Shotwell has made outlandish comments like this before and it undermines the reputation she has among the 'space-fan' community as a rational, pragmatic counterpart to Musk's Space Cadet fantasies....
...If she actually believes what she says then that's shocking. Of course she could just be taking a leaf out of The Book of Elon, where it says you can keep a struggling company afloat, at least for a time, on hype alone. Maybe that's the hyper drive she foresees.
So I did some research as to how feasible it is to harvest antimatter from the interstellar medium. Apparently antiprotons are 10^-4 times as abundant as protons in the interstellar medium (Bambi and Dolgov, 2007). There is about 1 atom per cm^3 in the interstellar medium. Thus, there is about 0.1 antiproton per cubic meter in the interstellar medium.
I don't think it's at all crazy to say that we could start building an interstellar ship in Gwynne's lifetime.1 million tons to LEO, given the costs SpaceX hopes to achieve for tanker Starship, is just $10 billion. (see slide 41: https://www.spacex.com/sites/spacex/files/making_life_multiplanetary_2016.pdf) And that is without more optimization of the propulsion (i.e. water or oxygen-rich first stage to reduce propellant costs, hydrogen upper stage, etc) to improve efficiency further.1 million tons dwarfs the size of ships like Project Daedalus (50,000 tons), Firefly Icarus (25,000 tons), Project Icarus Ghost (150,000 tons), etc. Daedalus was dismissed as being too heavy by some.Some overview of Ghost:https://indico.esa.int/event/309/attachments/3516/4657/Fusion_Propulsion_-_Rob_Swinney.pdf...all of those require fusion propulsion, which would be a massive propulsion breakthrough, fitting Shotwell's description (as would dusty fission fragment or high efficiency beamed propulsion or antimatter). But Starship itself would be an ENORMOUS enabling capability.
You brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.If 0.03c is about 9 million m/s and braking force is only felt 2AU out (about 2.976 E^11m) that using V^2=U^2+2AS that gives a deceleration of about 14g to get to zero relative velocity. Using S=UT+1/2 AT^2 gives a deceleration time of 18.37hrs at 14gSo unless that magsail can start working a lot further out it's going to be a flyby followed by a journey to the next nearest star in that direction. Alternatively a way is found for the human body to resist that level of acceleration for that length of time. I think we're looking at highly oxygenated fluids currently used for people with serious lung damage.
Quote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 10:16 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.For a high speed mission to Alpha Centauri, with {\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}{\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}, one finds {\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}}{\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}} and {\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}{\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}. These requirements exceed by far the specifications of projected launch systems, such as of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.The above is from Wikipedia. This is a minimum of 40 year jouney to alpha centauri but acceleration and deceleration will add to that. The weight is for the sail (1500tonnes) on top of that is the weight of the spacecraft. Obviously this is totally out the question of a manned craft.There is as far as I can see no indication of effective thrust to calculate the deceleration rate of a mass much larger than 1500 tonnes. Maybe you can give me those figures?
Quote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 11:41 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 10:16 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.For a high speed mission to Alpha Centauri, with {\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}{\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}, one finds {\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}}{\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}} and {\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}{\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}. These requirements exceed by far the specifications of projected launch systems, such as of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.The above is from Wikipedia. This is a minimum of 40 year jouney to alpha centauri but acceleration and deceleration will add to that. The weight is for the sail (1500tonnes) on top of that is the weight of the spacecraft. Obviously this is totally out the question of a manned craft.There is as far as I can see no indication of effective thrust to calculate the deceleration rate of a mass much larger than 1500 tonnes. Maybe you can give me those figures?No. Your formatting is all broken and you’re not giving your assumptions or sources. What you’re saying doesn’t make any sense.We wouldn’t use Breakthrough Starshot for this.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 12:25 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 11:41 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 10:16 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.For a high speed mission to Alpha Centauri, with {\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}{\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}, one finds {\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}}{\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}} and {\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}{\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}. These requirements exceed by far the specifications of projected launch systems, such as of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.The above is from Wikipedia. This is a minimum of 40 year jouney to alpha centauri but acceleration and deceleration will add to that. The weight is for the sail (1500tonnes) on top of that is the weight of the spacecraft. Obviously this is totally out the question of a manned craft.There is as far as I can see no indication of effective thrust to calculate the deceleration rate of a mass much larger than 1500 tonnes. Maybe you can give me those figures?No. Your formatting is all broken and you’re not giving your assumptions or sources. What you’re saying doesn’t make any sense.We wouldn’t use Breakthrough Starshot for this.I thought we were talking about interstellar travel in general, not specifically Breakthrough Starshot.These craft are only a few grammes and the magnetosail is not anywhere near appropriate for that.
Quote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 12:25 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 11:41 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 10:16 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.For a high speed mission to Alpha Centauri, with {\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}{\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}, one finds {\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}}{\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}} and {\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}{\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}. These requirements exceed by far the specifications of projected launch systems, such as of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.The above is from Wikipedia. This is a minimum of 40 year jouney to alpha centauri but acceleration and deceleration will add to that. The weight is for the sail (1500tonnes) on top of that is the weight of the spacecraft. Obviously this is totally out the question of a manned craft.There is as far as I can see no indication of effective thrust to calculate the deceleration rate of a mass much larger than 1500 tonnes. Maybe you can give me those figures?No. Your formatting is all broken and you’re not giving your assumptions or sources. What you’re saying doesn’t make any sense.We wouldn’t use Breakthrough Starshot for this.Another question I have is whether the laser also exerts a force on the array which is emitting it? If it is pushing the ship up to 3% of c, does it also exert the same force in the opposite direction, albeit distributed across the entire array? If so, I guess keeping the array in place might be problematic.But I suspect it does not, for some reason related to how photons are propagated, else this concept would surely have a major flaw.
Quote from: M.E.T. on 12/15/2019 11:19 pmQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 12:25 pmQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 11:41 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 10:16 amQuote from: daedalus1 on 12/15/2019 06:34 amQuote from: Robotbeat on 12/15/2019 04:16 amYou brake against the interstellar medium (a thin plasma) using a magnetosail. This was a game changer in interstellar travel concepts when it was first developed (a side effect of the Bussard Ramjet concept).Nowadays, most large interstellar travel concepts use magsail braking.You need to be 1 or 2 AU from the star to get meaningful thrust (which is still small).And when you are travelling at significant fractions of light speed you only get a few hours to slow down.Luckily I said braking against the INTERSTELLAR medium, not the stellar/solar wind.And the effectiveness is greatest at high speed, so it’s much better than you’d calculate based on solar wind speeds at those low densities.For a high speed mission to Alpha Centauri, with {\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}{\displaystyle v_{0}=c/10}, one finds {\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}}{\displaystyle R\approx 1600\,{\mbox{km}}} and {\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}{\displaystyle m_{tot}\approx 1500\,{\mbox{tons}}}. These requirements exceed by far the specifications of projected launch systems, such as of the Breakthrough Starshot initiative.The above is from Wikipedia. This is a minimum of 40 year jouney to alpha centauri but acceleration and deceleration will add to that. The weight is for the sail (1500tonnes) on top of that is the weight of the spacecraft. Obviously this is totally out the question of a manned craft.There is as far as I can see no indication of effective thrust to calculate the deceleration rate of a mass much larger than 1500 tonnes. Maybe you can give me those figures?No. Your formatting is all broken and you’re not giving your assumptions or sources. What you’re saying doesn’t make any sense.We wouldn’t use Breakthrough Starshot for this.Another question I have is whether the laser also exerts a force on the array which is emitting it? If it is pushing the ship up to 3% of c, does it also exert the same force in the opposite direction, albeit distributed across the entire array? If so, I guess keeping the array in place might be problematic.But I suspect it does not, for some reason related to how photons are propagated, else this concept would surely have a major flaw.Yes, but the force isn't that big. For Breakthrough Starshot in particular, it's irrelevant as it's attached to the Earth which won't move much.I fail to see how we got on the topic of Breakthrough Starshot, though.
We're barely able to create reliable chemical rockets.