Well, what I understood is that only in L2 there is never any sunshine. — Raymond
Don’t ever expect mass emigration from Earth. And here I disagree strongly with Elon Musk and with my late colleague Stephen Hawking. It’s a dangerous delusion to think that space offers an escape from its problems. We’ve got to solve them here.
Musk himself says he wants to die on Mars – but not on impact. Although we may not want to join these space adventurers we should cheer them on. This is why. They’ll be ill-adapted to Martian conditions, so they’ll have a compelling incentive to redesign themselves. They’ll harness the super-powerful genetic and cyborg technologies that will be developed. These techniques will, one hopes, be restrained on Earth, on prudential and ethical grounds, but settlers on Mars will be beyond the clutches of the regulators. We should wish them good luck in modifying their progeny to adapt to alien environments. This might be the first step towards divergence into a new species.
The Starshot concept envisions launching a "mothership" carrying about a thousand tiny spacecraft (on the scale of centimeters) to a high-altitude Earth orbit for deployment. A phased array of ground-based lasers would then focus a light beam on the crafts' sails to accelerate them one by one to the target speed within 10 minutes, with an average acceleration on the order of 100 km/s2 (10,000 ɡ), and an illumination energy on the order of 1 TJ delivered to each sail. A preliminary sail model is suggested to have a surface area of 4 m × 4 m.[19][20] An October 2017 presentation of the Starshot system model[21][22] examined circular sails and finds that the beam director capital cost is minimized by having a sail diameter of 5 meters.
The Earth-sized planet Proxima Centauri b is within the Alpha Centauri system's habitable zone. Ideally, the Breakthrough Starshot would aim its spacecraft within one astronomical unit (150 million kilometers or 93 million miles) of that world. From this distance, a craft's cameras could capture an image of high enough resolution to resolve surface features.
The fleet would have about 1000 spacecraft. Each one, called a StarChip, would be a very small centimeter-sized vehicle weighing a few grams. They would be propelled by a square-kilometre array of 10 kW ground-based lasers with a combined output of up to 100 GW. A swarm of about 1000 units would compensate for the losses caused by interstellar dust collisions en route to the target. — Wiki
There wasn't much to 'see' in the Big Bang, because for the first 240,000 - 300,000 years, there was no light. — Bitter Crank
does the JWT have (intelligent) life-detecting capabilities? — The Opposite
I've followed the controversy around Avi Loeb — Wayfarer
Thanks for the link to the New Yorker article, Did Arthur C. Clark's Rendezvous With Rama inadvertently influence Loeb's interpretation of the brief sighting? — Bitter Crank
SETI has been searching for electromagnetic signals sent out by alien intelligences for decades without finding anything. — Wayfarer
SETI is one of those organizations that'll never show results. — Agent Smith
Thanks. I find it hard to picture the processes. Fortunately, it doesn't matter whether I understand it or not. — Bitter Crank
Either we are alone -- and that is amazing, or we are not alone, and that is amazing. — Bitter Crank
Likely because a coherent signal from very, very far away is unlikely to reach us, and b, such signals may never have been sent in the first place. — Bitter Crank
BTW, what radio telescope is SETI using, these days? — Bitter Crank
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