• Categories
Collapse

The Silver Fern

Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Topic
734 Posts 39 Posters 28.7k Views
Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • NTAN Offline
    NTAN Offline
    NTA
    wrote on last edited by NTA
    #141

    From this: https://www.gizmodo.com.au/2019/06/new-video-shows-how-humanity-could-spread-throughout-the-galaxy/

    Comes this:

    
    **New Video Shows How Humanity Could Spread Throughout The Galaxy**
    
    A fascinating competition to devise an efficient way of colonising the galaxy has resulted in this beautiful, and provocative, visualisation.
    
    This is the 10th running of the Global Trajectory Optimisation Competition (GTOC X), which is organised by the Mission Design and Navigation section of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
    
    These contests present complex problems having to do with space travel, to which aerospace engineers, physicists, mathematicians, and computer scientists must devise efficient solutions.
    
    GTOC X says these competitions are “a way to foster innovation in optimisation of interplanetary trajectories and cross-fertilisation of ideas between researchers in optimisation and in astrodynamics.”
    
    For the latest competition, contestants had to settle the Milky Way galaxy in the most efficient way possible given the constraints laid out by the rules of the contest.
    
    The winner of the competition was a joint team of China’s National University of Defence Technology and the Xi’an Satellite Control Center (their visualisation is available here), while second place went to a team from China’s Tsinghua University (video not yet available). Third place went to the Advanced Concepts Team (ACT) from the European Space Agency.
    
    At a recent two-day workshop on interstellar exploration, ACT showcased its entry, which was uploaded to YouTube
    
    Each tiny white speck in the simulation represents a habitable star, while the brightly coloured lines represent the journeys taken by spacecraft between settled stars. From start to finish, the simulation encompasses tens of millions of years.
    
    Here’s the scenario as it was presented to the contestants: About 10,000 years from now, humanity has decided to colonise the galaxy. A total of 100,000 star systems have been identified in advance as being habitable, and thus suitable for settlement.
    
    This scenario takes place in the far future, but no radical forms of space travel exist, such as zipping through worm holes or other forms of faster-than-light travel. That said, the technology is such that long-term space travel is possible, with ships capable of supporting settlers for hundreds of thousands of generations.
    
    “The task... is to settle as many of the [100,000] star systems as possible, in as uniform a spatial distribution as possible, while using as little propulsive velocity change as possible,” according to the GOTX contest guidelines. “The settlement of the galaxy starts by fanning out from our home star, Sol. Once another star is settled, further settlements can fan out from that star.”
    
    Competitors were supplied with a pre-configured set of the 100,000 habitable star systems, along with the motions of these stars through space and the physics required to move the spaceships, among other criteria.
    
    For the colonisation mission, the settlers departed Earth in three Mother Ships (shown in blue in the ACT simulation) and Two Fast ships (shown in green). Each mothership contained 10 Settlement Pods, which could be released once a Mother Ship reached a target star system.
    
    Settlement Pods were required to perform manoeuvres to match the velocity of their target stars, while the velocity of Mother Ships were not affected by the star (gravitational slingshot effects were not allowed). A star was considered “settled” once a Settlement Pod or Fast Ship arrived there.
    
    Once a star system was settled, and at least 2 million years had elapsed, a colony could dispatch up to three Settler Ships (shown by the reddish-pink streaks). Each Settler Ship could rendezvous with and settle a single star system. Stars could only be settled once.
    
    It’s fair to say this scenario and the constraints provided are somewhat artificial, and not necessarily indicative of an actual future mission to colonise the galaxy. That said, exercises such as these are meaningful for astrobiologists and SETI researchers.
    
    The general patterns seen in the simulations are probably not too far removed from how a colonisation wave might spread from a host star system, whether it be from Earth or a distant star system.
    
    Indeed, an intriguing (or disturbing) takeaway from this simulation is the apparent ease and speed at which an entire galaxy can be subsumed, or at least explored, by an adventurous civilisation. Our galaxy is around 13.5 billion years old, or 13,500 million years old.
    
    The GTOC X entries saw their settlers sweep across the galaxy over timescales no longer than 90 million years—a scant 0.67 per cent the age of the galaxy. Formal studies on the matter have attained similar results. Such is the power of exponential growth, which these simulations beautifully illustrate.
    
    Yet, despite the Milky Way’s extreme age, we don’t appear to live in a galaxy overrun by extraterrestrial civilizations. This is an exceptionally weird observation, one dubbed the Fermi Paradox. It’s not immediately obvious why our galaxy appears to be uncolonized, and this latest simulation only adds fuel to the fire.
    
    Duncan Forgan, a computational astrophysicist and author of Solving Fermi’s Paradox, said the new simulation is “definitely relevant” to this ongoing conundrum.
    
    “After all, its strongest variant is that we might expect to see interstellar craft from other planets in our solar system, and the fact we don’t tells us something important,” Forgan told Gizmodo. “What that something is, is of course up for debate!”
    
    Forgan, who wasn’t involved with the GTOC X contest, said a smart way to approach the Fermi Paradox is to ask if humans can achieve either effective interstellar communication or interstellar travel.
    
    “Workshops like these demonstrate that there is an appetite to achieve these aims, for the purposes of scientific exploration,” he said. “If humans can do it, surely other technological civilizations could do it, too.”
    
    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by Nepia
    #142

    @Kirwan said in SpaceX Crew Demo:

    @Nepia it’s all good. It’s something about the costs after season three, Netflix has to take more onboard.

    Effectively they are Netflix originals.

    Last Jessica Jones was great again, hope it comes back in some form or another.

    Oh yeah, I was meaning their non licensed from other studios/networks originals as that’s all drying up as the streaming landscape in the US is about to get silly.

    I can see a rise in illegal downloads coming.

    Never really got the Marvel TV buzz, didn’t like the first Daredevil which kind of set the scene I guess, and the Jessica Jones S1 was decent but too long, which actually was the same for Punisher. Clearly not my bag which is strange as they’re all in my wheel house.

    KirwanK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    replied to Nepia on last edited by
    #143

    @Nepia the thing they do well is the slow burn plot with a big payoff. TV for adults instead of kids with no attention span.

    In Daredevil, the single tracking shot sequences were amazing. The escape in season three on one take is incredible.

    Punisher left me cold, it was just too bleak. Never watched the second one.

    NepiaN 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    wrote on last edited by
    #144

    RocketLab launchinga gain in 8 minutes

    1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • PaekakboyzP Offline
    PaekakboyzP Offline
    Paekakboyz
    wrote on last edited by
    #145

    8a4c2409-cbed-49b7-b894-559f0074affc-image.png

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • NepiaN Offline
    NepiaN Offline
    Nepia
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #146

    @Kirwan said in SpaceX Crew Demo:

    @Nepia the thing they do well is the slow burn plot with a big payoff. TV for adults instead of kids with no attention span.

    In Daredevil, the single tracking shot sequences were amazing. The escape in season three on one take is incredible.

    Punisher left me cold, it was just too bleak. Never watched the second one.

    Oh burn. 😉

    I never got to S3 of Daredevil, one was enough and that's the one everyone usually rates the best. I actually don't like the actor, he was also in Boardwalk Empire and I didn't like him in that either.

    KirwanK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    replied to Nepia on last edited by
    #147

    @Nepia reads bad, but wasn’t meant to!

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    wrote on last edited by
    #148

    Space X is live;

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    wrote on last edited by
    #149

    And scrubbed

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #150

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/115124630/live-rocket-labs-look-ma-no-hands-rocket-launches

    Another launch just a few minutes ago. It is crazy that it will be so routine soon it barely makes the papers

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    wrote on last edited by
    #151

    31mins in you'll see the test hover flight of what will end up being this;

    alt text

    canefanC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #152

    @Kirwan Very shiny. Very phallic

    KirwanK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • KirwanK Offline
    KirwanK Offline
    Kirwan
    replied to canefan on last edited by
    #153

    @canefan aren't all rockets? Very 1950s idea of what a rocket should look like.

    canefanC SnowyS 2 Replies Last reply
    2
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #154

    @Kirwan said in SpaceX Crew Demo:

    @canefan aren't all rockets? Very 1950s idea of what a rocket should look like.

    Looks like something out of Gattaca

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • SnowyS Offline
    SnowyS Offline
    Snowy
    replied to Kirwan on last edited by
    #155

    @Kirwan said in SpaceX Crew Demo:

    @canefan aren't all rockets? Very 1950s idea of what a rocket should look like.

    I think Flash Gordon would be proud, and that was 1936.

    82fae2f9-1529-4661-91e3-20499a5001a6-image.png

    PaekakboyzP 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • PaekakboyzP Offline
    PaekakboyzP Offline
    Paekakboyz
    replied to Snowy on last edited by
    #156

    @Snowy ribbed... for someones pleasure!

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #157

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/industries/116767827/rocket-lab-plans-to-shoot-satellites-to-the-moon-and-beyond-with-new-photon-spaceship

    We are going to the moon baby!!!

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #158

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/118028699/tenth-mission-milestone-for-rocket-lab

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • canefanC Offline
    canefanC Offline
    canefan
    wrote on last edited by
    #159

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/business/118378024/rocket-lab-starts-work-on-second-nz-launch-pad

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • jeggaJ Offline
    jeggaJ Offline
    jegga
    wrote on last edited by
    #160

    Never gets old

    1 Reply Last reply
    5

Space - Spacex, NASA, Rocket Lab
Off Topic
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.
  • First post
    Last post
0
  • Categories
  • Login

  • Don't have an account? Register

  • Login or register to search.