How soon until we get to a Star Trek reality?

Secure Da Bag

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One step closer to replicator. :blessed:


Tu and his colleagues approached that puzzle by looking not at stable matter, but at what happens when protons are smashed together at extreme speeds. In the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, or RHIC, protons were accelerated to 99.996 percent of the speed of light. Those collisions released enough energy to disturb the vacuum and turn virtual quark-antiquark pairs into real particles.

The team focused on strange quarks and strange antiquarks. According to the theory behind the experiment, these pairs should emerge from the vacuum with their spins aligned in parallel. If that spin pattern survived the messy transition from free quarks to bound particles, it could serve as evidence. It would mean the particles had originated from the vacuum condensate.
 

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We can get to the next galaxy not in 1000 years, but in 20 years.


The nearest star system to our own, Alpha Centauri, is well over four light-years away — tens of trillions of lonely miles that could take hundreds, if not thousands, of Earth years to reach using contemporary rocket propulsion methods.

But there may be a way to cut the length of the journey down significantly. As detailed in a new paper published in the journal Newton, a team of researchers at Texas A&M University say they’ve demonstrated an exciting new approach, which uses lasers to propel and steer objects from a distance, without physical contact.

They claim lasers could one day push entire spacecraft, accelerating them to the point where the trip to Alpha Centauri will only take around 20 years. While that may still sound like a long time, it’d be a major upgrade over having to send a generation ship built to survive thousands of years.

That’s if the concept can effectively be scaled up, of course. For their research, the scientists developed micron-scale devices, called “metajets,” which are smaller than the width of a human hair, and which move when a laser light is pointed at them.

These metajets feature minuscule “metasurfaces,” or intricate patterns that change how the light behaves, not unlike a lens. These etchings allow the researchers to move the metajets in all three dimensions, which they claim is a world’s first.
 
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