Everything that can be invented has been invented.mistermack wrote:Lets face it. We are never going to explore space. The nearest star is more than four light years away. What's the equivalent in human terms?
Charles H. Duell, Commissioner, U.S. patent office, 1899
First things first. Let's go to the Moon, then Mars, then the outer planets. We'll then start with a probe to another star. Most folks in the 19th century would have placed traveling to the Moon or Mars as among the list of impossibles. Had we followed your advice then, we'd not have gone as far as we have.mistermack wrote: The faster you travel, the more energy needed for acceleration, and deceleration when you arrive.
Under current technology, using conventional rockets. Theories have existed for decades about how faster than light travel might be effected some time down the road.mistermack wrote:
And you can't survive more than one g for long periods, so deceleration must take as long as acceleration. So getting humans to the NEAREST star would take a lot more than a thousand years, and huge amounts of energy.
Everything in the solar system is worth sending men to. We can learn to live on Mars in constructed habitats. We can, potentially, down the road, even terraform the planet.mistermack wrote:
So when you talk about manned exploration of space, you're really talking about manned exploration of THE SOLAR SYSTEM. Any further isn't a practical proposition.
And there ain't really too much in the solar system worth sending a man to.