George Dyson: Let's take a nuclear-powered rocket to Saturn

84,301 views ・ 2008-02-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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I'm a historian.
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Steve told us about the future of little technology;
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I'm going to show you some of the past of big technology.
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This was a project to build a 4,000-ton nuclear bomb-propelled spaceship
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and go to Saturn and Jupiter.
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This took place in my childhood, 1957-65.
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It was deeply classified.
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I'm going to show you some stuff that not only has not been declassified,
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but has now been reclassified.
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(Laughter)
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If all goes well, next year I'll be back,
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and I'll have a lot more to show you, and if all doesn't go well,
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I'll be in jail, like Wen Ho Lee.
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(Laughter)
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So, this ship was basically the size of the Marriott Hotel,
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a little taller and a little bigger.
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And one of the people who worked on it at the beginning
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was my father, Freeman, there in the middle.
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That's me and my sister, Esther, who's a frequent TEDster.
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I didn't like nuclear bomb-propelled spaceships.
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I mean, I thought it was a great idea, but I started building kayaks.
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So we had a few kayaks.
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Just so you know that I am not Dr. Strangelove.
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But all the time I was out there doing these strange kayak voyages
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in odd, beautiful parts of this planet,
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I always thought in the back of my mind about Project Orion,
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and how my father and his friends were going to build these big ships.
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They were actually going to go --
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Ted Taylor, who led the project, was going to take his children.
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My father was not going to take his children,
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that was one of the reasons we sort of had a falling out for a few years.
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(Laughter)
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The project began in '57 at General Atomics there,
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that's right on the coast at La Jolla.
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Look at that central building right in the middle of the picture.
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That's the 130-foot diameter library.
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That is exactly the size of the base of the spaceship.
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So put that library at the bottom of that ship --
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that's how big the thing was going to be.
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It would take two or three thousand bombs.
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The people who worked on it were a lot of the Los Alamos people
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who had done the hydrogen bomb work.
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It was the first project funded by ARPA.
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That's the contract where ARPA gave the first million dollars
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to get this thing started.
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"Spaceship project officially begun. Job waiting for you. Dyson."
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That's July '58.
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Two days later, the space traveler's manifesto explaining why --
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just like we heard yesterday -- why we need to go into space:
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"... trips to satellites of the outer planets.
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August 20, 1958."
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These are the statistics of what would be the good places to go and stop.
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Some of the sizes of the ships,
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ranging all the way up to ship mass of 8 million tons.
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So that was the outer extreme.
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Here was version two: 2,000 bombs.
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These are five-kiloton yield bombs, about the size of small Volkswagens;
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it would take 800 to get into orbit.
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Here we see a 10,000-ton ship will deliver 1,300 tons
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to Saturn and back -- essentially, a five-year trip.
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Possible departure dates: October 1960 to February 1967.
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These are trajectories going to Mars.
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All this was done by hand, with slide rules.
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The little Orion ship,
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and what it would take to do what Orion does with chemicals:
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you have a ship the size of the Empire State Building.
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NASA had no interest; they tried to kill the project.
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The people who supported it were the Air Force,
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which meant that it was all secret.
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And that's why when you get something declassified, that's what it looks like.
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Military weapon versions that carried hydrogen bombs
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that could destroy half the planet.
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There's another version there that sends retaliatory strikes at the Soviet Union.
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This is the really secret stuff:
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how to get directed energy explosions.
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So you're sending the energy of a nuclear explosion --
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not like just a stick of dynamite, but you're directing it at the ship.
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And this is still a very active subject.
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It's quite dangerous,
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but I believe it's better to have dangerous things in the open
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than think you're going to keep them secret.
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This is what happened at 600 microseconds.
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The Air Force started to build smaller models
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and actually started doing this.
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The guys in La Jolla said, "We've got to get started now."
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They built a high-explosive propelled model.
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These are stills from film footage that was saved
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by someone who was supposed to destroy it but didn't,
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and kept it in their basement for the last 40 years.
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So, these are three-pound charges of C4;
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that's about 10 times what the guy had in his shoes.
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(Laughter)
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This is Ed Day putting --
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So each of these coffee cans has three pounds of C4 in it.
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They're building a system that ejects these at quarter-second intervals.
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That's my dad in the sport coat there, holding the briefcase.
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So, they had a lot of fun doing this.
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But no children were allowed;
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my dad could tell me he was building a spaceship and going to go to Saturn,
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but he could not say anything more about it.
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So all my life I have wanted to find this stuff out,
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and spent the last four years tracking these old guys down.
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These are stills from the video.
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Jeff Bezos kindly, yesterday, said he'll put this video up
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on the Amazon site -- some little clip of it.
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(Applause)
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So, thanks to him.
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They got quite serious about the engineering of this.
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The size of that mass, for us,
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is really large technology in a way we're never going to go back to.
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If you saw the 1959 --
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this is what it would feel like in the passenger compartment;
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that's acceleration profile.
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(Laughter)
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And pulse-system yield: we're looking at 20-kiloton yield
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for an effective thrust of 10 million newtons.
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Well, here we have a little problem, the radiation doses at the crew station:
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700 rads per shot.
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(Laughter)
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Fission yields during development:
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they were hoping to get clean bombs; they didn't.
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Eyeburn: this is what happens to the people in Miami who are looking up.
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(Laughter)
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Personnel compartment noise: that's not too bad; it's very low frequencies,
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it's basically like these sub-woofers.
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And now we have ground-hazard assessments when you have a blow-up on the pad.
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Finally, at the very end in 1964, NASA steps in and says,
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"OK, we'll support a feasibility study for a small version
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that could be launched with Saturn Vs in sections and pieced together."
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So this is what NASA did,
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getting an eight-man version that would go to Mars.
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They liked it because the guys could kind of live there and be like,
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"It's like living in a submarine."
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This is crew compartment.
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It switches, so what's upside down is right side up
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when you go to artificial gravity mode.
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The scientists were still going to go along;
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they would take seven astronauts and seven scientists.
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This is a 20-man version for going to Jupiter:
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bunks, storm cellars, exercise room.
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You know, it was going to be a nice, long trip.
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The Air Force version: here we have a military version.
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This is the kind of stuff that's not been declassified,
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just that people managed to sneak home and after, you know,
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on their deathbed, basically, gave me that.
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The sort of artist conceptions.
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These are basically PowerPoint presentations
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given to the Air Force 40 years ago.
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Look at the little guys there outside the vehicle.
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And one part of NASA was interested in it,
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but the headquarters in NASA, they killed the project.
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So finally, at the end,
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we can see the thing followed its sort of design path right up to 1965,
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and then all those paths came to a halt.
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Results: none.
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This project is hereby terminated.
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So that's the end.
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All I can say in closing is:
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we heard yesterday that one of the 10 bad things that could happen to us
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is an asteroid with our name on it.
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And one of the bad things that could happen to NASA
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is if that asteroid shows up with our name on it nine months out,
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and everybody says,
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"Well, what are we going to do?"
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And Orion is really one of the only, if not the only,
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off-the-shelf technologies that could do something.
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(Laughter)
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So I'm going to tell you the good news and the bad news.
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The good news is that NASA has a small, secret contingency-plan division
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that is looking at this, trying to keep knowledge of Orion preserved
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in the event of such a misfortune.
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Maybe keep a few little bombs of plutonium on the side.
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That's the good news.
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The bad news is, when I got in contact with these people
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to try and get some documents from them, they went crazy
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because I had all this stuff that they don't have,
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and NASA purchased 1,759 pages of this stuff from me.
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So that's the state we're at; it's not very good.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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