hyzer
Veteran Member
Professor Dave spottedAvI Loeb tbinks everything that falls from the sky or is in the sky is an alien probe. AvI Loeb says he has found alien probes at the bottom of the ocean.
AvI Loeb is a fraud now.
Professor Dave spottedAvI Loeb tbinks everything that falls from the sky or is in the sky is an alien probe. AvI Loeb says he has found alien probes at the bottom of the ocean.
AvI Loeb is a fraud now.
"Practical"Still far too slow for practical interstellar travel. Thousands of years of travel time between stars would be playing an incredibly long game.....
Still doesn't change the fact that one of these days, we will be turning rocks like this into 'earthling probes' ourselves.If you step out onto Miami Beach, pick up a handful of sand and let it all run through your fingers until there’s only one single grain left, it is more likely that you are holding a tiny diamond than that 32/Atlas is an intergalactic or inter-stellar spacecraft built by intelligent beings.
I doubt that any will EVER go intergalactic AND be detected and identified by any “alien intelligence”.Still doesn't change the fact that one of these days, we will be turning rocks like this into 'earthling probes' ourselves.If you step out onto Miami Beach, pick up a handful of sand and let it all run through your fingers until there’s only one single grain left, it is more likely that you are holding a tiny diamond than that 32/Atlas is an intergalactic or inter-stellar spacecraft built by intelligent beings.
Over time that probability will increase exponentially, if only because we are the reason.
NASA's human factors studies of Antarctic winter crews use the isolated, confined, and extreme (ICE) environment as a spaceflight analog to investigate the psychological, physiological, and team dynamics involved in long-duration missions
. Crews endure prolonged isolation, sensory deprivation, and altered light-dark cycles, making it a valuable setting for research on how humans adapt to stressful, remote environments
Transient gray matter decline during antarctic isolation: Roles of sleep, exercise, and cognition
The isolated environment led to weight loss and fatigue among the crew, as well as behavioral issues and divisions within the group
If you get to 1% C how do you stop or make a turn?
. . .
Th energy has to go somewhere.
... Early work on these concepts has taken place at the University of Washington under Robert Winglee, with reports available at NASA’s Institute for Advanced Concepts site.
Thus the hybrid concept Andrews and Zubrin came up with in the Vision-21 work, extending ideas they had first presented in a 1988 paper: Use laser beaming technology to push a sail to interstellar cruise speeds, then deploy a magsail upon arrival to reduce deceleration time. The authors looked at the numbers and worked out 0.8 years for acceleration, 17.4 years of coasting at almost half the speed of light, and 18.8 years for deceleration. This gets you about 10 light years out in around 37 years, a mind-bending pace that uses a huge sail and some generous assumptions about laser power that we’ll look at tomorrow. For there are other ways to use lasers, even for deceleration, and other ways, too, to exploit the local interstellar medium.
You'll get holes in the sail but so long as they're designed properly that won't matter.Can it? Or will it be torn to shreds by micrometeorites within a few million km?A craft that is mostly lightsail and using current production techniques can do about 1% of lightspeed
That's for a K2, not for us.Sure. What happened to "Short intergalactic range. Like Andromeda"?Someone carefully looking could find us at tens of light years.
Not sure you can say that because, unlike the situation with the sand and the Diamond, we do not have sufficient information about the underlying probability distribution of interstellar spacecraft to make a quantitative assessment of odds.If you step out onto Miami Beach, pick up a handful of sand and let it all run through your fingers until there’s only one single grain left, it is more likely that you are holding a tiny diamond than that 32/Atlas is an intergalactic or inter-stellar spacecraft built by intelligent beings.
Figure that we are normal. The time it will take on some other planet will be within a factor of 10 of what we saw here. Anything that happened in tens of millions of years is probably inevitable, anything that happened in gigayears is questionable.Or else there is not a single Great Filter but several filters, behind us in time, at us in time, and ahead of us in time.That's how it looks, but who knows, perhaps Fermi's Paradox is a matter of intelligent life being extremely rare and interstellar travel too difficult.From looking at how the world is going I think it very likely the Great Filter is ahead of us.Maybe so, could well be, but Fermi's Paradox appears to suggest the galaxy is populated by Mayflies.
Looking at our emergence, there are some events that happened several times, and some other events that happened only once.
Did they happen only once because they are rare? Or did they happen only once because they preempted other events? Or did they happen only once because there has to be a first one of them?
Yeah yeah … the “odds” over the next billion years are effectively zero in either case. Diamonds are not known to occur in Miami’s beach sands whatsoever, but that doesn’t mean it couldn’t happen. After all, Namibian beach sands can yield up to several carats of diamonds per ton of sand.Not sure you can say that because, unlike the situation with the sand and the Diamond, we do not have sufficient information about the underlying probability distribution of interstellar spacecraft to make a quantitative assessment of odds.If you step out onto Miami Beach, pick up a handful of sand and let it all run through your fingers until there’s only one single grain left, it is more likely that you are holding a tiny diamond than that 32/Atlas is an intergalactic or inter-stellar spacecraft built by intelligent beings.
Andromeda, a whole other galaxy, will be flying through before then.I doubt that any will EVER go intergalactic AND be detected and identified by any “alien intelligence”.Still doesn't change the fact that one of these days, we will be turning rocks like this into 'earthling probes' ourselves.If you step out onto Miami Beach, pick up a handful of sand and let it all run through your fingers until there’s only one single grain left, it is more likely that you are holding a tiny diamond than that 32/Atlas is an intergalactic or inter-stellar spacecraft built by intelligent beings.
Over time that probability will increase exponentially, if only because we are the reason.
Contact me for an apology if it happens in the next 10 billion years.
On whose dime?Repeat this as many targets from Andromeda pass through.
Seriously? That's like asking "reproduce and spread on whose dime?"On whose dime?Repeat this as many targets from Andromeda pass through.
You may have eternity, but from the perspective of Fermi's "paradaox", nobody has had eternity. The universe is less than 14 billion years old."Practical"Still far too slow for practical interstellar travel. Thousands of years of travel time between stars would be playing an incredibly long game.....
You realize that there is no real time limit, ya?
If you're cold and have sufficient ambianr energy for most of the trip, from your perspective time moves as fast or slow as you want.
It's not really a "long" game taking a hundred or a thousand or ten thousand years to get aroind.
What "short game" is there to force you into a short game yourself?
If you detect a planet, say, during an emergence of some primitive biochemistry (through atmospheric emissions spectra), that tells you you might have millions or even a billion years to get there and beach-head before spacefaring life can beat you to the Le Grange points.
What even is "practicality" when you have eternity?
You will also get holes in the craft. Will they also not matter?You'll get holes in the sail but so long as they're designed properly that won't matter.Can it? Or will it be torn to shreds by micrometeorites within a few million km?A craft that is mostly lightsail and using current production techniques can do about 1% of lightspeed