What Will The First Manned Mission To Proxima Centauri Be Like?

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The First Interstellar Journey!
What will the first Proxima Centauri voyage, the closest star to the solar system, be like? Will it be with a spaceship like the ones we have today or with technology that doesn't exist yet? Who will be the crew members of that mission, and what challenges will be presented during the flight?
Let's find out!
When discussing interstellar travel, we must consider a significant factor: in the 21st century, we still do not have technology capable of traveling through the stars.
The spacecraft that have gone the furthest in history are Voyagers, which have not yet made it entirely out of the solar system and still have thousands of years to go to get out.
In addition to the fact that our spacecraft cannot yet travel long distances quickly, we also do not have efficient propulsion systems.
Parker Probe
The Parker Probe is a spacecraft that NASA launched in August 2018 to study the Sun and its corona. It is the fastest spacecraft ever built by humans and has managed to break several records in its short lifetime.
1. Travel with a return ticket
In the first case, we have the most optimistic option of all, a round trip at superluminal speeds, where we can build a spaceship that reaches up to 10% or even, in the best of cases, 20%. of the speed of light, with this speed the trip to the Proxima Centauri star would take approximately 20 years, it is a long time, yes. Still, it is much more reasonable than a trip that lasts thousands of years.
2. Travel without a return ticket
If it becomes impossible to reach such high speeds, even with the advancement of technology in the next few years, the only option left for us would be a mission that lasts several centuries or millennia.
Difficulties and problems
A journey to the Proxima Centauri star is not easy, and many challenges and problems must be solved. Some of the biggest challenges include the following:
Distance: The closest star to Earth, Proxima Centauri, is about 4.24 light-years away. At the speed of light, this journey would take more than four years, which is currently impossible. The journey would take at least 20 years, even with laser sail propulsion technology.
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Credits: Ron Miller, Mark A. Garlick / MarkGarlick.com
Credits: Nasa/Shutterstock/Storyblocks/Elon Musk/SpaceX/ESA/ESO/ Flickr
00:00 Intro
5.00 scheda interstellar
1:22 Parker Probe
3:40 1. Travel with a return ticket
7:30 Travel without a return ticket
10:10 Difficulties and problems
#insanecuriosity #proximacentauri #interstellartravel

Пікірлер: 287

  • @neilgaddis6336
    @neilgaddis6336 Жыл бұрын

    Imagine giving up your whole life to arrive somewhere first. Just to find out upon arrival that there was a new technology invented after you left that got someone else there in half the time. That’s what would probably happen to that first ship.

  • @davehoward22

    @davehoward22

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine you get there and it's just a star surrounded by a few dead planets.. (which is likely )

  • @M4V3RiCkU235

    @M4V3RiCkU235

    Жыл бұрын

    will pass 43.5 years on Earth, if you go 42.5 years at 20% of the speed of light. Not such a big deal.

  • @willzsportscards

    @willzsportscards

    2 ай бұрын

    forget the name, but there's an old sci book with that as its premise.

  • @vincentbaltus8830
    @vincentbaltus8830 Жыл бұрын

    At 20% the speed of light the time dilation is minimal, so when the astronauts will be back from Proxima, they will be 40 years older and their families on Earth too.

  • @BIGJATPSU

    @BIGJATPSU

    Жыл бұрын

    The travelers would return and be approximately 9 months younger than the rest of Earth at 20%.

  • @conquester4890

    @conquester4890

    Жыл бұрын

    Their sending the breakthrough starship first and they’ll film it

  • @ilicdjo

    @ilicdjo

    Жыл бұрын

    bruh stop it. Never gonna happen and u know it. And if u write me a response I'll find u and do something terrible to your dog...or cat

  • @Banane1321

    @Banane1321

    Жыл бұрын

    that’s true, but he got the whole concept of time dilation wrong in this video.

  • @joshuamills2136

    @joshuamills2136

    Жыл бұрын

    Whole video is based on bad math lol

  • @Banane1321
    @Banane1321 Жыл бұрын

    I would like to kindly point out a slight misconception presented in your recent video regarding time dilation experienced by a spacecraft traveling to Proxima Centauri and back at 20% the speed of light. You suggested that the 40-year duration of this journey is experienced onboard the spacecraft while thousands of years pass on Earth due to time dilation. This, however, is not quite in line with the theoretical predictions made by Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity. In actuality, the scenario works in the opposite way. The 40 years would be the time elapsed as observed from Earth, also known as the "proper time." Meanwhile, onboard the spacecraft, due to the effects of time dilation, less time would elapse. This is because the time experienced by an observer in motion (in this case, the spacecraft) is always longer than the proper time, according to the formula of time dilation: Δt = γΔt₀, where Δt₀ is the proper time, Δt is the dilated time, and γ is the Lorentz factor. In the case of the journey to Proxima Centauri and back at 20% the speed of light, the Lorentz factor γ is approximately 1.021, which means that time on the spaceship would be slightly less dilated than the time on Earth, not dramatically more. I hope this clarification contributes positively to the scientific accuracy of your content. I'm looking forward to your future videos and further discussions on such intriguing topics.

  • @joemasters2270

    @joemasters2270

    Жыл бұрын

    Glad someone finally said it. I’ve noticed countless videos that ignore the Lorentz factor for the passengers

  • @Banane1321

    @Banane1321

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joemasters2270 Your passion for the Lorentz factor is noted, Joe Masters. But the issue here isn't about ignoring it for passengers; it's about misunderstanding time dilation. A nuance, yet a vital one in the realm of relativity!

  • @VolcyThoughts

    @VolcyThoughts

    Жыл бұрын

    So according to that factor, how much actual time would pass on earth?

  • @Banane1321

    @Banane1321

    Жыл бұрын

    @@VolcyThoughts While the spaceship's clock ticks slower due to time dilation (thanks to the Lorentz factor), the Earth has no such pause. So, while the spaceship's occupants might age a smidge less, back on Earth exactly 40 years have passed. No Lorentz-induced time warp for Earth, I'm afraid!

  • @VolcyThoughts

    @VolcyThoughts

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Banane1321 so they actually would return 40 years later but would they actually be 40 years older or only slightly older than when they left?

  • @kennyfordham6208
    @kennyfordham6208 Жыл бұрын

    Will the children, born on a generational ship, be resentful that they are condemned to live out their entire lives, confined to a ship, on a mission that they didn't volunteer for? This might cause a lot of trouble. 🤨

  • @damienwhited87

    @damienwhited87

    Жыл бұрын

    Hmm 🤔🤔. That's a good point. They probably would be resentful & maybe jealous too, of the facts they didn't volunteer or sign up for the trip / journey(s) and that they wouldn't have any memories about Earth, especially after the first generation would live & die on the ship(s). As the memory of Earth & living there would only be in stories or some sort of other file, etc. about Earth & life on Earth.

  • @kennyfordham6208

    @kennyfordham6208

    Жыл бұрын

    @@damienwhited87 No doubt though, the ship will have an extensive library of life on Earth; a life that they can never have. Running through green grass, hiking, swimming, and etc. Dang, just to lay, on a beach, and soak-up the sun.

  • @ozymandiasultor9480

    @ozymandiasultor9480

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kennyfordham6208 Probably some will be resentful, but you don't miss something that you never had... Those libraries and all info about the Earth can be preserved in capsules for the generations which will live on some distant planet to know about their ancestors and what is the planet where human beings developed, but I see no reason why those who will have to live on those ships have to know about Earth... That is a good idea about some sci-fi film where all are oblivious about who they are and there is some strange explanation why they are in some enormous spaceship and what is their mission, and suddenly someone finds out some book where Earhi is described... That might be an interesting film or even a series.

  • @M4V3RiCkU235

    @M4V3RiCkU235

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly the point: Will feel like they are imprisoned for life. Anyway, the most part of it. And every day face certain death - some random component of the ship just goes wrong - and they might have a death sentence

  • @Kqzmii

    @Kqzmii

    7 ай бұрын

    They would have some sort of simulation that can simulate earth and be like a video game to keep them entertained and learn about earth

  • @damo5701
    @damo5701 Жыл бұрын

    The first mission will be surprised they are not the first to arrive, instead passed on their Journey by craft leaving later, travelling at greater speeds, and arriving earlier.

  • @danielblouin4176

    @danielblouin4176

    10 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @shane1489
    @shane1489 Жыл бұрын

    Ludicrous speed capable engines are a must. We don’t have time for light speed. However it comes at the cost of having our 3 ring circus onboard.

  • @foxdavani4091
    @foxdavani4091 Жыл бұрын

    I would be an astronaut in a heartbeat. I am forever alone, doomed to never have family, so why not travel to the stars. And if I return, I get to see a whole New World beyond what I left behind, and since I would have nobody to be emotionally connected to, I wouldn’t care that my generations cease to exist. That is the beauty of being alone.

  • @fubaralakbar6800
    @fubaralakbar6800 Жыл бұрын

    Interstellar travel methods: 1: Generation ship. A Space Shuttle the size of a city. Your kids' distant decedents will get there, but you won't. Hey, raising kids is all about sacrifice. 2: Sleeper ship. You will get there, and you can even take your kids with you. But don't bother coming back. Everyone you knew will be multi-thousand year coffin dust. 3. Relativistic ship. You will get there in just a few weeks. Okay, it's actually hundreds of years, but it will only feel like a few weeks. Same problem as number 2, you just won't know it's a problem until you get back. Surprise! 4. Orion drive: sit on some nuclear weapons and detonate them. If you are okay with the safety concerns, see option 3. 5. Warp drive. The ultimate. You get there, your kids get there, you and your kids can come back any time they want, and everyone will still be alive. Okay, not YOU and YOUR kids, but maybe someone else and their kids, thousands of years from now when and if the thing gets invented. See options 1 thru 3. Einstein says this one is a no-no, but he also said it might be okay. Besides, he's dead. 6. Worm hole. Stationary warp drive. Think Stargate. See option 5--but remember, you have to be the size of a cosmic string to fit through it. Even Kate Moss can't lose that much weight.

  • @ivobrick7401

    @ivobrick7401

    11 ай бұрын

    subluminal warp drive won't help you much. 7. Frame shift drive. You move through hyperspace with little to no effort. Dont forget to bring a power to speed up to significiant % of the speed of light, and knowledge how to break in and out, even if, hyperspace/multiverse exist.

  • @fubaralakbar6800

    @fubaralakbar6800

    11 ай бұрын

    @@ivobrick7401 That's basically option 5. Requires bending of space and time. Scientifically, all you have to do is be God (or snort some Spice). Realistically, I think #3 is the way to go. It's probably the best our tech will ever be able to do. And really, it's not that bad. I mean, I exaggerated a bit there--it would take well within a human lifetime, depending on how far you want to go. Four years to Alpha Centauri? With current drives, it takes 3 years to get to Jupiter. New Horizons took 9 years to get to Pluto! Fuck Alpha Centauri, a relativistic ship could make it to Sirius in that time! You could even come back--although a lot would have changed, everyone would still be alive. Okay, so you're not going to have an interstellar empire like that. Communication would take way too long. But you could have a lot of small empires, each occupying a solar system. It would be an excellent way for humanity to spread out and avoid being genocided by rocks, nukes, natural disasters etc.

  • @ivobrick7401

    @ivobrick7401

    11 ай бұрын

    @@fubaralakbar6800 I think way to go is much more simpler. You send slow cargoship to a given system, lets say at 20% speed of light. Loaded with communications, robots, computers and empty shells. Then you will send digitalized humans, or ai, or just update. Still this method eats way less power and resources.

  • @jasonwilk5539
    @jasonwilk5539 Жыл бұрын

    I would never volunteer for anything like that. The people I love are what make Life worth Living and the thought of never seeing them ever again is beyond depressing not to mention the insanely high probability that something will go wrong and your remains will be lost in space forever. I would happily give that opportunity to anyone but me! However, there would be no limit of volunteers if this was ever feasible. Whether it would the desire to explore the unknown or the fact that Mankind would remember you Forever, would lead many to make it their Life Purpose.

  • @Jamie_Wulfyr

    @Jamie_Wulfyr

    4 ай бұрын

    Even if you make it to the planet in Proxima Centauri's Goldilocks' zone there would be a host of problems to deal with. We have no real idea of the composition of the atmosphere and it's several times the mass of the Earth making the gravity considerably stronger. I'm sure there are plenty more issues people could think of. It really would be a step into the unknown unprecedented in human history.

  • @IcarianX
    @IcarianX Жыл бұрын

    Honestly, travelling to Proxima Centauri sounds terrible. The absolute best case scenario is spending 20 years in space and never seeing your friends, family, dogs, cats, trees, rivers, the sky or oceans again. The worst case scenario is multiple generations spending thousands of years in space only to arrive on dead, uninhabitable planets. And no, we won't be able to take terraforming equipment there. We can't even terraform Mars, no way we can send the necessary resources to Proxima Centauri. Do the planets there even have magnetic fields? If they don't then terraforming won't work, their atmospheres will be blown away.

  • @wolfpaws8985

    @wolfpaws8985

    Жыл бұрын

    find a system with a yellow star instead of 1 that is already on it's way to death .

  • @johngeier8692

    @johngeier8692

    Жыл бұрын

    The m type red stars will shine for trillions of years. They are most unlikely to have any Earth like planets due to tidal locking and stripping of the atmosphere by stellar wind and flares. A Close Earth Analog Planet similar to earth 400 million years ago would be the ideal destination for the first manned interstellar mission.

  • @mk40846

    @mk40846

    Жыл бұрын

    Best case is it takes you a few seconds to get there and back (travelling at *very* close to the speed of light), while on Earth a total of 8 years has passed. Practical best case at 1G acceleration / deceleration is 10 years for the astronaut, about 16 years on earth for the round trip.

  • @davidponseigo8811
    @davidponseigo8811 Жыл бұрын

    I would travel in space in a second if it were offered.

  • @davehoward22

    @davehoward22

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends how far

  • @greggieboy393
    @greggieboy393 Жыл бұрын

    The humans on that ship may go insane and kill each other. You know how people can be.

  • @sprinter768

    @sprinter768

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah. The isolation and confinement would drive them mad. That is if they don't die before that happens from any other of tons of space travel risks. It's also unethical to ask people to live most if not all of their entire lives in interstellar space.

  • @pablodono7227
    @pablodono7227 Жыл бұрын

    At 20% the speed of light the time dilation is minimal...

  • @GeoNetics
    @GeoNetics Жыл бұрын

    (11:36 of the video) Someone is growing some Proxima Space Kush over there huh 😏...i saw it😂😂

  • @amangogna68
    @amangogna68 Жыл бұрын

    Great information !

  • @ultimatemovierecaps
    @ultimatemovierecaps Жыл бұрын

    Great explanation my friend.

  • @pieterjanrouw1355
    @pieterjanrouw1355 Жыл бұрын

    I cannot understand why anybody would want to undertake such a journey, living in a dark, complex and cramped environment, I definitely would have no desire or interest in such a journey, it would be a scientific andvancement for sure, but other then that we are humans born on earth and used to live, play and work here, not on a godforsaken interstellar trip of I don't know how long and then there is the possibillity that you crash on the way, no thank you I stay here and do what I like, such as riding my motorcycle.

  • @stevecribbs9247
    @stevecribbs9247 Жыл бұрын

    This video ignores several factors. It's not just a spaceship which needs to survive the forces involved, but the crew too. They can't be subjected to excessive g forces, and how long would they have to endure high g forces? Acceleration is one thing but you'd also face the same challenge slowing down. A generational ship would require a sizeable population to avoid inbreeding and consequential genetic issues. A sterile environment could eliminate viral and some bacterial illnesses, but at the expense of a diminishing immunity system. Repairs would requirea spare parts and materials stock. We must consider natural degradation of materials when we think of journeys lasting generations. Apart from accumulated damage due to cosmic rays, there will be some humidity due to people's breath and perspiration. This could in time affect components. What if people arrived at the nearest star system and found a world too extreme to survive? Could they even land? Terraforming if even possible, could take longer than the journey there, even if it were possible to get the necessary items in place. Then, you'd need to create a viable ecosystem. Finally, there's a more mundane obstacle which could stop it from ever starting. That is the lack of payback for any government or organisation. There's no profit involved and people and equipment would depart, probably never to be seen again by anyone on Earth. Reports back would be at best monotonous and non eventful provided everything works OK. Eventually, the time taken for radio waves to reach us would cause such a delay as to make effective communication unachievable.

  • @MrLou345
    @MrLou34511 ай бұрын

    We are many thousands of years away before we can even think of something like this to take place. We currently can travel at 0.01 percent of the speed of light. We have a long long way to go...

  • @garrettrussell7281
    @garrettrussell7281 Жыл бұрын

    It would be done by technology most people can’t ever grasp the concept of. And I think it would be a one way trip.

  • @district5198
    @district5198 Жыл бұрын

    FTL research needs to be done on a global scale. And I think it will happen a lot sooner than we expect with the advent of the singularity in the near future.

  • @ozymandiasultor9480

    @ozymandiasultor9480

    Жыл бұрын

    FTL research? Why not Tarot research? You have the same chance to have some "result"... Anything that has mass can't travel faster than light...

  • @jamesvoller167

    @jamesvoller167

    Жыл бұрын

    FTL travel would require a mass that's an imaginary number. IE the square root of a minus number = impossible

  • @district5198

    @district5198

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamesvoller167 I suspect when the singularity comes to fruition and computers can think for themselves. Humanity will see advances in science that literally our brains could not contemplate. So I believe FTL will be a reality in the future.

  • @jamesvoller167

    @jamesvoller167

    Жыл бұрын

    @District 519 singularity: = apocalyptic nonsense. Like the Age of Aquarius, etc. Etc. A promised golden Age that will always be in the future and never in any present. The singularity is just a new kind of religious belief.

  • @district5198

    @district5198

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jamesvoller167 Singularity is in simplest terms. When computers can think independently for themselves. And predicted to happen in the near future by Chief Engineer at Google Ray Kurzwell and other prominent scientists. And with the exponential advances in AI, it seems the singularity may arrive sooner than thought. And no nothing to do with religion or belief. Purely an evolution of AI and mankind, based on science. That will usher in a whole new era more profound than the world has ever seen before.

  • @corey2232
    @corey2232 Жыл бұрын

    I just don't think this will EVER happen, at least not with humans.

  • @aliensoup2420

    @aliensoup2420

    Жыл бұрын

    Right. AI robots will be exploring the stars. Maybe they will take human DNA with them if they find a habitable planet.

  • @fierdrages6523

    @fierdrages6523

    Жыл бұрын

    Robots will probably be what is first, at least until technology advances enough to allow humans to go anywhere without much risk, though that will probably be like 1000 years in the future

  • @shootthelobster
    @shootthelobster Жыл бұрын

    The long journey of 100`s of years or multiple generations would be a total waste of time and money. We will most certainly build a space ship that will at least double the speed, and therefore would pass the first before it arrived at Proxima Centauri! This could happen many times over, leaving a convoy of slower ships all on their way there.

  • @mareowainaina9168
    @mareowainaina916811 ай бұрын

    I would volunteer for interstellar travel in a heartbeat. The opportunity to explore space has always fascinated me. I'm not the biggest fan of people and how our world is going to sh*ts so I wouldn't mind leaving earth.

  • @user-lz5kp5qg8g

    @user-lz5kp5qg8g

    10 ай бұрын

    How long will it take the species which screwed up their own world (Earth) to do the same for the new world?? 🙂

  • @Every-picture-tells-a-story
    @Every-picture-tells-a-story Жыл бұрын

    It would be nice, but I am a realist. Someone needs to understand we are people not robots. The affects of Gravity, Radiation.

  • @weffy93
    @weffy93 Жыл бұрын

    20% sol-1 day on ship is 1.02 days on earth.7 days difference per year. In 20 years is only 140 days the crew would not age.

  • @Sae1962
    @Sae1962 Жыл бұрын

    No "like" for science-tech videos w/o SI units!

  • @richardshelby-dunn5826
    @richardshelby-dunn5826 Жыл бұрын

    The thing most of these videos don't talk about is radiation protection. I'd really like to see that. The systems we do have now don't do a fabulous job of protecting the people we have in space now.

  • @ivobrick7401

    @ivobrick7401

    11 ай бұрын

    Water will do the trick, he says he will travel 42 years, so you need also loads of water lol. I guess you can create water shell atleast 5 meters thick. Stupid ship design but you still need that undrinkable water.

  • @geraldscott4302
    @geraldscott4302 Жыл бұрын

    There will not be any such mission. We will never attempt interstellar travel unless we come up with some kind of FTL propulsion system. And while that is at least a remote possibility, at least theoretically, I don't see any way it could ever actually happen. Humans will destroy themselves long before they come up with anything like that.

  • @stefanrafa1348
    @stefanrafa1348 Жыл бұрын

    The best way is to build telescopes which are stronger than James Webb.

  • @artdogg50
    @artdogg50 Жыл бұрын

    A very nicely produced and inspiring video!

  • @sprinter768
    @sprinter768 Жыл бұрын

    The realistic way to do it is to send robots in charge of maintaining a space ship carrying human and animal embryos along with seeds for most kinds of plants and technologies to terraform a planet that has already been studied from the Earth and determined to be a great candidate for terraforming.

  • @RonsmooveTI

    @RonsmooveTI

    Жыл бұрын

    We don’t have that technology that is type 2 civilization

  • @Road_Rash
    @Road_Rash Жыл бұрын

    I don't know how much I buy that time dilation theory...there's no way to test it but in actual practice & it'll be quite some time before our technology will even be advanced enough for it to even feasible...just because it happened to Charlton Heston in Planet Of The Apes is no guarantee it'll do the same in reality...until tested, it's just an idea of what could happen...and I don't think sleep pods would be a viable option either...wouldn't their bodies atrophy from the years of inactivity?

  • @mk40846

    @mk40846

    Жыл бұрын

    "that time dilation theory" is well and truly tested every single day by the GPS system in your phone - or more accurately the GPS tramsmitters in the satellites that transmit to your phone. The oscallators in those satellites have to be tuned specifically to account for the effects of time dilation. If they weren't, your phone's GPS would completely fail to work.

  • @Miami543210
    @Miami54321011 ай бұрын

    Nothing is more important than what is out there. Whatever is out there, is unbelievable. Amazing. All of our secrets are out there. We must find out what is out there. But none of us will ever know. None of us alive right now will know. Unless upon our death, we learn.

  • @pablocopello3592
    @pablocopello3592 Жыл бұрын

    Interstellar "practical" human travel is not only beyond our current technology, but it is beyond our current best understanding of nature (General Relativity an QM), as much as human travel to the Moon was beyond the technologies and understanding of nature in ancient Greece. I suspect that practical interstellar travel will need us to evolve to another physical support (if we can still consider humans to minds evolved from ours but in another physical support). ("practical" means that the enormous efforts and resources invested in making the travel have a "return" (benefits) that justifies those gargantuan efforts and expended resources).

  • @Concordd9
    @Concordd917 күн бұрын

    i got nothing to live for here, i would be very happy to chase this dream of going on another planet.

  • @deant6361
    @deant636111 ай бұрын

    I can’t see it happening in human history. We would have to invent a space craft that could reach incredible speed.

  • @Chris-kq9lb
    @Chris-kq9lb7 ай бұрын

    Once we have LS travel velocities like traveling on a gravity wave. It'd be 4 LY's to AC/ProxB 4 years requires a lot of consumables. SO likely an umanned mission first. Also, future LS travel most likely AI as probes. AI beings don't require food consumables.

  • @kevanhubbard9673
    @kevanhubbard9673 Жыл бұрын

    '.... sleep pod technology is still not fully developed ',a bit of an understatement as it's not developed at all!

  • @sprinter768

    @sprinter768

    Жыл бұрын

    Actually, I just recently learned that the possibility of placing humans into hibernation is being studied (by NASA I believe), so, there's that.

  • @gigakrait5648

    @gigakrait5648

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sprinter768 Studied is not development.

  • @robbie8142
    @robbie81426 ай бұрын

    Hello Mr Insanity I am a hopeful Space Cadet when it comes to new space discoveries and journeys. I agree with you on the need to invent new ways to cover the distances between stars. They are much, much further away than our technology will allow us to go. Not only that, the Space Ship will need to deal with tiny rocks and dust travelling more than 100 times faster than abullet. Thankyou for your videos. They are informative and alot of fun. Robbie 🚀🐝😁👻🛸

  • @BurtReynolds.
    @BurtReynolds. Жыл бұрын

    I've always wondered if we do get speed to go fast. How do we slow down?

  • @wolfpaws8985

    @wolfpaws8985

    Жыл бұрын

    Depends the ship may need to turn 180 and fire the engines to slow down,unless technology advances enough that thrusters will be capable of slowing the ship.

  • @sprinter768

    @sprinter768

    Жыл бұрын

    They would have to travel the second half of the trip slowing down which means that they would still take a hugely long time to get there as they would only travel at the top speed for a short period of time. They will probably also have to do some gravitational assists to slow down once they arrive at the destination star system and will need some precise calculations of the orbits of those planets. A few orbits here and there and they will slow down to a speed that would allow them a "safe" landing in the planet of their choosing.

  • @shane1489

    @shane1489

    Жыл бұрын

    Space brakes seem easier than light speed

  • @skygge1006

    @skygge1006

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sprinter768 because the first half fired off a lot of weight you can spend more time accelerating then decelerating cause you have less stuff to decelerate so you don’t need as much energy to decelerate.

  • @ivobrick7401
    @ivobrick740111 ай бұрын

    Humans can travel at the speed of light exactly. As a data. Robots need to get there first and make an? outpust there or something like that. ps: good luck waiting for an advancements in that areas, mainly medicine, computing power, ai, robotics.

  • @stevenmoore4612
    @stevenmoore46126 күн бұрын

    I think it will be possible but as far as the tech goes we will only be able to go visit stars that are in our immediate area. But perhaps we should just focus on our own system first before looking at other star systems. We haven’t even been beyond the moon yet so we still have a while ago.

  • @mitseraffej5812
    @mitseraffej581229 күн бұрын

    Odds are humanity will splutter into extinction without ever setting foot outside the solar system.

  • @blessingsofparadise4439
    @blessingsofparadise4439 Жыл бұрын

    Both Voyagers have left the Solar System {{ Interstellar Space }} but still inside Our Milky Way Galaxy.

  • @christophercharles9645
    @christophercharles9645 Жыл бұрын

    A spacecraft leaving earth got the stars COULD use our outer planets for a gravitational assist on their way out of the solar system. That's basically what the Voyagers did - though they got lucky and used a rare window that enabled them to use 3 or 4 (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, & maybe Neptune), whereas we might just get 1 or 2. One could potentially go out to Jupiter and slingshot back in to the sun and zip around that and then head off - the sun has the biggest pull and therefore the best push - but lets face it: without something like an Alcubierre drive, we're probably not visiting anywhere. Unless we figure out how to live for 140,000 years!

  • @martijndaems6503
    @martijndaems65036 ай бұрын

    In 40years this video is still on youtube. En we just made a space craft that Will take us there.🥰😍

  • @IanAnthonyMartin
    @IanAnthonyMartin7 ай бұрын

    5:55 If the journey was undertaken at 20% of the speed of light, 4.2 years will have passed on Earth, and around 30 days less then 4.2 years, on the ship.

  • @MachineThatCreates
    @MachineThatCreates Жыл бұрын

    You'd want to be sure there's something worth going there for. I think we'll be sticking to our solar system for some time yet.

  • @josephpiskac2781
    @josephpiskac2781 Жыл бұрын

    HAL9000 we love you.

  • @donnyyen6484
    @donnyyen6484 Жыл бұрын

    This is possible, I hope space agencies will look into the VIMANA technology.

  • @Vexterian
    @Vexterian Жыл бұрын

    The only way possible to travel to centauri is if there is a safe faster than light transport. Otherwise it is impossible.

  • @mk40846

    @mk40846

    Жыл бұрын

    No, it really isn't. At a constant 1G acceleration and deceleration (meaning very comfortable for those on board) it would take only 5 years ship time.

  • @Chris-kq9lb
    @Chris-kq9lb7 ай бұрын

    Or......some projection vids < possible projection evolution. First immortal mouse in 2080. Possibly first Immortal humans in 2120? Then even great LY travel even at LS not a big deal, you have time on your side.

  • @innertubez
    @innertubez Жыл бұрын

    3:46 "A round trip at superluminal speeds" - that would not be superluminal at 10% or 20% the speed of light. Just a gentle constructive criticism.

  • @triaenmarsh107
    @triaenmarsh107 Жыл бұрын

    Hear me out. What about a wormhole engine? Like in Halo.

  • @gigakrait5648

    @gigakrait5648

    Жыл бұрын

    What about warp speed? Warp 10 or even warp 11 because 11 is better than 10. Or how about jumping to hyperspace? How about asking aliens for help? Maybe a transwarp conduit designed by the Borg? Voyager from Star Trek was able to create a slipstream so that it could travel way faster too. Excelsior had transwarp drive also.

  • @lucasw.3719
    @lucasw.37198 ай бұрын

    Image spending your whole life on a generation ship with your great, great, great, great, great, grandchildren arriving at proxima centauri after a 1000 year, only to find out humans has been living there for 800 years since 100 years after the departure of the generation ship technology was developed that could make the trip in 100 years instead of a 1000.

  • @KevinMurphy0403
    @KevinMurphy04037 ай бұрын

    Acceleration using nuclear explosions may work just fine. But would the reverse technique work when the ship needs to decelerate, effectively flying into the path of the explosions?

  • @mariobenone5476
    @mariobenone5476 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think it will ever be possible for us humans to make interstellar journeys. Let alone intergalatic. The distances are just too big

  • @GregNicolas-vb6vj
    @GregNicolas-vb6vj Жыл бұрын

    The plural of spacecraft is spacecraft.

  • @kirousamaki4874
    @kirousamaki48745 ай бұрын

    Ofcourse.. If it's possible for us to go to there in our lifetime.. and if I was offered the chance.. I'd say yes without a second thought, not because I don't realize the risks, but because just to have that chance would be a miracle, it would be a massive leap for humanity.. to be a part of that? To be able to go so far out into space? Nothing would deter me :) ofcourse sadly I doubt I'd have that chance even if it occured😅

  • @KevinMurphy0403
    @KevinMurphy04037 ай бұрын

    At 20% of light speed, the travellers will experience time dilation of roughly 2%. So if a round trip was 40 years they would have aged about 9.5 months less than that if they’d remained on earth

  • @richardmercer2337
    @richardmercer2337 Жыл бұрын

    3:40: "Superluminal" means "faster than light"!

  • @MonctonRad

    @MonctonRad

    Жыл бұрын

    And, the author speculates about significant time dilation at 10-20% of the speed of light. This is wrong. Time dilation is exponential and doesn't become a significant factor until you are travelling in excess of 90% of the speed of light.

  • @Chris-kq9lb
    @Chris-kq9lb7 ай бұрын

    What if.... What if.... the sport model that Bob Lazar did research on is finally operational and is in fact what is on the Navy "tic tac vids" and is now enroute to Alpha Centari at 4 LY and may be on it's way back with AC/Prox B mango salsa and Gentleman's club models.

  • @MissCV
    @MissCV10 ай бұрын

    Yes. I would be willing to travel even if it meant I never saw anyone from earth again. I’m going to venture a guess and say that’s mostly because of high functioning autism. It leaves me ok with the thought.

  • @billneal8995
    @billneal8995 Жыл бұрын

    I would go in a second!

  • @bjt81366
    @bjt81366 Жыл бұрын

    With time dilation. So it's possible they could spend twenty years traveling to Proxima Centauri, get there and there could be a ton of humans already living there for a couple hundred years. Because humans a thousand years after they left figured out the wormhole.

  • @davehoward22

    @davehoward22

    Жыл бұрын

    Odds are there will be nothing habitable there.

  • @Dazza13Bravo
    @Dazza13Bravo6 ай бұрын

    Not a vacation trip! I think a one way trip and just you know this is your new home.

  • @M4V3RiCkU235
    @M4V3RiCkU235 Жыл бұрын

    According to ChatGP: Approximately 43.43 years would pass on Earth while a spaceship travels for 42.5 years at 20% of the speed of light. So won`t pass hundreds or thousands of years on Earth! I will correct that. So yeah....now we need a ship to go 20% speed of light and the crew to enlist for it. Is like 42.5 years in prison. With a chance that every day could be the last! The reactor could stop working, an engine, the life support (oxygen/water, etc), the ability to grow food, hull breach - you name it! You have thousands of ways to die on board such a ship - no one would come for rescue. So...." who`s in" for such a trip ?!

  • @miketaylor7023
    @miketaylor7023 Жыл бұрын

    Even in space we need precision gravity and we need to be able to do things like running at full speed! We are alien creatures. And much like all other alien creatures our behavioral characteristics are part of what we are. We don't just escape our past because we believe we're special somehow. Every creature is infinite and unique! And we share similarities seen through fractal analysis. Math symmetries. You absolutely have to push your thinking to the limit. And BEYOND. No limits as Bruce Lee said. It is true to a point. After 30 years of age or other various conditions everyone has limits though. But in developmental reasoning and imagination it becomes possible to engineer mysteries by examining everything around ourselves and even within ourselves. Question your accuracy along with others. Question all the facts. Even those you don't know about. Question reasoning itself! Others including your own!!!! It can be good to ask if one's own thinking is way off the mark! When something is happening it's good to ask yourself the question: What is going on? Study the behaviors of other creatures in yourself! And the behaviors of yourself manifesting in other creatures. In other species too! THINK!

  • @gpierre90
    @gpierre9011 ай бұрын

    I will never volunteer for such a mission, in my opinion currently with current technologies we have now, it is impossible to ever make such a mission, in order to make a round trip you need to go like infinitesimal speeds or perhaps if something like "warp drives" or "slipstream" like in Andromeda series or star wars movies or whatever is a thing and you could address the human problems that comes with it not to mention dangers of space exploration then OK, I think mankind may need to evolve for another several millenia before we can ever do it. That is if humans would be around for that long. Sometimes I just wonder why we don't simply explore the oceans on our planet, I think that is more do Able than an exploration to Proxima Centuri.

  • @Nostradamus_Order33
    @Nostradamus_Order33 Жыл бұрын

    I have a novel idea. Let’s start with the moon. 😮

  • @kumars1961
    @kumars19612 ай бұрын

    You cannot make predictions about the future based on the knowledge and technology available today. Just two hundred years ago the same pessimistic views would have been said about air travel and setting foot.on the moon. When we consider the tremendous progress science and technology have achieved during the past one hundred years, we can say with absolute certainty that Nothing is Impossible. If a very short period of one hundred years can bring forth such progress, just imagine what it would be like in the year 5000 AD. I am absolutely certain that mankind would have gone beyond the Alpha Centauri system by then.

  • @4yerears

    @4yerears

    2 ай бұрын

    Yes... the same way that it is difficult to grasp the staggering distances between our sun and the nearest ones, people cannot picture where science will be in the distant future

  • @peterinburnaby
    @peterinburnaby Жыл бұрын

    A life like Robot would be a better idea with a full time communication link 👽

  • @danieljames5423
    @danieljames5423 Жыл бұрын

  • @Karcarius
    @Karcarius11 ай бұрын

    They believe they can warp space.When they do that,if they can, it'll take about 2 weeks to get there.

  • @phoqueanonyme4072
    @phoqueanonyme4072 Жыл бұрын

    Is this one of those bot chanels that science guy was talking about ?

  • @InsaneCuriosity

    @InsaneCuriosity

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope, we are not fans of those channels too

  • @Quinn37
    @Quinn377 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry, it just seems so premature to talk about this when we haven't even been back to the moon in 50 years. A mission like this would be built on the experience of moon and mars colonies, and considerably more exploration of our own system. Even then it seems the trail will be blazed by artificial life. Where is Zefram Cochran when you need him?

  • @happyandhealthy888
    @happyandhealthy8885 ай бұрын

    Or we can drive with a bicycle 🚲 from planet to planet. Turning on the lights on the way. 😅

  • @nofrackingzone7479
    @nofrackingzone7479 Жыл бұрын

    The first trip will be done by an AI and no human passengers. It’s ridiculous to believe a wagon train to the stars will happen.

  • @philipbenjamin1371
    @philipbenjamin1371 Жыл бұрын

    I am in volunteer count me in

  • @phildavenport4150
    @phildavenport41502 ай бұрын

    There is absolutely no point in setting out on a journey of this type using only the current forms of propulsion. Until we achieve a folding of space or harnessed wormhole type of travel, all we are doing is condemning a large number of people to a pointless existence in space, only for them to discover that they have been well beaten by a ship having the sort of propulsion referred to. Even if cryosleep were perfected, it achieves nothing.

  • @melvino8926
    @melvino8926 Жыл бұрын

    Wow.....imagine

  • @sk111zz
    @sk111zz7 ай бұрын

    If the USA alone just swapped its NASA budget with its Military budget think of the possibilities!!!

  • @CesarLopez-nd8le
    @CesarLopez-nd8le11 ай бұрын

    I believe it will happen but with current technology it is not possible we need to harness other forms of propulsion maybe using the heat of the sun

  • @richardofutuasella3453
    @richardofutuasella3453 Жыл бұрын

    Let's say eventually human reaches proxima centaury and manages to habitate in proxima centaury B. Won't the same thing will happen there as earth will be eaten by sun here? I am not saying it is useless to reach another habitable exoplanet but what next?

  • @jeffwinters8152
    @jeffwinters8152 Жыл бұрын

    intresting would it be posable to go up to the speed on light maybe but not in the way you would think a gravity drive would work better pulling insted of pushing use a gravity amplification to pull the item or ship so if i were on earth had a gravity amplification device aimed it at the moon and set it to two gs it would pull me to the moon you can do the same thing but at a much greater range could you use this to get to the speed on light maybe time slows down the faster you go so if you ever did reach the speed of light for the people on the ship traveling to the star it would take .000000186 seconds for every light year travel for the people on the ship at the speed of light for ever one seconds on the ship traveling at light speed would travel 186,000 light years for every second at the speed of ligh and a 186,000 years would of past on earth for the people on the space ship only one second of time would of passed

  • @eoachan9304
    @eoachan9304 Жыл бұрын

    Good effort, poor research. With libraries AND the internet you have NO excuse for such simple errors! (e.g, vincent baltus's note). Pulsed nuclear propulsion would be easily in our grasp after perhaps a decade of intense research, and used correctly could gradually boost the speed of the ship a lot faster than 20% SOL, perhaps to 60% SOL. There is of course also the Alcubierre drive too :) Most likely a tech none of us have heard of will be the "it" tech for interstellar travel ;)

  • @russellroadmasterseries2208
    @russellroadmasterseries2208 Жыл бұрын

    In life u got to take a chance. Be it for humanity as a last resort. To save humanity an find new life far an beyond. Yes we will lose the ones we love as we would be back but who we new would be dead an gone. Is it worth taking a risk. Or just stay back an let life takes us on earth before we depart from earth itself

  • @st.3433
    @st.3433 Жыл бұрын

    imagine doing that trip just to travel to a hell and leave paradise our earth. It sounds like worse than death

  • @jamesms4
    @jamesms44 ай бұрын

    Time dilation only kicks in(that is you notice it) when you go above 50% the speed of light and thousands of years would only go past if you traveled thousands of light years and near light speed like at 99%c or 99.5%c. At 99% for every 100 years the Earth bound observer experiences 14 years. At 99.5% every 100 years Earth time only equals 4 years ship time.

  • @gregmanahan1312
    @gregmanahan131211 ай бұрын

    We need faster than light travel (FTL) to make anything possible to study in a lifetime

  • @qw3rtypd4ng3r
    @qw3rtypd4ng3r Жыл бұрын

    And when we get there all we see is a boring star with uninhabitable planets. I’m all for space travel but the technology to do so at a reasonable speed will not be available for thousands of years, if ever.

  • @ultrasurfs
    @ultrasurfs5 ай бұрын

    miles? can you use km/hour next time? most of us are international audience.

  • @davidwalker5054
    @davidwalker5054 Жыл бұрын

    What will the first flight to proxa be like. Short answer very very long about 70 thousand years give or take a day

  • @eternisedDragon7
    @eternisedDragon7 Жыл бұрын

    What it will be like? It will not be like; it will not exist, that's what it will be like.

  • @budwhite9591
    @budwhite95917 ай бұрын

    “Spacecraft we have today”. Shows picture of shuttle 🙄

  • @tonygu2958
    @tonygu29582 ай бұрын

    What would suck is the possibility the planet is at a stage of lava flows and cannot land the craft. Just a waste of time to get there. Should send non-manned ship to investigate the system first. We can be wrong about the system.😢😢

  • @ahmadx1998
    @ahmadx19985 ай бұрын

    What if there is already a civilization on proxima b when the first humans arrive?

  • @calvinmasters6159

    @calvinmasters6159

    5 ай бұрын

    Then do what the 19th century British did... Introduce them to cricket.

  • @phaysyk
    @phaysyk Жыл бұрын

    I have nothing going for me, ill be the first to volunteer. Idc if i don't make it back to earth. 😊

  • @user-ml6dk8sk4e
    @user-ml6dk8sk4e5 ай бұрын

    We will send AI enhanced Robots and a few humans (?) what an ADVENTURE ! 😮😊

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