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Interstellar Expansion WITHOUT Faster Than Light Travel 

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In the far future we may have advanced propulsion technologies like matter-antimatter engines and compact fusion drives that allow humans to travel to other stars on timescales shorter than their own lives. But what if those technologies never materialize? Are we imprisoned by the vastness of space-doomed to remain in the solar system of our origin? Perhaps not. A possible path to a contemporary cosmic dream may just be to build a ship which can support human life for several generations; a so-called generation ship.
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15 май 2024

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Комментарии : 4,3 тыс.   
@pbsspacetime
@pbsspacetime 27 дней назад
Hey Space Timers! If you enjoy thinking about the realities of human space travel, then check out the documentary Space: The Longest Goodbye. And if you head over, let them know (politely) that Space Time sent you! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-MT-pV48XBI4.html&ab_channel=PBS UPDATE: Currently the YT Link is only accessible in the US. We're working to see if we can get full international access.
@osmosisjones4912
@osmosisjones4912 27 дней назад
What about traveling as fare back in time as time is moving forward with . Moving at light speed with warp and thrust molecular vibration. Against The rotation of galaxy
@utube7930
@utube7930 27 дней назад
No worky linky
@frogz
@frogz 27 дней назад
dont make it app ONLY, plenty of people would happily go to a pbs webpage but wont install another app just to view videos
@cyanah5979
@cyanah5979 27 дней назад
Video not available
@geroffmilan3328
@geroffmilan3328 27 дней назад
"This video is not available" is what I see when clicking the link
@kapsi
@kapsi 27 дней назад
What I never see in discussions of long time space travel, is how to keep machines going for hundreds, thousands or more years. Everything eventually breaks down from usage, and you'd have to keep many spares, or manufacture needed components on the ship, which also seems hard to do. Here in current reality, it's a miracle that Voyager 1 still works (barely) after 50 years, and that's a super simple machine, compared to a generational ship to Alpha Centauri.
@Drew_goo
@Drew_goo 27 дней назад
I have heard capturing asteroids can provide material for an advanced 3d printing machine, possibly two for when one needs a part replacement
@Giantcrabz
@Giantcrabz 27 дней назад
easy. Make the whole ship out of Gameboys and Nokia bricks
@catmacopter8545
@catmacopter8545 27 дней назад
Thats really interesting!! I would think that a lot of the materials could be recycled from.... Human waste maybe? That takes care of the carbon, but the copper i dont know. Very cool question!
@SebastianKrabs
@SebastianKrabs 27 дней назад
You need 10x of all systems in reserves for repair. Making the ship larger for storage... complicating the systems .... Requiring additional parts for repairs...#DoomLoop
@randar1969
@randar1969 27 дней назад
Eventually yes, but our experiences here a skewed as well , a factory that operates for profit will not design things to last forever instead it will design to break down faster even. Want an example here lightbulb source wiki 'The world's longest-lasting light bulb is the Centennial Light located at 4550 East Avenue, Livermore, California. It is maintained by the Livermore-Pleasanton Fire Department. The fire department claims that the bulb is at least 121 years old (installed 1901)' In this case we will even design to last. How far we can push that when our future depends on it is everyone's guess.
@savionhathorn6945
@savionhathorn6945 27 дней назад
I wonder if the generations who live and die on the ship would feel a little similar to the phrase at the start. Too late to see earth, too early to see the destination.
@scaper8
@scaper8 27 дней назад
That would actually be an interesting idea for a longer short story or short novella. Open with the "Too late to explore the Earth; too early to explore the stars," and go from there, then close with, "Too late to see Earth; too early to see ProxCent B."
@arcan762
@arcan762 27 дней назад
Sad...
@Scorch428
@Scorch428 27 дней назад
Even our generational ship of Earth hasnt made it 100 years in yet with nuclear weapons :P
@Ylyrra
@Ylyrra 27 дней назад
@@scaper8 Pretty sure I've read a few short stories with that premise during the wave of "new hard sci-fi" of the early 2000 to 2010s, can't think of the titles though I'm afraid. Probably Charles Stross or Ken MacLeod or someone of that era. Alastair Reynolds also did a bunch of novels featuring around exploring slower-than-light travel and the social ramifications.
@SolaceEasy
@SolaceEasy 27 дней назад
The plan would be to keep the mutinous middle generations properly drugged.
@Maladjester
@Maladjester 22 дня назад
"We'll have to have a society based on teamwork, harmony, and mutual respect." Well, there goes that idea.
@OrosTheAvengerX
@OrosTheAvengerX 13 дней назад
Societies like Japan could probably do it. Homogeneous and high-trust.
@gfries4906
@gfries4906 12 дней назад
@@OrosTheAvengerX japan is not "high trust". they have made exclusively-female train cars due to the staggering rate of SA. japanese workers are overworked, underpaid, and depressed. its also rare for a homogeneous society to stay intact. there will be outcasts, and those who deviate from the norm.
@SteveWithers
@SteveWithers 11 дней назад
They definitely won't be Americans or Russians. China might be able to do it...
@fermista
@fermista 10 дней назад
Building such a society is actually the current goal of social revolutionaries like anarchist communists. The idea is to build those socio-political structures in the the here and now to the greatest extent possible, based on the principles of mutual aid, solidarity, equality, free association, and individual freedom. These structures and frameworks, once they are in place, would take over in a post-capitalist society. In practice, this was achieved to a large extent in revolutionary Spain in the few years prior to the Francoist counter-revolution.
@Maladjester
@Maladjester 10 дней назад
@@fermista Idealized communism is a carrot dangled by would-be tyrants.
@eirrenia
@eirrenia 24 дня назад
Realistically, I think our best first step would be building space colonies/stations. Once we have those working reliably we can start thinking about generation ships.
@Igor369
@Igor369 4 дня назад
There is a lot of overlap between technology for Mars colonization and multigenerational ship travel so why not just do both at once.
@billyfugate4823
@billyfugate4823 27 дней назад
One of my favorite things to think about is a generation ship arriving at their new world only to be absolutely baffled by finding an even more advanced human civilization because FTL was figured out during the generation ships journey
@jasonp7091
@jasonp7091 25 дней назад
I read a short story about that. There were three people on the ship in cryo sleep. They would wake up every 50 years or so, make sure everything still worked, and go back to sleep. One guy woke up to alarms and saw a burning spaceship, but couldn't do anything about it. When they arrived, they found the planets already colonized, and their arrival had been predicted. The burning ship had tried to stop and pick them up but something had gone wrong. The crew spent a little time there but then were able to go back in time to the earth in the past again.
@Arquinas
@Arquinas 25 дней назад
@@jasonp7091 "Yeah we thank you for your service but it wasn't really needed. Here, you can go back if you want. The future is safe and secure." "Oh ok..."
@azambon
@azambon 25 дней назад
@@jasonp7091 It's intriguing, do you remember its author and title?
@WastelandSurvival2
@WastelandSurvival2 24 дня назад
this happens in a quest in Starfield, you find an earth colony ship that got lost & arrive to find the entire solar system is full of people already that created a faster technology
@DougHoffman
@DougHoffman 24 дня назад
@@WastelandSurvival2 Worst. Quest. Ever.
@Feefa99
@Feefa99 27 дней назад
What we need is lots of spice
@VolkerHett
@VolkerHett 27 дней назад
And this is only available on Arakis and we need FTL to get there.
@noellenn2122
@noellenn2122 27 дней назад
Five spice is 5x better than spice
@TehJumpingJawa
@TehJumpingJawa 27 дней назад
@@noellenn2122 Even if it's old?
@WolfeSaber9933
@WolfeSaber9933 27 дней назад
Or use a warp manifold to generate the vast amounts of energy need to run the advance systems necessary to warp the space-time fabric.
@nonojustno1766
@nonojustno1766 27 дней назад
​@@noellenn2122does that mean KFC is faster than warp factor 5?
@8ManFan
@8ManFan 25 дней назад
Another issue, especially with the 6000-year trip: The first generation or so will have attachments to Earth and the motivation and training to keep things going. A few generations into it and it'll be, "What's Earth?", "The heck with future generations, what about my needs?", and "Dad, I don't want to be an engineer, I'm an artist." Chaos Theory and Murphy's Law are undefeated.
@henryfleischer404
@henryfleischer404 25 дней назад
That's why I think the ship would need to be extremely big. Over 10,000 crew and passengers.
@MrCmon113
@MrCmon113 24 дня назад
Those are stupid examples, but in general the concern with mutation is relevant. And mutation can happen whether you send biomatter or artificial agents or simply people.
@brandontylerburt
@brandontylerburt 24 дня назад
@@henryfleischer404 The number of crew necessary is difficult to gauge, but considering that maintaining a baseline of happiness, psychological health and commitment to the mission is so vital as to render the distinction between "crew" and "passengers" meaningless, that number would need to accommodate artists, poets and visionaries among the ship's inhabitants without considering a life's devotion to the arts as some kind of failure when compared to that of an engineer, and to assimilate the tangible and intangible fruits of that devotion ranging from new symphonic compositions and theatrical productions to more palatable ways of preparing mealworms and improvements in propulsion efficiency.
@etienne9747
@etienne9747 24 дня назад
you need religion. you get far with that, even if atheist dont like it
@sprolyborn2554
@sprolyborn2554 23 дня назад
​@@MrCmon113How is that stupid? That's exactly what would happen. Why would the 4th or 5th generations have the same motivation or drive of the 1st that actually got to physically see what they were trying to preserve?
@noiJadisCailleach
@noiJadisCailleach 26 дней назад
Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. Multi-generational ship? Check. Traveling to another world? Check. Disasters happening en route? Check. Humongous sized ship? Check. Psychological stability issues due to environmental conditions? Check. Ship has AI? Check. If the things in the vid somewhat intrigues you, I highly recommend that book!
@KaichouClips
@KaichouClips 25 дней назад
Great recommendation. The ins and outs of generational ships are very well thought out in that series, along with what could happen before and after the journey. Adrian Tchaikovsky is also great at showing development in terms of biology, psychology, culture, etc.
@colonagray2454
@colonagray2454 20 дней назад
Everything that man writes had so much depth and world building that im yet to read a book I dint like. Really makes you look at things. Children of time was wild
@paragsatyal6891
@paragsatyal6891 16 дней назад
Thanks! This is going to be the next book I read, I haven't read fiction in a while! Also seems like it (or atleast the broader concept of multi generational spaceship would really make a good game.
@davidharvey3743
@davidharvey3743 14 дней назад
Sweet Child of Time by Deep Purple. The rest? whatever you said.
@addisonmartin3200
@addisonmartin3200 13 дней назад
The Gilgamesh wasn't really supposed to have an AI... let alone a couple dozen babbling half-born AIs.
@stevesmith4600
@stevesmith4600 27 дней назад
One of the concepts missed is "not putting all eggs in one basket". If the only constraints are time and technology, and not costs, resources and volunteers, then we're going to have to launch a number of these colonizing ships, just to increase the odds that one succeeds. Multiple ships with communication between the ships may help out with some of the human, psychological challenges too.
@Comicsluvr
@Comicsluvr 14 дней назад
Another advantage of this is that ships can trade people (for a better gene pool) as well as spare parts. If they take slightly different courses, but can still rendezvous in-transit, then you get the best of all worlds.
@ristags
@ristags 14 дней назад
This is actually a really great idea
@SmartMaterial
@SmartMaterial 27 дней назад
I predict future colonists will be groups of cells in a petri dish.
@Pidgey95
@Pidgey95 27 дней назад
Wouldn't be that bad after all. Letting some organisms colonize a planet so that us humans might disappear but at least know that some life forms would survive
@MichaelDeHaven
@MichaelDeHaven 27 дней назад
Or send frozen embryos that are raised by advanced robots after terra forming. But in the end it'll likely just be a slow expansion of livable space habits. After Sol fills up, or gets too crowded, just move some out of the system. They'll have the systems, culture, etc. All they really need is some propulsion. They don't really even need much of that. A medium size group orbiting a small resource body could probably make the transition to another star system fairly easily. Once there they can just start the process over again.
@ryanhouston2437
@ryanhouston2437 27 дней назад
Maybe I've had one too many whiskeys but this is brilliant. Maybe it's where we came from.
@freebreezy2k155
@freebreezy2k155 27 дней назад
Yea, frozen embryos grown when the ship is 20-25 years out from destination seems simpler than trying to keep generations of humans alive, sane, and motivated on a ship for thousands of years. You'd just need to keep the ship and AIs/robots working for thousands of years and then only raise, teach, and feed a single generation instead of 200+.
@mcblaze1968
@mcblaze1968 27 дней назад
Algorithm in a chip.
@krowland7584
@krowland7584 25 дней назад
6,300 year travel is a comically long mission timeline. Though I think this could be a fun and thrilling sitcom.
@gewinnste
@gewinnste 15 дней назад
One issue Matt didn't mention is the _energy problem_ : In fact, if all the recycling necessary would be improved to at least 99.9(9?)%, then energy would be the only limiting resource. It's difficult to gauge whether a fission reactor would be suitable (lifetime of the reactor etc.) - But regarding the required fissile fuel, let's estimate the needed mass: Upscaled from the ISS, 500-1000 crew members would need very roughly 10 MW, but upscaled from a Virginia Class nuclear submarine, 500-1000 crew members would need ~115-230 MW. Most of the energy in a nuclear sub goes into propulsion, but then again, maybe almost as much (or even more?), fraction-wise per crew member, would be needed to keep homeostasis (growing food etc.) in a generation ship. So let's semi-optimistically say 100 MW for 500-1000 people. That would amount to very roughly 500-1000 tons of ~30% enriched uranium (nuclear subs use >20% enriched uranium, >50% would maybe be too dangerous (?)) for 6000 years for 500-1000 people: 1 kg pure U235 --> 24,000,000 kW/h = 86,400,000 MJ (~86 TJ) --> 864,000 seconds at 100 MW = 10 days --> 36.5 kg/year --> ~220 tons 100% U235 for 6000 years --> 730 tons 30% U235 for 6000 years. If that could be stored as one giant cube (which it won't), it would be a cube of edge-length ~3.4 meters, so very manageable. In reality the space for storing the equivalent in uranium rods would be a lot larger, but it's certainly not a deal-breaker (neither volume- nor mass-wise). An unknown factor is the life-time of the reactor though - that could in fact be a deal breaker. 6000 years is ~ 100-250x a regular nuclear reactor lifetime! Then, since fusion is always 30 years away ;-) it might not be an option, but even if, there's the reactor-lifetime problem again. What about solar panels? They only work efficienctly (energy per surface area) close to a star and the vast majority of the trip will be very, very far from either star (Sun and target star), so photovoltaics are under no circumstances feasible: Even at Earth-orbit distance from the sun, 100 MW would require the surface are of a ~700x700 meter square of 15% efficient solar panels and that area quadruples for every doubling of the distance to the sun. I.e. at Neptune that square would need to have an edge-length of 21 km and somewhere in the Kuyper belt of ~100 km edge-length. And that's just 0.05% of the trip to the nearest star! So it looks like we'd need a very, very long-lived fission or fusion reactor or one that can be "refurbished" with onboard resources hundreds of times; Or something like an Epstein drive, but that would bring about the problem of micro-asteroids or just dust grains doing a lot of damage on impact.
@user-jq4fk3wb4u
@user-jq4fk3wb4u 27 дней назад
Going towards Proxima Centauri to escape from the tri-solarians seems like a bad idea...
@ObjectsInMotion
@ObjectsInMotion 27 дней назад
Its so crazy they'd never expect it!
@chr1styn806
@chr1styn806 27 дней назад
Glad I wasn't the only one who thought that
@EebstertheGreat
@EebstertheGreat 27 дней назад
Pull the old switcheroo. By the time they realize we've colonized their planet, they've already left to colonize ours. What could go wrong?
@briondalion3696
@briondalion3696 26 дней назад
@@ObjectsInMotion It's the move they'd least suspect, and we wouldn't need to worry about them following us. They wouldn't want to drive home at 1% the speed they're used to
@danm9006
@danm9006 26 дней назад
How about the Borg? Cylons?
@TehJumpingJawa
@TehJumpingJawa 27 дней назад
Given how accurate Humanity's prior estimates have been for future space endeavors, I'm confident that 30 year countdown would be just long enough for us to realize we'd need another 70.
@Briskeeeen
@Briskeeeen 27 дней назад
And then we need another 90 after that
@anonts5050
@anonts5050 27 дней назад
Well we finally have the technology for the moon :o)
@PaulZyCZ
@PaulZyCZ 27 дней назад
We were supposed to have Enzmann ships a decade ago, based on how Apollo was going before the Oil crisis. :)
@tunnfisk
@tunnfisk 27 дней назад
Just enough time for us to greet the Trisolarans with open arms. (we became extinct)
@h14hc124
@h14hc124 27 дней назад
Those trying to build the ship would be under constant attack from those screaming fake news, and who want to divert all the funding away.
@sciteceng2hedz358
@sciteceng2hedz358 25 дней назад
Remember Spacetime, a common mistake @3:51 : cryogenics is not the technology that froze Hans Solo. That's cryonics. Cryogenics is the study of production and usage of really cold non-biological material, like liquid H2 and O2 rocket fuels and cooling the magnets in the LHC.
@bannor99
@bannor99 24 дня назад
I think that's a common mistake because most assume the "genics" part to refer to biology
@donald-parker
@donald-parker 25 дней назад
6000 years living on worms and yams. Where do I sign up!
@grooverkitty
@grooverkitty 17 дней назад
lol :D
@peterswanson3446
@peterswanson3446 8 дней назад
This video in my opinion, outside of being highly educational, does nothing but confirm we are likely very much stuck within our own solar system for the foreseeable time. Space is just to vast and things are just too far away. We're not going anywhere.
@markcentral
@markcentral 27 дней назад
The existential threat scenario is the only one where this analysis makes sense. If this wasn't the case, you'd expect in the 6400 years it takes the slower ship to arrive, humans will devise a much faster form of propulsion -- and so the second or third ship they send will overtake the first one and get there first. Imagine the feeling of being on spaceship one, arriving at the destination, and discover there's been an existing human colony there which arrived 5000 years earlier 😂
@MisterZimbabwe
@MisterZimbabwe 27 дней назад
Yeah generation ships are a last resort method of space travel. I know I certainly don't want to be stuck on board a sweaty cramped ship my whole life.
@JMurph2015
@JMurph2015 27 дней назад
​@@MisterZimbabwe what makes you think it would be sweaty or even cramped? In building a generation ship, you basically need to pack up a small part of Earth's biosphere and put rocket engines on it. It's going to be large one way or another.
@shipwreck9146
@shipwreck9146 27 дней назад
It's kinda terrifying to think about forgotten generation ships. I'm sure there are some in space, (non-human of course) and there's probably even some cases of Donner party type situations in space. Think about the amount of information we lose over a period of 1000 years. There's little chance that we'd remember sending a specific ship. Eventually archeologists might find record, and then we'd go looking for the ship to see if it still exists. But more likely, we'd just assume it was lost.
@hollownation
@hollownation 27 дней назад
Even with the short 140 year journey this could still happen and the colony that is already there would be far more evolved the people on the ship would be a relic of the past. Imagine some traveler’s in 1880 on there way to America got shipwrecked and stayed hidden on an island till now it would be like time travelling and not in a good way.
@DrDeuteron
@DrDeuteron 27 дней назад
and they're building a generational ship to GTFO.
@thebourgeoispunk
@thebourgeoispunk 27 дней назад
When you stop to think about it, Earth is a pretty great spaceship except for that last part of figuring out how we’re all supposed to live together. that’s the hardest to figure out.
@eustab.anas-mann9510
@eustab.anas-mann9510 27 дней назад
Duck "Earth"
@Ylyrra
@Ylyrra 27 дней назад
Eventually all technical problems simplify into social problems. By that I mean they "complexify".
@logancatron2239
@logancatron2239 27 дней назад
Capitalism has no answers for the problems it creates
@SebastianKrabs
@SebastianKrabs 27 дней назад
It's called "Spaceship Earth", an old concept.
@Hector-bj3ls
@Hector-bj3ls 27 дней назад
There's a Chinese film about it. It's ridiculous, but a fun watch.
@leejamison8436
@leejamison8436 21 день назад
One way to explore these ideas is to study what can be discovered of Pacific islanders. Small groups set out on long journeys into the unknown, found islands and established some richly independent cultures.
@matthewona
@matthewona 23 дня назад
A lot of times we always assume that exploration is always targeted towards finding new worlds. If we do generational ships maybe the ships itself become the world and the outer space that we explore is just an avenue for us to extract raw resources to build more space habitats grouped together in the future.
@DobromirManchev
@DobromirManchev 27 дней назад
Thinking about a 6000 years journey is absurd. Imagine how much humanity has changed on Earth in the last 6k years. The countless discoveries, wars, diseases, struggles and things... it's mindboggling. There's absolutely no way that you can get a tiny set of people, stick them on an isolated hunk of metal for 6k years and expect it to work. Tbh, they'll probably not even last 20 years.
@Rampart.X
@Rampart.X 25 дней назад
I'd go nuts after two weeks.
@ThePainqT
@ThePainqT 25 дней назад
This progression will not go on forever. We will hit stagnation eventualy, bcs of a war or simply not having enough resources.
@istvanvincze7411
@istvanvincze7411 25 дней назад
@@ThePainqT Most of human history has been stagnation, actually. Our rate of progress has been exponential; Most of the things we have ever known were invented in the last 200 years. And the overwhelming majority of the things we know from before then were invented the last 200-800 years. And if we look at our evolution; in the prehistoric times humans were cavemen for what could be a mind boggling 200.000 years. Humans are no strangers to stagnation.
@ProtoAlpha
@ProtoAlpha 25 дней назад
lobotimize them and use implants to give them back the functions 6000 years later. It's far more easy than you guys make it out to be😅
@invisiblekincajou
@invisiblekincajou 25 дней назад
Inside closed starship you will not have too much things to discover. And crew will divide to "normies" and "mutes" very soon... :)
@Roxor128
@Roxor128 27 дней назад
One aspect of the generation ship: it'll need to be designed for constant maintenance, rather that just longevity. You don't want something to last so long that the crew forget about it. You want something that'll last a reasonable amount of time and can easily be replaced when it wears out. Design all your parts to last ten years and be easily recycled into new ones, and they'll stay on the crew's mind down the generations. And there's another side of things: the ship will need to include a complete industrial base capable of manufacturing anything and everything, plus raw materials to do so. If you're going to be colonising a place that far away, you'll need to be able to make everything from day one, because there's no way to get new supplies in any sort of timely fashion.
@m.scottford9877
@m.scottford9877 26 дней назад
I jumped into the comments to make this point as well. Nice to see another mind agreed. I'd like to add that some tools and systems needed to bootstrap resource gathering once the mission lands would need to be part of the mission payload. Small hand tools will not be adequate to jumpstart a mineral mining operation once the crew arrives at their destination. And that materiel would need to either be packaged in a way that would ensure its preservation or it would need to be regularly examined to look for degradation.
@Roxor128
@Roxor128 26 дней назад
@@m.scottford9877 As long as the ship includes the necessary industrial capacity and raw materials, it doesn't need to include every piece of equipment the colony will need, as the crew can make it along the way. They do have the time, after all.
@cherriberri8373
@cherriberri8373 26 дней назад
1. Why would longevity be a bad thing? You suggest those on the ship might forget as really the main reason for this, but... I'm sure you yourself have ways of reminding yourself of things you don't need to do very often. 2. You wouldn't need to carry everything one would need to Jumpstart industry, as plenty could be built themselves, just the more complicated things and necessities.
@jumboegg5845
@jumboegg5845 26 дней назад
Exactly my thoughts even just to colonise Mars. People dont understand the complex and heavy industrial machinery required to build and repair even simple things, let alone the machinery and equipment. Just a basic lathe weighs many tons.
@Roxor128
@Roxor128 26 дней назад
@@cherriberri8373 There's a difference between "not very often" and "last done by your grandpa when he was your age". If something needs replacing ever ten years, each generation of engineers will have to replace it a couple of times. If it lasts 50 years, you'll have entire generations that never needed to fix it, and running the risk of the knowledge being lost, and having to rediscover it could take too long, jeopardising the survival of the ship.
@jakublizon6375
@jakublizon6375 25 дней назад
"Hey so, I found another job. Giving my 2 weeks.". Boss: Uhhhh....
@ian2372
@ian2372 20 дней назад
Pandorum was a great film and a warning about a generational ship. Also, never eating bugs. Mission over.
@erics3317
@erics3317 26 дней назад
There's an ethical side to this discussion that I think is just as important to explore as the feasibility of being able to pull all of it off. The first generation will, presumably, be volunteers, and that is fine. But every subsequent generation has been forced into what is likely going to be a dismal existence without any say in the matter. At some point there will be no surviving first-generation passengers and the ship will be filled with people who only know of living on a planet through second hand sources. It will be important for the success of the mission to try to understand how these people might react to being in that situation. I suspect there will be a lot of resentment, which will not bode will for the successful completion of the mission.
@danielh.9010
@danielh.9010 25 дней назад
Also, when systems degrade or fail, the living conditions will degrade as well (or even fail catastrophically). I imagine it might be hard to replace all failed parts. I have a hard time imagining a ship that is not a death trap. Also, sabotage will be easy and easily fatal for the crew. I wouldn't even expect that the crew will survive the first generation.
@sprolyborn2554
@sprolyborn2554 23 дня назад
That's a moot point as that's already commonplace and accepted here on earth. Nobody asked to be born and nobody requested the conditions in which they are born. There is some resentment for it but people work with what they were given anyway. So there is no point in trying to take it into account. Nobody asked to be born on that spaceship just like how nobody asked to be born into mining blood diamonds deep in the CAR.
@k_a_bizzle
@k_a_bizzle 23 дня назад
Sounds just like being born on earth😂
@leejamison8436
@leejamison8436 21 день назад
Pacific islanders seem not to have thought their existence bleak.
@alexandragrace8164
@alexandragrace8164 Час назад
@@leejamison8436Pacific Islanders (I’m Hawaiian) were not exploring a deadly environment in a deadly vessel. They were Earthlings exploring more Earth, with only the same dangers their fellow humans faced elsewhere on Earth. Your comparison makes no sense!
@foxdavion6865
@foxdavion6865 26 дней назад
One story that explores generation ships is Knights of Sidonia. They have been on a generational ship for so long that not only had they forgotten their past, they have no idea what their destination is supposed to be either. So instead they live in constant fear of an enemy they believe is trying to destroy humanity and let that fear control them.
@NeostormXLMAX
@NeostormXLMAX 25 дней назад
also the side story aposimz, shame it got canceled and rushed
@goldentrout4811
@goldentrout4811 22 дня назад
Gaunaaaaa!
@maciejbala477
@maciejbala477 13 дней назад
meh, that wouldn't happen with digital archives. i guess it could if crazy conspiracy theorists take over
@marceloliveros1057
@marceloliveros1057 25 дней назад
The possibilities for realistically sustaining life in an interstellar trip are daunting and feel highly unlikely for either the short and long trip. Humans are amazing and continue to demonstrate an ability for greatness, but I still don’t trust us because of our propensity to want to go stray. All you need is one “crazy” during this fantastic trip, for everting to just fall apart. And trust me, if our history is a sign, then we can count on plenty of “crazies” to screw this up. Let’s just focus on restoring, protecting, and preserving our lovely planet!!
@SergLapin
@SergLapin 25 дней назад
Not much time ago we had no clue how to manipulate electromagnetic waves, and here we are with tech indistinguishable from magic. Finding timespace properties and looking beyond may open things unimaginable right now.
@User-jr7vf
@User-jr7vf 18 дней назад
Not trying to lecture you here, but this is a false analogy. We didn' know how to manipulate electromagnetic waves at a time when we hadn't even discovered them in the first place. Not long after finding out about them, we figured a theory which has been consistent since the time it was put together. As for space-time travel, we have Special and General Relativity, and they forbid faster than light travel, unless you have exotic matter/energy. It is not as if we haven't figured how to manipulate space-time, rather we just CAN'T do that (in a classical-macro level).
@SergLapin
@SergLapin 18 дней назад
@@User-jr7vf electromagnetism was described using aethir as an exotic medium, and this is after we practically discovered some effects. Same here, we don't know what maybe hiding behind the spacetime, but we can tell that mass is definitely affecting its shape.
@User-jr7vf
@User-jr7vf 18 дней назад
@@SergLapin but the aether didn't have any influence on what we wanted to do, it wasn't useful at all. That is why it was discarded (sorry for the analogy, specially if you are religious, but.. it is the same as God. We don't need him in any of our theories, so as far as Physics is concerned, he doesn't exist. Same for the aether.)
@SergLapin
@SergLapin 18 дней назад
@@User-jr7vf how do you know what you need from unknown physics? Aethir was discarded when the theory of electromagnetism was well developed and much more details were revealed. Without all that we would be unable to comment on the RU-vid. Did Mr Maxwell need RU-vid? Most likely not.
@User-jr7vf
@User-jr7vf 18 дней назад
@@SergLapin but the thing is, the physics of electromagnetic waves was not unknown in the late 19 century. Maxwell had put together the equations that came to be known as Maxwell's equations, and many interferometer experiments were being carried out, most notably, the experiments by Fizeau, Michelson, and Morley. The theory itself didn't predict an aether, it didn't require one, and an aether was never detected in experiments. That led the Physics community (after a long time of struggle) to discard the concept of an aether altogether. With regards to space-time travel, the theory does require something that is impossible (as far as we know) to obtain, which is exotic matter.
@austinbeige
@austinbeige 27 дней назад
Essentially this video outlines why we aren't going anywhere.
@timl2k11
@timl2k11 27 дней назад
Exactly. We are stuck here on spaceship earth for better or for worse.
@earthwormscrawl
@earthwormscrawl 27 дней назад
I work in the semiconductor industry and the failure rate of electronics could provide reliability fo a 140 year trip with the appropriate redundancy, but an entire semiconductor and electronics industry would be needed for 3,600 years.
@ProfShibe
@ProfShibe 27 дней назад
@@timl2k11well definitely not stuck on earth, but in the solar system for a while
@mpwilso
@mpwilso 27 дней назад
​​​@@earthwormscrawlI feel technology isn't the main barrier here but rather ego and holding on to free will. Meaning our nature doesn't favor a Noah's ark scenario of populating the cosmos.
@egalanos
@egalanos 27 дней назад
It's why AI/robotic probes will do the travel instead. The complexity and economics will dictate that. It seems more likely that instead of transporting our bodies, that we would develop methods of creating & transmitting digital representations that could be run at the other end.
@greenfeller
@greenfeller 27 дней назад
"Quite naturally, tasks PBS spacetime with..." is the best madlib I've heard in a while.
@zoranmitrovski704
@zoranmitrovski704 16 дней назад
Of all the souls I’ve encountered in my RU-vid videos, Matts was the most human.
@cassert24
@cassert24 25 дней назад
The video feels like screaming that "forget it."
@c0d3r1f1c
@c0d3r1f1c 27 дней назад
It’s always a good day when there’s a new episode of Space Time.
@matiaswagner9810
@matiaswagner9810 27 дней назад
Indeed
@pulsar7632
@pulsar7632 27 дней назад
Indeed
@flufffycow
@flufffycow 27 дней назад
A smaller crew could be used if frozen fertilized eggs were keep in storage for longer then we currently can. The next generation could have children naturally and from that set up pairing until the diversity gets low, at that point frozen eggs mixed in and so forth. As long as the original code is mixed in evolution could continue.
@mattmaas5790
@mattmaas5790 27 дней назад
Indeed
@ivocanevo
@ivocanevo 27 дней назад
It's always a good day when there's a new episode of...
@Nightscape_
@Nightscape_ 27 дней назад
Isaac Arthur's videos on generation ships are really good.
@daikucoffee5316
@daikucoffee5316 27 дней назад
Future women aren’t real
@dallassukerkin6878
@dallassukerkin6878 27 дней назад
I was wondering if these channels were aware of each other, aye. I am sure they are given the subject focus of both.
@rodrigojimenez3965
@rodrigojimenez3965 27 дней назад
@@dallassukerkin6878 I think Matt did shout out Isaac Arthur´s channel in an episode a few years back. I was very glad to hear it
@ToxicityAssured
@ToxicityAssured 27 дней назад
Most of his videos are top notch!
@athrunzala6919
@athrunzala6919 27 дней назад
There is a sci fi series called "Ascension" that covers some of the social dynamics
@markrix
@markrix 13 дней назад
I enjoyed every minute of your productions over the years, the free form 'drink n discussions' where the best. Ty for taking time to transfer this knowledge.. keep being great, along whatever path you take.
@Star_Skiing_Starskski
@Star_Skiing_Starskski 22 дня назад
The documentary listed is phenomenal. Thank you so much for exposing me to it.
@marvinadams4784
@marvinadams4784 27 дней назад
Sending a fleet of generation ships together would make the journey so much more palatable.
@h14hc124
@h14hc124 27 дней назад
As each ship progressively failed and became lost, the rest of the fleet would become more and more alone.
@AthAthanasius
@AthAthanasius 26 дней назад
Perhaps have two of them exchange young adults to keep up the genetic diversity. Just try not to have the third one be run by a brain in a bottle feeding management executives into the mix as leaders ....
@solsystem1342
@solsystem1342 26 дней назад
​@@h14hc124 How would you lose them? They'd be headed in the same direction at the same speed (presumably all lined up together so you don't need multiple physical shields for space debris). It doesn't make sense that you would lose one unless it was intentionally pushed off course because of some catastrophic disaster. I think what they're trying to get across is that allowing people the choice of 5 different communities means that you have some choice on where to live.
@briondalion3696
@briondalion3696 26 дней назад
Yeah, I don't want to be on just one solitary ship in space, even with other people on board. It would make me feel infinitely better with a fleet of ships. That way, I could look out a window and not lose my mind....and we could have a local internet up there amongst all the ships and better believe a lot of them would probably want to game in their spare time.
@h14hc124
@h14hc124 26 дней назад
@@solsystem1342 I mean through system failures - life support, disease, war, famine, etc.. we're talking about 6000 years potentially. that's a lot of time for things to go wrong.
@davidcerutti8795
@davidcerutti8795 27 дней назад
2:58 But if the Trisolaran fleet is coming to us, why would we try to colonize one of their planets?
@marcusliu9782
@marcusliu9782 27 дней назад
It’s called base trade
@davidcerutti8795
@davidcerutti8795 27 дней назад
@@marcusliu9782 Always a good move to harass your opponent's natural.
@RocketPropelledMexican
@RocketPropelledMexican 27 дней назад
Careful, the UN is gonna shut you down for promoting escapism
@apokatastasian2831
@apokatastasian2831 27 дней назад
to eat their cheetos
@skaiaks8934
@skaiaks8934 27 дней назад
Power move, they surely wouldn't expect us coming to them
@zacharywong483
@zacharywong483 22 дня назад
Absolutely fantastic video, as always!
@reconnaissance7372
@reconnaissance7372 23 дня назад
Imagine you're on route, have been for like 35 years into your generation, and then some futuristic ship with lightspeed picks you up and gets you the rest of the way.
@Perserra
@Perserra 27 дней назад
Otherwise known as 'crawl-onizing the galaxy'. Issac Arthur has a great video on this too.
@manw3bttcks
@manw3bttcks 27 дней назад
I'm skeptical because the slower you go, the worse the maintenance problems get. Just making a microchip takes a fab that takes many acres, so how can you keep a ship working for decades without any new parts and just the ones you can carry along.
@Perserra
@Perserra 27 дней назад
@manw3bttcks First, that just slows down the pace of expansion. Maybe you have to stop and develop a colony for a couple decades before you feel confident you have enough infrastructure to move on. Second, this assumes modern technology, or not much higher. With advanced additive manufacturing capabilities, you can make any component you need out of basic raw materials, or even disassemble components to transform them into something else.
@ozzy6852
@ozzy6852 27 дней назад
@@manw3bttcks I think that's why generation ships, if they are ever built, would have to be absolutely massive and would make them infeasible as a last ditch escape options that is so often depicted in science fiction.
@ivoryas1696
@ivoryas1696 21 день назад
​@@ozzy6852 You see, that's one of the _neat_ things about Mr. Arthur; he acknowledges that making a last ditch fleeing of Earth _virtually _*_never_* makes more logistical sense than fortifying, adjusting, or even moving the planet as it is now. Earth is where we're made for, and chances are slim that a colony ship or structure would be guaranteed safety from whatever was able to take it out...
@esurfrider7687
@esurfrider7687 27 дней назад
I think a generation ship would probably be a collection of human frozen embryos maintained by autonomous robots, they would be revived and incubated several years before the journeys end, the humans would be raised by ai robot parents and taught lessons required for their survival on the exoplanet. That would be pretty cool and I think it would be very effective strategy to populate exoplanets
@GeneralJarrett1997
@GeneralJarrett1997 26 дней назад
Could even still have a human crew, just one that doesn't need to be massive. We don't quite have artificial wombs yet (though with notice we probably could get them working and reliable pretty quick). Still, with frozen embryos (or just sperm and eggs) you could drastically increase genetic diversity as well as lower the minimum requirement for re-population.
@kubhlaikhan2015
@kubhlaikhan2015 26 дней назад
Go another step. The ship only needs to contain a machine to assemble DNA. Only after arrival does it begin to assemble life forms based upon the environmental conditions that have to be overcome. Proxima B - and every other poetential destination - will NOT be amenable to human life and terraforming is an absurdity in realistic timeframes. Therefore it is life that must change.
@esurfrider7687
@esurfrider7687 25 дней назад
@@kubhlaikhan2015 good point!
@barelyafloatfarm809
@barelyafloatfarm809 23 дня назад
You could also have a base crew with fetuses unrelated to any on board to be used through the mission with planned pregnancies. It does present it's own challenges of caring for the surrogates as they go through the process but mitigates some of the initial drain on resources caring for the large crew.
@johnsmith-sp6yl
@johnsmith-sp6yl 23 дня назад
@@barelyafloatfarm809 the problem is most life on earth is programmed genetically to reject or mistreat other people's offspring. you would end up with a class system of people who had fathers on board the ship, and those who didn't. those who didn't would have many of the same psychological issues as children of single mothers.
@Articulate99
@Articulate99 22 дня назад
Always interesting, thank you.
@johntomlinson2323
@johntomlinson2323 15 дней назад
I loved this episode. You basically just walked us through the synopsis of the awesome show, The 100!
@derekwhidden9730
@derekwhidden9730 27 дней назад
Finally, an episode that I can understand about 99% of the data without having to guess. Seriously a cool episode but there are a couple of things you forgot. One is, when our interstellar heroes arrive at their destination, how are they getting to the surface? Now I'm assuming since our generation ship is going to be so large that it will have to be built in orbit, or maybe at a lagrange point like where the JWST is parked. Shuttles will ferry workers and materials, and eventually the crew. So docking bays should be included in the design. These shuttles could be used to explore along the way, in case they find something worth exploring. Then those same shuttles ferry the crew down to the surface when they arrive. Oops almost forgot another point. The crew will need machinery so they can build things as well, since replicators are not a thing. A CNC machine is a safe bet since it can be programmed to cut almost anything. 3d printers would be another. But here is my second point. What if the crew finds out that Proxima b is just like Venus? They get there and it's literally a dead end. They used their resources and fuel up, and made it there, only to find out the planet is too toxic to even mine for more resources. What kind of contengincy plans would need to be developed so that our heroes can continue on instead of being cancelled like Firefly?
@paddy6295
@paddy6295 27 дней назад
Your second point was my first thought.
@ozzy6852
@ozzy6852 27 дней назад
You basically answered your first two ponts so for your third point, they might not even care that much. Because depending on how long it took them to get there it could be that there is no one left alive that remembers what it was like to live on a planet. They would more than likely be comfortable with the idea of living in spaceborne artificial habitats because that's bassically what their colony ship is. So without the strict need for an Earth-like planet to colonize any decently sized comet or asteroid becomes an ideal place to stop and either stay or resuply/refuel and move on.
@ovidiu_nl
@ovidiu_nl 27 дней назад
I don't think it's that easy to "explore along the way". That would mean slowing down which would require energy, and you'd need to get back up to speed which would also require energy. Oh, energy and propulsion mass. About the second point: Venus would not even be that bad. You may arrive to find out that Proxima B is lacking one of the 19 chemical elements that are required for life that originated on Earth, like... phosphorus for example. That's not something you can just shrug off and endure. Without phosphorus there is no DNA and there is no ATP. Unless you can make more (in a huge collider for example) your population would forever be bounded by the phosphorus that left Earth in the bodies of the colonists and you'd have to be very careful about recycling every atom of that.
@theslay66
@theslay66 27 дней назад
There wouldn't be a lot to "explore along the way". Just empty space. The probabibility of crossing the path of something of interest during travel is extremely low. However those shuttles may be invaluable when it comes to maintenance of the ship, or exploring the destination system -as well, of course, for bringing crew and material onto the surface of the planet, and maintaining a link with the main ship that will certainly stay in orbit and get dismantled for ressources.
@thecodewarrior7925
@thecodewarrior7925 27 дней назад
One thing I think people always forget is how much insane bootstrapping we’ve done on earth, especially in the semiconductor industry. The sheer complexity and insane precision required for semiconductor manufacturing seems like a huge bottleneck. We would have to bring along all the parts for a semiconductor fab and hope they survive the trip, or somehow survive without new chips until we can build a fab on site. In the end I feel like it might legit be easier to develop this tech for zero g and then live in space habitats. That or a hybrid where a lot of manufacturing happens in orbit or around asteroids, and the final products are delivered to the surface.
@rreece90
@rreece90 27 дней назад
0:10 the remaining part of that quote: "... born just in time to explore the internet!"
@AapoJoki
@AapoJoki 27 дней назад
I thought it was "to browse dank memes".
@jogeem5480
@jogeem5480 27 дней назад
@@AapoJoki Same thing
@SimonClarkstone
@SimonClarkstone 26 дней назад
...Born just in time for sub-second comunications to anywhere. If all goes well, our lifetime is the most quickly-connected humanity will ever be. If we run a base on the Moon like we do in Antarctica, it'll be the end of an era. We'll never be all within 1 light-second again. Ever.
@alexandragrace8164
@alexandragrace8164 Час назад
Thank you Matt!! Can’t wait to watch the Doco when it’s available in Australia!! ❤
@iNeo1
@iNeo1 26 дней назад
One aspect of the challenge missing here is the repair and maintenance of the ship. Most machines we have today last less than a human lifetime. Cars and computers don't work much more than 20 years, so a much more complex ship will need a self sufficient way to recycle not only water and air, but also every single one of its electronic and mechanical components. Let's say a computer on board needs a motherboard. The ship will need a machine that can melt down this mother board after and build a new one. That machine will need to be able to rebuild itself too. It will be the spaceship equivalent to eating your own arm in order to regrow the other. Such a ship can't just pull over next to an asteroid and mine new resources.
@brandontylerburt
@brandontylerburt 24 дня назад
Imagine building a ship like manufacturers built washing machines in the 1940s, before the invention of planned obsolescence. I've encountered a few of them in my life and every one was in good working order, which is not surprising considering that they're so bulky and heavy it's easier to figure out how to repair one than it would be to figure out how to dispose of it. Still, they are solid and imposing enough that it's hard to imagine a household catastrophe severe enough to permanently break one. I'm not saying an old Bendex would survive long in space for generations, but on the plus side, they often have interesting aesthetic details built in.
@tinu5779
@tinu5779 27 дней назад
You forgot a few important points: - Energy: The plants need light and electricity is needed for all the systems. - Repair: Things will break. There must be specialists who can repair things and they need tools and material. - Landing: How will the ship slow down and land on the planet? Every part of the ship could be useful on the planet so better not just abandon the ship. - What things would be helpful on the planet to get a good start?
@ArgzeroYT
@ArgzeroYT 27 дней назад
Energy can be absorbed during travel (but likely not fuel) Repair can be limited by reducing decay in function *(likely costs more energy) For landing you could find some way to modify current reusable rockets to be completely automatic or semi automatic (more resources / energy)
@happmacdonald
@happmacdonald 27 дней назад
*especially* energy. I'd like to see stats on how much power we would be able to pull per square meter from our absolute most efficient (thus expensive) solar panels from nothing but deep field starlight in interstellar space. Then divide that by the power needs of such a ship to figure out the absolute minimum solar panel area we'd have to cover the ship in.
@mshepard2264
@mshepard2264 27 дней назад
energy for the plants and humans is nothing compared to the power for the drive to get to any percent the speed of light.
@smitasitara
@smitasitara 27 дней назад
We will need to plan for their landing and settlement alo- building, power generation, oxygen and water production equipment, some means of protective dome formation, terraforming...
@donaldhobson8873
@donaldhobson8873 27 дней назад
@@happmacdonald Look. If you have an interstellar spacecraft, you need some fuel with a lot of kick to it, likely antimatter, or fusion. Perhaps fission. Given any of these, you can run the lights off the same power source that runs the engines. And no the lighting doesn't need much fuel compared to the engines.
@JaydragonM
@JaydragonM 18 дней назад
What if at any one time for example we could have 4/7 members of the crew in a medically induced coma and cooled to low temperatures. That way their metabolism runs more slowly. When we wake people up from the coma, they spend 3 days on working, excercising, sports, and recreation. And instead of keeping them at 1G we keep them at 1.1 G or 1.2 G. That way we combat/prevent muscle atrophy. That would drastically reduce food and water requirements without needing to develop true cryogenics.
@jahosaphat
@jahosaphat 26 дней назад
This is the best channel in the known universe.
@kevincronk7981
@kevincronk7981 27 дней назад
This feels like Matt just watched the longest goodbye and thought "what if this, but longer?" And I mean that as a compliment
@Sparkyicus
@Sparkyicus 26 дней назад
Are we not forgetting the fact the ship could also carry 1000s of frozen fertilised eggs in a relatively smaller space to offset concerns with genetic diversity; and a form of cryogenics to reduce life support demands. These embryos could be “hatched” in artificial wombs (Sheep are already being done so now) as the ship neared the star. Educational courses created in VR would also give the younglings all the knowledge required to build a new settlement from scratch. A smaller caretaker crew could man the ship and hatch occasional embryos or clones to replace them as they aged.
@SimonClarkstone
@SimonClarkstone 26 дней назад
Or the DNA could be stored as computer data. If it only need to be accessed slowly you can store data even more densely and durably than nowadays. You could offer huge numbers of people the opportunity to have genetic descendants even if they personally can't leave Earth.
@pawelstuglik4737
@pawelstuglik4737 26 дней назад
Indeed, also the crew of the ship wouldn't necessarily have to reproduce via their own offspring. They, too, could use embryos from the bank.
@mvmlego1212
@mvmlego1212 25 дней назад
There's a movie from 2019 called "I am Mother" with a similar premise--though its setting is post-apocalyptic rather than outer space. It has good acting and visuals, but the large-picture story isn't very cohesive. I don't think I'd recommend it to a general audience, but you might enjoy it.
@d_andrews
@d_andrews 25 дней назад
This was the "plan B" option in the film Interstellar
@Deadlyish
@Deadlyish 25 дней назад
True, but you do still need a large enough caretaker population on the ship during the 6000 year flight to keep the ship maintained. 100 or more people maintaining a ship hundreds of times larger than the ISS would probably work out to the same requirements regardless of whether they brought extra frozen dna too
@robjohnston1433
@robjohnston1433 7 дней назад
I REALLY wish Frank Herbert had written a novel about the Spacing Guild ... instead of the increasingly tedious volumes at the "end" of the Dune series. I would love to read about how the effects of Spice were discovered, exactly how they made FTL travel possible and what physical/mental transformations Spice brought about in long-term human users. IF the new TV series on the Bene Gesserit proves very popular, let's HOPE Frank H's literary "inheritors" turn to that next!
@toi_techno
@toi_techno 21 день назад
Anyone involved would be the bravest, most important humans that had ever lived
@MichaelJM
@MichaelJM 10 дней назад
Indeed. Their success or failure could determine the difference between humanity surviving for hundreds more years or tens of thousands of years. Being able to travel to and survive in different solar systems would be a turning point in human history.
@matthewparker9276
@matthewparker9276 27 дней назад
In adition to insects, a generation ship diet would probably also feature fungus and algae as space efficient crops to grow.
@maciejbala477
@maciejbala477 13 дней назад
don't fungi have little nutrients of note though?
@glasses685
@glasses685 27 дней назад
Going by the way Matt says "Just build a ship that can support human life for several generations" as if it's no huge feat, he must have a badass secret laboratory like Dexter
@Giantcrabz
@Giantcrabz 27 дней назад
Dr. O' Dowd what does THIS button doooo?
@WackoMcGoose
@WackoMcGoose 27 дней назад
@@Giantcrabz DEE DEE GET OUT OF MY LA-BOR-A-TO-RY!
@spacechannelfiver
@spacechannelfiver 27 дней назад
I'd give it 10 years before they start eating each other.
@ariochiv
@ariochiv 27 дней назад
Yes... it's firmly in the domain of science fiction. The problem is not solvable with current technology in the proposed time limitation.
@DneilB007
@DneilB007 27 дней назад
He’s a theoretical physicist; his brain is his laboratory.
@ioresult
@ioresult 15 дней назад
2:43 "The Trisolaran" fleet. For people who only saw the Netflix series, it's the "SanTi" fleet.
@TheMorpheuuus
@TheMorpheuuus 19 дней назад
Fantastic interview with a brilliant structuralist realist geopolitician, so refreshing to hear different point of view from mainstream media. Thank you.
@user-fc8xw4fi5v
@user-fc8xw4fi5v 27 дней назад
"Or the Trisolaran fleet" Nice reference. Great book series
@georgeashley6643
@georgeashley6643 27 дней назад
A series that has quite literally completely changed how I look at the universe and feel about my own existence in it.
@lyrimetacurl0
@lyrimetacurl0 27 дней назад
​@@georgeashley6643 overly pessimistic and dangerous idea
@georgeashley6643
@georgeashley6643 27 дней назад
@@lyrimetacurl0 who said I meant that as a negative? Since when was introspection dangerous?
@user-fc8xw4fi5v
@user-fc8xw4fi5v 26 дней назад
@georgeashley6643 True. The only thing that upsets me was the "reduced light speed" section. Author missed a cool opportunity to discuss how the measured value of light "speed" doesn't change anything because all of our equations and perceptions are dependent on c to begin with
@NeostormXLMAX
@NeostormXLMAX 25 дней назад
@@georgeashley6643 its still pretty good for a first contact series, although imo blindsight is much better of a first contact story. the trisolarians are still too "human" the scramblers are literal alien cosmic horrors, not even living but "the structure of the honey comb instead" a literal emergent system that is given life through chance
@mrstock7986
@mrstock7986 27 дней назад
The idea of Generation Ships is one of the major plot-lines in Alastair Reynolds' SF novel 'Chasm City' from 2001. The story chronicles the first ever 5-generation-ship mission to 61 Cygni, interleaved with an interplanitary man-hunt (taking place years after the flotilla's arrival at their destination) and much, much more food for thought. Without giving away too much, i cann tell you that the generation-ship mission doesn't end well. And that, indeed, the mental health of the crew is probably the most critical and most difficult aspect of the whole endeavour. I'd say 'Chasm City' sits firmly in the top-5 of the best SF i've ever read. (Along with the 'Dune' saga and other works by Reynolds, set in his 'Revelation Space' universe.) I highly recommend it. And once you've read it, you'll _never_ want set foot on a generation-ship, i reckon.
@Fika_Break
@Fika_Break 27 дней назад
The movie Voyagers was interesting movie about a generational ship. It was a sort of Lord of the Flies in space.
@athrunzala6919
@athrunzala6919 27 дней назад
There is a sci fi series called "Ascension" that covers some of the social dynamics
@PaulZyCZ
@PaulZyCZ 27 дней назад
The Colony by Rob Grant comes to mind. He's co-author of Red Dwarf, so it's no surprise there are similar tropes. The main character wakes up on the ship by accident, as a head in a jar, far from Earth and surrounded by all kinds of messed up crew. Short novel and fun read.
@Wroredko
@Wroredko 24 дня назад
It seems as though Matt saw the longest farewell and wondered, "What if this, but longer?" And it is a complement, I hope.
@wjockusch
@wjockusch 27 дней назад
You need to maintain a large variety of human professions in the travelling ship. This raises the needed population considerably.
@wtspman
@wtspman 27 дней назад
Like hairdressers and telephone sanitizers?
@denysvlasenko1865
@denysvlasenko1865 27 дней назад
No, you do not. You just need to carry encyclopedia with technical info.
@sebastienh1100
@sebastienh1100 27 дней назад
@@wtspmanI love you 😂
@jogeem5480
@jogeem5480 27 дней назад
I think the initial 100 is enough to cover the essentials. I'd say most jobs aren't that important for starting a new civilization. Also a lot of knowledge can be stored in a relatively small amount of space on the ship.
@ip6289
@ip6289 27 дней назад
​@denysvlasenko1865 try to fix any of your home appliances next time it breaks with this information. 😉
@davec3226
@davec3226 27 дней назад
Not too late to explore the depths of the ocean, we've only begun.
@douglasharley2440
@douglasharley2440 27 дней назад
there's very little of interest in the depths of the ocean...lol, why would we go there?
@mpmpm
@mpmpm 26 дней назад
"Not too late to explore the depths of the ocean, we've only begun.": We will find massive amounts of plastics (at the bottom of the oceans), cluttering up everything there.
@mpmpm
@mpmpm 26 дней назад
@@douglasharley2440 "there's very little of interest in the depths of the ocean...lol, why would we go there?": Oceans are covering 71% of the earth surface. Of course we want to go there, at least to see if we can live there.
@douglasharley2440
@douglasharley2440 26 дней назад
@@mpmpm lol, there ain't anything down there other than salt water, dirt and rocks, and unimaginable pressure. just because something is "unknown" doesn't mean it's interesting. also, no we cannot live down there...everything a human needs to survive is on land, not at the bottom of the ocean.
@MrFishyEater
@MrFishyEater 26 дней назад
Why cant we do both 😂
@r1b3y38
@r1b3y38 23 дня назад
6:10, yeah about the only practical use for our nuclear weapons arsenal that I've very heard of.
@ShamblerDK
@ShamblerDK 21 день назад
This video has some very serious compression artifacts.
@NWAWskeptic
@NWAWskeptic 27 дней назад
Essentially the ship would have people in charge of landing the ship who learn how to do so without ever once piloting the ship in an atmosphere and by watching training videos and maybe simulators, instead of pilots who have flown other flying objects like planes/helicopters/etc, they’re putting all their fates into the best gamer of their generation.
@patnor7354
@patnor7354 24 дня назад
As if humans will be piloting anything in the far future. I very much doubt SpaceX are landing their rockets by manual control these days.
@Step_n_up
@Step_n_up 23 дня назад
... like a gamer winning Le Mans - that happened
@crypto66
@crypto66 27 дней назад
I've always wondered about the continued march of progress in this subject; imagine being the crew of one of the first attempts at colony ships, by the time you arrive at your destination, you're either old AF and/or had to spend your entire existence in your ship. Then another ship produced later with more advanced tech arrives at the same time or shortly after, with inhabitants whose experience seemed like a commute relative to yours. Or maybe your ship spends 6000 years in transit, only to find a colony that was sent out just a hundred years ago.
@AthAthanasius
@AthAthanasius 26 дней назад
This is a not uncommon trope in science fiction.
@crypto66
@crypto66 26 дней назад
@@AthAthanasius Can you give some examples? I don't really consume much SF media beyond video games. I'd love to see how it's usually handled.
@arifbagusprakoso2308
@arifbagusprakoso2308 25 дней назад
Considering the scenario in the video, the moment the crews fly out from earth, the catastrophe is starting. There is no more competitor (or even crews' loved ones) afterward. They're all dead sooner than later.
@AnthonyFlack
@AnthonyFlack 25 дней назад
@@crypto66 - One random example I can think of was in Terry Pratchett's "Strata".
@LukaJandric
@LukaJandric 25 дней назад
Can we talk about propellant? Not sure what exact exhaust velocity / specific impulse of our best future theoretical engines would be, but to get 1kg to 0.1c you would need more than 10 Earth's masses of propellant?!
@ElementalAngelKashi
@ElementalAngelKashi 24 дня назад
interesting tidbit in the game Starfield there is a mission related to a generation ship being sent out before a major technological leap makes travel faster. Basically they arrive after human already got there using the new tech. it is a fun side mission.
@djdedan
@djdedan 27 дней назад
Why does lord of the flies keep popping up in my mind while I listened to this
@QueenAI-ph1xi
@QueenAI-ph1xi 14 дней назад
' propelling by blowing the umbrella' type of concept
@tomsamario
@tomsamario 25 дней назад
That was amazing!!
@michaels.3709
@michaels.3709 26 дней назад
14:45 - I actually just went and toured Biosphere 2 the other day! While the close-loop experiment is considered a "failure" because the amount of food grown didn't meet ideal calorie levels for the 8 Biosphereians, and the CO2 removed by plants was insufficient (dropping O2 levels from around the nominal 21% in air down to around 14%), they did still remain (relatively) sane and healthy for _two full years_ , which is pretty insane to me. If the experiment were ever conducted again (and a Biosphere 3 were ever constructed), I feel like the lessons learned at Biosphere 2 would help the next iteration achieve a much higher, healthier level of success! If you're ever visiting Tucson, Arizona, it's a must-see location!
@haileycollet4147
@haileycollet4147 23 дня назад
Seconded on the recommendation! I think the project was honestly a success, in that it was close enough to working that it seems obviously possible at something close to that scale.
@gptiede
@gptiede 23 дня назад
There was also all sorts of ridiculous politics involved in the closed-loop experiment at Biosphere 2, not to mention many of the people involved were not actually scientists. Considering all of this, I believe that the experiment went quite well, and that it definitely needs to be done again. This time correctly, and with the lessons learned.
@Its__Good
@Its__Good 26 дней назад
The more I watch videos like this the more I realise just how little point there is in endeavours like this until our technology becomes way, way, way more advanced.
@neandrewthal
@neandrewthal 26 дней назад
Don't worry. Due to the movement of the stars, when the faster ship we just built passes the one we sent hundreds of years ago on its way to the same destination they won't even pass anywhere near each other :D
@TheMelnTeam
@TheMelnTeam 25 дней назад
Automated probes shouldn't be too far off in principle. Much cheaper and fewer engineering challenges, with much lower stakes if some (or even the majority) fail.
@jimmyholloway8527
@jimmyholloway8527 24 дня назад
The point of such endeavor is the advancement you mention. The 50-year hiatus of manned planetary exploration is precisely why so little has changed since the 70's and why news of just a new style of EVA suit is seen as significant.
@Its__Good
@Its__Good 23 дня назад
@@jimmyholloway8527 A ton of stuff has changed since the 70s?? There are far more rewarding things that we could choose to set as 'missions' for humanity if we wanted. I'd rather spend a trillion dollars trying to perfect cold fusion than travelling to Alpha Centuri.
@LabGecko
@LabGecko 23 дня назад
The point is that currently any number of very likely disaster scenarios could wipe out all life on this planet. All our eggs are in _this_ basket. Without getting people off it, we won't get do-overs.
@Kahweekah2o2f
@Kahweekah2o2f 18 дней назад
Great video. When we travel space, what will be the constant (such as north) that we will navigate by? How will we give directions or get back to earth?
@eclairwolf
@eclairwolf 17 дней назад
if i've learned anything about the feasibility of generation ships from video games it's that the two biggest challenges are ensuring that future generations don't reformat their shipboard ai, and that they never un-thaw any mysterious frozen princesses
@mithrillis
@mithrillis 27 дней назад
I suppose an easier but potentially "dystopian" way of handling long interstellar journeys is to carry only embryos on the ship, and grow a new generation cared for and educated by AI & robotic systems as we get close to the destination. A lot of upsides like no stress of interstellar travel, no risk of disease outbreak or ideological drift, acceptable risk if the mission ends catastrophically midway, reasonable likelihood of artificial wombs being feasible in the not so distant future, etc. But it might be very difficult getting approval to raise hundreds of newborns with AI parents in a test run...
@jonatand2045
@jonatand2045 27 дней назад
Or just send [only] AIs. They could live and grow in space just fine.
@zerochan2915
@zerochan2915 26 дней назад
current technology only allows us to freeze oocyte/semen/embryo for less than 20 years so no.
@pauljazzman408
@pauljazzman408 26 дней назад
Have you seen the series Raised by wolves devised by Ridley Scott?
@terdragontra8900
@terdragontra8900 26 дней назад
This is true, but also, there are many bad human parents on earth that have children: at some point of advancement, raising kids by AI would be *more* ethical once the probability of abuse/other bad things is small enough.
@Magus_Union
@Magus_Union 25 дней назад
Yeah, the frozen embryo/AI solution would be the safest bet. Either that, or using hollow out asteroids that would contain an entire city sized ecosystem that would take a decade to build post orbital capture.
@r000tbeer
@r000tbeer 27 дней назад
How is the ship expected to last 6300 years? That itself would be a deal breaker.
@glenneric1
@glenneric1 27 дней назад
duct tape
@CoalOres
@CoalOres 27 дней назад
There's people on board (hopefully) maintaining it.
@crewrangergaming9582
@crewrangergaming9582 19 дней назад
"We are the middle child of human history" this is sooooooo well put.
@darrennew8211
@darrennew8211 15 дней назад
Fun story: Voyage from Yesteryear by Hogan. We send embryos to a nearby star system. They grow up without all the culture from here, but with enough robots etc that they build a post-scarcity society. Then a couple generations later Earth sends another ship. Hijinks ensue.
@lk9650
@lk9650 27 дней назад
On our multi year journey we will need to watch a new episode of spacetime once a week to help us pass the time.
@tr48092
@tr48092 26 дней назад
If the planet is ending, I don’t think constructing 500 space ships, or even 50,000, would be unreasonable. More importantly, I think that the biggest threat to such a project wouldn’t be the engineering challenges of designing, building, and operating space craft for interstellar travel; it would instead be the sabotage as the rich and powerful but unqualified forced their way onto the ships
@sailordolly
@sailordolly 12 дней назад
If the survival of humanity is at stake, I could envision about half of the world's total economic production being usable for the exodus projects (the other half would be for keeping the people fed/healthy while the ships are being built, and providing security against people who are upset at being left off the passenger list).
@TheReluctantCoder
@TheReluctantCoder 25 дней назад
Great video!!
@theskypals1334
@theskypals1334 2 дня назад
Better shot of hearing warp speed scotty for real than traveling 6000 years on a ship
@Nightweaver1
@Nightweaver1 26 дней назад
And once again, both the strongest and the weakest link in the chain would be humans themselves. Remember that this is just to get us to the NEAREST exoplanet. Space is massive beyond imagining, and this really demonstrates how difficult it would be to explore even the local group of stars in our own galaxy.
@memitim171
@memitim171 24 дня назад
Yeah, in all likelihood the nearest habitable planet is much further away, I don't think this idea can work, there's just too much that can go wrong in 150 years, let alone thousands. And that's before you consider the impracticality of it all and the fact people be crazy, you can select the initial crew but that doesn't prevent them birthing a generation of psychos further down the line...
@TheHigherSpace
@TheHigherSpace 27 дней назад
The 6300 year journey is funny lol .. By the time they get there earth will be a legend and people will question if it ever existed ..
@xxxnyanthecatxxx
@xxxnyanthecatxxx 27 дней назад
If any records will remain at all, as all tech must be recycled and rebuilt mamy, many times by then.
@christopherrogers532
@christopherrogers532 26 дней назад
Even funnier is what'd happen to any religion that makes it aboard. :)
@mcwornex2123
@mcwornex2123 26 дней назад
even funnier than both is the war that'll be sparked on earth the moment they try to do this idea (knowing the earth is going to be unlivable). The moment the idea becomes real, countries will launch nuke at each other and civil war will be rampant everywhere.
@dustanhoff9292
@dustanhoff9292 26 дней назад
@@christopherrogers532 There would be born a new ‘prophet’ that claimed he alone was given insight by god, and create additional and likely radical subsets of the old religions!
@MichaelJM
@MichaelJM 10 дней назад
Didn't think about it that way but that's so true. Can't imagine what it would be like to only see earth through movies or VR... And have those things be further away in time than what the roman empire is to us. The entire concept of living on a planet wouldn't be real. People would probably start questioning if their destination even exists. How bizarre. Makes me think such a mission would be doomed to fail.
@Kirhean
@Kirhean 23 дня назад
One must wonder how realistic a constant acceleration of 1g might be, turning halfway to decelerate at 1g. It'd remove the need for a mechanically complex rotational gravity system, not to mention the fact that over long periods of time rotation will alter the trajectory of the craft.
@JonCofer
@JonCofer 18 дней назад
Generations of humanity born on a spaceship, learning about earth from VR and getting life advice from a growing AI therapist is the most SciFi thing I’ve ever heard. I love it
@HeliSal700
@HeliSal700 27 дней назад
It's interesting that the ethical issue is not considered here. We are essentially 'condemning' several hundred people (or thousands for a 6300-year travel) to a confined space, stripping them of the freedom to choose their actions. This is at least one of the biggest issues. Second, it shouldn't be a problem for four or five generations: How can we ensure that there will be no rebellion? Look at ourselves when we approach an age over 50 or 60 years. There is some sort of resignation to cope with whatever is out there is a strict adherence to what we know, without accepting any change. Then look at our youngest. They always aim to change something. I believe that we can overcome the technological hurdles, but the sociological issues are much larger.
@sailordolly
@sailordolly 12 дней назад
The proposed scenario is that there was NO alternative--Earth was going to be rendered uninhabitable, so living in an artificial environment (whether elsewhere in the Sol system or traveling through interstellar space) would be the only chance for survival.
@MorphSenior
@MorphSenior 27 дней назад
"When the first fish left the ocean they ceased to be fish; when the first humans leave earth for good, they will cease to be human" -a sentence from the three body problem that stuck with me.
@altrag
@altrag 26 дней назад
Not necessarily true though. It depends on how similar the destination planet is to Earth. Obviously it needs to be _somewhat_ similar, but small changes in the environment can certainly lead to big changes in the species over time. That is unless the ship itself is different enough from Earth conditions to trigger speciation, but we'd almost certainly do everything we can to either prevent that or - if we know enough about the destination - to have the ship slowly adjust from Earth conditions to destination conditions (modify rotation speed to change "gravity", modify air composition, that kind of thing. In that case we wouldn't really be "human" any more by the time we land, though it would be difficult to pinpoint an exact time when we "changed" as the change would intentionally happen over the course of centuries.
@MorphSenior
@MorphSenior 26 дней назад
@@altrag the author actually didn't mean humans would change biologically into a new species, but that the struggle to stay alive on a generational voyage could completely change our society and morality to the point where it wouldn't be compatible with earth civilization anymore.
@altrag
@altrag 25 дней назад
@@MorphSenior I can't read the authors mind, but comparing to a fish leaving the water (a very explicit reference to biological evolution) doesn't suggest to me that they were talking about merely cultural differences. Especially since that wouldn't make sense in the first place - Earth has had plenty of cultures that were divided by thousands of years and while we generally didn't get along well when cultures ran into each other, nobody would claim that they're different _species._ (At least not until the eugenicists came on the scene, but pretty much everyone agrees early eugenicists were just wrong - including most modern eugenicists.) My guess is that they were indeed thinking in terms of biology, along the lines of the Martians in The Expanse - ie: some aspect of space travel made the people on board genetically diverge from the humans on Earth. And that's not really _wrong._ Whatever new environment those people end up in will impose evolutionary pressures and if those pressures are great enough for long enough, people there would indeed eventually diverge enough to be called a different species. It just wouldn't be the "first people to leave Earth". It probably wouldn't even be the first people to land on the new planet. Even if the ship adjusted parameters during flight to try and acclimate the crew to the new world, 6000 years just isn't long enough to cause major genetic drift in a species as complex as our own. Maybe some minor drift in things like bone density or muscle mass, but not enough to call them a new species. (Of course the quote is misleading even before that - the first "fish" to leave the ocean was already not a "fish" long before it set foot on land. It would have already needed to evolve lungs - or at least a precursor to lungs - in order to make that first step, which would make it not a fish.) And yes, I'm aware I'm pedanting way too hard on a silly quip :D.
@Clover-qz8nl
@Clover-qz8nl 7 дней назад
This might be the most relaxing thing to watch on RU-vid right now ❤️ I love it 🫶 thank you for sharing it with us all ♾️🫶
@aerohard
@aerohard 10 дней назад
Imagine arriving after the 6300 year journey and finding out humans just warp jumped to Proxima a couple decades after your generation ship was launched.
@EliotHochberg
@EliotHochberg 13 дней назад
In addition to using water for survival both for food and water, and for radiation protection, the water could also be valuable for a back up fuel source both on the ship for propulsion, and also potentially for electrical power if you were able to harness heat from the nuclear pulse propulsion as well as Maintaining temperature without overheating within the ship itself. One of the big problems of space travel is radiating heat. Since it’s a vacuum, there is no medium for releasing heat, so you would need massive heat sinks for black body radiation. However, it seems to me you could Somewhat reduce that need by using some of that heat to turn water to steam and run turbines to create power.
@CartoonHero1986
@CartoonHero1986 27 дней назад
Something I find a little funny when talking about space travel and colonizing other planets is in the majority of these hypothetical scenarios we seem to forget to take into account if we discover a planet that is already habitable and with nearly identical conditions to Earth's... unless we are from the same genetic "tree of life" and make up; we won't be able to colonize and live on that other planet. Because of the difference in genetic make up the introduction of 2 alien biospheres on a single planet would result in one eventually destroying or destabilising the other. Long and short of it; either we kill the biosphere on the new planet by introducing a new element it can not handle, or that biosphere on the new planet kills all of us with something our physiology can't handle. In these scenarios from a human's point of view the former is the "better" of the two possible outcomes so long as they brought enough of Earth's biomass in the form of viable plants and animal stocks to replace the former native biosphere once it is dead and sterilised. In the latter scenario we just get a prolonged death that results in us becoming out of place relics and fossils on that planet to confuse the crap out any intelligent life that planet might eventually evolve if there is anything left to find by that point.
@TheMelnTeam
@TheMelnTeam 25 дней назад
I'm not so sure...we don't have enough data points. It's not clear how similar is "too similar" before microorganisms and such become a threat. If stuff is too different from each other, it would mostly interact with physical force if at all. If it's too similar, we might find a scenario more comparable to invasive species situations on Earth - some things from each side compete too well, but neither has 100% of the "most competitive niche" versions. Humans could just immediately die out due to disease. But failing that, they could probably make it work unless the target environment has sentient populations that resist the attempt or some other factor like "turns out humans can't live long-term in gravity even a bit different from Earth's" comes into play. It's probably an academic question...any planet we can reach hasn't turned up evidence of being "habitable" to anything remotely analogous to humans or life on Earth. We'd not be competing with native flora/fauna, we'd be trying to get any flora/fauna to survive off the ship in any capacity at all. If we can trivially colonize Mars, I'd start to believe maybe we could similarly live using another star's energy. I would love to be alive for that tech to be around, but that's probably not happening unless we stop the aging process in our lifetime (I won't bet on it, but I won't turn that down if we manage it haha).
@CartoonHero1986
@CartoonHero1986 25 дней назад
@@TheMelnTeam Very true that at this point this discussion is just Academic as we have no way to test working theories, and the best analogue we have to go on is uncontacted peoples encountering colonists carrying diseases that are novel and extremely virulent to the uncontacted people for a time, and zoological transmission of novel diseases mutating to infect humans. So we can only speculate at this point, I just find it interesting that we tend to be more optimistic about finding and eventually colonizing Earth like planets that are essentially pre terraformed as the easier option for galactic expansion. When the reality is this would take just as much technology, and time/energy to solve as Terraforming "dead" worlds, or building stations or dyson objects; just instead of massive technical engineering focuses to the problem, we'd have A LOT of genetic modification and medical science R&D to focus on instead
@blobishlybelfer2717
@blobishlybelfer2717 25 дней назад
reminds me of "scavangers reign". this would defidently be a problem, unless we scout the planet and make gentic alterations. we can isolate our food from the enviorment untill we figure out how to eat the native stuff. but consider that the "it's perfectly habitable" assumption doesn't necessarily mean it has its own biosphere. it could just miraculusly have the right atmosphere composition, temprature, and light shielding. it's an unrealistic miracle, but so is an alien biosphere that creates those conditions (before even getting to the problem you mentioned).
@TheMelnTeam
@TheMelnTeam 25 дней назад
@@CartoonHero1986 Agreed on that. Or maybe the worlds with life are even harder, if we're already at feats of engineering like general AI and dyson swarms. At that point maybe you don't live on worlds at all, instead just having the machines strip asteroids and such to build more "generational" ships to orbit a star. It would make a lot more stars viable! If we're at the tech to do interstellar travel somewhat feasibly, this stuff shouldn't be out of bounds most likely.
@cheffrey82
@cheffrey82 24 дня назад
Imagine being one of the crew members alive at the end of its epic journey. You've survived the ravages of interstellar space, kept the ship together, are somehow physically and psychologically intact... only to discover that Proxima Centauri b has a surface more hostile than that of Venus. I'd be pretty bummed out by that.
@Noblenote0
@Noblenote0 27 дней назад
you will breed in the spinning pod. you will eat the bugs. you will be happy.
@ronanclark2129
@ronanclark2129 16 дней назад
I'm glad I was born in a place where outside exists
@jamessaras1279
@jamessaras1279 7 дней назад
nice three body problem reference
@philipmurphy2
@philipmurphy2 27 дней назад
RU-vid is alive again, PBS Space Time has just dropped a video
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