You won't be able to get to the airport in time because of problems on the northern line
2006-08-04 09:22:50
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answer #1
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answered by bwadsp 5
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Be confident.
Surely technology would have developed by that time to go out of Solar system. They have recently proposed the use of Plasmas to project capsules and other ways by which it could be made very easy.
But if you want to travel, then you must do manythings before that.
You can become an "ASTRONOMER" or become a very rich person so that when space tourism is introduced, you can pay the huge amount and take the tour.
I think by that time, some of the popular tourist spots would be
1) OORT cloud (present in the outer edge of our solar system"
2)Alpha Centuria system (a system of 3 stars, that has Proxima centuria, the closest star to our sun)
But if you wait (somehow) nearly 100 years, you may also visit
Orion Nebula and other closer nebulae.
Hope all this come true...
2006-08-04 14:29:44
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I'm sorry but the answer is to 100% no.
Why?
To develop a spacecraft to travel out of this solar system with a human in it will take properly another 70 - 100 years.
To travel out of this solar system will take properly 15 - 20 years.
The human will be in this spacecraft all this time and also have to come back!
There is also no point to go beyond this solar system without a target.
Because you have to come back!
You need to consider for enough air, water, food and fuel supplies.
You properly have to be deep frozen to survive such a long trip.
But what would be the point without a target?
2006-08-04 09:12:10
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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No way! think about 2001: Space Odyssey, Dan Dare, all those 50s Sci-Fi B-movies. The future never keeps pace with our imaginations. In fourty years time we'll all still be dong the same as we do now, driving cars that are more or less the same as they are now. The only difference will be that Earth will be a little warmer and a lot more polluted.
2006-08-04 08:23:36
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answer #4
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answered by stevo 2
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Tecnically speaking, we're not far removed from sending you outside the solar system now. We just need to perfect some type of stasis. If we do that, we'll be able to send anyone on these long journeys and maybe suspend their body so they don't age normally.
However, we don't have the propulsion system to make it a reasonable time. I think the fastest moving probe we have(Voyager) won't reach another star system for like 500-600 years....
2006-08-04 08:22:01
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answer #5
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answered by molex77 3
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If you devote the next 40 years of your life to becoming the best damn rocket scientist ever, and invent a new propulsion system before the 40 years is up, then maybe since you were the one who invented it they would let you fly it. Or you could wait for someone else to do it...but where's the fun in that.
2006-08-04 09:46:49
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answer #6
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answered by outbaksean 4
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Voyager 1 and 2 are already beyond our solar system and continue to relay back data.
2006-08-04 09:05:48
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answer #7
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answered by greebo 3
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You will know in the next 40 years
2006-08-04 08:29:42
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answer #8
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answered by Ollie 7
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No you would have to have already set off.
Even those voyager and pioneer rockets sent off in the early 70's have not reached interstellar space.
2006-08-04 18:14:31
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I fear not even *within* our solar system. Maybe someone will reach Mars, but not a step further. But not you or me, for that.
2006-08-04 08:22:01
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answer #10
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answered by ascaniosobrero 3
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