Game_Minds t1_j12pvb7 wrote
Reply to comment by Origin_of_Mind in Could being submersed in a sealed tank of fluid help humans survive heavy G acceleration in outer space? by cheeze_whiz_shampoo
To paraphrase something someone said elsewhere in here, it would allow humans to achieve ludicrous relative accelerations compared to normal human expectations, but that would still be extremely negligible acceleration compared with trying to achieve relativistic speeds
And as a third person said, the cost of transporting and manufacturing this fluid would probably significantly outweigh any gains
Origin_of_Mind t1_j12yeoh wrote
Human ability to withstand acceleration is not a limiting factor in long range space travel.
With the astronauts experiencing just the ordinary 1g of acceleration all the time they would be able to get to anywhere in the visible universe and get back to Earth in just 100 years (from the point of view of the astronauts themselves.)
But even accelerating the rocket at 1g for more than a few tens of minutes is already beyond our present technology.
Game_Minds t1_j14d8b6 wrote
I think the idea of the extreme accelerations is that you could use something like a nuclear bomb to clear the first few stages of accelerating and then your onboard fuel supply doesn't have to work as hard, but I think there are more reasons than the G forces why that wouldn't work either. We don't have the tech for much more than 1g of sustained thrust anyway, like you said. These kinds of thought experiments are the very definition of speculative lol
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