Potential System to system travel?












3














So one of the ideas I've come up with for system to system travel, in the early colony stage of my world, is using fuel boosters to start the journey and then to reach the required speed for the colony ship to reach the next system, using solar sails.
Is this a plausible mechanism for inter-system travel?



The storyline will be making no use of hyperdrive/wormholes etc, however later on there will be the use of anti-matter/ion drives. But this is for the expansion era of the story.



I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional failures. The technology would have been developed as an alternative to riskier medically-induced comas.



I'm aware that the time required to traverse from one star system to the next would be quite large. But this age of expansion (in my universe) would be what sets into place the colonial divides in religion/science/design and political views.










share|improve this question









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  • Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
    – Alexander
    3 hours ago










  • Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
    – Richard
    3 hours ago


















3














So one of the ideas I've come up with for system to system travel, in the early colony stage of my world, is using fuel boosters to start the journey and then to reach the required speed for the colony ship to reach the next system, using solar sails.
Is this a plausible mechanism for inter-system travel?



The storyline will be making no use of hyperdrive/wormholes etc, however later on there will be the use of anti-matter/ion drives. But this is for the expansion era of the story.



I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional failures. The technology would have been developed as an alternative to riskier medically-induced comas.



I'm aware that the time required to traverse from one star system to the next would be quite large. But this age of expansion (in my universe) would be what sets into place the colonial divides in religion/science/design and political views.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
    – Alexander
    3 hours ago










  • Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
    – Richard
    3 hours ago
















3












3








3







So one of the ideas I've come up with for system to system travel, in the early colony stage of my world, is using fuel boosters to start the journey and then to reach the required speed for the colony ship to reach the next system, using solar sails.
Is this a plausible mechanism for inter-system travel?



The storyline will be making no use of hyperdrive/wormholes etc, however later on there will be the use of anti-matter/ion drives. But this is for the expansion era of the story.



I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional failures. The technology would have been developed as an alternative to riskier medically-induced comas.



I'm aware that the time required to traverse from one star system to the next would be quite large. But this age of expansion (in my universe) would be what sets into place the colonial divides in religion/science/design and political views.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











So one of the ideas I've come up with for system to system travel, in the early colony stage of my world, is using fuel boosters to start the journey and then to reach the required speed for the colony ship to reach the next system, using solar sails.
Is this a plausible mechanism for inter-system travel?



The storyline will be making no use of hyperdrive/wormholes etc, however later on there will be the use of anti-matter/ion drives. But this is for the expansion era of the story.



I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional failures. The technology would have been developed as an alternative to riskier medically-induced comas.



I'm aware that the time required to traverse from one star system to the next would be quite large. But this age of expansion (in my universe) would be what sets into place the colonial divides in religion/science/design and political views.







science-fiction space-travel worldbuilding-process science interstellar-travel






share|improve this question









New contributor




Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









jdunlop

7,05511540




7,05511540






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Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 3 hours ago









RichardRichard

165




165




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Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Richard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
    – Alexander
    3 hours ago










  • Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
    – Richard
    3 hours ago




















  • Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
    – Alexander
    3 hours ago










  • Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
    – Richard
    3 hours ago


















Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
– Alexander
3 hours ago




Hi, Richard Edmunds, Welcome to Worldbuilding! Booster or no booster, solar sail is a viable method of interstellar travel, so the answer is "yes". But this travel would be relatively slow, so you might want to be more specific on your colony ship type (generational etc.) to assess its potential.
– Alexander
3 hours ago












Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
– Richard
3 hours ago






Hi Alexander, pleasure to be here hehe. I was thinking the original colony ships in my timeline would involve some 'sketchy' at best cryo sleep with occasional faliures. The technology having been developed as on off-shoot for medical reasons in place of medially induced coma's. I'll add this to my original question though, thank you
– Richard
3 hours ago












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















4














It was covered in a comment, but the answer is



Yes



A solar sail is a perfectly viable method of travel. It will be very, very slow, but there's nothing inherently wrong with it. Given the distance between potentially inhabitable worlds in our galaxy (yours might be different, of course), you're talking centuries (at least!) of travel, so cryogenic hibernation is basically the only viable option if you want someone to make the trip personally, rather than genetically.



To be clear, the maximum velocity theoretically achievable by a solar sail lightcraft is circa 0.11c, so travelling to the nearest star would take around 40 years. This speed is only achievable with power beamed from the starting point using a 1000km-diameter Fresnel lens. Using solar power alone, the approximate exit speed would be 0.005C, and the trip would take 800 years.



This is to the nearest star. If we assume at least 100 ly separation between solar systems with habitable planets (and here we're likely being very generous), we're talking forty thousand year trips. That is, for reference, longer than all recorded history - the oldest cave paintings are about 40 000 years old. You'd definitely get some political divides, though, given that two thousand generations would have lived and died before the travellers made it to their destination.






share|improve this answer































    2














    How about solar sail brakes?



    The thing about going fast is that you then have to slow down, somehow. Consider the sail. The sail provides more acceleration the more solar wind it can catch. The farther you are from the star, the less dense the solar wind. Solar wind pretty much nonexistent in interstellar space.



    But as you reach the destination you are going towards the sun of that system. The solar wind gets more and more energetic and the sail provides more and more backwards acceleration.



    My proposal - use your fuel boosters to get up to full speed and then the solar sail to slow yourself down at your destination.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
      – Richard
      3 hours ago



















    2














    When designing interstellar travel techniques, the thing to remember is that constant acceleration is the key. Low reaction, constant acceleration is interstellar physics' version of compound interest; using less fuel to add less acceleration over a longer time period works out in your favour, especially as it would appear these engines are usually more efficient in terms of energy output against their fuel.



    Ideally, you'd only use rocket boosters to escape your local gravity well (IE get off the Earth) and then use your sails for the entire remainder of the journey. If your two solar systems are adjacent, then this works particularly well because for the first half the majority of your solar wind is coming from the sun, speeding you up, and for the second half it's coming from your target star, slowing you down.



    Ion and plasma drives are a thing, and worth looking at as your next generation of engines as they're currently being looked at by NASA.



    The one type of engine that you can guarantee won't be used for interstellar travel will be standard chemical rocket style propulsion systems, as for the distances you need to cover in interstellar travel, they are way too inefficient and you don't get that benefit of sustained acceleration over time.






    share|improve this answer





















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      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      4














      It was covered in a comment, but the answer is



      Yes



      A solar sail is a perfectly viable method of travel. It will be very, very slow, but there's nothing inherently wrong with it. Given the distance between potentially inhabitable worlds in our galaxy (yours might be different, of course), you're talking centuries (at least!) of travel, so cryogenic hibernation is basically the only viable option if you want someone to make the trip personally, rather than genetically.



      To be clear, the maximum velocity theoretically achievable by a solar sail lightcraft is circa 0.11c, so travelling to the nearest star would take around 40 years. This speed is only achievable with power beamed from the starting point using a 1000km-diameter Fresnel lens. Using solar power alone, the approximate exit speed would be 0.005C, and the trip would take 800 years.



      This is to the nearest star. If we assume at least 100 ly separation between solar systems with habitable planets (and here we're likely being very generous), we're talking forty thousand year trips. That is, for reference, longer than all recorded history - the oldest cave paintings are about 40 000 years old. You'd definitely get some political divides, though, given that two thousand generations would have lived and died before the travellers made it to their destination.






      share|improve this answer




























        4














        It was covered in a comment, but the answer is



        Yes



        A solar sail is a perfectly viable method of travel. It will be very, very slow, but there's nothing inherently wrong with it. Given the distance between potentially inhabitable worlds in our galaxy (yours might be different, of course), you're talking centuries (at least!) of travel, so cryogenic hibernation is basically the only viable option if you want someone to make the trip personally, rather than genetically.



        To be clear, the maximum velocity theoretically achievable by a solar sail lightcraft is circa 0.11c, so travelling to the nearest star would take around 40 years. This speed is only achievable with power beamed from the starting point using a 1000km-diameter Fresnel lens. Using solar power alone, the approximate exit speed would be 0.005C, and the trip would take 800 years.



        This is to the nearest star. If we assume at least 100 ly separation between solar systems with habitable planets (and here we're likely being very generous), we're talking forty thousand year trips. That is, for reference, longer than all recorded history - the oldest cave paintings are about 40 000 years old. You'd definitely get some political divides, though, given that two thousand generations would have lived and died before the travellers made it to their destination.






        share|improve this answer


























          4












          4








          4






          It was covered in a comment, but the answer is



          Yes



          A solar sail is a perfectly viable method of travel. It will be very, very slow, but there's nothing inherently wrong with it. Given the distance between potentially inhabitable worlds in our galaxy (yours might be different, of course), you're talking centuries (at least!) of travel, so cryogenic hibernation is basically the only viable option if you want someone to make the trip personally, rather than genetically.



          To be clear, the maximum velocity theoretically achievable by a solar sail lightcraft is circa 0.11c, so travelling to the nearest star would take around 40 years. This speed is only achievable with power beamed from the starting point using a 1000km-diameter Fresnel lens. Using solar power alone, the approximate exit speed would be 0.005C, and the trip would take 800 years.



          This is to the nearest star. If we assume at least 100 ly separation between solar systems with habitable planets (and here we're likely being very generous), we're talking forty thousand year trips. That is, for reference, longer than all recorded history - the oldest cave paintings are about 40 000 years old. You'd definitely get some political divides, though, given that two thousand generations would have lived and died before the travellers made it to their destination.






          share|improve this answer














          It was covered in a comment, but the answer is



          Yes



          A solar sail is a perfectly viable method of travel. It will be very, very slow, but there's nothing inherently wrong with it. Given the distance between potentially inhabitable worlds in our galaxy (yours might be different, of course), you're talking centuries (at least!) of travel, so cryogenic hibernation is basically the only viable option if you want someone to make the trip personally, rather than genetically.



          To be clear, the maximum velocity theoretically achievable by a solar sail lightcraft is circa 0.11c, so travelling to the nearest star would take around 40 years. This speed is only achievable with power beamed from the starting point using a 1000km-diameter Fresnel lens. Using solar power alone, the approximate exit speed would be 0.005C, and the trip would take 800 years.



          This is to the nearest star. If we assume at least 100 ly separation between solar systems with habitable planets (and here we're likely being very generous), we're talking forty thousand year trips. That is, for reference, longer than all recorded history - the oldest cave paintings are about 40 000 years old. You'd definitely get some political divides, though, given that two thousand generations would have lived and died before the travellers made it to their destination.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 3 hours ago

























          answered 3 hours ago









          jdunlopjdunlop

          7,05511540




          7,05511540























              2














              How about solar sail brakes?



              The thing about going fast is that you then have to slow down, somehow. Consider the sail. The sail provides more acceleration the more solar wind it can catch. The farther you are from the star, the less dense the solar wind. Solar wind pretty much nonexistent in interstellar space.



              But as you reach the destination you are going towards the sun of that system. The solar wind gets more and more energetic and the sail provides more and more backwards acceleration.



              My proposal - use your fuel boosters to get up to full speed and then the solar sail to slow yourself down at your destination.






              share|improve this answer





















              • Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
                – Richard
                3 hours ago
















              2














              How about solar sail brakes?



              The thing about going fast is that you then have to slow down, somehow. Consider the sail. The sail provides more acceleration the more solar wind it can catch. The farther you are from the star, the less dense the solar wind. Solar wind pretty much nonexistent in interstellar space.



              But as you reach the destination you are going towards the sun of that system. The solar wind gets more and more energetic and the sail provides more and more backwards acceleration.



              My proposal - use your fuel boosters to get up to full speed and then the solar sail to slow yourself down at your destination.






              share|improve this answer





















              • Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
                – Richard
                3 hours ago














              2












              2








              2






              How about solar sail brakes?



              The thing about going fast is that you then have to slow down, somehow. Consider the sail. The sail provides more acceleration the more solar wind it can catch. The farther you are from the star, the less dense the solar wind. Solar wind pretty much nonexistent in interstellar space.



              But as you reach the destination you are going towards the sun of that system. The solar wind gets more and more energetic and the sail provides more and more backwards acceleration.



              My proposal - use your fuel boosters to get up to full speed and then the solar sail to slow yourself down at your destination.






              share|improve this answer












              How about solar sail brakes?



              The thing about going fast is that you then have to slow down, somehow. Consider the sail. The sail provides more acceleration the more solar wind it can catch. The farther you are from the star, the less dense the solar wind. Solar wind pretty much nonexistent in interstellar space.



              But as you reach the destination you are going towards the sun of that system. The solar wind gets more and more energetic and the sail provides more and more backwards acceleration.



              My proposal - use your fuel boosters to get up to full speed and then the solar sail to slow yourself down at your destination.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered 3 hours ago









              WillkWillk

              103k25197433




              103k25197433












              • Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
                – Richard
                3 hours ago


















              • Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
                – Richard
                3 hours ago
















              Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
              – Richard
              3 hours ago




              Hi Willk. I actually was thinking along those lines as an answer to my "How do we not crash into the planet at the other end?" question. the way you described it is pretty much how I would have things play out.
              – Richard
              3 hours ago











              2














              When designing interstellar travel techniques, the thing to remember is that constant acceleration is the key. Low reaction, constant acceleration is interstellar physics' version of compound interest; using less fuel to add less acceleration over a longer time period works out in your favour, especially as it would appear these engines are usually more efficient in terms of energy output against their fuel.



              Ideally, you'd only use rocket boosters to escape your local gravity well (IE get off the Earth) and then use your sails for the entire remainder of the journey. If your two solar systems are adjacent, then this works particularly well because for the first half the majority of your solar wind is coming from the sun, speeding you up, and for the second half it's coming from your target star, slowing you down.



              Ion and plasma drives are a thing, and worth looking at as your next generation of engines as they're currently being looked at by NASA.



              The one type of engine that you can guarantee won't be used for interstellar travel will be standard chemical rocket style propulsion systems, as for the distances you need to cover in interstellar travel, they are way too inefficient and you don't get that benefit of sustained acceleration over time.






              share|improve this answer


























                2














                When designing interstellar travel techniques, the thing to remember is that constant acceleration is the key. Low reaction, constant acceleration is interstellar physics' version of compound interest; using less fuel to add less acceleration over a longer time period works out in your favour, especially as it would appear these engines are usually more efficient in terms of energy output against their fuel.



                Ideally, you'd only use rocket boosters to escape your local gravity well (IE get off the Earth) and then use your sails for the entire remainder of the journey. If your two solar systems are adjacent, then this works particularly well because for the first half the majority of your solar wind is coming from the sun, speeding you up, and for the second half it's coming from your target star, slowing you down.



                Ion and plasma drives are a thing, and worth looking at as your next generation of engines as they're currently being looked at by NASA.



                The one type of engine that you can guarantee won't be used for interstellar travel will be standard chemical rocket style propulsion systems, as for the distances you need to cover in interstellar travel, they are way too inefficient and you don't get that benefit of sustained acceleration over time.






                share|improve this answer
























                  2












                  2








                  2






                  When designing interstellar travel techniques, the thing to remember is that constant acceleration is the key. Low reaction, constant acceleration is interstellar physics' version of compound interest; using less fuel to add less acceleration over a longer time period works out in your favour, especially as it would appear these engines are usually more efficient in terms of energy output against their fuel.



                  Ideally, you'd only use rocket boosters to escape your local gravity well (IE get off the Earth) and then use your sails for the entire remainder of the journey. If your two solar systems are adjacent, then this works particularly well because for the first half the majority of your solar wind is coming from the sun, speeding you up, and for the second half it's coming from your target star, slowing you down.



                  Ion and plasma drives are a thing, and worth looking at as your next generation of engines as they're currently being looked at by NASA.



                  The one type of engine that you can guarantee won't be used for interstellar travel will be standard chemical rocket style propulsion systems, as for the distances you need to cover in interstellar travel, they are way too inefficient and you don't get that benefit of sustained acceleration over time.






                  share|improve this answer












                  When designing interstellar travel techniques, the thing to remember is that constant acceleration is the key. Low reaction, constant acceleration is interstellar physics' version of compound interest; using less fuel to add less acceleration over a longer time period works out in your favour, especially as it would appear these engines are usually more efficient in terms of energy output against their fuel.



                  Ideally, you'd only use rocket boosters to escape your local gravity well (IE get off the Earth) and then use your sails for the entire remainder of the journey. If your two solar systems are adjacent, then this works particularly well because for the first half the majority of your solar wind is coming from the sun, speeding you up, and for the second half it's coming from your target star, slowing you down.



                  Ion and plasma drives are a thing, and worth looking at as your next generation of engines as they're currently being looked at by NASA.



                  The one type of engine that you can guarantee won't be used for interstellar travel will be standard chemical rocket style propulsion systems, as for the distances you need to cover in interstellar travel, they are way too inefficient and you don't get that benefit of sustained acceleration over time.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 3 hours ago









                  Tim B IITim B II

                  25.6k656108




                  25.6k656108






















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