Relativity) compressing space in front and expanding it behind so that the craft is not moving itself but the space and time around it is moving. Perhaps this can conquer the light barrier seeing that gravity would be in use which is a function of black holes to overpower light.
 
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  • #44
planethunter said:
The best solution to this problem would indeed be self-replicating robots capable of reproducing and repairing themselves. We have already advanced in the field of AI and I feel that this will definitely be the next step in our quest for interstellar travel.

As far as humans joining this journey, I believe that unless we can discover how to bend spacetime to create a wormhole joining two distance corners of our universe, that we will be sending probes rather than humans in the meantime!

Yes in General Relativity the result in the bending of spacetime is gravity. Which is in enormity in black holes which in turn overpowers light :).
 
  • #45
Nabeshin said:
I am abundantly more pessimistic than you.

It is not as though we merely came up with the theory of GR to summarize our experimental predictions -- quite the opposite, GR was invented before we had any real experimental evidence to suggest we needed it! (Of course, there was much theoretical motivation, but that's another story alltogether.) So I surely wouldn't say we're only at the stage of predicting within the realm of our experience -- GR has predicted much more beyond that.

Also, it's not as though we can't combine gravity and electromagnetism. On the contrary, it's really not that difficult to do electromagnetism in a curved spacetime. The non-existence of a theory of quantum gravity just doesn't factor into this.

And too, do note that GR perfectly well answers both of your questions you think it doesn't. The Einstein Equations tell you precisely how mass curves space-time, and as to the question of what mass is, well it's just one manifestation of energy in the SET. If you want to dig deeper into what mass "really" is, that's like asking what charge "really" is. Philosophy.
Whoa, I think I know what he is pointing toward. We know through general relativity the functions, behaviors and tendencies of mass and it's effect on spacetime as a result of measureble or observable effects. The the entire working of it is in question. Possibly we might be able to use electromagnetism to inflict a "bending of space and time" (gravity). If we know how to manipulate the nuclear forces of atoms which holds molecules together and composes mass which mass in turn creates that bend in space time proportional that mass. So with this known we could safely assume we can "warp" spacetime to a given degree with a given level of electromagnetic energy. I'm optimistic :D.
 

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