Deuterium fusion Starships II

Enzmann Starship

earlier post… Deuterium fusion rockets

Attaching a starship to a great big mass of frozen deuterium seems a good idea, in light of Dr. Friedwardt Winterberg’s updated e-print from June…

Advanced Deuterium Fusion Rocket Propulsion For Manned Deep Space Missions

…of course the trick is igniting the reaction and getting a high fusion-burnup fraction out of the fuel-target. Not so easily done, but Winterberg’s work makes the prospects look good with sufficient effort. The estimated exhaust velocity is fairly high, a bit over ~4% of c, [according to Brian Wang it can go as high as 6.3%] which means a 120,000 ton starship attached to 12,000,000 tons of deuterium can do a delta-vee of ~0.2 c. With an efficient magnetic sail that means the journey speed approaches ~0.2 c, albeit with the mass-penalty of the sail. Perhaps a plasma-magnet can be formed at such speeds, with a quite different decceleration profile to the mag-sail, since the artificial magnetosphere balloons to match the plasma ram-pressure. Essentially the size goes up as the relative speed goes down, thus allowing a more-or-less constant braking force. A decceleration of 0.1 m/s2 will bring the vehicle to a halt in ~19 years over about 1.9 light-years from 0.2 c.

In case you didn’t realise it’s a LONG way between the stars. Fusion-ship trip-times are decadal at best.

PS Even a Vex of 6.3% c, the maximum burn-out velocity is just 0.28 c. While that’s an incredible 84,000 km/s it does still mean that the nearest star, Proxima Centauri, is at least a 15 year trip.

A Girl With Familiar… Feet

Ardipithecus is a hominid species from Ethiopia, discovered in 1994 but only just revealed in her full glory by the team who have laboured for 15 years to pull her bits together to give us a clear image…

Ardipithecus Girl from Scientific American

Credits: Illustrations by J.H. Matternes

…and who does she remind you of? For me those divergent big toes remind me instantly of Oreopithecus bambolii, the putatively bipedal ape from Sardinia & Tuscany, who lived during the Miocene. Marcel Williams has made the case for Oreopithecus being a hominid, if not a direct ancestor, of humans – maybe he’s on to something.