The Science Faction
Between
the stars we have the so-called interstellar medium, which contains mainly
hydrogen (about 90%) and helium (about 9%). That leaves 1% for, in particular,
so-called "metals" in a range of atomic weights from lithium to iron,
including in particular carbon dust and oxygen and nitrogen as significant
components among the gases. Dust grains account for most of this heavy
fraction, with of the order of 0.1% being gases.
This
doesn't only include the common istotypes, but in particular species of
Hydrogen and Helium with a neutron or proton more or less than the common
isotopes.
About
26 in a million Hydrogen (H) atoms across the universe seem to be Deuterium (D)
with its extra neutron (this D is theorized to date from the big bang), while
the fraction can be an order of magnitude bigger in some comets, and it is
similarly prevalent in oceans (Earth water is theorized to come from
comets). But stars destroy Deuterium
faster than they create it, so have lower fractions, while there are other
places where nuclear processes must create it. Tritium (T) is also created by
both natural and artificial nuclear reactions but is not stable – it has a
half-life of 4500 days (12.32 years) and decays into Helium-3. Interestingly
carbon dust grains preferentially adsorb Deuterium.
Within
a star system, we have the so-called interplanetary medium, which is similar in
composition but a highly conductive plasma, a gas of ions and electrons, and it
incorporates particles from cosmic rays, solar wind and other stellar ejecta, in
particular corononal mass ejections – ending at the heliopause where the solar
wind transitions into the interstellar medium.
Cosmic
rays are again largely hydrogen ions, that is they are 85-90% protons, with
again a good proportion of helium in ionic form, known in this case rather as
alpha particles, plus about 1% electrons, known also as beta radiation
(although that also includes the much smaller fraction of positrons too. There
is again about 1% "metals" plus a bit of antimatter (not just
positrons but antiprotons, and potentially the full gamut of elementary
particles – although most of them have very short lifespans). Of course,
there's also true wavelike radiation, gamma rays, photons with energies and
frequencies extending from X-rays down through UV, visible, IR and radio
frequency ranges.
Of
course radiation and rays have the idea of radiating out from somewhere whether
in the form of waves or particles, massless or massive. And that somewhere is
usually a star or some residual thereof, in particular supernovae and their
remnants. The Fermi (1949) proposals relating to diffusive cosmic-ray
acceleration and supernova remnant shockwaves has over the intervening decades
become well established theory, although with still a long way to go in explain
everything.
The
focus of current theories is, like any good scientific theory, predictions that
can be observed, and that means a focus on gamma rays given we are looking for
indirect evidence of what is (or rather was) happening thousands or millions of
light years away.
But
cosmic rays are here and now, and when the primary cosmic rays described above
hit our atmosphere at close to the speed of light, things happen. The resulting
secondary rays add scattering decay products including the full range of known
particles - some of which were first detected in cosmic rays. Of particular
note are the alpha particles and neutrons - the latter being one of the most
penetrating and dangerous forms of radiation, but being neutral also some of
the hardest to detect.
Of
course, everything we think we know in science is really theory through the
eyes of empirical evidence: manufactured faction rather than fact.
The Science Fiction
For
science fiction authors, the focus is somewhat different: what would a space
vessel experience when encountering these phenomena, what precautions would
they routinely take, what new technologies need to be developed to allow
zipping through the interstellar and interplanetary media at high fractions of
c, within being ripped to threads by those tiny particles and dust grains -
some of which are themselves traveling close to c.
These
technologies include both active and passive measures, and in particular active
and passive shielding - and just to make things interesting we might have ships
powered by nuclear reactors and guided by quantum AIs, which might require
their own special shielding. But for starters, we might focus on shielding for
humans and other living entities, plus current generations of electronics and
associated technologies.
For
X-rays, or gamma rays across a broad spectrum, we'll probably look at heavy
metal (high-Z) shielding. Those heavy shields will tend to work pretty well for
protons and electrons, and the alpha particles and metal ions are fairly easy
to stop. But for neutron shielding lighter elements (low-Z) tend to be
indicated, in particular hydrogen, boron and carbon, as their interaction with
heavier elements will tend to involve nuclear reactions and produce radioactive
isotopes and secondary radiation. Even the absorption of gamma rays by a high-Z
layer produces X-ray fluorescence.
A
layered or graded-Z shield is typically used, where each layer deals with the
secondary radiation from the previous one. Polyethelene (containing lots of H)
is often used to deal with beta radiation while minimizing secondary radiation,
while water of heavy water (with D or T instead of H) is often used to absorb,
scatter and slow neutrons, then using a suitable isotope (such as lithium-6) to
capture the slowed neutrons without triggering secondary radiation. On ships
using hydrogen fuel, that can be stored so as to provide additional neutron
protection.
In
relation to alpha and beta radiation, as well as higher atomic weight ions
(HZE), active electromagnetic shielding is currently being explored by NASA and
others, including using superconducting magnets. Permanent magnets are heavy, and conventional
electromagnets are power hungry.
This
might help with the charged cosmic rays or interplanetary medium, but what of
the neutral interstellar medium and dust grains? What of supernova remnants
and shockwaves? What about space debri? What about neutrons?
One
solution that comes up in SF is the idea of shooting the neutral particles to
ionize them or annihilate them.
Yes,
that's theoretically possible, but is it practical? We could use a laser to
ionize our targets so that our electromagnetic shields will guide them safely
around the ship - but at a substantial fraction of light speed there's not a
lot of time to detect and deflect, and there would be a lot of energy, mass and
reverse thrust used to achieve this continuously and speculatively if we tried
to avoid the detect part of this.
Ionizing
with a laser would avoid direct expulsion of mass, and could ionize with some
dispersion. A laser would also provide a kind of ranging detector too. We could
follow up with accurately targeted antimatter of an appropriate kind - but that
would be pretty hard to do head on, not to mention the antimatter being very
expensive and difficult to produce, and antineutrons would be particularly hard
to control too.
Shooting
matched mass and momentum particles is interesting, the matched momentum
implying a particular frame of reference in which the resultant particles (of
elastic collision) would shoot of at right angles. Streams of particles would
produce and explosive disk that wouldn't have much time to move out the way,
but if ionized that might be enough for the magnetic shielding to work.
In
my stories, I'm assuming the existence of an ionization and magnetic shielding
system, and the ability to produce streams of particles of different kinds,
including antimatter - but not as a routine path clearing solution.
But
now I want to come back to the hazard of ion storms, particularly those that
relate to supernova remnants, and the particular dangers they present - which
would be way off the charts in terms relative to the interstellar and
interplanetary media (ISM and IPM) that these radiation and dust protection
devices are designed to protect against.
The Missing Link
Supernova, shockwaves, cosmic rays and neutron blasts
Neutrons
have a half life of 10 minutes 10 seconds - so if faced by a cloud of neutrons
half of them would be gone in 10 minutes, with only around a millionth of the
left after an hour. The mean time to
decay is 14 minutes 40 seconds.
So
how could they possibly be a problem?
Part
of the interest in reading and writing hard science fiction is exploring the
real science problems that get thrown up, whether in artificial intelligence,
astrophysics, genetic engineering or particle physics - or all of the above at
once.
Remember
the Fermi shockwaves ?
Let's
start with a supernova. As observers, we observe and classify taxonomically by
which lines appear in the spectum, and whether they indicate presence or
absence of key elements - in particular Hydrogen and Helium as the two most
abundant elements. Type I supernovae don't show a hydrogen line, while type II
does. Type 1a doesn't show helium either, but shows a strong silicon absorption
line, while types 1b and 1c lack that, with type 1b showing strong helium lines
and type 1c lacking them.
That's just looking at the spectra of the actual explosion. The
next step is theoretical models to explain the spectra. Type 1a are
hypothesized to involve a common mechanism with carbon-oxygen white dwarf
progenitor stars that accrete matter beyond a 1.44 M☉ limit (40% bigger than our sun). Much of
the carbon and dioxide then fuse into heavier elements within a few seconds,
internal temperatures shooting up to billions of degrees, releasing an
explosive shockwave at around 5% of the speed of light, and lighting up as 5
billion times brighter than our sun. Some theories suggest the associated
graviton effects go forward and backward in time...
The
other main type of supernova involves core collapse (CC). This includes both
Type II and other subclasses of Type I. My stories are set in Andromeda when a
supernova of Type I was observed in 1885 (SN1885A) but does not fit the type I
model. The remnants of this supernova (amognst others) are currently being
tracked. Other supernovae would no doubt have occurred in Andromeda (M31) since
SN1885A, there might have been one today - but we won't know about it for
another 2.5 million years.
So
what are the implications for a wormhole from here to Andromeda given these
wormholes and their shockwaves. How could we know if a shockwave from an event
2.5 million years ago, was going to affect our missions to Andromeda. My stories assume they there are such events
and the do affect our missions.
But
for the present discussion the key question is how they will affect our ship
with its ISM and IPM shielding. In terms of current observations, the SN1885A
remnant has a diameter of around 2.5 parsec and is 725 parsec away, traveling
at 11000 km/s, with absorption lines for hydrogen, potassium, calcium and iron,
with the average velocity of the original ejecta being around 13000 km/s.
These
ejecta travel faster than the speed of sound in the interplanetary and
interstellar media. They are ionified
and so have strong magnetic fields, and in the first few hundred years they
sweep up their own weight in circumstellar and interstellar matter, creating
not just a single shockwave as the ultrasonic mass invades the medium, but
additional shockwave as kinetic energy is transferred to new particles and
deionizes and accelerates them to ultrasonic velocities.
Because
these are shockwaves of charged particles, they do not even need to collide to
transfer this energy, but rather can be turned back by the magnetic fields, a
"magnetic mirror" effect. In the first order Fermi process, particles
get trapped between a faster main wave and a slower secondary shockwave,
bouncing back and forward and gaining energy each time they bounce off the
faster primarily shockwave (much like the energy gains in a slingshot effect).
This accelerates the particles to close to the speed of light, and only at very
high fractions of c can they break through the secondary wave - and they will
all have to do this by the time the faster primary wave catches up and merges
in. This was elaborated detail by Parker (1958) and analysed in further detail
by Wentzel (1962) so that this is also known as Fermi-Parker Wentzel diffusive
shock acceleration (DSA). DSA in Supernova shockwaves is seen as a primary
source and mechanism for cosmic rays. This stage can last for thousands of years.
In
the second order Fermi affect, the "magnetic mirrors" are the more
randomly moving "magnetic mirrors" in magnetized gas clouds of
interstellar material.
In
these processes, the initial taxonomic type and inceptive origins of supernova
become blurred as the remnants and their associated shockwaves develop their
own character (Reynolds, 2008). The DSA traps are very energetic sources in
their own right, ejecting highly energetic particles at close to c, with TeV
energies, and spawning the full gamut of secondary radiation as pairs of
shockwaves close and merge. The primary shockwave comes close to an
"effectively infinite-mass scatterer" (Reynolds, 2008, p97).
What
happens when a ship is caught in a DSA trap? Or is within an AU or two of the
merging shockwaves? There is no time for
the neutrons to decay, so we cannot ignore them.
If
we consider a wormhole between galaxies, then these shockwaves will necessarily
intersect it at multiple points, and at times our traversing ship can expect to
meet a DSA trap.
Bibliography
Chevalier,
R.A., and Platt, P.C. (1988), "On the nature of F. Andomedae (SN
1885A)",
Astrophys.
J. 331: L109
Fermi,
E. (1949), "On the origin of cosmic radiation", Phys. Rev. 75: 1169–
1174.
Fermi,
E. (1954), "Galactic magnetic fields and the origin of cosmic
radiation", Astrophys. J .119: 1–6.
Parker
E.N. (1958a) "Origin and Dynamics of Cosmic Rays". Phys Rev 109:1328–
1344,
DOI 10.1103/PhysRev.109.1328
Parker
E.N. (1958b) "Suprathermal Particle Generation in the Solar Corona".
Astrophys.
J. 128: 677, DOI 10.1086/146580
Parker
E.N. (1992) Fast dynamos, cosmic rays, and the Galactic magnetic field.
Astrophys.
J. 401: 137–145, DOI 10.1086/172046
Reynolds
S.P. (1998) "Models of Synchrotron X-Rays from Shell Supernova
Remnants". Astrophysics J. 493: 375–396, DOI 10.1086/305103
Reynolds,
S.P. (2008), "Supernova Remnants at High Energy", Ann. Rev. Astron.
Astrophys. 47: 79-126
Wentzel,
D.G. (1963), "Fermi acceleration of charged particles", Astrophys.
J., 137: 135–146.
Wentzel,
D.G. (1964), "Motion across magnetic discontinuities and Fermi
acceleration of charged particles", Astrophys. J., v. 140, No. 3,
1013–1024.
My Paradisi Lost stories
Encounters with wormholes and asteroids, exploited, benign and catastrophically dangerous feature in the Paradisi Chronicles stories, including my Casindra Lost subseries, which also feature genetic engineering, an emergent AI 'Al' and a captain who is reluctantly crewed with him on a rather long journey to another galaxy - just the two of them, and some cats... There's another AI, 'Alice' that emerges more gradually in the Moraturi arc. It is not space opera, stories that could be set anywhere, or space fantasy, stories that are more magic than science, but stories where the science drives the story, and engineering provides the solutions. The stories also aim to help us to think about our own planet, and to develop science and engineering that will conserve rather than destroy.
The Paradisi colonization aims to preserve the pristine ecosystems of New Eden, restrict mining to the other planets and asteroids of the system, and genetically modify people to suit the ecosystem rather than overwhelm it with introduced species: https://paradisichronicles.wordpress.com/
Casindra LostKindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B07ZB3VCW9 — tiny.cc/AmazonCLKindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 978-1696380911 justified Iowan OSKindle enlarged print edn ISBN-13: 978-1708810108 justified Times NR 16Kindle large print edition ISBN-13: 978-1708299453 ragged Trebuchet 18
Moraturi LostKindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B0834Z8PP8 – tiny.cc/AmazonMLKindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 978-1679850080 justified Iowan OS
Moraturi RingKindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B087PJY7G3 – tiny.cc/AmazonMRKindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 979-8640426106 justified Iowan OS
Encounters with wormholes and asteroids, exploited, benign and catastrophically dangerous feature in the Paradisi Chronicles stories, including my Casindra Lost subseries, which also feature genetic engineering, an emergent AI 'Al' and a captain who is reluctantly crewed with him on a rather long journey to another galaxy - just the two of them, and some cats... There's another AI, 'Alice' that emerges more gradually in the Moraturi arc. It is not space opera, stories that could be set anywhere, or space fantasy, stories that are more magic than science, but stories where the science drives the story, and engineering provides the solutions. The stories also aim to help us to think about our own planet, and to develop science and engineering that will conserve rather than destroy.
The Paradisi colonization aims to preserve the pristine ecosystems of New Eden, restrict mining to the other planets and asteroids of the system, and genetically modify people to suit the ecosystem rather than overwhelm it with introduced species: https://paradisichronicles.wordpress.com/
Casindra Lost
Kindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B07ZB3VCW9 — tiny.cc/AmazonCL
Kindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 978-1696380911 justified Iowan OS
Kindle enlarged print edn ISBN-13: 978-1708810108 justified Times NR 16
Kindle large print edition ISBN-13: 978-1708299453 ragged Trebuchet 18
Moraturi Lost
Kindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B0834Z8PP8 – tiny.cc/AmazonML
Kindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 978-1679850080 justified Iowan OS
Moraturi Ring
Kindle ebook (mobi) edition ASIN: B087PJY7G3 – tiny.cc/AmazonMR
Kindle paperback edition ISBN-13: 979-8640426106 justified Iowan OS
Author/Series pages and Awards
WorldCon2020 presentation (COVID-style):http://tiny.cc/CoNZHumanTalkyPPT (downloadable talky) & http://tiny.cc/CoNZHumanTalkyPPTNew York City Book Awards 2021 (Gold and Silver): Paradisi Chroncles Lost Mission page:
WorldCon2020 presentation (COVID-style):
http://tiny.cc/CoNZHumanTalkyPPT (downloadable talky) & http://tiny.cc/CoNZHumanTalkyPPT
New York City Book Awards 2021 (Gold and Silver):
Paradisi Chroncles Lost Mission page: