Space Travel Basic - Department of Physics and Astronomy
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Transcript Space Travel Basic - Department of Physics and Astronomy
Last Words on SETI & CETI and
some Space Travel Basics
HNRT 228
Fall 2012
Dr. H. Geller
1
What I Will Cover Today
Final words about CETI
Space Travel
Space Environment
Spaceflight Projects
Spaceflight Operations
2
iClicker Question
About how many extrasolar planets
have officially been detected to date?
A
B
C
between 10 and 100
between 100 and 1000
more than 1000
3
iClicker Question
How have we detected most
extrasolar planets discovered to date
(before Kepler mission)?
A
B
C
Transits
Hubble Space Telescope images
the Doppler related technique
4
iClicker Question
Which technique does the Kepler
mission use to search for Earth size
planets around other stars?
A
B
C
D
Transits.
The astrometric technique.
The Doppler related technique.
Gravitational lensing.
5
iClicker Question
Nearly all the extrasolar planets
discovered to date are
A
B
C
terrestrial-like planets.
jovian-like planets.
large, icy worlds.
6
iClicker Question
The end result of a calculation with
Drake equation is intended to be an
estimate of
A
the number of worlds in the galaxy
on which life has arisen.
B
the number of worlds in the galaxy
on which intelligence has arisen.
C
the number of worlds in the galaxy
on which civilizations are transmitting
signals now.
7
iClicker Question
Which of the following statements is
true about the terms in the Drake
equation?
A
Astronomical research will soon give
us firm values for all of the terms.
B
Some of the terms depend on
sociology, and cannot be determined by
astronomers alone.
C
We already know the terms of the
equation to an accuracy within a factor of 2.
8
iClicker Question
The fact that marine predators like
dolphins and sharks have similar shapes
despite different ancestry is an
example of
A
B
C
convergent evolution.
narrow bandwidth.
spontaneous creation.
9
iClicker Question
Which of the following would lead an animal
to a higher encephalization quotient (EQ) as
it evolved?
A
B
C
Growth in both body size and brain size.
Growth in body size but not in brain size.
Growth in brain size but not in body size.
10
iClicker Question
Two-way conversation with other
societies is probably unlikely, even if we
make contact. This is mainly because
A
aliens won’t speak our language.
B
it might be dangerous to get in
touch.
C
the time it takes for signals to cross
the distance to them could be centuries or
more.
11
iClicker Question
One reason the scientists doubt that
crop circles have alien origin is
A
they are always beautiful.
B
they can be easily made by humans.
C
their appearance is not correlated
with sightings of bright lights.
12
A Cartoon about CETI
13
What does a telescope do?
Collect electromagnetic waves
Collecting ability proportional to the
square of the diameter of the objective
Resolve electromagnetic sources
Related to the atmosphere, wavelength
and curvature of the objective
Magnify surfaces of planets and the Moon
Magnification only of Moon, Sun and planets
14
Looking
Beyond
the Eyes
15
Optical Telescopes
Reflector
Refractor
16
Different Views of Sun
Sun in Hydrogen-alpha
Sun in X-ray
17
Radio
Astronomy
Basics
18
A Little More Detail
19
Jansky’s Original Radiotelescope
20
Grote Reber’s Telescope
21
170 foot
Diameter
Radiotelescope at
Green Bank,
WV
22
The 100meter Green
Bank
Telescope
23
Even Bigger than you Think
24
Jupiter in
Radio
Saturn in
Radio
25
3C296
Radio/Optical
Composite
26
Smoothing Data
27
Visualizing the Data
28
Colorizing the Data
29
Dealing With Noise
30
Worldwide Noise Sources
31
The Space Environment
Solar System
Reference System
Gravity and Mechanics
Trajectories
Planetary Orbits
Electromagnetics
32
Solar System Considerations
Distance
From Sun
Energy,
temperature,
condensation of
matter
Hostile
Environment
Radiation (gamma
ray)
Radiation (x-ray)
Radiation (UV)
33
Coordinate Reference Systems
Geographic
Celestial
Precession
34
Gravity and Mechanics
Orbits
Kepler
Newton
35
Orbital Transfers
36
Planets and Gravity
37
Flight Project Considerations
Mission Inception
Experiments
Spacecraft Classification
Telecom
Onboard Systems
Science Instruments
Navigation
38
Mission Inception
39
Instruments
40
Telecommunications
41
Onboard Systems
42
Operations Considerations
Launch
Cruise
Encounter
Extended Operations
Deep Space Network
43
Launch Vehicles
44
Cruise Portion of Mission
45
Encounter Portion of Mission
46
Need for Deep Space Network
47
Interstellar
Spaceflight
Considerations
48
THE PHYSICS AND MATH OF
SPACE TRAVEL
For a spacecraft accelerating at a rate a, the velocity v reached and
distance x traveled in a given interval of time t is:
v(t)
at
2
at
1
c
2
c 2
at
x(t)
1
1 c
a
c = speed of light
Accelerating at 1g = 9.8 m/s2:
Crew Duration (yr)
1
10
20
40
Earth Duration (yr)
1
24
270
36,000
Range (pc)
0.02
3 - nearest stars
42
5,400 - center of Galaxy
49
iClicker Question
What does the letter “c” stand for in
the equations shown?
A Speed of sound
B Speed of light
C A constant of unknown value
D A generic constant
E Speed of time
50
Considerations for Interstellar Travel
Three considerations for interstellar travel
1. Imagination - not a problem today
2. Technology - constantly improving
3. Laws of Nature - may provide ultimate limits
Unless there is a MAJOR revolution in technology rockets are all we have.
Rocket engines most efficient when v~vexhaust. Going faster
makes them less efficient.
Rockets must accelerate not only the payload but also all the
fuel they carry!
51
For a final velocity Vf, a ratio of initial mass (payload plus fuel)
to final mass (ditto) M, and exhaust velocity W, then:
1 M 2W /c
c
1 M 2W /c
Vf
For Vf < 0.1c, then M = “e” = 2.7182…..
For a round trip, where 4 legs of the trip each require a factor of M:
M RT M 4
Suppose we took a round trip to a star 5 pc away:
Via Chemical Rocket
Vf / c ~ 10-5
MRT = 55 (=e4)
t = 3 million years
Via Nuclear Rocket
Vf / c ~ 10-1
MRT = 55
t = 300 years
52
iClicker Question
What does the letter “e” represent in
these equations?
A Speed of light
B The natural logarithm base
C An irrational number
D A rational number
E Both B and C are correct
53
Energy Costs of Interstellar Travel
Example: Controlled Nuclear Fusion (can’t do this yet!)
1000 ton payload
55,000 tons fuel in the form of H, dissociated from
440,000 tons of H2O ice mined from one of Saturn’s
moons
Dissociating 440,000 tons of ice requires 1016 Joules
(Watt-sec) = 3x109 kW-hours = 3000 GW-h ~ 0.1% total
annual energy consumption in the USA
But it won’t go very fast.
54
iClicker Question
When do you think the USA will develop
a nuclear fusion reactor that produces
more electricity than it consumes?
A Within the next 10 years
B Within the next 20 years
C Within the next 30 years
D Within the next 50 years
E Never
55
Vf
c
1 M 2
1 M 2
c2
x(dist.)
M M 1 2
2a
2c
T (earth)
M M 1
a
c
t (crew)
ln(M )
a
Matter/Antimatter Rockets
W=c
Illustration - flat-out acceleration (No stopping, drifting, or return).
Vf/c = 0.1
a = 0.01 g
M = 1.1
Tcrew = 9.7 y
tearth = 39 y
Vf/c = 0.98
a = 0.01 g
M = 9.95
Tcrew = 230 y
tearth = 2000 y
Vf/c = 0.1
a=1g
M = 1.1
Tcrew = 0.1 y
tearth = 0.4 y
Vf/c = 0.98
a=1g
M = 9.95
Tcrew = 2.3 y
tearth = 20 y
The fuel supply needed to reach Vf / c=0.98 for a round-trip (MRT=M4=9,800)
10-ton payload requires 100,000 tons matter-antimatter
mc2 E 10 25 Joules
About 1 million times the annual energy consumption in the USA
56
iClicker Question
What is the value of v2/c2 when v is
very small compared to c?
A Near zero
B Near one
C Effectively infinite
57
iClicker Question
What is the value of (1 - v2/c2) when v
is very small compared to c?
A Effectively zero
B Effectively one
C Effectively infinite
58
iClicker Question
What is the value of (1 - v2/c2) when v
is approaching the speed of light?
A Effectively zero
B Effectively one
C Effectively infinite
59
iClicker Question
What is the value of 1 / (1 - v2/c2) when
v is approaching the speed of light?
A Effectively zero
B Effectively one
C Effectively infinite
60
Project Orion - detonate nuclear
bombs to provide thrust (motion
picture “Deep Impact”)
61
iClicker Question
Do you support the use of nuclear
weapons for space travel?
A Yes
B No
62
Solar Sailing
Solar wind only reaches 0.003c, need to use sunlight
Planetary Society - Cosmos 1
June 21, 2005, launched on
Volna rocket from Russian
sub. Failed to reach orbit
63
Suppose we start at 1 AU
from the Sun (i.e. Earth's
orbit), a sail area A and a
payload (plus sail mass) M.
v
2x
R1AU
ALSun
x
M 2 c
10-ton payload, sail 1000 km x 1000 km in size. v∞ is then only 0.04 c.
It would take roughly 3/0.04 = 75 years to get anywhere, i.e. 3 ly away (ignoring
deceleration & stopping)
Oops! The SAIL ALSO has mass!
A 1000 km x 1000 km. A gold leaf sail 1 atom thick (a real sail would have to be
much thicker) would have a mass of 170 tons (it effectively becomes the payload),
and so the top speed is 0.009 c. Now it takes over 300 years to get anywhere!
Science fiction story - sails from star to star in a day or two (1/300th of a year),
This is impossible by a factor of 300 x 300 = 90,000 times! Such trips are,
therefore, unrealistic fantasy.
64
Yet other "Possibilities" for Interstellar Flight
Ships pushed by X-ray lasers
A rear reflector plays the same role to a
powerful planet-based light source as the solar
sail did to sunlight.
Interstellar Ramjets
This uses interstellar gas as fuel. You no longer
need to carry it with you. Avoid low-density
regions? How do you get the fuel into the
engine?
FTL (Faster-Than-Light)
Warp drives, etc. Contrary to all known
physics. Sorry.
65
Exploration by Proxy - Robotics
Von Neumann Machines/Probes - self-replicating:
1. Travel to a destination
2. Mine resources
3. Make copies of itself
4. Send copies out to new destination
5. Spread though the Galaxy as exponentially growing
fleet of machines that consume raw resources
Is this really a good idea?
66
Commentary on Interstellar Space
Travel
•
•
Unless there is a major revolution in our
understanding of the laws of nature, space travel is
likely to be confined to the solar system, unless
someone wants to launch "generation ships" where
only their distant descendents will see arrive
somewhere.
IF interstellar travel were to become a reality, but
still limited to relatively slow travel, all trips will be
1-way. For M="e", M1way = M2 = 7.4, while MRT = M4 =
55. Also, why return? Everyone you know back on
Earth will be dead. You will be an anachronism (how
would your great-great-great-great grandparents fit
into today's society?), or worse, a specimen in a zoo.
67
iClicker Question
You take a spaceship to Alpha Centaurus and
return to Earth. Which of the following is the
case when you return to Earth?
A All who knew you will be dead.
B There will be no time noticed to have
passed on Earth.
C All who knew you will be alive.
D This is not possible.
D More information is needed.
68
Another Hazard of interstellar flight
A 1-mm grain (mass of 0.012 grams) hit by a spacecraft
traveling 0.1 c - energy (E=1/2 mv2) of 5.4x109 J.
Same energy as a 1-ton object hitting at Mach 9.5 (7,000
mi/hr)!!
Unless there is a way to screen out all
interstellar dust, the spacecraft will be
easily destroyed.
69
iClicker Question
If you double the mass of a moving
object, the force needed to accelerate
it would
A be doubled.
B be tripled.
C be quadrupled.
D decrease.
E Cannot be determined, more
information is needed.
70
iClicker Question
If you double the mass of a moving
object, its kinetic energy will
A be doubled.
B be tripled.
C be quadrupled.
D decrease.
E Cannot be determined, more
information is needed.
71
iClicker Question
If you double the velocity of a moving
object, its kinetic energy will
A be doubled.
B be tripled.
C be quadrupled.
D decrease.
E Cannot be determined, more
information is needed.
72
Past "Attempts" at
Physical Contact
The Pioneer 10 spacecraft plaque
The Voyager 1 and 2
spacecraft - gold record (and
stylus for "playing") with
images and sounds of Planet
Earth.
73
iClicker Question
Do you believe it is easy to construct a
message for another civilization?
A True
B False
74
More Scenes of Earth
from Voyager Catalog
75
Voyager
Trajectories
– Interstellar
Spacecraft
Neither of these are targeted at
any specific star. Their
trajectories were constrained by
their science missions to the
jovian planets.
76
Will the Pioneer & Voyager Spacecraft ever “get anywhere”?
To come within 1 AU of a star & accidentally be found:
“Mean Free Path” (how far to go in order to hit something)
x=1/(n)
n = number of systems per pc3
= "target area" to be hit.
(For a circle, the target area is times the radius (here 1 AU) squared, which we will express in pc2 to
get the units we need.)
n 2.5x10 3 stars / ly 3 0.1star / pc 3
2
1
2
1AU
pc 2.4 1011 pc2
206,265
x
1
1
11
1.3x10
pc
n 0.1pc3 7.5x10 11 pc2
The MW is about 105 pc across (and about 103 pc thick)
Changes of “hitting” are less than 10-6 or 0.0001%. Using
Neptune’s orbit as target - goes up to a whopping 0.1%.
77
iClicker Question
Can the previous calculation be applied
to the likelihood of intercepting a radio
signal from another civilization?
A Yes
B No
78
N.B. - 28 November 2012
New Horizons half way between Uranus and Neptune
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