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by danielweber 3585 days ago
Magsails would work.
1 comments

If you're going to use magsails to slow it down, why not use a magsail to get it there? The trip is basically symmetrical.

I suppose it's possible that the laser could produce a much more stable and precise trajectory, while a magsail would just slow it's descent towards or accelerate it away from the sun. But I think it's more likely to be a case of the materials science and energy density being in favor of the laser method over sails.

What if we used lasers to send a fleet of laser ships with powerful one-time-use chemical lasers, then the front set of laser ships fired the same kind of beam back at the rearmost ship to to slow it down?

> If you're going to use magsails to slow it down, why not use a magsail to get it there? The trip is basically symmetrical.

If you launch a strong magnet in interstellar space, it will slow down relatively to plasma by deflecting charged particles.

In order to speed up, you need to spend energy.

The symmetry is broken between accelerating and slowing down relatively to interstellar plasma (Edit: or solar wind).

Ah, I had neglected the effects of interstellar plasma.

I assumed the magsail operated in a similar fashion to a solar sail, depending on the solar wind. If the destination's solar wind was sufficient to slow us down, I expected that the Sun's solar wind would be sufficient to speed us up.

Thanks for the explanation!