I'd jump for joy and be perfectly happy with 10% lightspeed right now.
^math fail. Try 107,761,674.24I'd jump for joy and be perfectly happy with 10% lightspeed right now.
10% is 18,600 miles per second.
This is interesting -The fastest manned space ship was Apollo 10 (Thomas Stafford, Eugene Cernan and John Young), which reached 39,665 kph as it returned to Earth from the Moon in May, 1969.
The Apollo 10 reached 39,665 kph when it returned to Earth.
18,600 miles per second = 107,761.67424 kph which is nearly quadruple the velocity obtained by the Apollo 10 craft upon re-entry.
Although the gas pressure might be nearly zero but when a ship begins to travel closer and closer to the speed of light the ship is occupying more space and gas pressure at a faster rate of velocity so the amount of gas pressure experienced increases exponentially thus acting like a gas bubble.
So elevating the gas pressure on the ship is also important to achieve fast as light velocity.
Well damn, I was thinking Dryson was onto something for a change instead of being completely utterly wrong.^math fail. Try 107,761,674.2410% is 18,600 miles per second.
This is interesting -The fastest manned space ship was Apollo 10 (Thomas Stafford, Eugene Cernan and John Young), which reached 39,665 kph as it returned to Earth from the Moon in May, 1969.
The Apollo 10 reached 39,665 kph when it returned to Earth.
18,600 miles per second = 107,761.67424 kph which is nearly quadruple the velocity obtained by the Apollo 10 craft upon re-entry.
Which is roughly 2700 times the speed of Apollo 10's return.
THERE ARE CALCULATORS ON THE INTERNET HOW CAN YOU SCREW THAT UP
It's worse than that. Dryson can't even tell the difference between "nearly quadruple" and "less than 3 times".
The reason why sources are being asked is because of the word Canon.
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