Not explicitly interstellar (though implied to be on his website) but I'm rather partial to Mike McPhail's CGI designs:

More room inside for the crew. thicker walls help too.
^ True. The only reference in the image we could use for sizing is the front docking portal, and that's only assuming it's meant to be big enough for a human (perhaps in an EVA suit).
ANYTHING interstellar is going to be in excess of what we have now. If you can cross interstellar distances at all, you're either cheating the laws of physics (using wormholes, hyperspace, hypergates, folding space or something likewise exotic) thereby allowing an otherwise conventional spacecraft to leap from system to system by some means or another, or you're doing it by some MASSIVE undertaking like a generation ship or a Yonada-style asteroid cruiser. In either case, McPhail's designs seem like a very good extrapolation on what a future Earth vessel would look like, since anything smaller than Manhattan Island is going to depend on either exotic propulsion systems or a galaxy-hopping mothership. You've got all the elements there: propellant tanks, propulsion, crew habitation, etc.I can't really see those designs being interstellar, perhaps interplanetary though. They look too small to have a substantial crew or supplies to last interstellar distances, barring some kind of drive technology far in excess of what we have now.
I'm guessing the one on the right is meant to be some kind of military, or asteroid defence ship, judging from the weapon turrets and what look like clamps/buffers on the side.
I wouldn't be surprised if something like the NX-class was actually built 150-200 years from now. It may not have warp drive, but it probably could cruise around the solar system at low sublight velocities.
that would be pretty cool, and it sucks that none of us are going to see it.
You've got all the elements there: propellant tanks, propulsion, crew habitation, etc.
...and clockwise vs anticlockwise.On the outside it would probably look like a Borg cube or the nuBattlestar Galactica.
On the inside, maybe like a nuclear aircraft career, everything where they need to be, not so much pretty.
Right.
I don't think we should imagine that strictly space-going ships would have a bilateral symmetry. It makes sense for terrestrial creatures and terrestrial vehicles to have bilateral symmetry because they inhabit a sphere that is so large that is like (i.e., approximates)moving around on a flat plane. Add gravity pulling down, and it makes sense to have a well defined "top" and "bottom" and "left" vs. "right." In space, this doesn't matter. The only symmetry that matters is forward vs. backward. You need an end that is designed to deal with moving forward (observation equipment, ablative plate, small engines or thrusters to put 'er in reverse) and you need an end to deal with putting stuff behind you (propulsion and probably an antenna to maintain contact with home). Left? Right? Top? Bottom? None of these matter. What matters is forward vs. backward.
I would suggest that a fast ship for use within the solar system could look a lot like a typical Trek starship, for three reasons, if some form of projected artificial gravity is developed: (1) the streamlined hull would parry microasteroids (2) the saucer shape of the habitable area is well suited to artificial gravity for the crew, and (3) positrons, the cheapest and most easily produced form of antimatter, have the drawback of gamma radiation, actually requiring nacelles to keep that radiation away from the habitable area, stood off by pylons and directed where the ship has been rather than where it's going.
And if artificial gravity rather than Newton's third law of motion is the mechanism of propulsion, such a ship could be very fast indeed, maybe not reaching full impulse (which would mean just minutes to Mars orbit), but many times faster than we can expect to go with chemical rockets.
You've got all the elements there: propellant tanks, propulsion, crew habitation, etc.
Yeah, all he is really missing is sufficient heat exchangers.
I would suggest that a fast ship for use within the solar system could look a lot like a typical Trek starship, for three reasons, if some form of projected artificial gravity is developed: (1) the streamlined hull would parry microasteroids (2) the saucer shape of the habitable area is well suited to artificial gravity for the crew, and (3) positrons, the cheapest and most easily produced form of antimatter, have the drawback of gamma radiation, actually requiring nacelles to keep that radiation away from the habitable area, stood off by pylons and directed where the ship has been rather than where it's going.
You've got all the elements there: propellant tanks, propulsion, crew habitation, etc.
Yeah, all he is really missing is sufficient heat exchangers.
He probably isn't. It's only a sci-fi conceit that thermal control has to be provided by big honking radiators that stick out hundreds of meters like sails. Skylab and Soyuz have conformal radiators pulled in close to their hulls, as did Apollo. Besides, I've always felt that a method of trapping and recycling waste heat is not beyond technological capability, provided you have a power source with plenty of energy to spare.
It depends on the application, the shuttle has big honking radiators as does the ISS.
I would suggest that a fast ship for use within the solar system could look a lot like a typical Trek starship, for three reasons, if some form of projected artificial gravity is developed: (1) the streamlined hull would parry microasteroids (2) the saucer shape of the habitable area is well suited to artificial gravity for the crew, and (3) positrons, the cheapest and most easily produced form of antimatter, have the drawback of gamma radiation, actually requiring nacelles to keep that radiation away from the habitable area, stood off by pylons and directed where the ship has been rather than where it's going.
1) No it wouldn't. In the first place, at the relative velocities you describe, the kinetic energies involved would still tear through the ship like tinfoil. In the second place, it doesn't matter what the ship looks like along the axis of its acceleration because all those micrometeorites are also in motion, not stationary, and many are crossing the ship's trajectory at several kilometers per second.
2) Even assuming trek-style artificial gravity--which is a technical absurdity in the first place--it really isn't. Since your gravity field is attracting everything in a uniform direction, the ideal solution is to build the ship around its normal axis of acceleration so that the field pulls everything "down" towards the engines on the rear of the ship. This allows the ship's natural acceleration to provide some of the gravity, and also prevents the crew from being disoriented and/or tossed around every time the engines fire.
3) Positrons aren't all that useful as a power source. But even if they were, moving the nacelles farther away from the hull would not be in any way useful in protecting the crew from exposure. You would have to provide shielding between the crew and the nacelles, and the most efficient way of doing that is a "shadow shield" that only blocks radiation that would come into contact with the hull. In this case, both nacelles would have to be placed right next to each other so they can both be blocked by the same shadow shield (or two smaller ones) instead of placing them right next to the hull where they can bathe the entire ship with radiation from afar.
As for "gravity drive," considering the weakness of gravity as a force it may not be very fast at all. It takes the total potential energy of a planet the size of Earth to produce accelerations of 9.8m/s. If you could even figure out how to produce an artificial gravity force and impart it on a space craft, you'd be lucky if it outperforms an ion engine.
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