Photo

Stephen Hawking joins futuristic bid to explore outer space


  • Please log in to reply
2 replies to this topic

#1 Mark Carver

Mark Carver

    MVP

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 2,598 posts

Posted 13 April 2016 - 10:34 AM

"With light beams, light sails and the lightest spacecraft ever built, we can launch a mission to Alpha Centauri within a generation," Hawking said.

 

 

With famed physicist Stephen Hawking at his side, an Internet investor announced Tuesday that he's spending $100 million on a futuristic plan to explore far outside our solar system.

 

Yuri Milner said the eventual goal is sending hundreds or thousands of tiny spacecraft, each weighing far less than an ounce, to the Alpha Centauri star system. That's more than 2,000 times as far as any spacecraft has gone so far.

 

Propelled by energy from a powerful array of Earth-based lasers, the spacecraft would fly at about one-fifth the speed of light. They could reach Alpha Centauri in 20 years, where they could make observations and send the results back to Earth.


Read more at: http://phys.org/news...ecraft.html#jCp

 

 

 

 

 



Read more at: http://phys.org/news...ecraft.html#jCp


John Keegan, a renowned British military historian, has called World War II the greatest single event in the history of mankind. - Tom Brokaw, NBC special correspondent and author of "The Greatest Generation"


#2 BSLChrisStoner

BSLChrisStoner

    Owner

  • Administrators
  • 156,288 posts

Posted 13 April 2016 - 10:50 AM

This was interesting. As is Hawking's general position that alien contact could be dangerous, but worthwhile.



#3 Mark Carver

Mark Carver

    MVP

  • Members
  • PipPipPipPip
  • 2,598 posts

Posted 13 April 2016 - 03:16 PM

This was interesting. As is Hawking's general position that alien contact could be dangerous, but worthwhile.

 

Yeah the send stuff out looking for something and jumping up and down and pointing to where the planet Earth is not wise IMO. Independence Day was only a movie but...


John Keegan, a renowned British military historian, has called World War II the greatest single event in the history of mankind. - Tom Brokaw, NBC special correspondent and author of "The Greatest Generation"





0 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 0 guests, 0 anonymous users


Our Sponsors


 width=