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CrowdScience

Will our spacecraft ever reach the stars?

CrowdScience

BBC

Science

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 11 December 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The space between stars is usually measured in light years, but this makes it less easy to acknowledge the true scale of the distance. Even the closest star system to Earth, Proxima Centauri, is 4.2 light years or 40.13 trillion kilometres from Earth. If we are ever going to bridge the gap between the stars, we will have to have some very fast spaceships, with extremely reliable, long-lasting technology on board.

So does science allow for these spacecraft to exist? That’s what listener Allan wants to know, and to find out, Presenter Anand Jagatia speaks with Tracy Drain, a systems engineer at NASA JPL responsible for overseeing the development and missions of multiple unmanned interplanetary probes including some around Jupiter and Mars. She tells us the challenges involved with simply keeping our spacecraft working for the long-haul.

Even if we can overcome issues of wear and tear over time, powering a ship to other star systems will not be easy. Today’s chemical rockets are too inefficient for the job, so we speak with Rachel Moloney, a researcher in electric propulsion to ask if this relatively new technology could power ships through interstellar space.

Faster than light travel is the solution most often found in Science Fiction, but it goes against Einstein’s laws of relativity. Is there a way around it? Theoretical physicist Professor Miguel Alcubierre thinks there may be, and he describes the way a spaceship may be able to create a bubble of spacetime around itself to move faster than light without breaking these fixed laws. But there’s a catch...

Contributors: Tracy Drain – Systems Engineer - NASA Jet Propulsion Lab, California, USA Rachel Moloney – Researcher in Electrical Propulsion - Surrey Space Centre, UK Professor Samuel Tisherman – Surgeon – University of Maryland school of Medicine, USA Dr John Bradford – President & CTO of SpaceWorks, USA Professor Miguel Alcubierre – Theoretical physicist known for the ‘Alcubierre Warp Drive’ – National University of Mexico

Presented by Anand Jagatia Produced by Rory Galloway

[Image: Speceship. Credit: Getty Images]

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of

0:07.0

Happiness Podcast.

0:08.0

For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want

0:14.4

to share that science with you.

0:16.1

And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley.

0:19.4

I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that

0:25.4

calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds.

0:30.7

Hello. Hello passengers and welcome aboard flight CS1-127. This is your captain speaking.

0:40.0

I'm Anan Jagatilla and I'll be piloting this spacecraft on its 4.3 light year journey to Alpha Centauri.

0:47.0

Although aboard is the crowd science cabin crew headed up by producer Rory Galloway.

0:52.0

We'll be taking a gravity assist around Jupiter

0:55.0

before heading out into interstellar space

0:57.0

at about 60,000 kilometers an hour.

1:00.0

Flight duration is going to be about 80,000 years, so please do sit back and relax.

1:06.0

Thank you for flying.

1:07.0

Crowdscience, we wish you a pleasant flight.

1:10.0

Now, I know that travel is kind of off the cards for the moment given the pandemic so it's going to be a little while before many of us step back onto a plane let alone an

1:19.4

interstellar spaceship but could it happen one day? That's what we're exploring on this

1:25.6

episode thanks to a question we got sent in from Alan, a nuclear power

1:29.5

engineer who lives in the UK. I've been involved in technology all my life.

1:34.0

I'm very interested in the prospect of our race ever moving off the planet.

1:41.0

I'd like to know if our spaceships will ever reach the stars. This is definitely a question

...

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