Message from @SideTracker

Discord ID: 616366755224485888


2019-08-28 20:19:49 UTC  

the Orion drive is the only feasible idea

2019-08-28 20:19:51 UTC  

It is already is being used on small satellites that leave solar system

2019-08-28 20:19:55 UTC  

Aye bruno you want some pizza?

2019-08-28 20:20:03 UTC  

But those are ion thruster powered by a nuclear device

2019-08-28 20:20:07 UTC  

those are nuclear thermal ion drives

2019-08-28 20:20:12 UTC  

Russia tried a thermonuclear this time

2019-08-28 20:20:17 UTC  

the thruster is still an ion drive

2019-08-28 20:20:18 UTC  

without us breaking all current laws of physics we know off, there wont be any FTL tech. So settle in for the Solar Empire and the of chance of other far far away Solar based Empires

2019-08-28 20:20:22 UTC  

A bit different, but kinda similar

2019-08-28 20:20:23 UTC  

Thing out of the US, China and Russia Russia is the least likely power to produce such weaponry and field them on a large scale

2019-08-28 20:20:28 UTC  

it's power plant is just different

2019-08-28 20:20:44 UTC  

No, the reactor was not a fusion one

2019-08-28 20:20:50 UTC  

It was a fission one

2019-08-28 20:21:05 UTC  

Fusion reactors are in their infancy

2019-08-28 20:21:08 UTC  

Fusion reactor is futuretech lads

2019-08-28 20:21:10 UTC  

remember that

2019-08-28 20:21:13 UTC  

Do not make a mistake of underestimating Russia or China

2019-08-28 20:21:14 UTC  

Yes

2019-08-28 20:21:22 UTC  

That mistake will cost ya

2019-08-28 20:21:24 UTC  

ah, fusion reactors are not yet proven feasible

2019-08-28 20:21:25 UTC  

What we have is Fission

2019-08-28 20:21:53 UTC  

they could just be perpetual motion machines when trying such a thing without a massive gravity well

2019-08-28 20:21:57 UTC  

Russia has the smallest functioning nuclear reactor cooled by molten lead

2019-08-28 20:22:08 UTC  

They did their homework

2019-08-28 20:22:19 UTC  

well that is a rather old design even

2019-08-28 20:22:24 UTC  

Perpetual motion machines don't work

2019-08-28 20:22:32 UTC  

Irrelevant

2019-08-28 20:22:41 UTC  

i know this; and a fusion reactor might be one

2019-08-28 20:22:50 UTC  

Nukes are not perpetual, they are just an exceptionally long lasting energy source

2019-08-28 20:23:04 UTC  

because no net output as of yet....

2019-08-28 20:23:13 UTC  

No energy source lasts forever

2019-08-28 20:23:23 UTC  

Perpetual motion machines are impossible cause friction on a planetary level, and there is also friction in space because Space isn't a vacuum devoid of gravity

2019-08-28 20:23:31 UTC  

no shit sherlock

2019-08-28 20:23:35 UTC  

^^^

2019-08-28 20:23:56 UTC  

Thermodynamics called, it said you need an award for being mr obvious

2019-08-28 20:24:06 UTC  

nuclear fusion might also be infeasible in terms of getting more out than you put in

2019-08-28 20:24:27 UTC  

@ManAnimal its not actaully

2019-08-28 20:24:39 UTC  

ITER split even on input-output in 2008

2019-08-28 20:24:39 UTC  

it's quite feasible within this century even

2019-08-28 20:24:43 UTC  

yes, quite actually; science is easy; engineering i hard

2019-08-28 20:24:52 UTC  

That's about the best the fusion got so far