The Manila Times

Hawking bares mission to reach nearest star

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NEW YORK: Billionair­e Russian investor Yuri Milner and British cosmologis­t Stephen Hawking on Tuesday announced an ambitious new space initiative for a mission to Alpha Centauri, the nearest star system to Earth.

Milner and Hawking are spearheadi­ng the “Breakthrou­gh Starshot” team of scientists working on the bold research program compact, ultra-light space vehicles or “nanocraft.”

The goal is to send the light-propelled mini space

vehicles -- each no bigger than a cell phone -- to Alpha Centauri, which is 4.37 light years away, or 25 trillion miles, from Earth.

Milner and Hawking estimate that it could take about 20 years to reach the star system from the time of the launch -- rather than the 30,000 years it would take with today’s fastest spacecraft.

“Space travel as we know it is slow. How do we go faster and how do we go further? How do we make this great leap?” Milner, who is planning to initially commit $100 million to the project, told a news conference in Manhattan.

we can do more than just gaze at the stars. We can actually reach them,” added the 54- year- old Russian philanthro­pist, whose fortune is estimated at $2.9 billion by Forbes.

“It is time to launch the next great leap in human history.”

‘Interstell­ar sailboat’

Milner -- one of the original investors in Facebook -- said the team hoped to send a super light robotic spacecraft streaking through space at 60,000 kilometers (faster than 37,000 miles) per second -- about 20 percent the speed of light.

The initiative will work by creating a giant laser array to propel the mini-probes -- which would deploy micro-sails -- toward a given star, creating what Milner likened to an “interstell­ar sailboat.”

“The Breakthrou­gh StarChip concept is based on technology either already available or likely to be available in the near future. But as with any moonshot, there are major engineerin­g problems to solve,” Milner cautioned.

Hawking noted, “I believe what makes us unique is transcendi­ng our limits.”

Milner said he will contribute $100 million from his own pocket for the project, which could cost as much as $10 billion before it is fully realized.

Milner, Hawking and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg will sit on the project’s board.

A team has already been working on the endeavor for a year, Milner said.

Initial research results indicate that the giant laser array — the “light beamer” — would require about 100 gigawatts, roughly the energy needed to launch a space shuttle, said Avi Loeb, a professor at Harvard University and a project member.

“When there is a vision for a grand project like this one, just like the vision that JFK had in the 1960s, it lifts many bolts,” said Loeb in a nod to former US President John F. Kennedy, whose vision it was to land a man on the moon.

Milner and Hawking have teamed up previously.

Last July, Hawking launched a massive search for intelligen­t extraterre­strial life in a $100-million, 10-year project to scan the heavens funded by Milner.

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