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The flight from Earth outwards

Purdy Bear

Lieutenant Commander
Red Shirt
If you were in a lovely big ship, in space doc orbiting the Earth, and you were then sent on a mission outside our universe, what planets, star systems would you pass as you went?


It doesnt matter the direction or the time of year.

Thanks.
 
Your question implies that we can get out of our universe by pointing a spaceship in some direction and going far enough. How far do you have to go before you run out of universe?
 
Use your imagination! If you were literally on board, what would you see. It can be factual or otherwise.
 
I'm willing to guess that it is like rush hour around there. #$#$!@#... Sub-warp speeds, and another $#@! shuttlecraft is in the way. When are they going to expand this inter-seller corridor?
 
I sort of think you wouldn't see any stations or fellow ships unless you specifically aimed for those; space is big enough that a random encounter would be unlikely. No particular need for lanes, either: the ships would need to avoid each other, yes, but normally they'd be in no particular risk of coming to within (naked-eye) visual range of each other to begin with.

To truly appreciate the planets, I'd probably fly past them at distances ranging from a few thousand to perhaps ten thousand kilometers, plus of course the approaches and departures. That wouldn't yet count as "buzzing" them and entering densely inhabited orbits, but I'd see a lot of detail with naked eye. I'd deliberately steer past all the planets that lay even coarsely in line at the time, even if that meant serpentining quite a lot: the loss in overall travel time or fuel expenditure would probably be minimal. Perhaps a stroll past Venus plus all the outer planets in the approximate direction beyond Venus at that particular time. No point in going out of the plane of the system until I'd visited at least one of the outer gas giants...

Flying (slowly) through the rings of Saturn would be a thrill - but perhaps forbidden for the massed effect of thousands of starships opting for the stunt and disturbing the wonder of nature...? Skimming through the upper atmosphere of Jupiter or Saturn would be less likely to be regulated.

Timo Saloniemi
 
Use your imagination! If you were literally on board, what would you see. It can be factual or otherwise.
Well, I imagine the best way to get outside our universe is through a black hole. I'd be in suspended animation through most of the trip, so I'd see nothing, or perhaps groaning years of math class dreams. Then I'd wake up just long enough to see this, and die.
 
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