5 REAL Possibilities for Interstellar Travel
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The prospect of interstellar travel is no longer sci-fi. It COULD be achievable within our lifetime! But, how would an interstellar rocket-ship work? On this week's episode of Space Time, Matt talks options for interstellar travel - from traditional rocket fuel to antimatter drives, could we travel to other star systems? Watch this episode of Space Time to find out!
"Quantum Entanglement & Spooky Action at a Distance":
• Quantum Entanglement &...
"The Real Meaning of E=Mc²":
• The Real Meaning of E=mc²
"Could You Fart Your Way To The Moon":
• Could You Fart Your Wa...
"The Speed of Light is NOT About Light":
• The Speed of Light is ...
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COMMENTS:
andrea papone
• The Speed of Light is ...
Jai Kalra
• The Speed of Light is ...
RedStefan
• The Speed of Light is ...
TheColonel
• The Speed of Light is ...
Tyler Hamilton
• The Speed of Light is ...
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Let us know what topics you want to learn more about:bit.ly/spacetimepoll
Imagine being sent to alpha Centauri on a fusion ship you spent 90 years on only to arrive and find humans there because about 20 years after you left someone figured out how to use a black hole drive
I would be the one it happened to😂😂😂😂
@@shelliejones434 F
but imagine that the humans who used a black hole drive arrived to find that humans have been living on Alpha Centauri for years after arriving via Quantum Teleportation! Dang, hate when that happens!
I mean I’d be happy to see company tho, lol
Imagine not sending someone to go pick them up!
If you watch this video on mute, it looks like he's trying to convince you not to punch him
Omg
hahahaha true
He reminds me of a taller Tyrion Lanister
@@davids.654 The Trump kids are great. Heck, even Hillary admitted that at the end of the 2nd or 3rd debate. Oh, and it looks like we're going back to the moon before Trump leaves office. Then onto Mars.
@@davids.654 So random dude lol
Plan how to save humanity:
Step 1: Get to a blackhole
Step 2: Get in it
Step 3: Stalk on a little girl from her bookshelf.
interstellar innit?
Aka, SCIENCE
How little we talking here?
@@codylee1682 little enough
Like all real black holes, this one is made of 95% love and 5% general mass.
I don't know if I've ever gotten this man's name, but I've watched a lot PBS Space Time and I really like the more laid-back style he has in this video: he's more animated, he's making jokes, and he has a little grin like he's just in his zone and loving it. I guess what I'm saying is that I find his enthusiasm in this video more engaging than his more rigid presentation in other videos.
Apparently he gets more excited and animated when presenting sci-fi fairy tales like this video.
This was 7 years ago
One of the best corp CZcams channels STILL
@@NondescriptMammal optimistic? sure. impossible fairy tales? maybe not so
@@icinnalatte Maybe not. But the furthest that a human has ever traveled from earth is the moon, and we haven't even done that for fifty years. Suddenly we are going to solve all the logistical problems for safely transporting a live human 100 million times as far as that to the nearest star?
*“Born too late to explore the world, and too early to explore the universe”*
Kyle Lin Not necessarily. We still have about 95% of the ocean undiscovered. Sure, it’s not as interesting as space, but it’s still something!
At the right time to explore mars and our own solar system
We can't find even find Planet X in our Solar System...So yeah
@@Fly--Crippin--blu--boi187 well no one has been further than the moon so any other planet in the solar system hasn't been explored by humans
Right on time to explore the mind --- with psychedelics.
“Pretty realistic”
“Increase our antimatter output by 100 trillion trillion”
Think about how much faster how internet speed has gotten over the past 50 years. It used to be 2.4 kbps and now it's 6000 mbps (publicly available). That's 6.000.000 kbps. Or in other words 250.000 times faster than it used to be.
We simply need new innovations.
@@warbreakr 250 000 times and 100 trillion trillion is kinda different
Yu Yevon also 2 completely different things, point still stands though
warbreakr Still the factor is just too big to overcome in 50 years
warbreakr lol, the best internet speed can read like 1.6 terabits per second. That’s above a x393 million difference.
Amazing how many of these ideas were included in the Three Body Problem sci-fi book series.
Probably not by accident...
and many other SF books over the decades 🙂 Alcubierre warp drive is a description in general relativity of a warp drive from Star Trek. 🙂
The fact that it would take us 120,000 years to get to the closest star is mind boggling and puts into perspectivie how ridiculously small we are
Did you watch the video? We could get a man on the nearest star in 150 years and a robot there in 50.
@@giles4565 Think you missed the point he’s making.
@@QixTheDS I think they missed each other's point :')
@@giles4565 is that travelling faster than the speed of light?
@@doc2590 The closest star is 4 light years, so travelling the speed of light it would take 4 years.
That awkward moment when you actually have the tech to reach 10% the speed of light in a ship... then collide with a particle of matter the size of a grain of sand and watch your ship get destroyed 😂😭
so true
Agreed Sir Captain :)
Have a bumper on the front just above your license plate
It's a matter of size. If you think an interstellar spaceship will be the size of a bus, or maybe even an aircraft carrier, yeah, sand=problem. But an interstellar spaceship will likely need to be bigger than all boats, ships, bikes, trikes, cars and planes ever built, combined. And weigh multi-billions of tons.
Moving fast isn't particularly necessary: Making a ship that can support life indefinitely and trundle along, only pausing to gather supplies at other star-systems, is a much more feasible-with-what-we-know approach.
tru tru tru. But just imagine shields. LIKE SHIELDS ON OUR SPACE SHIPS DANGGG
The one single necessary ingredient for space travel: A united planet.
Good luck with that.
@MoerkoffieZA Casual Gaming! First step: People got to stop being so religious.
@MoerkoffieZA Casual Gaming! Start with nuking middle east.
Well, half the religions live in the 17th century like Islam, Hinduism etc. Even here, half the country is filled with morons who infest the republican party. The uber moron is in the White House. So....
FOR REAL!!!!
Bill Whitis That was actually prophetic.
3:52 It would actually take 2*sqrt(2) times as long to reach Alpha Centuri because your average speed is much faster on the second half of the voyage than on the first half when you don't decelerate. Thus, it would take about 124 years instead of 90.
He also mentioned that you’d need half the fuel to slow down at the other end, that’s wrong as well because there is less mass to slow down (since you’ve already lost a lot of mass to accelerate).
did you forget that you had to accelerate at the beginning? or am i just missing your point
The fact that most of this is possible just makes me happy lol
Sadly, but the time it surface in reality, we're already dead.
@Universe3141 I mean the time this idea of this possibility realized. It takes a a ton of time to make interstellar travel to become real.
@Trevin De Alwis if we can mobilize the entire earth, ignoring the fact that more than %99 of total population would die and at least billion would fight themselves in other to get to the ships, which will slow down the progress even more
None of this stuff is ever going to happen, despite all the starry-eyed optimistic dreamers.
Giving a motor a German name is all you need to convince people that it's not only working, but sleek and safe ^^
...and needing to be in the shop at least twice a year for major issues. Hard pass.
That's why you drive a fiat punto ?
Bending space and time?
@@siddbastard Actually, I drive a Mazda. Fiat is a brand I have even more disdain for lol. I've owned a BMW once before and it had various problems. Brother in law had similar issues. Best friend had an old BMW and it was constantly in shambles, but that could've been more of an "old car" issue rather than the inherent issues of the manufacturer. But who knows.
jw11432 sounds like a BMW problem to me. Never had a problem with my Audi, which I’ve owned for 3 years now. And my 1985 Porsche 944 has over 300,000 miles on it and is still running strong
It's a little bit depressing knowing that in my lifetime, we might send a probe to another star but it will take so long to get there, and for any information to be sent back, that I almost certainly (without a major breakthrough in the cure for aging) will not see the results.
+Lutranereis good thing there's many breakthroughs for "cure for aging" in store, at worst 20 years from now. ^^
+Lutranereis let's just hope we'll be able to upload our brains to a computer in a few years
BonJoviworstbandever Go Matryoshka Brain!
+Lutranereis If we send the light sail in the next 2 decades, I miiight be lucky to be alive on the arrival of the informations! (I am 22 currently)
I just need the entire world to get together and cooperate for my selfish reason of wanting to know more about space :P
+DerSergal Is it _really_ a selfish reason though? After all, there are at least dozens of us who _also_ want to know!
"One design, our best chance. What do we build?"
That line gave me chills for some reason. I'm imagining some kind of game or series about the necessity of following that idea, having to FIND that one design and make sure that it actually gets recognized as such.
There could be some real twists and turns with new discoveries, shifting which option(s) you support and which you squash down, with multiple paths leading to different time scales for the ultimate escape. Maybe your support for your favorite option actually ends up disregarding the promising discoveries in favor of another option, that turns out to actually BE faster and you end up getting left behind in retributiuon for having actively worked AGAINST what turns out to be *our best chance* in the end.
This would be epic
Project Hail Mary
12:25 - This one aged well
I was expecting something like " a fuel tank as big as the Earth" but as big as the observable universe?!!
I'm just sittin here like :O right now :D
Don't believe everything he says. His calculations are wrong. 5:58 says we can reach alpha centauri in 3.3 years but it's impossible since light itself(fastest thing in the universe) can't get there THAT fast.
He said the journey would take 3.3 years in the astronauts perspective due to time dilation. So, it means that, in the perspective of those who stayed, the journey would take a longer time to reach its destination.
why not stop moving and let those planets come to us. because i think our sun and our solar systems is moving 800,000km/hr in our galaxy. if there is a space vessel that will stop moving relative to our solar systems, its like waiting for an elevator and the elevator is the planet we want to go to like the trappist planets.
This works in a solar system because of local gravitational effects, yes. However the theory breaks down when you start talking about interstellar travel. The reason for this is relative velocity. Yes, our solar system is moving at a high speed, but so is the target solar system. There's really no way to cancel our momentum and have that take us to another star. We have to just take our relative velocities into account, aiming for where the star will be when we are projected to arrive. Basically, it's like being an archer on horseback trying to shoot an arrow at another archer on horseback moving in a different direction.
Joaquin Michelini, I know you posted this 9 months ago, but to answer you: If we are traveling at near the speed of light, we would perceive the time to only take 3.3 years and we would only age by 3.3 years.
Glad there are smart people out there thinking about these questions, instead of wasting time with celebrity gossip. Cool video
🤔 I wonder which celebrities would be willing to be shipped across the universe...
@@luisportas looks fun
They power their brains by reading celebrity gossip :)
London Falling hmmmm.. quite an assumption to think people are thinking about the scientific stuff INSTEAD OF celebrity gossip as opposed to thinking of both. Scientists come home from work and get into meaningless celeb gossip as an escape. Just sayin
OMFG amen . Atleast some people out here tryna learn about whats actually important .
A modular starship would have a great deal more versatility, be further expansible, and would alter velocity/vector with less duress, maybe even allowing for gravity to assist in such transitions.
Amazing video! I found this very informative and interesting.
A spaceship miscalculated and hits a planet at 10% speed light with nukes on board, or a pile of unspent anti-matter...whoa, not a good way to introduce yourself.
More like strange matter and you transform their entire world into a strange world.
Of course theoretically, this is what would happen according to some physicists.
That’s what happened to the dinosaurs fam
Good way to start an interstellar war. Better hope the species on the other world aren’t far more technologically advanced than us.
Sam kela maybe that was our civilization that hit the Earth presumably in a “meteor” but maybe it wasnt a meteor but rather some technology like in the video from another solar system. 🤔
It ain't like dusting crops boy...
This video makes me sad I wasn't born 100 years into the future. At least I got to experience the internet.
Alchemist1330 and mobile phones... Hell and self driving cars and drones
8- track, here
It makes a lot of sense to ignore the Wait equation and just launch as soon as we have something feasible.
It provides a benchmark, we enjoy learnings, geopolitical situations may change, and being able to create faster craft is partially just theory.
Plus, you have to find astronauts who are willing and psychologically totally accepting of the risks of dying enroute, so the "I'll wait to go later with better tech" wouldn't be a factor.
humor and shirts greatly improving your personality shining through is AWESOME!
I was surprised that a big issue with traveling to the stars was not mentioned: friction and collisions. Even at .1C you're going to get an awful lot of erosion just from hydrogen atoms you encounter in interstellar space. At .8C that much worse. Just from the atoms you'd have to have a very strong shielding system of some sort to ensure your spacecraft doesn't simply get worn down to a nub and fall apart before you get a large part of the way to Alpha Centauri. And that doesn't take into account bigger things, like little pebbles or even microscopic bits of debris like molecules that could cause serious damage given their kinetic energy in relation to the spacecraft. Going at those kinds of speeds your inertia keeps you on track and it's difficult to see something far enough ahead to avoid the object if it's big, impossible if it's small. Electromagnetic shields could deal with smaller particles perhaps, and physical, ablative shields for the bigger, but that adds serious mass.
Correct - it's all impossible because even an object the size of a grain of sand would
explode against the ship like a tonne of dynamite at 0.1c.
We went to the moon and back in Reynolds wrap, not once but 6 times.
@@andrewarmstrong7310 so what - they weren't traveling at 0.1c
isn't there an inversely proportional relationship between mass and speed?
@@sorh Not in general terms. There is an inversely proportional relationship between mass and acceleration, assuming constant thrust (force), but you can get massive objects going very very fast on relatively small thrust if the thrust can be maintained for a long time.
3:40 "we need to use half of our fuel to slow down at the other end"
No, half your delta-v. Depending on what fraction of the initial mass is fuel, these could be enormously different quantities.
I was gonna say the same thing, "half the fuel to slow down" is totally wrong.
I think what he means is going from 0 to x back to 0 without anything but the fuel, which if he is, then he'd be theoretically correct (Assuming I'm doing my quick math correctly). Factoring in everything else would prove him wrong, but he probably didn't add those in either for simplification reason, or because he simply forgot to do so
Will Swenson Fuel has mass
Someone clearly plays KSP lol
He used the momentum p1 + v1 = p2 + v2 so the amount of energy to get to a certain speed would need the same (minus what weight in fuel you’ve already used) to slow down.
The ratios would be 2:3 or something
I've seen, I think it was Kurzgesagt's treatment of this topic. But I had no idea this channel existed til recently, and I'm excited to see their take on it!
It'd be incredibly lonely.. especially for writers, who just wanted to write their own novels; for creators, who just wanted an audience to see thier quality art or content, and researchers, who just wanted to continue their papers and be acknowledged. It'd take 4.5 years to transmit a message with all that to Earth and double that to get a message back and it might even get lost. It's just sad thinking about being in another planet that far. Well.. at least for me. I cannot help but feel like there's a lot of stuff I'd like to give Earth before I go.
As for the other part of the population who are totally fine with leaving Earth, I'm pretty sure they'd have a lot of matrix-like simulations powered by AGI virtual characters, and infinite worlds to explore on the generation spaceship, and also on the foreign planet. They'd probably live the happiest live like that I guess.
Maybe if the spaceship was large enough, it might not feel that bad. Like at least thousands of people with different opinions about different stuff should be present to create an environment. If everyone liked the same stuff, mind biodiversity is pretty much killed.
The spaceship should be also kinda like Noah's with many different animals at sections of it for farming or even petting.
Let's figure out FTL communication first lol. Say through an artificial wormhole or something; at least to keep us connected to our people out there.
You miss a bigger issue - Shielding. If your going at the speed of light and you hit a speck of dust, you are dust.
Radar, hello?
@@hannahmadden3573 And how do you propose to dodge it, not even talking about spotting it.
Hollowed out asteroid with some engines slapped on it's ass, takes care of shielding from objects and radiation. Stick a whole bunch of cameras all over the surface and have display screens on the inside instead of windows so you an still see cool shit as you fly by, obvious radars and detection equipment with hi powered lasers to intercept the larger objects that may do more damage. All the little stuff like micro dust will just slam right into us, leaving us cool craters to check out with our surface cameras,
Good point.
You could make an ablative shield out of ice. Hopefully you could find some on the other side to replenish it.
The real question is how big will the explosion be when our spacecraft traveling at 0.1c or faster hits a grain of space dust.
Big. The relativistic kinetic energy of a grain of space dust weighing 1 gram traveling at 0.1c is 452 gigajoules - equivalent to 113 tons of TNT. I don't know if one gram is a good approximate weight for space dust but if it is then hopefully the dust is really diffuse.
That means
L1. we need a lot more of energy to support an "energy shield" Though, impacts slow the ship down.
L2.....so long as we have a fusion reactor....E=MC2 the hell out of that mater and use it to further propel us. Fusion Bombs?.
L3. Use excess energy to clear debris in the path (ha. Space ship turns on its headlights) and direct the debris to be collected.
+@@jimstone2235 - We use deflector dishes for clearing the path.
Another amazing video, keep up the great work!!! ;)
The “Pion age” is going to be a interesting time to say the least.
And yes. We should totally strap the riches to nuclear propelled rockets. We have plenty that shouldn’t be used for anything else.
"There's some very serious rocket science in this episode about farts." - you, sir, have just won the internets.
ALL the internets.
you both have diseases
yeah, they're both TERMINALLY AWESOME. See, I made a joke about terminal velocity in the guise of a disease joke. get it? GET IT?!?
+Defective here you go have an Internet buddy
all three of you have a degenerative disease
Give me a few days and I'll see what I can knock together in my shed.
According to your comment time-stamp, you've had 2 weeks, Phantom 453! So, where are we at, mate? Time's a wastin'! :D
lathe and a clapped out bridgeport gonna get everyone to another planet?
Phantom453 I’ll hold your beer
Hail the mediocrity of people who hang out in sheds...
I don't think any old lawnmower engines will get us very far.
I am amazed at how people still think that wormholes can be used for interstellar travel. According to real experts wormholes are still only theoretical, and can manifest only at the quantum level, and not in our macroscopic reality.
The reason you can't go through a wormhole is because the point of connection between spacetime is frozen in time, so even though both spaces are connected, you can't get past the point where you don't get to have the next moment.
In your opinion…
@@Rob-cy8xc You get how time dilation works right? When you reach the event horizon of the wormhole, how do you get to the next moment?
"So we don't see any ducks, but something's quacking and eating all our bread sticks." Classic, and pretty cool that we now HAVE seen gravitational waves since this video. Onward, science!
Yes😂😂
The problem with lasers is divergence. Early on you might have a nicely collimated beam, but there is no laser with 0 mRad of divergence. The farther away you get from the source, the lower the energy density of the beam gets.
I think that another thing to consider is the affect of acceleration on the human body. Some of these options would see us accelerating at a rate that is to strenuous for our bodies to handle for long periods of time. The time that it would take for humans to safely accelerate to 10% the speed of light should also be factored in. Great video as always!
We do not need to safely accelerate, we just need to get rip enough to survive sudden acceleration of 100G, without seating
"The Expanse" solves this very cleverly, by accelerating and decelerating at 1g in most routine travel, with ships space layouts that are reversible, thereby providing articifial gravity for the crew along the axis of acceleration. Higher accelerations require them to be strapped in and on drugs!
I like the solution in the Forbidden Planet, where they are turned into solid objects for the deceleration.
His English accent had me at "The future of Humonitee is in the staaauus".
I beliiiiiiiieve you maaaaaan!!!!
He's Australian, mate
@@ihsahnakerfeldt9280 good enough for me!😁
50 years ago : in the future we will have flying cars
Now: we have memes
...and PewDiePie
@@thewormholetv7228 so really we got it better than expected
Thats what they said 50 years ago
Memes have been here for more than 10 thousand years. Talk about pre history and ideas in their artifacts and such. If you think about it, those are memes, abstracted ideas. Just that its not funny necessarily.
@@thewormholetv7228 Exactly and because of that example the humans dont deserve any of these technology because we as race are to stupid, ressource consuming assholes, and we should just live on the earth and die without colonizing anything.
Funny you should mention an Earth-like planet at Alpha Centauri hearing recent news.
Was about to say
It is located in Proxima Centauri :)
+gabichri but it's still in the Alpha Centauri system.
oh and gravitational waves too :)
Earth has many characteristics. "Earth-like" is actually pretty vague.
Noticed you've gotten more comfortable in your videos in the last 5 years.
I noticed the exact same thing haha
@@ThePixelExpedition I have the hobby to recommend
science-youtuber to fans of science-youtuber. May I?
@@loturzelrestaurant I'm not sure what you're asking.
@@ThePixelExpedition I thought my comment was pretty clear, but here again: Can i, loturzel, recommend you, pixel expedition, some science-youtube-channel and/or education-channel? Cause i like the idea of me spreading education and fun?
@@ThePixelExpedition ?
Thank you for the video I found the subject to be very interesting. Great presentation.
We don't have to intentionally travel to other stars. We could build self sustaining space habitats such as Stanford Torus's, O'Neill Cylinders and Bernal Spheres. With resources in the asteroid belt, the kuiper belt, the oort cloud and with comets and even rogue planets, we would spread our way to the distant stars in much the same way that ancient man migrated over the world just by building another village over the next hill. Multiple self sustaining habitats are also our best defense against extinction events. Such habitats could easily become a reality in mere decades and as with any real estate, could potentially net a return on investment.
Best comment I've read so far.
Except the distance between star systems is positively gigantic compared to the size of the solar system. There's nothing of use between here and there. It is light years and light years of total emptiness. It's like saying Europeans could have traveled to the New World just by building an outpost every few miles in the Atlantic so people could just swim across. Except there aren't even fish in space.
We still need to spread across the galaxy in order for our species to survive: all humans being in various habitats (planets, asteroids or artificial habitats) in the same small area of the galaxy makes us vulnerable to supernovae explosions. If one explodes in our proximity in the near future, we are toasted. Literally.
@@anthonydesportes9968 I didn't say that we didn't need to spread across interstellar space, just that we only need to be able to live in interstellar space to do so. Stone age man did not intentionally cross over to six of the seven continents, they simply built villages beyond the next hill. Just being able to build and maintain O'Neill cylinders, Bernal Spheres and the occasional Stanford Torus out of resources such as comets, asteroids and rogue planets in interstellar space would inadvertently take us to other star systems. Even a generation ship is essentially such a habitat. With our current technology, it is constructing such habitats that will take us to the stars and it would do so without us even trying once we are building such habitats.
@@EnDSchultz1 Yet already we have been mapping rogue planets, dwarf planets and brown dwarfs in nearby interstellar space. Interstellar space isn't as empty as you are imagining and without as many planetary gravity wells to interfere with navigation, accessing those resources should be quite straight forward as long as you can wait for the deliveries which self sustaining habitats should be able to do so. Remember that a single asteroid or comet would be enough resources for centuries to millennia for several such habitats. The fact that we recently had an interstellar object pass through our solar system recently shows that interstellar space is not without resources.
Did I miss something or did he promise to talk about Alcubierre Warp Drives and then just didn’t??
In another video
@Tom Arnold What?
@Tom Arnold Really?? Do u know anything.
They aren't real right now, but lemme tell u that NASA scientist Harold G White is working on one.
@Tom Arnold And he knows bout them, I don't think u do
@@rzy5746 As he worked on the EM-drive lol. Even babies knew that one was a fake.
0:53 The Star Trek panel, amazing
This is the greatest channel on CZcams
The aliens will be pretty annoyed when we accidentally blast their planet with a probe doing 0.1c.
It would be amazing if our attempt to reach another planet so that we don't go extinct, is the cause of our extinction due to war with an advanced species because they consider it an attack. Except it wouldn't be a war, they would simply annihilate us the way we do a hive of insects.
@@t.a.7970 If you really felt that way, you wouldn't still be alive.
Fred
@@t.a.7970 "Humans are like the fleas on the carcass of the dog they killed waiting for another dog to pass by so they can leap on and do the same thing."
With this view of your own species, what else can we conclude but that all humans should be eradicated?
You first.
Fred
Wait. What if the meteor that wiped out the dinosaurs, was a "alien-maned"-probe in a desperate and failed attempt of a spacefaring civilization to excape their own dieing world and colonize Earth - a planet trillions of miles away and the only habitable planet they discovered in their sky?! *wooah*
@Shasa Monaghan Thank you for making my point.
Fred
Imagine being the pioneering human on a ship going sub-light speed to Alpha Centari, and when you finally get there, humans have been there for years cause they had a faster ship
ShadowStormTTV I’m planning on being the pioneering human that will invent the technology to take us to Alpha Centauri ...
Lol, it's all fake
@@Chronz elaborate please
@@TAHJBecomeYourBestSelf See ya when you get back
@@TAHJBecomeYourBestSelf me to G. All the best to us mate
... as usual, massive thanx and kudos, please ride onn ... will try to remember to include the future space-babies in my medits ...
Love your focus on big ideas. Without thinking BIG you can't achieve BIG things.
This guy has a lot of energy in his eyebrows,,,
no he does't
i mean wtf if i mute it i would think he is some kind of creep telling me how he would rape me
@@siemniak😂😂
@Metalcore Reactions I was wondering if anyone else was trippin on this guy!
😂😂😂😂
Edited: no one can tell why I have over 500 likes. Have a nice day.
Yay, I get the reference!
underrated reference, deserves more likes
imagine thinking "the wormhole from interstellar" is a viable real world idea for sending a spacecraft somewhere right now
Murph! Murph! Murph!!!!!
MAKE HIM STAY MURPH!!!!
Love the Synewave digital (The Crew) music in the background!!
“It’s Rocket Science and Nuclear Physics...so..it’s hard.” I love it lol
Great video!
My only doubt was... How do you even harvest a Black hole? How are you saving the radiation and make it propulsion?
+Luis Alejandro Carrasco Molina Actually, the kugelblitz is an artificial black hole. You make it by concentrating an extremely high intensity of light in a very small region of space. If you can also give the new black hole electric charge (feed it some electrons) then you can suspend it in a magnetic field. The charged radiation it produces can be channeled by magnetic fields as propellant or the heat can be used to power a conventional generator. However you're right to think that it's a big challenge to harness very high energies. We don't have the materials to capture the highest energy non-charged products of proton-anti-proton annihilation, for example, and I imagine the same may be true for this Hawking radiation.
+PBS Space Time I was wondering how can we hold a black hole in place when you mentioned it in the video. Good thing that you explained it here. Although it'd be good to mention in a video. In the next video's comment section, perhaps?
+PBS Space Time wouldn't the biggest problems with the kugelblitz be generating the massive amounts of energy needed and then focusing that energy into lasers. You would need lasers pumping 53 octillion joules into a single point nearly instantaneously. That's more energy that our sun produces per second.
+PBS Space Time But... it's a black hole.. am I the only one terrified of it, you know... eating the ship for breakfast? Is it because it's so small that it could be contained?
UnknownXV Black holes don't suck anything in. They have gravity yes but that gravity is only as strong as the mass equivalent contained within the black hole and it's only once you get near the event horizon that things will get screwy. the 600 billion kg of mass mentioned wouldn't even be noticeable gravity wise.
What's under the hood?
A 4 cubic inch black hole
czcams.com/video/0tqgWuSIZUg/video.html
you comment makes no sense.
Rob Dunkes sr Let me tell you what Melba Toast is packin' right here, alright. We got 411 Positrac outback, 750 double pumper Edelbrock intakes, bored over 30, 11 to 1 pop-up pistons, turbo-jet 390 horsepower. We're talkin' some f***in' muscle.
@@AnthonyChinaski alright allright alllright!
Anthony Joseph Taubenkrau
Watch the leather
Another great episode!
@12:29....cough. Amazing what can be discovered and even discounted in a short period of time. Big Kudos to the LIGO Team! 🌌💫🌀💫
I want to be alive to see this... :(
Natalie you are not the only one
I want to be alive and young enough to be one if the astronauts on board
Being dead and still see it, would be good enough for me. Like Idk, make cyborgs happen before 2060 or something!
Diet and exercise... ;)
yeah im fine being a head in a jar if i get to witness the broad sweeps of history for the next millenia. Im insanely curious.
😂🤣 I've just found this channel and I'm loving it! Especially at the end when someone asked "why are we even talking about gravitational waves when the don't exist " and LIGO has found them and Weiss, Barish & Thorne won a Nobel Prize for it and only 2 yrs later (2017)
I love this old videos!
My favorite ship is the sail one lol
Could you supplement a kugelblitz's mass with matter and use that to create a hybrid kugel/matter black hole?
Also could you, instead of or in tandem with lasers(assuming we get to that point) use a particle accelerator to supplement the energy required? Or would the apparatus be so big that you'd be better off using one or the other?
Hello I'm from the distant year of 2019. Gravitational waves are observed all the time now! Boo ya
Was hoping to see this in the comments
I am a simpleton, how does this change what's mentioned in the video here?
@@ryandeal5872 Dear Simpleton, we went from only theorizing their detection, to detecting them regularly. Don't over think it.
@@ryandeal5872 This video was posted back in 2015, what was theory in 2015 is now fact in late 2019. And to over think it, " Gravitational Waves " were mention back in 1960's when Star Trek first aired. 60 years is not bad for a kid sitting on the living room floor watching a black & white tv going wow...! To an 70 year old man going " I found them ! I Found Them !"
Hello I'm from the nearby year of 2030. Human's didn't make it to the stars. Society has collapsed, what's left of us all is but scattered factions under the rule of King Kirkman, the tyranical Tioletpaper King. The one who discovered the lost toilet paper vault, some say there's a thousand years worth of toilet paper in the vault that was meant for the people who survived the apocalypse to build anew.
Unfortunately it was Kirkman who found it first and at that moment he became the most powerful being alive. With his newfound power he crowned himself the first King in the end times. King Kirtman forged himself an empire that was unmatched with a legion of soldiers that would not go unwiped. Although it does not seem all hope is lost, the one known as Charmin of Clan Ultra seeks to unite the people and defeat Kirkman so that our children's children will never go unwiped.
I don't think anything is happening in my lifetime. I think I'll go back to watching some porn
You, my friend, seem to be one of the very, very few reasonable/realistic persons participating in this thread.
it do be like that sometimes
Ok coomer
lol Genius statement
We are there
“What do we need to build a starship”
Elon Musk: hold my rocket
Hate that guy. Stupid poser
2:09 i just discovered this, would love one done today. 😊 loving learning with you ❤
To be honest, humans are geniuses. We could do anything if we set our minds to it. The problem is setting our minds to it
Geniuses? I just heard about people putting urine in their eyes for ... reasons.
Bob Bob this is my new favorite quote. Thank you.
Bob Bob eating the sun in one second? Didn’t think so.....
There are a whole lot of mongoloids aswel
That actually sounds racist against Mongolians. Is it?
Im pissed I wont be around when humanity will be so advanced, planets go for sale
Freeze yourself. Maybe, just maybe, you might be able to survive till such time.
At that point we will hardly be human.
that's only assuming humanity will even last that long
@@KelpyG. I'm still surprised we lived past the Bush years.
Freeze yourself until then☺
Anti-matter drive is a very exciting possibility! We just need to figure out how to mass produce anti-matter. The potential it has as an energy source is amazing. 0.8c! Can you even believe it? But with anti-matter still being so hard to create, it might take some time, and until then, fusion should work ok.
Very serious rocket science episode about..... 2:16
Farts?!
LMAO
OR you can just carjack a UFO and use their ship to explore the cosmos.
Fuel
And where can you find one?
@@2024hasbeentheworst.. joke
@@adityashankar5267 joke
@@adityashankar5267 Area 51 lol or maybe in the backyard of History Channel's Producers 😂
harnessing the power of stupid is the energy of the future, hands down.
+GEXGE11 the one who would develop a way to do so will be hailed as the greatest hero of humanity for ages beyond counting.
+GEXGE11 You fool! That's the mistake the other single-planet civilizations made! You can't control that much energy, it would tear the planet apart!
+GEXGE11 A single youtube comment could power the whole of America for 5 years! Who knows what a whole comment section could make?
+GEXGE11 Next you will be telling us that that we can use the power of darkness...
AgentDRJ
That's easy enough, at least in a laboratory setting. The problem is you need a special magnifying glass to put in front of the pile of icecubes to focus the cold.
It’s insane that we could absolutely send humans to another star RIGHT NOW, without warp drive, without cryogenics, without any exotic wormholes. Whether or not we’ll find an accommodating habitat on the other side is another question. But assuming we send, say, 100 of these nuclear pulse colony ships to the closest 100 stars, odds are at least one will have a habitable planet, yeah?
No.
Anything habitable will home to someone. Would you welcome a people who screwed their own home up...so. no. Lovely idea but.. dimensions probably the same.
@@dominicseanmccann6300 do you have any idea how difficult it is for life to form and the time it takes for it to become sufficiently evolved to be noticed by humans
It's not about having a habitable planet, it's about did you make reservations. Have you ever tried to show up at a desirable destination on our planet and try to find a hotel that wasn't already booked solid?
1st video I've watched from this channel and my only regret is that I waited so long.
Ugh, it sucks that I'm probably not gonna witness this amazing stuff....
Nobody is dewd, none of this stuff will ever pan out, the sails being the dumbest of all the option, even far dumber than artificial black holes.
You could become an icy head waiting for one more glimpse of reality before finally getting uploaded to the universal net where you solve field equations in support of an ever increasing human empire.
Colin learn astral travel, explore the universe on your own
+Nyanator someone believes that shit? oh wow
@@tententononce2570 I not only believe, I KNOW. PS. Open mindedness is beneficial for _yourself_, because the next thing you know, sth you deemed impossible or highly unlikely suddenly is possible and true. But you will never get this far without an open mind. Why should it be impossible? Because others dont do it? You gotta know that people ARE actually doing it, but not everyone (on purpose). Maybe because we arent being taught this at school or because the government doesnt promote this? Well.........
It would be a lot more efficient to send frozen human embryos, to be incubated after the ship reaches its destination. Assuming that it's possible to make artificial wombs, and that robots could build a habitat and take care of the kids until they grew up, you could make the spaceship super small and light weight. That way, it wouldn't bankrupt the human race to try and accelerate a battleship to 0.1 C, instead, you could accelerate a ship the size of a bass boat. Speed it up with rockets and a light sail, and slow it down with an ion drive, and you might have a human colony on an alien world in 20,000 years.
' Well enough' is a low bar considering the way a lot of kids get neglected and abused by human parents, but still make it into adulthood. AI could possibly be up to the challenge of providing basic necessities, and education to the first generation. I assume, that, after arrival, the mission could use raw materials and energy of the new solar system. Perhaps the spacecraft could spend a few centuries mining asteroids and building a lander to send down to the surface of a habitable planet.
This might have been the way human life started on earth in the first place. Mind blown!
ypey1 ...
What I thought. Possible that a doomed life form sent its DNA here, which became us. And could they see us now.. PFFFT !!
So that means more people can get laid now ;)
We just happen to resemble is primates that were already here?
someone recommended me this chanel, it's so interesting 🙂
The clear difference in tone in these older space time videos is hilarious.
"Why not just choose the most metal option and explode nukes behind the spacecraft then surf the blast" ~Matt O Science Bro
I wonder if there's jokes in space...
Like, turn it up to eleven, you mean...
waste of energy.
Thing is nuclear pulsed propulsion is viable. And it has both high thrust and high specific impulse.
@@brettvv7475 well the Muppet Show tells us there are "PIGS IN SPACE"
Can you do this kind of video again? Maybe a 2021 update of interstellar travel impossibility and how it is
The moment he said "There is some very serious rocket science in this episode about farts" I died laughing. xD
While talking about thrust is sexy, it generally overlooks the bigger and more ho-hum problems involved in building a machine that will have to be powered and operational for 100 years. Think about how often large complex machines need to be put up in docks for refits, even crowning achievements like aircraft carriers or nuclear submarines. These conversations usually leave out MSEs or other disciplines that deal with these problems, but there are some potentially insurmountable issues here.
+neeneko guess we will need to develop self-healing materials and repair nanorobots first.
For me it goes without saying that without sufficiently developed on-sight fabrication technology and general nanotech stars are closed to us. We simply won't be able to bring enough nowdays machinery with us to mine resources in the destination star system and fabricate needed components.
+Atila Elari Another big area of worry is one way chemical processes involved in some materials, or at minimal process that get more expensive each time. Sealants are a huge issue. The humble rubber washer for instance decays over time yet is critical for keeping gasses and liquids where you want them.
In my opinion, the fact that once the machine is accelerated it is technically just floating thought the vacuum of space, will limit the concern with this wear and tear. But I agree that lastability is an important factor to consider, as a materials engineer at northwestern, I do know that there are metals and polymers that can self heal, either through chemical, reactions or by introducing an electric current.and we have that now. Imagine what we will have in 50 years.
+neeneko Yes thrust is sexy.
+neeneko absolutely, most physicists dont really have much hope for interstellar travel in our lifetime. Who knows how things will be in 100 or 500 years. But for now? Even if it sounds possible, it doesn't mean it's feasible. Star Ships that last generations are at the moment the most realistic option, but the chances for success are very low. Space is a very unforgiving medium. One mistake, and it's over. You can increase the chances by sending maybe 10 or 100 ships on their way. But still. It would be extremely dangerous. The cost in material and human life might be very huge.
"To learn more, there's some very serious rocket science in this episode about farts." And people still wonder why I love this channel so much.
There is also the option of chain fusion. From protium, to helium, to carbon fusion, extract fusion energy to the top.
Also far fetched.
More options, reverse fuel. Send through a Canon a fuel path. Try to create the concept of the Bussard engine of collected the fuel during the flight, just if it doesn't exist that fuel, you launch it before sending the rocket. Require a level of precision that it's probably impossible, but it can be explored.
Also, for previous colonized stars, laser or charged particles beams for solar or magnetic sails could also work for deceleration.
Imagine reaching alpha centauri after all that time and money just to discover the candidate planet is completely uninhabitable. Seems pretty unlikely the closest star system would have conditions conducive to life from another star system.
To late to explore earth and to early to explore the galaxy... man talk about bad timing 😭
Just the right time to make contact with the Black Knight satellite
Just in time for solar system exploration 🤟
Explore the oceans, dimwit.
Dude I feel ya. But what if we created our own Earth/civilizations to explore?
born at the perfect time to browse dank memes
I've watched a few of these videos about interstellar travel and they never mention deflector shielding. Hitting a small particle at that speed can be devastating.
That is one of the big problems. At relativistic speeds, hitting a grain of dust is like getting hit with a modern tank gun.
Another problem is blue shift.
there are ways to achieve interstellar travel that circumvent this issue and make it irrelevant, though this video does not explore them
That one guy with the speech impediment, his videos explain it very well. Can't remember his damn name tho....
Isaac Arthur!!!
Science and Futurism with Isaac Arthur is the channel name.
Nor do they mention payload and how on earth you would address the fundamental of human biological requirements on an extended space journey. And, perhaps most importantly - the scenario described presupposes that the entirety of mankind would somehow lock arms, sing Kumbayah and support such an effort. This is without a doubt the most unrealistic supposition of all. Why on earth would the entire global community commit its entire set of resources on such a low-percentage of success project which would benefit only an infinitesimally small fraction of humanity? How on earth would you ever get agreement on which individuals would be the ones to send?
Thanks excellent video, funny to watch that gravitational waves haven’t been measured by the time of the video
Compared to your modern Videos, this feels like an Action movie with all the Hand waving :D
Gravitational waves have been proven. Game bud
+Cyril Figgis What video ? we're talking about the new discovery, not the one about the polarized light of the early universe.
This video was posted before the first observation of gravitational waves.
okay geeks. explain to me what that really means. Gravitational waves? so what? we can space travel faster? without needing so much of whatever methods the dude above mentioned?
You should rename this video
5 real ways we can start a galactic empire
Thanks for conceding the "Romulan connection" of the blackhole drive: it was the first thing I thought of (referencing the sixth-season ST:TNG episode, "Timescape," for all you non-Trekkies). But once again, a lot of these real-life proposals seem to have fictional analogues (is that a word?), and this is just one example.
Overall, it's looking like interstellar expansion will be a complex mix of manned and unmanned exploration, typically involving sending a LOT of probes & machines ahead of us, or sometimes, even instead of us.
The way I see interstellar travel is first the equipment is sent across the void then robotically assembled. Life then will be non volatile and any future travellers will be turned into a computer code then sent at light speed to be reassembled there.
I would bet money that it's possible.
Nearly 4M views gives me hope for humanity in the bleak future of our planet.
Siri Erieott Who’s to say any of them cared?
0.05% of Earths population
It doesnt
Do not forget the chinese communist military and the core muslims with their imams living alongside promising the best amenities of good life
I like the antimatter one. Nearly 100% efficiency is about as good as it gets and it sounds very controlled
+Robert Maxson anti matter is produced in such small quantities that it would take a trillion years to get 1 kg of it. Not that production rates won't ever get better, but it is almost certain that we will be spending orders of magnitude more energy than we could get back from the antimatter. It's cool, and theoretically possible, but practically unfeasible
+cuulcars yeah I caught that, but we barely have an understanding on antimatter. Anything is possible
+Robert Maxson Anything is possible *that physics makes possible.
+Viktor6665 Honestly, physics makes some weird stuff surprisingly quite possible.
+Robert Maxson agreed.
We actually have the tech for it. it just slow as fucking hell right now
I love ending up on old videos with clean shaven Matt.
We need more of these kind of videos, to entertain is a sure thing, but to promote science, and interest more people about that.
To have some dream, about planet and exploration. And not just about money and more money...
Arthur C Clarkes' _"Imperial Earth"_ featured a drive that utilized a black hole contained on a magnetic matrix. Awesome book, awesome author.