Warning, Captain Kirk: Warp speed will kill you
Interstellar hydrogen atoms would deliver lethal radiation blasts

By Jeremy Hsu
Space.com

updated 6:21 p.m. CT, Mon., March. 8, 2010

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35770625/ns/technology_and_science-space/ns/technology_and_science-space


Captain Kirk might want to avoid taking the starship Enterprise to warp 
speed, unless he's ready to shrug off interstellar hydrogen atoms that 
would deliver a lethal radiation blast to both ship and crew.

There are just two hydrogen atoms per cubic centimeter on average in 
space, which poses no threat to spaceships traveling at low speeds. But 
those same lone atoms would transform into deadly galactic space mines 
for a spaceship that runs into them at near-light speed, according to 
calculations based on Einstein's special theory of relativity.

The original crew of "Star Trek" featured as unfortunate examples at a 
presentation by William Edelstein, a physicist at Johns Hopkins 
University, at the American Physical Society conference in Washington, 
D.C. on Feb. 13. The physicist showed a video clip of Kirk telling 
engineer Scotty to go to warp speed.

"Well, they're all dead," Edelstein recalled saying. His words caused a 
stir among the audience.

Edelstein's personal interest in this thought experiment began 20 years 
ago, when his son Arthur asked him if there was friction in space. The 
father responded that yes, there would be hydrogen bumping off a 
spaceship. But he soon realized that the stray atoms of hydrogen gas 
would actually go right through the ship traveling close to light speed, 
and irradiate both crew and electronics in the process.

More recently, the physicist and his now-grown son calculated the 
scenario of a spaceship trying to travel halfway across our Milky Way 
galaxy in just 10 years. That's doable in theory, because special 
relativity states that time slows down and distances shrink for 
travelers approaching light speed.

Edelstein's work showed that a starship traveling at just 99 percent of 
the speed of light would get a radiation dose from hydrogen of 61 
sieverts per second, when just one tenth of that number of sieverts 
would deliver a fatal dose for humans. And that's not even the 99.999998 
percent of light-speed necessary to make the journey to the center of 
the Milky Way in 10 years

At the higher speed, the human crew of a starship would experience 
something like getting struck by the high-energy proton beam from the 
Large Hadron Collider particle accelerator at CERN in Geneva, 
Switzerland. On top of killing the crew, such powerful levels of energy 
would also likely destroy the starship electronics.

"I'm not claiming this is a brilliant new discovery or anything," 
Edelstein told SPACE.com. "I'm just saying that it's interesting."

Some audience members at the American Physical Society event protested 
that Kirk, Spock and the "Star Trek" crew would all still live because 
of the starship Enterprise having shields. But Edelstein noted some of 
the existing difficulties with creating an electromagnetic shield with 
any resemblance to "Star Trek" technology.

Solid shields seem even more hopeless. A starship might need anywhere 
from a 4.4 -meter to 4,400-meter thickness of lead shielding to deflect 
the hydrogen radiation — added mass that would make travel at near-light 
speed even more impractical.

The physicist concluded by suggesting that extraterrestrials might not 
have visited Earth because of all the problems in traveling at 
near-light speeds, including how to deal with deadly hydrogen space 
mines. But for the record, he does believe that alien life exists.

"Getting between stars is a huge problem unless we think of something 
really, really different," Edelstein said. "I'm not saying that we know 
everything and that it's impossible. I'm saying it's kind of impossible 
based on what we know right now."


URL: 
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35770625/ns/technology_and_science-space/ns/technology_and_science-space/

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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