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How to design a sail that won't tear or melt on an interstellar voyage
Phys.org ^ | 2/16/2022 | Evan Lerner

Posted on 02/17/2022 3:40:02 AM PST by LibWhacker

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To: Chad C. Mulligan

Yup,Larry Niven had light sails accelerated by solar powered lasers based on the planet mercury.🤔


21 posted on 02/17/2022 1:51:25 PM PST by BiteYourSelf ( Earth first we'll strip mine the other planets later.)
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To: outofsalt
wouldn’t the photons from AC work against the solar photons?

Photons from AC are negligible in comparison to the impetus from the massive laser beam from earth. Those photons from AC may indeed work against the photons from the sun, and in fact would overpower the sun's puny output since there are three stars (they think) associated with AC vs. only one star on this end. As the article says, "Once the sail is in orbit, a massive array of ground-based lasers would train their beams on it, providing a light intensity millions of times greater than the sun's," and vastly greater than AC's. Secondly, the cup of the antenna (or sail) is oriented toward earth, not AC. So only all that intense laser light from earth has any chance of pushing the "starchip."

22 posted on 02/17/2022 8:03:55 PM PST by LibWhacker
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