Computers0 min ago
Travelling Near The Sun
how near to the sun could you travel in a space ship before the inside becomes too hot to survive? forgetting about gravity! you see these sci-fi ships almost grazing the sun/star, i wouldn't have thought it possible.
Answers
The current record is, I think, about 0.3 AU or 45 million kilometres, so not exactly that close. There are plans to get a probe to within about 6 million kilometres (Solar Probe Plus, due to launch at some point next year apparently). Even at that distance conditions are pretty awful. I suspect that it will be a while before we can get closer still -- in part, at...
12:57 Wed 25th Jan 2017
Some hints here
http:// www.mrs ciences how.com /2010/0 9/how-c lose-co uld-ave rage-sp aceship -get.ht ml
and here
http:// physics .stacke xchange .com/qu estions /35225/ how-clo se-can- spacesh ip-get- to-the- sun
As has been mentioned there, it's not just heat that you'd need to worry about but other forms of radiation as well.
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and here
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As has been mentioned there, it's not just heat that you'd need to worry about but other forms of radiation as well.
The temperature at the equator on the planet Mercury (average distance from the Sun, around 35 million miles) reaches well over 400 degrees Centigrade. It has no atmosphere to speak of so those temperatures are probably down to direct radiation. I would think a spacecraft at that distance from the Sun would suffer badly.
>>> The moon is to hot to go near so imagine the sun
That might be a bit of a surprise to all those who watched the moon landings!
The maximum temperature on the moon's equator is around 115C, which is certainly 'hot' but not 'mega-hot'. The minimum temperature on the moon's equator is actually much harder for humans to deal with, as it's around -180C.
That might be a bit of a surprise to all those who watched the moon landings!
The maximum temperature on the moon's equator is around 115C, which is certainly 'hot' but not 'mega-hot'. The minimum temperature on the moon's equator is actually much harder for humans to deal with, as it's around -180C.
The current record is, I think, about 0.3 AU or 45 million kilometres, so not exactly that close. There are plans to get a probe to within about 6 million kilometres (Solar Probe Plus, due to launch at some point next year apparently). Even at that distance conditions are pretty awful. I suspect that it will be a while before we can get closer still -- in part, at least, because most solar observations are made better at a fair distance anyway, so there's little incentive to solve the technical problems that are required to get, say, within the Corona.
All the same, given enough time, it might be plausible to do Star-Trek like runs to within tens of km of the surface. For the time being, the closest distance we can access is measured in millions of miles/ kilometres.
All the same, given enough time, it might be plausible to do Star-Trek like runs to within tens of km of the surface. For the time being, the closest distance we can access is measured in millions of miles/ kilometres.
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