bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
With the technology we’ve got, even our fastest probe, Voyager 1, would need around seventy-five thousand years to reach the nearest star. That’s longer than all of recorded human history. The idea of an interstellar commute suddenly feels a little ridiculous, unless you want to make it a generational journey.
Propelling even a small ship to near-light speed would take more energy than humanity produces in thousands of years. The math alone makes it daunting. Our entire civilization isn’t yet capable of paying the cosmic energy bill that such a trip demands. Is it hopeless to even consider?
If Alpha Centauri is just 4 light years away, that means any message sent at the speed of light would take 4 years to get there, and another 4 years to even get a reply. so almost a decade for communication. If it was sent to another system which is only a hundred light years away (Which is comparatively close), it would take 200 years for a reply. Is serious space travel a futile endeavor?
Propelling even a small ship to near-light speed would take more energy than humanity produces in thousands of years. The math alone makes it daunting. Our entire civilization isn’t yet capable of paying the cosmic energy bill that such a trip demands. Is it hopeless to even consider?
If Alpha Centauri is just 4 light years away, that means any message sent at the speed of light would take 4 years to get there, and another 4 years to even get a reply. so almost a decade for communication. If it was sent to another system which is only a hundred light years away (Which is comparatively close), it would take 200 years for a reply. Is serious space travel a futile endeavor?