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You are here: Home / Starship Blog / Project World Ship

Project World Ship

29 April 2020

Artist renditions of a world ship (Credit: Adrian Mann, Maciej Rebisz)

World ships are hypothetical, large, self-contained spacecraft for crewed interstellar travel, taking centuries to reach other stars. Due to their crewed nature, size, and long trip times, the feasibility of world ships faces an additional set of challenges compared to interstellar probes. Despite their emergence in the 1980s, most of these topics remain unexplored.

This project revisits some of the key feasibility issues of world ships. First, definitions of world ships from the literature are revisited and the notion of world ship positioned with respect to similar concepts such as generation ships. Second, the key question of population size is revisited in light of recent results from the literature. Third, socio-technical and economic feasibility issues are evaluated. Finally, world ships are compared to potential alternative modes of crewed interstellar travel.

Key roadblocks for world ships are the considerable resources required, shifting its economic feasibility beyond the year 2300, and the development of a maintenance system capable of detecting, replacing, and repairing several components per second. The emergence of alternative, less costly modes of crewed interstellar travel at an earlier point in time might render world ships obsolete.


Publications

Hein, A.M., Smith, C., Marin, F., Staats, K. (2020). World Ships: Feasibility and Rationale, Acta Futura, 12, 75-104, 2020

Hein, A. M., Pak, M., Pütz, D., Bühler, C., & Reiss, P. (2012). World ships—architectures & feasibility revisited. Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, 65(4), 119.

In the media

OneZero, "Scientists Are Contemplating a 1,000-Year Space Mission to Save Humanity", 5th Dec. 2019

Futurism, "Scientists Are Planning a 1,000 Year Trip to Another Planet", 10th Dec. 2019

International Business Times, "Scientists Planning Long Voyage For Space Colony To Avoid Human Extinction", 16th Dec. 2019


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