The 100 Year Starship

Dr. Mae Jemison was the first black woman in space. Now, she’s leading a wildly ambitious project: to achieve interstellar travel in the next 100 years. She’s with us.

Think Star Trek and you won’t be far off. A new Pentagon project is putting out seed money for interstellar travel. Humans, rambling around among the stars. It’s called the 100 Year Starship project. It’s as wildly ambitious as just about anything you can imagine.

The spaceship, its energy source, its passengers’ survival – full-blown or just as DNA… all giant challenges. Not to mention that we’re sort of broke and not even flying space shuttles right now. Leader of the new effort: astronaut Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space. She’s with us.

This hour, On Point: the 100 Year Starship.

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Possibly related…

  1. The future of interstellar travel - Future Tense - ABC Radio National (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Imagine being an astronaut and planning for a space mission you know you have no chance of joining; a journey that won’t even happen in your lifetime, or possibly even your children’s. We meet the long-term thinkers and planners—the space visionaries not afraid to think outside the square. Or the solar-system as the case may be!

    Guests: Dr Mae Jemison, Physician and former US Astronaut. Leader of the 100 Year Starship Project and head of the Dorothy Jemison Foundation for Excellence.

    Dr Gregory Benford, American science fiction author and astrophysicist.

    Dr Richard Obousy, President Icarus Interstellar and Senior Scientist with Project Icarus, Longview, Texas.

    Ian Crawford, Professor of Planetary Science and Astrobiology, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Birkbeck College, London.

    Marc Millis, Founder of the Tau Zero Foundation and former NASA Propulsion Physicist and Aerospace Engineer.

    Further Information:
    100 Year Starship Project (http://100yss.org/index.html)
    Richard Obousy’s Profile (http://www.icarusinterstellar.org/team/richard-obousy/)
    Ian Crawford’s webpage (http://www.homepages.ucl.ac.uk/~ucfbiac/)
    Centauri Dreams- blog on deep space exploration (http://www.centauri-dreams.org/)
    Tau Zero Foundation (http://www.tauzero.aero/)

    http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/futuretense/the-future-of-interstellar-travel/4514402

    —Huffduffed by theJBJshow 2 months ago

  2. NASA Astronaut Dreams Up Space Inventions from NPR: Science Friday Podcast

    NASA astronaut Don Pettit spent nearly six months aboard the International Space Station and elected to spend his off-duty time performing science experiments of his own design. Pettit talks about life in space and some of the gadgets he invented while he lived there.

    —Huffduffed by norelpref 4 years ago

  3. Astronomycast 145: Interstellar Travel

    In science fiction it’s easy to hop into your spaceship and blast off for other stars. But the true distances between stars, and the limits of relativity make interstellar travel almost impossible with our current technology. What would it really take to travel from star to star, exploring the galaxy?

    http://www.astronomycast.com/space-flight/ep-145-interstellar-travel/

    —Huffduffed by Clampants 3 years ago