Fer cryin’ out loud. He can go in the daytime. Haven’t you ever heard of SUNGLASSES?!
It’s been suggested that an asteroid or comet would make a nifty sun shield for approaching the Sun. One asteroid approaches as close as 0.092 AU, and one family of “sun grazing” comets pass as close as a few hundred thousand kilometers above the sun’s surface.
I tend to think that even if this is such a problem it isn’t an insurmountable problem. after all we have probes that go to mercury and we have probes that go to pluto. My question doesn’t have to do with how I get there but my survivle once I do get there.
[QUOTE=Robert Zubrin]
We either muster the courage to go
Or we risk the possibility of stagnation and decay
We’ve got cosmic radiation
Zero gravity
Martian dust storms
Back contamination
But these are dragons that we can take on
[/QUOTE]
I’m not sure how to ask this but what is the closest thing to the sun with a relatively circular orbit? Is it Mercury? I understand comets come very close to the sun all the time, but their aphelions are way out there.
I guess what I mean is, is there anything between Mercury and the Sun?
Thing is, the amount of time it takes you to get there may determine what kills you. If the approach speed is slow you may be killed by radiation, depending on solar activity and how much protection you have. If your travel time is very short, you’ll quickly reach a point where the heat will kill you.
IIRC, it takes more energy to reach Mercury than it does to leave the solar system.
There may be some vulcanoid asteroids, but none have been detected, it’s difficult to examine this region due to the sun’s glare.
Yes, sounds like the magnetar option would be the quickest and most painless way.
Let’s give credit where credit is due…
*"I realize that planet Earth is unique, at least in our solar system. We know that. It’s odd that people try to talk about going to go to some other planet like Earth and they have no respect whatsoever for the contemplation of traveling to these places. We went to the moon - it took us about three days at the speed we went there. To go to the sun, I keep kidding about it: At the speed of light, it takes eight minutes, but you have to go at night."
Although I think he stole that schtick from Bill Dana..
Ali G asked Buzz Aldrin the same question. Aldrin said the sun was too hot, and Ali G. asked if you could go in winter instead.