Could We Colonize Alpha Centauri Today?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 203

  • @InsaneCuriosity
    @InsaneCuriosity  Месяц назад

    Hey Insane Curiosity Squad! If you liked the video, we would love for you to share it with your friends or on other social networks like Facebook, Reddit Instagram, Tik Tok and Twitter, etc.. ( Since the algorithm is not cooperating in showing us to the public😅). In just 30 seconds, you will greatly help our Channel to grow and improve our future content. A big thank you from all of us.

  • @stephenjohnhopkinson8096
    @stephenjohnhopkinson8096 3 месяца назад +16

    Anything travelling at that speed would need shielding that simply doesn't exist yet

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @kumars1961
    @kumars1961 3 месяца назад +10

    Even travelling at the speed of light, it would take 4.3 years to reach the Alpha Centauri system. Unless we develop a Warp Drive, Interstellar space travel would remain a Dream.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy 3 месяца назад

      Traveling to planets in our solar system is still a dream.

    • @gipgap4
      @gipgap4 2 месяца назад +3

      Isn’t that 4.3 years to the observer not the actual traveller as it would be almost instantaneous due to the effects of time dilation?

    • @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime
      @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime 2 месяца назад

      @@gipgap4I think that’s correct.👍🏻

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

    • @stewiesaidthat
      @stewiesaidthat 5 дней назад

      ​@@gipgap4you a talking about cryostasis. A frozen embryo has about a 40 year lifespan where it is still viable.

  • @davidhess6593
    @davidhess6593 3 месяца назад +16

    No. Next question...

  • @kosflorin
    @kosflorin 3 месяца назад +15

    Let’s go to the moon again , with better cameras

    • @dragoonseye76
      @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

      Yes. Considering they had such an easy time of it since the 60’s. Surprised there aren’t moon hotels yet. The way successful tech creates a growing industry. Doesn’t seem like that particular tech has been developed by now. Curious

    • @mastpg
      @mastpg Месяц назад

      You can take any camera you want. None of them will have the dynamic range to expose unobstructed-full-sun images in the foreground while also getting even a slight hint of stars in the background, but if you'd like, I'd be more than happy to take pictures of you in your tinfoil hat, provided you apply the proper amount of clown makeup.

    • @lincolnmuri3308
      @lincolnmuri3308 Месяц назад

      @@dragoonseye76 Shortcomings of a purely capitalist society I'm afraid. "What can going to the moon do for our billion dollar investment in the short-term?" Answer that question and there will be moon hotels breaking ground tomorrow. We'll never go back to the moon, not in our lifetime anyway!

  • @tkuvma4372
    @tkuvma4372 3 месяца назад +3

    man, I didn't know what to focus on, the information or the great music in the background!, great strategy to make your subscribers watch the video twice! 😃

  • @stopbunsen
    @stopbunsen 3 месяца назад +9

    Great that we can get there in 40 years but how are we going to slow down and stop?

    • @gubmentchz3570
      @gubmentchz3570 3 месяца назад +3

      This. The fuel required to get there AND slow down (think flip and burn off momentum) are well beyond current abilities.

    • @mastpg
      @mastpg Месяц назад

      Only possibility would be evaluating the system sufficiently to use gas giants in conjunction with orbiting planets to slow the craft. It would be the three body problem on steroids, with a retro solar sail, plus the greatest heat shield ever, plus a ton of time...but you might as well think on it, since bringing along reverse thrust fuel is laughably absurd.
      The game, if it is ever played, is one of two things...new physics or engineering of the lowest mass "human" imaginable. Maybe there's some qm bypassing of the causality limit simply for information...I sure did love the ansible, but that's still totally scifi.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @wynnschaible
    @wynnschaible 3 месяца назад +5

    People conceived, incubated, and raised by robots? But we're getting towards that here on earth!

  • @amangogna68
    @amangogna68 3 месяца назад +8

    Great video and information !

  • @polisagora2811
    @polisagora2811 3 месяца назад +5

    You would not want to put anything living on that craft. It could carry a probe to AlphaC. Then would you find mars type planets, the "Planet of Prehistoric Women" or the Klingons. ? You also need to leave relays to carry communication back which might become a hazard to future navigation.

  • @jdrollins6485
    @jdrollins6485 3 месяца назад +23

    I was under the impression Alpha Centauri is a star. I confess that all I know about astronomy came from my own reading. Grade school pretty much taught me nothing. I wasn't aware we even knew enough about planets circling other stars. I'm dumb.

    • @TYSPIRITUAL
      @TYSPIRITUAL 3 месяца назад +8

      Alpha Centauri is also the name of the solar system. It has 3 Stars MAIN Stars. Alpha Centauri A, B, & C. However C is mainly referred to as “Proxima Centauri”. Rather than Alpha Centauri C

    • @Marc-mo8bt
      @Marc-mo8bt 3 месяца назад +2

      So far there is no confirmed planet for Alpha Centauri A or B. Only for Proxima there is a planet confirmed, which is also mentioned in this video. But Proxima is a small flare star so there is no real chance of finding life there.

    • @TYSPIRITUAL
      @TYSPIRITUAL 3 месяца назад +4

      @@Marc-mo8bt There’s advanced life in Proxima B. That i can tell you.

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 3 месяца назад

      ​@@TYSPIRITUALAt last, an alien listening to RUclips! Please, Mr. Alien, in your infinite wisdom, how come you acquired such advanced knowledge ? Because so far, official channels have not reported any conclusive evidence even pointing to the extremely remote possibility of a life form, however primitive it may be, on Proxima by? If it's not too much to ask. Apparently, you can understand and communicate in English. We all are ears! (I hope you don't have ridiculously large ones - ears, I mean - and don"t think I'm attempting to belittle you!)

    • @nomadbynature8811
      @nomadbynature8811 3 месяца назад +6

      You are not dumb. And you're not wrong. At least not completely. Centauri was taught to us as a triple star system.

  • @marcusaureliusantoninusaug2161
    @marcusaureliusantoninusaug2161 3 месяца назад +7

    We have to go to Mars, Europa and Titan first, before we even start to dream about Alpha/ Proxima C.
    And even that is atleast 100 years in the future.

    • @RayEttler
      @RayEttler 3 месяца назад

      its as far as someone developing a truly revolutionary means of space transportation. not with combustion engines.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @ramsoncole4605
    @ramsoncole4605 3 месяца назад +14

    Could we colonize Alpha Centauri today? No. It's gonna take at least a week to get there.

    • @etsequentia6765
      @etsequentia6765 3 месяца назад +3

      The trick is to get on the way before the rush hour. If you time it just right, you can avoid that annoying traffic jam that's always there around Neptune.

    • @hobbyhermit66
      @hobbyhermit66 2 месяца назад

      Don't forget the toll booths. Gonna take a shitload of dimes.

    • @thomasfredericks3230
      @thomasfredericks3230 Месяц назад

      I don't think humans have breached low earth orbit. In that we are still protect by our magnetic field. Past that is the harsh radiation from the sun to deal with and re!ain alive.moon has no atmosphere or magnetic field. I don't think those space suits were enough to keep astronauts alive. Just so you know I believe we didn't go to moon.

    • @whysoserious8666
      @whysoserious8666 Месяц назад

      Didn’t we send the Robinson family back in the 60s?

  • @TheUAProdigy
    @TheUAProdigy 3 месяца назад +8

    The answer of course is, probably but we care too much about each other's differences to work towards one goal.

  • @Ch1ckeNug01
    @Ch1ckeNug01 3 месяца назад +7

    If we are struggling to get to Mars, we won’t be going to anywhere else anytime soon.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @BIGJATPSU
    @BIGJATPSU 3 месяца назад +5

    I don't think the hard part now is thinking of a way to get to Alpha Centauri relatively quickly now... but slowing down FAST enough so your trip is as close to the minimum time as possible.

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 3 месяца назад +5

      Not to mention the unanswered potential issue of hitting particles of matter. Even very light such particles would have devastating impact on rockets traveling at speeds in the order of 0,1 c. One mustn't rule out the presence of such particles (let alone larger objects such as meteorites or comets) in interstellar space on the basis of gravitational "depletion". For instance, the frequency of rogue planets recently evidenced took astronomers by surprise. For the same reason that large objects such as planets or planetoids are more frequently found than previously suspected, the occurrence of smaller objects with considerable momentum is highly probable and should be considered and adequate protective measures found to avert catastrophic collisions. With velocities in the order of magnitude of those envisioned for rocket propulsion by atomic explosion or any version of it, even "tiny" objects would carry momentum with monumental energy of impact. This problem is surprisingly ignored in many discussions of interstellar travel.

    • @BIGJATPSU
      @BIGJATPSU 3 месяца назад

      @@raminagrobis6112 exactly! It's crazy we now actually KNOW HOW to get a decent way to the speed of light, the issues now become what to do to survive going those speeds. And as you pointed out, those issues are going to be even tougher to address short/medium term with the technology we currently have.

    • @Larrymh07
      @Larrymh07 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@raminagrobis6112You're correct! E = 1/2mv squared. Correct?

    • @maniacslap1623
      @maniacslap1623 3 месяца назад +1

      We’re already developing laser weapons on Earth. U would need that kinda tech on the ship. Or in the case of Orion, the pusher plate should be durable enough to withstand the smaller impacts.
      For bigger objects, more advanced sensors could give u a means of avoiding them. Better than having to built something that could withstand the impact.

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 3 месяца назад

      @@maniacslap1623 Advance signaling of the presence of interstellar objects by "sensors"is extremely hard to design. Such systems would be based on lasers used as radars. However, the interval for reacting to sensor detection of an object is going to be extremely small. Automatic correction of trajectory is theoretically conceivable, but we would need not only the position but also the coordinates of its trajectory, which would require some form of triangulation or rapid sensor detection in series. I think that the sensor approach is too complicated and highly hazardous due to a lack of simultaneous information on both the position and velocity of interstellar objects. A protective shield system would be a safer approach imo.

  • @LeonardoAstronautp9n7r
    @LeonardoAstronautp9n7r 3 месяца назад +1

    Great video and informations👍🏻👍🏻🤙🏻! This channel is the best😎😎!

  • @jeffreyromanelli1708
    @jeffreyromanelli1708 3 месяца назад +3

    How about we solve some of the problems we've got here before spreading them across the universe.

  • @tomcurda4203
    @tomcurda4203 3 месяца назад +1

    Alpha Centauri is 4.35 light years (Approximately) distance from earth. At .1 of C, it would take 43.5 years to get there. That is a LONG logistical string.

  • @wplg
    @wplg 3 месяца назад +8

    Time dilation means it's a one-way ticket!
    Not to mention stopping!
    That also means it will only be for the very rich!
    As in the movies "Don't look Up." And 2012.

  • @marcatteberry1361
    @marcatteberry1361 3 месяца назад +1

    at 1G acceleration, for just over 3 months 24/7, constant 1G thrust, will take you to the speed of light. I am not saying you could achieve 1C, (Light speed) but the math says it would get there at just over 3 months...

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @francisbean688
    @francisbean688 3 месяца назад +2

    3:35 that sounds like the Orion drive?

  • @CoolClearWaterNM
    @CoolClearWaterNM 3 месяца назад +1

    The answer to the titular question only takes a second or two.
    No.
    A theoretical possibility that as yet un-invented technologies might allow something to be done is in no way even remotely similar to 'we can do that now'.

  • @barracuda861
    @barracuda861 3 месяца назад +2

    I'm wondering if after a place is setup on the Moon, we could make and use nuclear propulsion. Because it won't be launched from Earth. There we could build a larger spaceship and fuel it with nuclear. Also isn't there talk of trying to form a bubble in space and time to move through space more easily and faster. I think this is our time to explore more space. I'm glad to see more enthusiasm for this endeavour. Viva la space.

    • @InsaneCuriosity
      @InsaneCuriosity  3 месяца назад +2

      Yeah, launching nuclear propulsion from the Moon could be possible due to its lower gravity and lack of atmosphere, making it easier and safer than Earth launches. Building larger spaceships on the Moon is also feasible in theory, but we need more infrastructure and technology. The concept of a space-time bubble, or warp drive, is still theoretical and highly speculative.

    • @barracuda861
      @barracuda861 3 месяца назад +1

      @@InsaneCuriosity Thanks for the reply

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @simonallan9941
    @simonallan9941 3 месяца назад +3

    If you lived on the other side of the Milky way Galaxy and you could travel at 10% the speed of light, it would take you 800,000 years just to get here, not worth the effort don't you think 😉?

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 3 месяца назад +1

    I disagree with your conclusion that had we not shifted priorities after Sputnik, we could be in the Alpha Centauri system now, reading our ipads and playing frisbee with the family dogs. Sorry, but making such a trip through deep space radiation? And lack of gravity? Though we could be talking about sending a probe to Proxima Centauri with nuclear powered propulsion, the human body is not currently capable of making such a trip. We'll have to devise technology to shield reliably against radiation (human-made magnetic fields are a possibility) and to create artificial gravity. The centripetal force systems we have envisioned for 1-G interfere with balance and blood flow, unless we could build them about a mile in diameter. That's a whole new mountain to climb. And just what do we know about the exoplanets of which we have seen indications? Just indications - that's all.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @jonathanhall1825
    @jonathanhall1825 3 месяца назад +1

    We need warp speed Scotty😂🤣

  • @ps3301
    @ps3301 3 месяца назад +1

    We can't even get to 0.01 percent the speed of light

    • @grzegorzjurczynski6897
      @grzegorzjurczynski6897 2 месяца назад

      @@ps3301 Wrong. Actually we rached 0.05% of the light speed. Parker Solar Probe reached 163km/s.

  • @lanceowens5902
    @lanceowens5902 3 месяца назад +1

    The odds in finding a planet that will be able to sustain life around a red dwarf is too unlikely because they are way too active when it comes to CMEs we shouldn't put are limited resources to use to try to go to a planet orbiting a red dwarf in my opinion.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @JocelinCaron
    @JocelinCaron 3 месяца назад +1

    Eeee, should we begin with the moon and mars first?

  • @stevevillanueva2803
    @stevevillanueva2803 3 месяца назад +1

    The Songs of Distant Earth: Arthur C. Clarke

  • @Johnnycrystalblue
    @Johnnycrystalblue 3 месяца назад +1

    I don’t think I’d like to go it’s a three star system visions of the three body problem come to mind.

  • @dragoonseye76
    @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

    Im guessing there would be many cascades of malfunctions before long. It would be the Mike Bay version of space travel.

  • @frankbridges2171
    @frankbridges2171 3 месяца назад +1

    They don't even know if it's habitable

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @dragoonseye76
    @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

    That flat metal plate would turn to slag after a short while.

  • @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime
    @Mostopinionatedmanofalltime 2 месяца назад +2

    I read somewhere that if the library at Alexandria hadn’t burned, Columbus would’ve traveled to the moon in 1492, instead of discovering America.😮

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @cedricjoshuapayne
    @cedricjoshuapayne 3 месяца назад +1

    Too bad the narrator sounds like Casey Kasem. Medi school makes them sound all the same .

    • @GS-zv3qn
      @GS-zv3qn 3 месяца назад

      Is there a radio dj school

  • @callumbush1
    @callumbush1 3 месяца назад +3

    We could already be on our way if Project Orion had got off the ground!

  • @bakkerhenriquejoao41
    @bakkerhenriquejoao41 3 месяца назад +1

    Muita fixe

  • @Bodyfitcph
    @Bodyfitcph 2 месяца назад

    Best astronauts in the world are inmates whom have been in isolation for more than 10 years etc.

  • @hobbyhermit66
    @hobbyhermit66 2 месяца назад

    Sci- fi is awesome to read or watch in movies and tv. Too many people believe it is the actual future. Unfortunately, there's more fi and less sci in it. I believe we're stuck here on earth, and better get used to the idea.

  • @tigeorge1277
    @tigeorge1277 Месяц назад

    You know 2069 is right around the corner...

  • @jediknight2350
    @jediknight2350 2 месяца назад

    you dont need a ship or lightspeed to travel you use quantum field travel array you clone here it will send it instantly anywhere in the universe without leaving. so your in 2 places at the same time.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @morganoverbay8783
    @morganoverbay8783 3 месяца назад

    What is the point of this? Can you not tell the difference between reality and fantasy?

  • @utareangara5529
    @utareangara5529 3 месяца назад

    for just one communication would take over 8 years for a reply >

  • @w0nd3r6
    @w0nd3r6 3 месяца назад +3

    How can we Colonize a world we cant even go to with todays tech.. maybe we should start by maybe getting man to mars first.

    • @barracuda861
      @barracuda861 3 месяца назад

      Well at least a colony on the moon would be helpful. Easier to launch from there.

    • @bdetert82
      @bdetert82 3 месяца назад +1

      @@barracuda861 Moon or Ceres. Once you have a Low g manufacturing base the entire solar system is habitable.

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 3 месяца назад

      ​@@bdetert82This looks all nice and simple on paper, but we tend to underestimate the extremely problematic fact that any planetary system further away from the Sun than Earth gets ever colder, and all moons with water and/or characteristics compatible with human life are so cold that living entire lives in the confines of heated compounds - not to mention the extra need for protection from radiation in all moons without a magnetosphere - presents potential difficulties we have never even addressed technologically. We're talking about temperatures colder than nitrogen boiling point here. I'm not saying that the problems of living in heated confined places with drastically steep temperature gradients inside - outside are insurmountable in theory. Only that we have never been confronted with dealing with the problem in actual space exploration. I'm sure that systems based on current habitation in Antarctica are currently tested for more extremely cold environments right now. Just mentioning that we have not officially tested the survival of humans in environments as cold as Europa or Titan.

    • @bdetert82
      @bdetert82 3 месяца назад +1

      @@raminagrobis6112 I do think the moon is the best option. You have essentially the same stuff that makes up earth. But with a fraction of the gravity. but trying to industrialize the solar system from earth based resources is not sustainable.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @johnj4130
    @johnj4130 3 месяца назад +2

    No point going to alpha as no viable planet's their.

    • @Bizguy1217
      @Bizguy1217 3 месяца назад +1

      I agree with you. There is also far too little information about conditions on Alpha Centauri to justify the likely expenses of travel from Earth. I think of basics like atmosphere, gravity, and whether we would be able to grow anything in the soil.

  • @ramporamanik1294
    @ramporamanik1294 3 месяца назад

    The first is that it will take twenty to thirty thousand years to get to the Alpha Century. First of all, Alpha Century is 4likers away from our world. So go there and dream about it far away, we may be unemployed

  • @davehoward22
    @davehoward22 3 месяца назад

    In the slim possiibility it is habitable,we cant even get there never mind colonise it.

  • @Stephen_Jabs
    @Stephen_Jabs 3 месяца назад

    You can only if theres a wormhole

  • @kalevipoeg6916
    @kalevipoeg6916 3 месяца назад

    The answer, very simply, is no. Even IF we could speed up the trip to something on the order off 10% light speed - so a mere 43 years one-way, first of all, there IS no return trip - you'd be dead before you got back even if you turned around right when you got there. At a minimum, any astronauts sent on an initial trip would need a college education - so likely they'd be at least 22 after Bachelor's and let's face it, it's NASA or its equivalent, so an advanced degree is minimum - Master's or PhD. Realistically then candidates would be, upon graduation, 24 to 29 years old depending on program length and whether they did a 1 or 2 year Master's, or added a PhD (5 years is typical) after that. Say 26 as an intermediate. 43 years later, assuming they left RIGHT after graduating, they'd be 69 years old upon reaching Alpha Centauri, probably closer to 70 (distance 4.367 light years / 10 = 43.67 years). Also, it'd take even LONGER than that because you'd have to start slowing DOWN long before you got there and build UP to that maximum 10% light speed.
    So you'd have a bunch of cranky old people arriving in a star system we know next to NOTHING about, expected to survive, where?
    THAT's the other key thing here: we're ASSUMING the planets in that system would be even remotely compatible with human life. We simply have NO way of knowing that. We can loo at spectral data, things like that for clues as to what ELEMENTS are present, but determining exact atmospheric makeup, geology, what sorts of hostile viral lifefforms may be present, how often the planet is smacked by big asteroids or gamma rays, these are not things we can TELL from earth. We don't even know for sure if the human body can TOLERATE the rigors of interstellar travel, we can't guarantee any objects wouldn't be in the WAY of our ship that even with a shield would destroy it. There are MILLIONS of variables we don't KNOW about, so ANY trip there would be a blind one at first.
    Realistically, before risking human lives on a 40+ year one-way trip (if it's a generation ship, even worse - maybe you take centuries only to get there and realize you CAN'T survive there - and then there's the ethics of giving birth to someone in space, so that they are born in a can in space and are forced to spend their entire life trapped in that ship) - you NEED to send scouts in advance. SO, we'd need to maybe send some LIGHT SAIL mini probes that can get up to let's say 30% light speed - low mass, tiny things propelled by giant light sails - the tinier the better because it's not a practical technology for a big ship - too heavy - get them there in, let's say, 15 years - the SIGNALS we get back take 4.36 year so about 19.5 years from launch to when we get our first up-close data back. And you'd want to send TONS of the little things, not just one - because you need to maximize the amount and KIND of data we get back so that we're not going to have to wait ANOTHER 19.5 years to send more if we miss anything, they run out f power, get destroyed on the way, malfunction, etc But to even DO this you also need to build basically a giant laser - maybe on the moon - that is aimed at the sail of each one to give them an extra push - very time consuming, expensive, and requires lunar construction bases.
    At MINIMUM, even if we started NOW, it'd be 20, 30 years to get the PROBE swarm capable of those speeds, the lasers built, dozens to hundreds of mini-probes launched and built, at a massive cost the public would complain about. THEN we wait almost 20 MORE years for the data back - so 40 to 50 years is the BARE MINIMUM (2074) for when we'd even have an ANSWER as to whether any planet in that system is truly habitable and exactly what we'd need to bring to survive there. THEN, because you DON'T want the colonists arriving with nothing set up to manufacture oxygen, water, etc , you'd want to launch a series of BIGGER missions designed to LAND on that planet with supplies already on-board - they'd start automatically growing plants they have brought with, producing breathable air (because chances are next to zero another planet just HAPPENS to have our exact atmospheric composition WE evolved to breath - 21% oxygen, mostly nitrogen) - and Those would be slower than the much lighter probes, realistically - maybe 10% light speed - so THEY'D take 43 years. ANd you'd HAVE to wait until they were down on the ground and operating for a while because yu do NOT want to send a bunch of people on a one -way trip to and the planet only to realize upon arrival the critical systems they needed crashed or stopped working. You COUD send a really BIG ship - but the bigger and heavier it is the more power you need to accelerate it to 10% light speed (any faster than that with our current science is not likely) - and the technology would be then UNTESTED on that new world. Which is bd. You want to take NO chances with that, so make SURE it works, before you even THINK about sending human beings.
    SO, we have 2074 for a minimum time to design, build and launch a swarm f mini-probes, get the data back, if the data is a green-light on human habitability, sending the advance ships (unmanned) with all the machinery and so on they'll need upon arrival, and start that running. You'd want it running at least, say, 10 years without issue before you'd ACTUALLY send manned ships. So 2084, MINIMUM date for sending MANNED ships. It arrives, assuming 10% light speed - in 2127 - a bit over a century from now. We don't know whether they SURVIVED the trip or not until 2131 minimum (takes the message that long to get to us). We send a "received" message - they don't get that fr another 4.36 years, close to 2135. Any messages and updates from THERE would also take over 4 years, 8.7 years round trip. Communication would be VERY slow, so they'd be on their own, knowing if any help COUD be sent, an SOS takes 4.36 years to get to earth and a mission to them takes over 40 years to get there - by which point they'd a be dead.
    And that's not even considering the cost an difficulty of building giant moon lasers, light sail probe swarms, the advance ships, and the final MANNED ship, which wouldl be huge and likely take DECADES to build. It's hard and expensive to transport even SMALL things into space - so you'd be looking at a LOT off very expensive launches - meaning a MOON base is likely needed FIRST, one which is permanently staffed AND has its own refineries and mean to make metal ad wiring and everything you'd need. THAT realistically won't happen for many decades at our current pace.
    But there you have it. REALISTICALLY, we're looking at an EARLIEST arrival time of nearly 2130. But given our ACTUAL pace of development and the lack of motivation in governments or funding for such a thing, it could be 500 to a thousand YEARS before we ACTUALLY got around to it. I mean, we're just NOW talking about sending people to walk on the moon again - over FIFTY YEARS after the last man walked on the moon. You'd need a concerted multinational effort to do this on a time scale that'd even get us there by 2130 - funding and all - and THAT, I'm afraid, is very, VERY unlikely unless a planet-sized asteroid we can't divert the orbit of in time due to its sheer size were hurting toward the exact spot earth will be at in 2150 or so and we KNOW for SURE that earth WILL be destroyed by it at that time. It'll take an existential crisis like that to FORCE powers that be to MAKE it happen even in the next 100 years. Without that push? Centuries, maybe thousands of years. WHICH, by the way, MAY be a big answer to the Fermi paradox - you don't see aliens flying around the galaxy colonizing worlds simply because the whole thing is too hard and takes too long and civiizations die off before they ever muster the motivation to actually do it, be it by nuclear war or something else.

    • @100percentSNAFU
      @100percentSNAFU 3 месяца назад

      Yes, unmanned probes would be the only way. With both distance and time a huge factor, and the likelihood of finding nothing even remotely habitable upon arrival, a manned mission would not be feasible. I can't imagine even the most dedicated astronauts and scientists being willing to spend their entire life in an oversized tin can hurdling through space just to reach an uninhabitable rock to take some pictures of and send back right before dying of old age. Until technology improves exponentially no humans are leaving the solar system anytime soon.

  • @gregputman
    @gregputman 3 месяца назад

    Good information. Very interesting stuff. However, there probably is not much in Alpha Centauri worth sending humans to. Proxima B is probably more similar to Mercury than it is to Earth.

    • @InsaneCuriosity
      @InsaneCuriosity  3 месяца назад

      Thanks! You're right, Proxima B may not be as Earth-like as we hope.

    • @maniacslap1623
      @maniacslap1623 3 месяца назад

      Yeah I’m all in on using the Orion design to safely deliver probes to the system. The interstellar versions of Voyager if u will.
      It’d nice if the ship could make these probes but at the worse, the ship is just the mail truck.

  • @onepcwhiz6847
    @onepcwhiz6847 3 месяца назад +2

    I love Jewel Verne!

  • @dragoonseye76
    @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

    Not to mention the damage to the environment of the planet. Trying to use nukes to propel a craft in atmo would be bad.

  • @jpasby779
    @jpasby779 3 месяца назад

    Let's get to mars first and put a refueling station in orbit first. Space X

  • @FransHesseling
    @FransHesseling 3 месяца назад

    What about the huge acceleration forces??? No human can endure that…. Oops forgot to mention that!!! (beginning of the clip)

  • @James-fo4un
    @James-fo4un 3 месяца назад

    Maybe in about 7or 8 thousand years. But it is most likely uninhabitable anyway

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @sgbermudez102
    @sgbermudez102 3 месяца назад

    someday the humanity will colonized toward the exoplanet...but not today.

  • @moonbeamskies3346
    @moonbeamskies3346 3 месяца назад

    No. As another video on this channel states, humans will never engage in interstellar travel.

  • @stephmaccormick3195
    @stephmaccormick3195 3 месяца назад

    5:08 "Thrust is nothing more than the force that develops the engine".... WHAT?! Wrong on so many levels...

  • @dragoonseye76
    @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

    A 40 year one way trip to certain doom is not ok.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @RayHorn5128088056
    @RayHorn5128088056 3 месяца назад

    Project Orion would also empower some unsavory extremists.

  • @anticat900
    @anticat900 3 месяца назад

    This site just uses the same videos whatever it is speaking about they often bar no similarity to what's spoken.

  • @ericb2017
    @ericb2017 3 месяца назад

    what’s all this old technology from the 50s, let’s show some new ideas pls

    • @maniacslap1623
      @maniacslap1623 3 месяца назад

      Problem is, better designs have already been conceived. Designing and building are two different things. Anything we talk about was already discussed in the 50s but the with the tech at the time, NPP was(and still is) the most feasible.
      Plenty of videos about Solar Sails to know that building one that could withstand the thousands of micro-meteor impacts is a doozy lol

  • @maniacslap1623
    @maniacslap1623 3 месяца назад

    Would there not be a Lagrange Point between Proxima and the other 2 stars to park our ship opposed to trying to directly stop at Proxima b?
    Shed speed using the other 2 stars, park on the outskirts of Proxima and then go from there?

  • @LillianToffee
    @LillianToffee 3 месяца назад

    What happens if Aloha Centauri is already inhabited?

    • @LillianToffee
      @LillianToffee 3 месяца назад

      What happens if Alpha Centauri is already inhabited?

    • @100percentSNAFU
      @100percentSNAFU 3 месяца назад

      It won't be. Most likely it is an uninhabitable tidally locked rock scorched on the side facing the star from solar flares, and frozen on the side facing away from the star.

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy 3 месяца назад

      The same thing that happened when North and South America was already inhabited.

  • @farmergiles1065
    @farmergiles1065 3 месяца назад

    It's one thing to dream up an idea, and another to build it. It's also one thing to propel a rocket to 10% of c: that's a tremendous accumulation of kinetic energy! Now imagine an object in your path, say only 100,000 km away. You have a little more than 3 seconds to avoid it. If you don't, then it also has a relative speed (relative to you) of something close to 10% of c. Now imagine the kinetic energy turned into heat and destruction during the collision. It's definitely another thing to imagine how to prevent that!
    But space is big, you say, and matter is scarce. What could happen in only 40 years? Starvation? Asphyxiation? Radiation poisoning? Or maybe alien intervention? 🤣 Yeah, the last one is unlikely, so I guess the others must be too.

  • @jasonhsu4711
    @jasonhsu4711 3 месяца назад

    WHAT? It's grossly premature to talk about colonizing the Alpha Centauri system today given that Voyager 1 is less than one light day from Earth. The Alpha Centauri system is over 4 light years away.
    Humanity hasn't even established a colony on the Moon, on Mars, or in the nearby interplanetary space.
    Before colonizing the Alpha Centauri system is on the table, how about colonizing our own solar system, establishing a network of telescopes in the sun's gravitational lens region, and finding a way to travel interstellar distances in a reasonable amount of time? Taking at least 10,000 years to traverse one light year just doesn't cut it.

    • @ciscodealmeida8541
      @ciscodealmeida8541 13 дней назад

      We have colonized it before the great flood, they since visit us and we chase them with firepower., this part
      of History has been kept from the masses and long ignored .but a few heads of state alive today know very well of this.

  • @alexfelder2
    @alexfelder2 3 месяца назад

    Colonize is a bad word. What if someone lives there? Not again. Geez. Humans 😮

  • @Bodyfitcph
    @Bodyfitcph 2 месяца назад

    Humans will never reach another planet/solarsystem etc.
    Stars are moving away from our system...

    • @InsaneCuriosity
      @InsaneCuriosity  2 месяца назад

      Appreciate your thoughts. Thanks for watching!

  • @Mr_Oggie
    @Mr_Oggie 3 месяца назад +2

    As the world is today, the people wouldn't let any space agency launch nuclear bombs as a payload to space.

    • @mhughes1160
      @mhughes1160 3 месяца назад

      80,000 years with the kids in the back seat
      Are we there yet ? Are we there yet ? LoL 😂

  • @generator6946
    @generator6946 3 месяца назад

    72,000 years …

  • @djsarg7451
    @djsarg7451 3 месяца назад

    No, is it is a multiple-star systems, no life multiple gravitational forces and solar radiation problems!

  • @valeria-es9tb
    @valeria-es9tb 3 месяца назад

    It’s not enough for reps to show up. If you rep 6000 workers, those 6000 workers should be there. That’s what solidarity means. It’s not the same as “we wish you good luck as you take in the fascist state.” 💖😘

  • @kevincarter2020
    @kevincarter2020 3 месяца назад +2

    we can't even go back to the moon. sit down

    • @GS-zv3qn
      @GS-zv3qn 3 месяца назад

      All our moon money slow joe spends on immigrants, and equipment we gave to Iraq, plus Ukraine conflict

    • @handsomeman-pm9vy
      @handsomeman-pm9vy 3 месяца назад

      And when we did go there 50 years ago, we did nothing there.

  • @angelwhite376
    @angelwhite376 3 месяца назад

    4 years we can be there. The Q is How can we see on the surface Sending a holagram from sun heat solar laser moon mirrors particles light energy crystals

  • @terrillfloyd
    @terrillfloyd 2 месяца назад

    No, we cannot even colonize the moon.Or mars they're a lot closer

  • @paulsleczka195
    @paulsleczka195 3 месяца назад +1

    Why would we want to colonise someone else's planet?

  • @newsmonger77
    @newsmonger77 3 месяца назад

    And with todays technology it would only take 30,000 years to get there!!!!! Keep dreaming.

  • @blitzchamp3854
    @blitzchamp3854 3 месяца назад

    Focus first on Mars...

  • @o.grambro422
    @o.grambro422 3 месяца назад

    We can't even get ev cars to charge bruh..

  • @gora2497
    @gora2497 3 месяца назад

    The problem is alpha centauri is so far

  • @brainwashed2586
    @brainwashed2586 3 месяца назад

    Not going 10 percent the speed of light

  • @randomcubed5005
    @randomcubed5005 3 месяца назад

    Sounds more like a nuclear cannon😅

  • @robertwitkowski6920
    @robertwitkowski6920 3 месяца назад

    No!

  • @stanleydavidson6543
    @stanleydavidson6543 3 месяца назад

    Im sure we will get the moon and mars colonized the moon first to learn and then mars

  • @NicholasNerios
    @NicholasNerios 3 месяца назад

    Generation ships

  • @alexhigginbotham8635
    @alexhigginbotham8635 3 месяца назад +1

    No.

  • @RodolphosTechchannel
    @RodolphosTechchannel 3 месяца назад

    We cant even easily travel to the moon yet, let alone to another solar system lol if we are lucky, if we dont self destroy in a nuclear war, we maybe, MAYBE will colonise the moon and mars just maybe by the end of the century

  • @victorhiggins2118
    @victorhiggins2118 Месяц назад

    No

  • @JamesHardaker
    @JamesHardaker 3 месяца назад +1

    No science to see here.

  • @handsomeman-pm9vy
    @handsomeman-pm9vy 3 месяца назад

    I ate breakfast this morning. Boring..........!

  • @distantlands
    @distantlands 2 месяца назад

    Hahaha they’ll be using DEI hires to get along for a few hundred years. Good luck 😂

  • @larky368
    @larky368 3 месяца назад +2

    Who the hell cares if we can build a machine to go to a distance place? The real problem is that humans would never survive a long journey in outer space.

    • @GS-zv3qn
      @GS-zv3qn 3 месяца назад

      People would have trouble on long trips where there is no where to stop and take a break,even going to mars would be tough

    • @maniacslap1623
      @maniacslap1623 3 месяца назад

      Who watches a video about interstellar travel just to comment who cares 🤔

  • @raym4934
    @raym4934 3 месяца назад

    Easy answer, no.

  • @ssshootssshoot
    @ssshootssshoot 3 месяца назад +1

    the best guess is sending humans to mars in 2069

  • @chomihai
    @chomihai 20 дней назад

    Never gonna happend, not even Mars

    • @InsaneCuriosity
      @InsaneCuriosity  20 дней назад +1

      Thanks for sharing your thoughts!

    • @chomihai
      @chomihai 20 дней назад

      @@InsaneCuriosity I would love for it to happen one day but we are just not built for long distance travel in space

  • @dragoonseye76
    @dragoonseye76 2 месяца назад

    😂😂😂. No.

  • @jswong8200
    @jswong8200 3 месяца назад

    None of the videos are relevant to the content of the narration. Simply terrible. What has a UFO got to do with a pusher-plate rocket??

  • @Wungling342
    @Wungling342 3 месяца назад

    Bro fell off