Warp Drive, When? A Look at the Scaling The ideal interstellar propulsion system would be one that could get you to other stars as quickly and comfortably as envisioned in science fiction. Before this can become a reality, three scientific breakthroughs are needed: discovery of a means to exceed light speed, discovery of a means to propel a vehicle without propellant, and discovery of a means to power such devices. Why? - Because space is big, really, really, really big. Space takes up a lot of space! How Far is Far Interstellar distances are so astronomical (pun intended) that it is difficult to convey this expanse. Consider the following analogy: If the sun were the size of a typical, 1/2 inch diameter marble, the distance from the sun to the Earth, called an "Astronomical Unit (AU)" would be about 4 feet, the Earth would be barely thicker than a sheet of paper, and the orbit of the Moon would be about a 1/4 inch in diameter. On this scale, the closest neighboring star is about 210 miles away. ThatÕs about the distance from Cleveland to Cincinnati. To help put this in perspective, consider that it takes light over 8 minutes to cover that 4 ft "Astronomical Unit" mentioned before. Light is the fastest thing that we know to exist! Just imagine...How long will take you to travel 210 miles if it takes you over 8 minutes to travel just 4 feet? Actually, the answer is 4.3 years. Our nearest neighboring star is 4.3 Light Years away. Speed: Getting there in a reasonable time - an obvious challenge Enormous Journeys The most obvious challenge to practical interstellar travel is speed. Our nearest neighboring star is 4.3 Light Years away. Trip times to reach our nearest neighboring star at conventional speeds would be prohibitively long. At 55 miles-per-hour for example, it would take over 50 million years to get there! I donÕt think even the twinkies in the glove box would survive that long. At a more typical spacecraft speed, for example the 3-day trip time that it took the Apollo spacecraft to reach the moon, it would still take over 900 thousand years. I still donÕt think the twinkies will make it. And even if we consider the staggering speed of 37-thousand miles-per-hour, which was the speed of the NASA Voyager spacecraft as it left our solar system years ago, the trip would still take 80,000 years. Maybe the twinkies would make it, but there would be nothing left on board to eat them. In conclusion, if we want to cruise to other stars within comfortable and fundable time spans (say, less than a term in Congress), we have to figure out a way to go faster than light. Mass: Rockets use too much propellant - a less obvious challenge A less obvious challenge is overcoming the limitations of rockets. The problem is fuel, or more specifically, rocket propellant. Unlike a car that has the road to push against, or an airplane that has the air to push against, rockets donÕt have roads or air in space. TodayÕs spacecraft use rockets and rockets use large quantities of propellant. As propellant blasts out of the rocket in one direction, it pushes the spacecraft in the other -- NewtonÕs third law. The farther or faster we wish to travel, the more propellant weÕll need. For long journeys to neighboring stars, the amount of propellant we would need would be enormous and prohibitively expensive. Rocket Performance This chart highlights two critical features of a rocket, Thrust and Specific Impulse. Thrust is how much push a rocket can give. The higher up on the chart, the greater the push. Specific Impulse can be thought of as a kind of fuel efficiency for rocket engines, analogous to the miles-per-gallon for cars. The farther right on the chart, the less propellant youÕll need. It really has to do with how fast the fuel blasts out of the rocket. What you should notice is the red region. This is the range of rocket performance we can conceivably create with what we know today. And what we need for interstellar travel is in that desired region or even more fuel efficient. Here are four examples [large graphic] of what it would take to send a canister about the size of a Shuttle payload (or a school bus) past our nearest neighboring star...and allowing 900 years for it to make this journey. Well....If you use chemical engines like those that are on the Shuttle, well..., sorry, there isnÕt enough mass in the universe to supply the rocket propellant youÕd need. So letÕs step up to next possibilities, nuclear rockets with a predicted performance thatÕs 10 to 20 times better! Well...itÕs still not looking all that good. For a fission rocket you would need a BILLION SUPERTANKER size propellant tanks to get you there, and even with fusion rockets you would still need a THOUSAND SUPERTANKERS! Even if we look at the best conceivable performance that we could engineer based on todayÕs knowledge, say an Ion engine or an antimatter rocket whose performance was 100 times better that the shuttle engines, we would need about ten railway tanker sized propellant tanks. That doesnÕt sound too bad, until you consider that we didnÕt bring along any propellant to let us stop when we get to the other star system...or if we want to get there quicker than 9 centuries. Once you add the desire to actually stop at your destination, or if you want to get there sooner, youÕre back at the incredible supertanker situation again, even for our best conceivable rockets. In conclusion, weÕd really like to have a form of propulsion that doesnÕt need any propellant! This implies the need to find some way to modify gravitational or inertial forces or to find some means to push against the very structure of spacetime itself. Energy: - yet another challenge Our third big challenge is energy. Even if we had a nonrocket space drive that could convert energy directly into motion without propellant, it would still require a lot of energy. Sending a Shuttle-sized vehicle on a 50 year one-way trip to visit our nearest neighboring star (subrelativistic speed) would take over 7 x 10^19 Joules of energy. This is roughly the same amount of energy that the Space ShuttleÕs engines would use if they ran continuously for the same duration of 50 years. To overcome this difficulty, we need either a breakthrough where we can take advantage of the energy in the space vacuum, a breakthrough in energy production physics, or a breakthrough where the laws of kinetic energy donÕt apply. What are THE 3 breakthroughs weÕd like to achieve? Contents * Why is interstellar travel so tough?