Could We Reach Alpha Centauri in Just 132 Years with an Orion Drive?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the feasibility of reaching Alpha Centauri using advanced propulsion methods, particularly the Orion drive and Robert Forward's proposed laser sail system. While the Orion drive could shorten the journey to 132 years, Forward's concept suggests a ten-year trip using a powerful laser and a massive Fresnel lens to propel a starship. Concerns are raised about the logistics of constructing and operating such a system, including energy requirements, course corrections, and communication challenges due to Doppler shifts. The conversation also touches on the implications of gravitational assists for a round-trip mission and the potential for faster-than-light travel with concepts like the Alcubierre drive. Overall, the thread explores both the excitement and the significant technical hurdles of interstellar travel.
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Using a VASIMR rocket, 1320 years of voyage are needed
Using an Orion drive, the duration of the voyage is 132 years
 
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I fail to see the relevance in this thread, but bon voyage anyways...
 
Good news!

I've just read what Robert Forward has proposed for a travel to Alpha Centauri.He proppose to construct a laser with a power of 10 million Gigawatts.the laser will be stationary on earth. Outside the earth, you let floating a Fresnel lens of a thousand km diameter. Then construct a starship with a sail of one thousand km long. Making the laser light pass through the lens and impacting on the sail it can provide a big impulse to the starship. With this system the voyage to Alpha Centauri is only ten years long!

Yeah!
 
Interesting theory, but what if they miss?;)

Whoah Momma!
 
Not to mention the lens. How are they going to put it in orbit?
And the military implications of the laser? (knocking down satellites...)
 
and the simple wondering of how they would get back :) maybe if the laser was rigged to the starship itself it may work.

and does the laser have to stay on ?
 
Yeah, the return trip came to my mind as well.

I agree with Bunting's statement about the laser being attached to the rocket when it comes to the return trip.

Then again, wouldn't you have to take into consideration Einstein's Theory of Relativity (time dilation, etc.)?
 
The laser couldn't be mounted to the back of the rocket. It's called the conservation of linear momentum.

- Warren
 
Have you but any thought into the amount of energy required to make this happen? If I recall correctly going by energy/mass equivelence there may not be sufficient mass in the solar system to make a trip at that speed. Minor detail, why would you worry about it.
 
  • #10
The laser couldn't be mounted to the back of the rocket. It's called the conservation of linear momentum.

<slaps himself really hard on the head>
 
  • #11
There are a few problems with a spacecraft traveling about 1/3 C as it leaves our solar system. If it’s a one-way mission, it will likely need a course correction early on using on-board engines with limited fuel supply. Communications to the craft will have to be at a higher frequency to compensate for the Doppler shift. Communications from the craft will be received at a lower frequency. As the craft approaches Alpha Centauri, we’d probably want to shoot some photos. Again due to the Doppler shift, normal optics would not focus. It would probably be better to use X-ray imaging. Perhaps the laser sail could be used as an x-ray receiver.

If it’s meant to be a round-trip mission, there’s no way to turn around with conventional rocketry but the gravitational field of the Alpha Centauri system could be used to do a 180. Since that system has at least 2 stars, its might be possible to get a gravitational velocity boost and return to Earth at a higher velocity. Of course the forces on the star craft would be enormous as it does the 180, but perhaps a converted nuclear sub might make it.

Now were approaching the solar system at 1/3 C+ we need to fire up the laser again to put the brakes on or find out what happens when a nuclear sub traveling at 1/3C hits the sun.

Just having fun.
 
  • #12
Originally posted by chroot
The laser couldn't be mounted to the back of the rocket. It's called the conservation of linear momentum.

- Warren
Sure it could. You point it BACKWARDS and take away the sail.

Its like the old cliche' of setting up a fan in your sail boat to blow against the sail. It doesn't work, but if you turn the fan around and point it backwards, it works just fine (they use them in swamps).

Of course there are negatives to doing it that way - half the thrust and the added weight.
 
  • #13
OK, who's into build this thing?
 
  • #14
Originally posted by Guybrush Threepwood
OK, who's into build this thing?

ME ME! Let me just check my bank account













damn never mind :(
 
  • #15
I've found new information about the project. The laser would be orbiting Mercury, using then the Sun's photons to excite the laser.
The lens would be located between Saturn and Uranus and would have a mass of 569 million kg (560000 tons)
A complete info of the project by the same Robert Forward can be found here:
http://planetary.org/interstellar/forward.html

There's a system that could permit to travel faster than light: the Alcubierre drive. Consists of create a bubble of space around you and make that bubble travel through space faster than light. It doesn't violate relativity, because in the space inside the bubble you are not traveling faster than light.
 
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  • #16
You don't launch the lens and such. You build them in space, preferably using some function nanotech thingies to form an absolutely perfect lens. I would guess we are only a couple of decades away from such capability.

You don't shoot a big laser at the spaceship because there's no big laser on the other end to shoot it to slow it down. Or I suppose using nukes at the far end to slow it down (ie. Orion Project) could be done.
 
  • #17
Originally posted by GENIERE
There are a few problems with a spacecraft traveling about 1/3 C as it leaves our solar system. If it’s a one-way mission, it will likely need a course correction early on using on-board engines with limited fuel supply. Communications to the craft will have to be at a higher frequency to compensate for the Doppler shift. Communications from the craft will be received at a lower frequency. As the craft approaches Alpha Centauri, we’d probably want to shoot some photos. Again due to the Doppler shift, normal optics would not focus. It would probably be better to use X-ray imaging. Perhaps the laser sail could be used as an x-ray receiver.

If it’s meant to be a round-trip mission, there’s no way to turn around with conventional rocketry but the gravitational field of the Alpha Centauri system could be used to do a 180. Since that system has at least 2 stars, its might be possible to get a gravitational velocity boost and return to Earth at a higher velocity. Of course the forces on the star craft would be enormous as it does the 180, but perhaps a converted nuclear sub might make it.

Now were approaching the solar system at 1/3 C+ we need to fire up the laser again to put the brakes on or find out what happens when a nuclear sub traveling at 1/3C hits the sun.

Just having fun.

The gravity of the system could not be used to turn around at 1/3 c. The radius would have to be miniscule, and this is not possible as the star is not miniscule.
 
  • #18
1/3C slingshot anybody?
 

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