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Re: Cyclers 1: The Interstellar Cycler
by John B on Friday July 26, @11:37AM
Very interesting concept. A couple problems I see with it: 1) How are you going to handle near-c collisions with interstellar particulates? The ablative-ice-shield concept would work with the normal problems (weight, primarily), except that such a device is designed to be ablative, and would wear away over time wherein there'd need to be some mechanism in place to repair it. And, of course, bunkerage to store the extra water, with its additional weight penalties, etc. 2) When you are talking about particle beams, what specific type(s) are you considering? And, are you sure that there will be no problems with a ship under constant charged-particle bombardment? Will it build up a charge? etc. IMO, many details to be considered. Still, even if these and your 3 caveats are not addressed, I'm deeply impressed with the creativity in the solution. -John
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    Re: Cyclers 1: The Interstellar Cycler
    by Karl on Monday February 24, @07:10AM
    Okay: for 1) I described something called a "plow sail" in Permanence. I don't explain it in that book, but it's a magsail that's used to deflect particles away from the cycler. In fact, since that action would decelerate it, it is a small, low-power interstellar ramjet. It harvests just enough hydrogen to keep itself at speed; its main function is to deflect particulates away from the cycler habitats.

    One variant to this idea is to use cargo magsails from stars you've passed by: the magsail drops off its cargo at the cycler, and keeps accelerating on the beam for some time. Then it settles into a low-power mode a few light-minutes or hours ahead of the cycler. In that position, it provides deflection (you'd want to ionize the interstellar medium with a laser before deflecting it, according to some studies) and is decelerated until it either falls behind the cycler, or matches velocity with it. Depending on how long that takes, you either lose the sail (which is just a large loop of wire) or you attach a small hab to it and ride it down to the next system on your ring.

    As to 2), I'm not talking about any specific type of particle beam. Many varieties are possible, from laser to microwave to neutral-beam to mesoparticle beam. Charged particle beams are the least likely to be useful, though. Because they are charged, such beams spread very rapidly. Electron beams dissipate in under a kilometer, typically. The solution, if you need charged particles, is to use a neutral beam, and ionize it just before it hits your magsail, using a laser.


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