http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061130/sc_nm/space_hawking_dc_2

Humans must colonize other planets: Hawking

LONDON (Reuters) - Humans must colonize planets in other solar systems 
traveling there using "Star
Trek"-style propulsion or face extinction, renowned British cosmologist Stephen 
Hawking said on
Thursday.

Referring to complex theories and the speed of light, Hawking, the wheel-chair 
bound Cambridge
University physicist, told BBC radio that theoretical advances could 
revolutionize the velocity of
space travel and make such colonies possible.

"Sooner or later disasters such as an asteroid collision or a nuclear war could 
wipe us all out,"
said Professor Hawking, who was crippled by a muscle disease at the age of 21 
and who speaks
through a computerized voice synthesizer.

"But once we spread out into space and establish independent colonies, our 
future should be safe,"
said Hawking, who was due to receive the world's oldest award for scientific 
achievement, the
Copley medal, from Britain's Royal Society on Thursday.

Previous winners include Albert Einstein and Charles Darwin.

In order to survive, humanity would have to venture off to other hospitable 
planets orbiting
another star, but conventional chemical fuel rockets that took man to the moon 
on the Apollo
mission would take 50,000 years to travel there, he said.

Hawking, a 64-year-old father of three who rarely gives interviews and who 
wrote the best-selling
"A Brief History of Time," suggested propulsion like that used by the fictional 
starship
Enterprise "to boldly go where no man has gone before" could help solve the 
problem.

"Science fiction has developed the idea of warp drive, which takes you 
instantly to your
destination," said.

"Unfortunately, this would violate the scientific law which says that nothing 
can travel faster
than light."

However, by using "matter/antimatter annihilation," velocities just below the 
speed of light could
be reached, making it possible to reach the next star in about six years.

"It wouldn't seem so long for those on board," he said.

The scientist revealed he also wanted to try out space travel himself, albeit 
by more conventional
means.

"I am not afraid of death but I'm in no hurry to die. My next goal is to go 
into space," said
Hawking.

And referring to the British entrepreneur and Virgin tycoon who has set up a 
travel agency to take
private individuals on space flights from 2008, Hawking said: "Maybe Richard 
Branson will help
me." 

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