Count your lucky stars.
To: LibWhacker
To: SunkenCiv
4 posted on
04/16/2018 1:54:28 PM PDT by
fieldmarshaldj
("It's Slappin' Time !")
To: LibWhacker
Basically saying that chemical fuel is not exactly optimal for deep space travel. For escaping earth’s gravity well it is ideal, since high thrust is required rather than specific impulse. Nuclear propulsion becomes the ideal thing after that, generally having low thrust but high specific impulse. I wish I had saved all those Scientific American magazines I used to buy. There were some interesting articles.
To: LibWhacker
This unfortunate fate will inevitably confront us in less than a billion years, when the sun will heat up enough to boil all water off the face of the Earth. With proper planning we could relocate to a new home by then. How friggin' profound...
9 posted on
04/16/2018 2:02:56 PM PDT by
sargon
("If the President doesn't drain the Swamp, the Swamp will drain the President.")
To: LibWhacker
Hmmm...The PC crowd has missed an important opportunity, for them, to protest these poor size-disadvantaged stars being referred to with such hurtful language...
10 posted on
04/16/2018 2:03:12 PM PDT by
SuperLuminal
(Where is another agitator for republicanism like Sam Adams when we need him?)
To: LibWhacker
A civilization in the habitable zone of a dwarf star like Proxima Centauri might find it hard to get into interstellar space with conventional rockets Good. The last thing we need is a bunch of aliens from the Proxima Centauri system showing up on our doorstep seeking welfare and demanding that we celebrate their culture.
11 posted on
04/16/2018 2:10:34 PM PDT by
noiseman
(The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.)
To: LibWhacker
i especially liked the advice to properly plan our escape from earth within the next billion years. I would suggest no planning of any kind until we are within, say, 5000 years of the need to do so.
12 posted on
04/16/2018 2:13:18 PM PDT by
Louis Foxwell
(Islam is Satans finest work.)
To: LibWhacker
If were around in ANY corporeal capacity in a billion years itll be possible to just move the earth further out...
14 posted on
04/16/2018 2:16:59 PM PDT by
Axenolith
(Government blows, and that which governs least, blows least...)
To: LibWhacker
Since the surface temperature of a warm planet is dictated by the flux of stellar irradiation,.. Wait, what? That sounds like heresy!
22 posted on
04/16/2018 3:37:57 PM PDT by
NativeSon
( Grease the floor with Crisco when I dance the Disco)
To: LibWhacker
Idiot author. If you can’t go direct interstellar you can use nearby moons and planets as gravitational slingshots. Easy peasy.
24 posted on
04/16/2018 5:17:28 PM PDT by
Go_Raiders
(The fact is, we really don't know anything. It's all guesswork and rationalization.)
To: LibWhacker
Three little words: quantum slipstream drive.
To: LibWhacker
Why would they use chemical rockets for anything beyond getting off their planet’s surface and into orbit? Solar sails or nuclear engines could take over from there.
26 posted on
04/16/2018 6:51:34 PM PDT by
jmcenanly
("The more corrupt the state, the more laws." Tacitus, Publius Cornelius)
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