StarShot

Author
Discussion

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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A probe to a nearby star?

scubadude

2,618 posts

204 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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Eric's suggestion is the obvious jump from the name but I can't see how they can hope to start something like that now yet unless its a relatively "low" speed shot.

The other shot type could be photos- try to photograph planets around stars?

Perhaps they have a method to shoot our own star down and end all our misery? :-)

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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A bit far fetched I admit but wouldn't it be a fantastic goal to aim for smile

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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Interstellar Sail it looks like.


Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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Just don't fly through the beam in your Cessna.

Pffft.

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

226 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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I'm usually all for these types of missions, but i'm not sure I see the point beyond being a propulsion testbed perhaps. They are talking about this probe taking and beaming back images.

Look at the technology it takes for us to get images back from a car sized probe 30 AU away. It's completely unrealistic to expect a gram scale spacecraft to be able to beam images from a distance around 276,000 AU away.

It's simply not a viable exploration mission as there would be no way to get data back from a probe at that distance. We probably couldn't even verify it actually achieved the velocities they claim, or even that it made it to it's destination.


Simpo Two

87,100 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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According to the news these 'probes' are actually just chips an inch long, released into orbit, then sails deployed and puffed into space with a laser from the ground. They reckon they can get one to Alpha Centauri in 30 years as opposed to 30,000 years for something bigger.

Presume Alpha Centauri is 'downsun' for the sails to work?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3602...

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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The usual nay sayers pop out all the time.

Let them give it a go. It will take them at least ten years to build a prototype anyway. And, as far as we can see, it will be entirely funded privately, so nobody's taxes will be getting spent on it.

I think it's a great idea. We should always try things that seem to be beyond our reach. The possible is best achieved when the impossible is aimed for.

MrBrightSi

2,914 posts

177 months

Tuesday 12th April 2016
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I've always thought we'd of got somewhere near a space elevator by now. It is great to see that we still have the explorer at heart, i just had hoped for more, galactic computer chip sailing is something sci-fi will never gather crowds with.

RobDickinson

31,343 posts

261 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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looks great, even the process will teach us a lot.

30 years isnt so long to send something to another star.

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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I'm sure having software that can recognise star patterns is no big deal. It's already being done now.

Unlike space elevators, the good thing about this particular project is that it does not need any major breakthrough in materials or technology. All the basic stuff exists already. All they need to do is build it and see how it works.

Flooble

5,571 posts

107 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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How do you envisage them transmitting back to Earth? I doubt we'd see the signal from a chip-sized antenna (I wonder if it is "chip" sized or "chip package" sized in reality).

Maybe they plan to make the sail perform double duty as a reflector?

Or perhaps they have a Part 2 for the project, while the probes are enroute they will deploy repeater stations ...

Eric Mc

122,858 posts

272 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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The sail certainly could be used as a communications dish. Obviously, they would need a certain amount of electrical power to allow the transmissions to be received back on earth at the great distances involved.

Traditionally, outer Solar System probes such as the Voyagers, Cassini, New Horizons etc have used Radioactive Thermal Generators (RTGs) to do this but I doubt they'll be able to make a nano-RTG (although you never know). I reckon the power will come from the laser signal itself.

For the record, the RTGs on the two Voyagers have now been operating successfully for the best part of 40 years - so that would enable an RTG to power a probe that could reach Alpha Centauri in the time scale envisaged by this project.

Flooble

5,571 posts

107 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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Did the RTG not have to be stuck out on a boom though, although I think that was to avoid the heat upsetting the instruments rather than because of radiation damaging the chips?

Maybe the solar sail will perform triple duty as a solar panel too. No space for batteries on these chips. The laser is going to be quite diffuse by the time it reaches interstellar space.

All looks interesting.

Moonhawk

10,730 posts

226 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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Eric Mc said:
I reckon the power will come from the laser signal itself.
The laser would be incredibly diffuse at 4 light years distant.

They use lasers now to do range finding measurements to retro reflectors on the moon - but even the tightly focussed beam of the laser has spread out so much over a distance of several hundred thousand km that they only get a few photons back.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Laser_Ranging_...

superlightr

12,900 posts

270 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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I like the idea. It a bit like Colin Chapman and the 7 - lightness/simple set ups gives rises to less complicated machines.

Solar sail. How they would get information back from it to earth will be a challenge but certainly good to try.

AshVX220

5,933 posts

197 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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I think this is absolutely astonishing, I hope it succeeds and that I'm still around to see at least some of the result.

Flooble

5,571 posts

107 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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I just noticed they said they are using a laser communications system. Not sure reflecting it off the sail would help much.

SpeckledJim

31,608 posts

260 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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I must be missing something here, but how does a laser fired from one part of a space-craft into another part of the same space-craft result in a net force in one direction?

Flooble

5,571 posts

107 months

Wednesday 13th April 2016
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Challenges here: http://breakthroughinitiatives.org/Challenges/3

Answers a lot of the questions we had (shame it was so hard to find)

They plan to use the launch array to receive the signal. The launch array not being a single laser ...