Rocky Earth-Sized Planet Found Circling Nearest Star
The privately funded Breakthrough Starshot program now has an excellent target for its StarChips

Astronomers from the University of Texas at Austin have just announced that they have discovered evidence that a rocky planet slightly larger than the Earth is orbiting Proxima Centauri, the closest star to Sol. The planet orbits its star in 11 days, but because Proxima Centauri is a cool red dwarf star, its surface temperature is low enough to be suitable for liquid water and thus lies within the conventionally defined habitable zone around the star. The new exo-planet is named Proxima b.
If this result stands, the new private Breakthough Starshot program will have an excellent target at which to aim. As reported earlier:
A fleet of laser-boosted nanocraft could be on their way to the Sun's nearest neighboring star, Alpha Centauri in a couple of decades. Breakthrough Starshot is the ambitious proposal announced by Russian internet entrepreneur Yuri Milner in New York [in April]. As outlined by Milner, the idea is that a fleet of gram-sized spacecraft - StarChips - kitted out with diaphanous lightsails will be boosted into orbit and then blasted with a ground-based "light beamer" consisting of phased 100 gigawatt array of lasers. Traveling at 20 percent of the speed of light, a fleet of StarChips would make the trip in only 20 years.
Of course, if warp drives were available (and consistently described), it would take perhaps 3 days to get there at Warp Factor 3.

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Of course, if warp drives were available (and consistently described), it would take perhaps 3 days to get there at Warp Factor 3.
I canno go any faster, Captain.
Dammit, Mr. Fist! You've got to get us there sooner...we are out of Saurian Brandy.
Isn't that a gateway drug to harder stuff like plutonium nyborg?
I'm no enginieer, but i feel fairly certain that you could reroute power from the shields and lifesupport through the thermal couplings and get us their a bit sooner.
And next thing we know, the Bugs are going to start hurling meteors at us.
The only good bug is a dead bug.
I would like to know more...
I'm from Buenos Aires, and I say kill them all!
Watch out for that Drago Earth-sized planet whose orbit intersects it. It can impact another celestial body at over 2000 psi.
What it hits, it destroys!
"Russian internet entrepreneur"
Sounds legit to me...
Please send your bank account information...
"Tovarich Yuri's Glorious Spaceships and Mail-Order Brides"
On of my duties is to process the spam quarantine every morning, sending legitimate emails to their destinations and nuking the spam to oblivion.
This morning there was a lovely one. It was addressed to our very straightlaced female HR rep. It was an HTML email with 16 point letters in the most passionately purple font I have ever seen.
The author of the email claimed to be a hot, young russian woman who addressed our HR rep as her "handsome master" and begged the repto set up an account on a russian website so that the rep could see more hot naked pictures of the author. To demonstrate her seriousness, the author had included a zip file tantalizingly named "naked-511.zip".
Part of me was tempted to release it just to hear the poor woman fall of her chair screaming/laughing. Sadly prudence won out and just deleted it.
Dammit - you should have let it through....and reported back to us.
🙂 You probably saved your company from a wicked virus anyway.
It'd be great to see this guy actually pull it off, though. Having grown up in the 80's, I'm sure I retain a little biased against Russians. Time will tell.
This, I guaran-damn-tee you the only thing that zip file didn't contain, was naked pictures.
*frantically searches for catalog*
This post is a shill for Big No Man's Sky.
Hey, you can't take the sky from me!
Firefly, why only 1 season why??? It hurts inside
I spent money on that and I shouldn't have.
Tragedy of the commons strikes again!
If it doesn't have a magnetic field, a very powerful one, there won't be anything alive on it.
magnets, work how do they?
I may be dyslexic.
probably latent effects of listening to Insane Clown Posse.
That's not so bad, we can still make use of it.
Pro L' already had it strip mined.
mined by strippers... you should see how hard Candy and Mandy and Angel work with the lash made out of $1 bills strikes their firm thighs.
Go on...
Maybe some day. But for the foreseeable future, there are plenty of lifeless rocks nearby to keep us busy for a while.
I have to look to the long-term future of my Imperium.
/God-Emperor of Mankind
You should practice sitting. You're going to be doing a lot of it in the future.
You won't listen to this, but watch out for dude named Horus.
Our fastest current spacecraft will only take 75,000 years to get there (or like 14 times longer than human civilization has existed).
Sure, but the spacecraft built 100 years later will beat it there.
*flies by 1st Gen ship, moons it*
/Next Gen ship
To Atanarjuat's clunky 1st generation ship, Swiss's bare ass is an imperceptible blur of light. But to the even faster 3rd Gen vessel passing by, his pressed ham is frozen gloriously in time forever.
...Point, Hugh.
That leaves us at 1-0, advantage Akston.
Akston doesn't keep score in the T-Ball game of life.
Nah, his ass is so big that even at that speed, it takes several seconds for it to pass by.
They've gone plaid!
Are you implying the Spaceballs have best us to it?
Kind of like getting passed on the highway when you're driving a Ford Pinto and all the cool kids have 328i beamers.
Chevy Malibus are the preferred interstellar transportation means.
Perhaps, but you're gonna want a 50s 'vette convertible for when you get close:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t_KXgFpguE0
is that the Stig driving that vette
That's why we need a law to require later ships to pick up any one they pass on the way. Only government action can address Arrival Inequality.
But we haven't really tried to make a spacecraft designed to go to another star. When all you are doing is visiting parts of the solar system, that's all the speed you need.
you know if you travel fast enough eventually you won't get anywhere. The biggest flaw of relative time theory.
What? No.
travel is determined by the change of distance over the change of time. the faster you go the slower time becomes and if you go fast enough when time slows to a stop, which = no time change thus zero you cannot divide by zero so you travel nowhere.
Fail. Time in your (inertial) reference frame does not change. The universe runs slower and in the direction of travel gets shorter.
How do you figure? As I understand it, if you can travel arbitrarily close to the speed of light, you can travel any distance in any amount of time.
Some trivial nits but effectively yes as long as you are only talking about time that you experience. The universe will continue to age and change during your trip.
Maybe deep under water?
Or subterranian...
What about creating an artificial magnetic field?
Strong enough to deflect a x-ray flare coming your way? Unlikely.
Unless you're a km long conductor, who cares? The issue with a lack of a magnetic field is atmospheric sputtering.
Well, if we had an energy source big enough to do that, we could probably get there too.
No.
OK, thanks for your valuable insight.
You're welcome. You literally need an infinite amount of energy to send anything with mass at the speed of light. Generating a planetary scale magnetic field is an engineering challenge but one that we could accomplish with today's technology at a reasonable cost. No, that does not mwan that we create molten convecting nickel iron cores. It does mean that we orbit a ring of nickel iron asteroids that we magnetize and periodically remagnetize.
What if we build some kind of rudimentary lathe?
STEVE SMITH TERRAFORM RAPE NEW PLANET!!!!
"TERRARAPE"
*Widens gaze*
Oh my.
It's also aparently a "flare star" that occasionally increases significantly in luminosity, which also seems like it would be a problem for life. And being so close to the star, I bet it always shows the same face to the star.
Most of the (admittedly simplified) models suggest that even a modest atmosphere and hydrosphere would convect the heat to the night side efficiently.
Clearly there is a race of sinister night dwellers with dark skin living on the dark side.
Irish, is that you?
Given that the same forces governing evolution here operate there I think I would prefer it that way. Lifeless that is.
Our field isn't that strong. It's barely above 1 Oe.
Wunderland!
The Kzin care not for your "safe" spaces.
The planet orbits its star in 11 days
why I would be over 1500 years old there.
Almost certainly tidally locked.
Unlikely location for life, but it's cool that we have a candidate this close by.
From the Hit & Run archives, let me recall a vaguely related discussion about a Dune-themed restaurant.
PRO L'! I spoke your name, and you appeared!
*Tebows*
Well look who decided to show up.
I'm limited to subluminal communications at this time.
It's working. I didn't even see you coming.
I had an old Urkobold post for the Lunar Sex Prize ready to go, but the blog was mysteriously removed from existence.
Wouldn't matter. Diane Reynolds isn't invited, as your rejection message so succinctly notes.
I deny any such rejection!
I kickstarted that subthread but dont remember it.
Engage!!!!!
Things would-be mother-in-laws say, survey says.....
Coincidentally, I'm currently re-reading RAHs "Friday" (1982), in which he talks about Proxima somewhat at length (with charts and graphs, even).
btw, also covered: transgender bathrooms, internet searches (he was a little bit off on that), and was prescient about where we are now headed with regard to gov't.
I've heard the 80s RAH books are supposed to be bad, but I enjoyed Friday quite a bit - better than a some (but not all) of the 50s books.
Anyone here have opinions on late-period Heinlein? I was thinking of hitting The Cat Who Walks Through Walls next.
I think they're worth reading.
However, they really are a pitiful attempt to hide from his mortality by building a fantasy where people live forever. I find them almost unbearably sad.
The only book I threw violently against the far wall. It made me stop reading his work.
"Cat" was pretty much a sequel to Number of the Beast. NotB is probly required first...
Overall, I like his "World as myth" stuff as a rule* - but some of it did feel really contrived in an effort to tie all of his shit together. By the time "To Sail Beyond the Sunset" came out -- it was a bit of a mess.
For a "stand alone" 80s book, I really enjoyed "Job".
*but then again, I was one of the 3 people who really liked "I Will Fear No Evil", so grain of salt.
Cat is pretty terrible. As is Number of the Beast.
If you like Time Enough for Love, Sunset is a worthwhile read. And Job is great.
Hmm. Sadness (and that subject is heavy one for me) and violent rage. I do have plenty of other books on my to-read list. Thanks guys.
Unreadable
A cool dwarf star is being orbited.
But enough about Peter Dinklage.
*slow clap*
Ah, the Gary Johnson campaign worker changes the subject.
Or are you shilling for Jill Stein? Because your carbon tax justification and her carbon tax proposals are identical.
Space lint needs some new shit to settle on and then be rubbed away by a polymer-clad sighing humanity. Fucking black yawning hell park is filled with floating rocks so hard with ecstasy at their impending discovery by anything alive their icy phalluses shimmer with goddamn comet cum.
Why is comet cum damned by God, Agile?
Because it came too soon. They need to think about space baseball.
Premature particle ejaculation.
You can tell that Proxima Centauri is a cool red dwarf star because it's always wearing shades.
"Yes, he reached it. He landed, he took off, he returned -- he found no life. But we found that twenty years ago. That's one of the ironies of progress, Miss Horn; could've saved the trip, could've saved him his anguish. His anguish being the following: unknown to us, here on Earth, to my predecessors, and to theirs, because of a lack of communication, Commander Stansfield arbitrarily removed himself from hibernation, six months after leaving Earth. He did this, because..."
"I know why. God help me, I know why."
"Over forty years, Miss Horn. Forty years in the cockpit of a ship. Forty years. His loneliness must have been something brand new in human experience."
So exciting!!!
Maybe a better candidate for human colonization than Mars.
I could imagine just sending out spore pods to seed the planet with living micoorganisms such as algae. Even if it takes us centuries ot get there it will kick start the process of terraforming.
After determining the place isn't inhabited by intelligent aliens of course.
You know who else conquered a place previously occupied by intelligent aliens?
Teddy Roosevelt?
William?
Cortez?
I'd give it a 99.99999% chance of that being wrong. An 11-day orbit next to a variable star, even if it is a red dwarf? That's not going to to be fun times, at all....
It is amazing how our planet is on the doorstep of doom due to my gas lawnmower, but we're going to colonize other planets in a snap. Four hundred years ago, PRIOR TO THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION AND ITS DEATHLY POLLUTION, people crossing over the ocean could barely make a go of it, and we're going to survive on a totally alien landscape? Sure.
We sure could have used an 11 day year during the Mofobama administration.
Of course, if warp drives were available (and consistently described), it would take perhaps 3 days to get there at Warp Factor 3
Trying to avoid that "greater than Warp 5 " tax, I see....
"The planet orbits its star in 11 days"
If every day there is like a month, does that mean the women there go through their whole cycle ever day?
Oh, the mood swings!
What? A rock is circling President P*ssy's head?
And here we thought all of his rocks were self-contained.
Build a force field around it and get Nibiru to pay for it.