by Ingenuity_Gap » Sun 03 Dec 2006, 15:25:54
Your enthusiasm is outstanding, even by SF standards. You seem to have answers to everything. You really make things look easy.
Only there's a problem with your approach: it's too good to be true. You never mention any problems, difficulties or dangers, or if you mention them, they can be effortlessly overcome.
It's this pinkish view of the world that brought us in this PO/GW/Resource Depletion/Pollution mess. People like you somehow convinced the vast majority of us that life is just an easy ride to more, better, easier.
Well not anymore. More and more people are starting to realize that the promises of easy life create way more problems than they solve.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'T')hese are charged particles and magnetic/electrostatic fields would be deflecting them.
As they are mainly protons, they could even be driven by mentioned EM fields into fusion reactors and actually make a power source for propulsion systems (cosmic ram jet design). Production of such fields would not be energy intensive process, and if mentioned protons are susesquently used as a fusion fuel for propulsion you would get decent EROEI.
Well all those "mainly protons" conveniently ignore the rest of the
Interstellar Medium. And that's only what we theorize know about it. You must realize that nobody actually traveled past the heliosphere (Pioneer & Voyager) or at speeds higher than 30 km/s (Deep Space 1).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he ISM consists of an extremely dilute (by terrestrial standards) plasma, gas and dust, consisting of a mixture of ions, atoms, molecules, larger dust grains, electromagnetic radiation, cosmic rays, and magnetic fields. The matter consists of about 99% gas and 1% dust by mass. It fills interstellar space. This mixture is usually extremely tenuous, with typical gas densities ranging from a few hundred to a few hundred million particles per cubic meter. As a result of primordial nucleosynthesis, the gas is roughly 90% hydrogen and 10% helium by number, with additional elements ("metals" in astronomical parlance) present in trace amounts.
What are the space travelers going to do about the neutral particles? They can't be deflected in magnetic/electrostatic fields. Oh, I forget, a few inches of lead will solve our problems. Or maybe a giant vacuum cleaner will suck them from the front of the ship and spit them at the back.
What happens to the ship and its occupants if any of the systems fail? How are they going to fix them? There's no repair shop on the way to Alpha Centauri. Carrying spare parts will definitely increase the payload and the energy consumption. Communication with Earth will certainly be impractical to say the least, due to the enormous distances: "Houston, here is the Enterprise, we have a problem!". After few days, weeks, months, years the answer will be more than helpful, yeah right.
So the would-be space explorers will need to be completely self-sufficient. During the long space voyages, anything can go wrong and it certainly will, eventually.
You see, we have similar technical backgrounds. The difference is you don't seem to comprehend the limitations. And that's the whole point actually. Knowing when to say “Enough!” and acting accordingly is what separates knowledge from wisdom.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnergyUnlimited', 'T')he hole pierced through you would be small enough, that you would not notice that it exists at all.
OK, you could feel a tiny pin prick once a day or so.