>Orion is a fabulous and quite valid counter to the folks that seem to like to repeat the canard that interstellar flight is impossible.
I’d never say it’s impossible, if we maintain a civilisation for long enough it might even be inevitable at least at a minimal level.
However, Daedalus/Orion is far from as straightforward as has been suggested by you and others. It’s based on projections of technology made in the 70s, not 70s technology. There are also formidable obstacles, such as obtaining enough Helium3. The authors suggested extracting it from the atmosphere of Jupiter or Uranus. That by itself would be as hard as building the vehicle itself, if not harder. I’d like to see a design for a Jupiter atmospheric scoop and return vehicle.
Also Daedalus couldn’t take people. Staggeringly huge as it was, it was a flyby mission with a 450 ton payload. If it was going to decelerate instead it’s payload was about the size of a washing machine.
Not Daedalus, Orion. It was a 1960s research project involving Freeman Dyson and others. Google it. There is a fantastic documentary that I think is on YouTube.
Orion is kind of shockingly practical. It was forgotten for some time as it was a military research project not NASA or academic.
Do you acknowledge the fact that interstellar travel entails more than just speeding up and slowing down? Because that's what Dyson would be telling you if he were here.
One of the main unsolved problems is the electromagnetic shielding, both front and back (as you need to turn to decelerate). Even at 0.08c every speck of interstellar dust has enormous impact energy, far worse than the radiation of your own bombs. AFAIK this is unsolved.
it's 35% of the fission energy released by totally fissioning 1g of U-235!
i.e. I don't know whether this it's feasible to just have a heavy water & lead shield, as 0.1g is fairly optimistic to be the heaviest particle hitting you. Already at this size we're in range of tactical nuclear weapons.
I’d never say it’s impossible, if we maintain a civilisation for long enough it might even be inevitable at least at a minimal level.
However, Daedalus/Orion is far from as straightforward as has been suggested by you and others. It’s based on projections of technology made in the 70s, not 70s technology. There are also formidable obstacles, such as obtaining enough Helium3. The authors suggested extracting it from the atmosphere of Jupiter or Uranus. That by itself would be as hard as building the vehicle itself, if not harder. I’d like to see a design for a Jupiter atmospheric scoop and return vehicle.
Also Daedalus couldn’t take people. Staggeringly huge as it was, it was a flyby mission with a 450 ton payload. If it was going to decelerate instead it’s payload was about the size of a washing machine.