AlienBastard said
I think you overuse the word impossible dude.I mean, you assume that smashing everything in genocide is the only effective means to wage interstellar war. Why? I could counter that by simply saying that you can send out a counter RKV and blow up such easy to detect [since serious, that RKV going to flare] death weapon. I've also seen people who said RKVs are impossible since they'd move too fast and the costs for making a RKV would be comparable to that of making a interstellar colony craft. I think interstellar genocide would be hard to achieve against another interstellar civ since they'd intercept them.
No I don't. Also note I have said VIRTUALLY impossible.
Instead setting up a base and building more invading spaceships in the outer regions of ther system could prove a more effective means of subjugation instead of sending a few big rocks and hoping for the best.RKVs are to me only good for strangling civs in the crib.
No it couldn't. It's completely nonviable unless your civilisation ALREADY has a vast superiority over the enemy.
And the trade/interstellar society stuff all assumes that the current pace of time we have will be the same pace for humans in the future. Perhaps humans, in order to counter the issue of long times to travel between stars simply start perceiving time in a way that makes a 45 year time only a week or two?
To even suggest that requires no longer discussing hard scifi. You're SERIOUSLY proposing that people perceive a 45 year trip as only a week or two.
And are you sure innovation is a constant that may not level off? technologically historically has been booms and busts, why would it be any different in the longer term future?
Since 1900 humanity's advancements in technology has been a constant and VAST increase with spurts of even greater development that co-incide with conflict. To imply that an enemy who has forty years minimum advance warning your coming won't be advancing and spending big on its military is pure wishful thinking.
And besides, trade doesn't just have to be tech. Culture, biological resources [which would by the way, be quite rare in a cold, dark cynical hard sci-fi setting] and simply people who want to go somewhere else would all be involved in some form of interstellar trade.
No, it wouldn't. There would be no benefit in it of ANY sort. Culture trade is an absolute joke and isn't even really valid on one planet, just look at all the people who move from one country to another and instead of adopting the customs of their new country, just build little microcosms of their old culture.
A polity capable of interstellar colonisation wouldn't NEED to transport biological resources. They'd have transported everything required for a self-sustaining colony with the initial effort.
And people who "want to go somewhere else" is even more of a joke. Governments would not maintain multi-trillion dollar craft to transport a few idiots to somewhere half a century away.
The only possible realistic trade would likely be purely digital transmissions. And even then it'd require stupidly powerful communications technolgies to make it work.
I mean, just look at the example above, those lovely 50 year trips are assuming you're capable of building ships capable of .2c (without even taking into consideration being annihilated by a micrometeorite that crosses your path. If we take it down to a known rough capability, say.
Max 2'000km/s with an acceleration of 1g (Roughly 0.006%c) (Still an exceptionally generous figure)
Max Speed: 0.006c
Acceleration: 1 G
Distance: 10ly
Time spent Accelerating: 2.12 days
Distance Travelled while Accelerating: 0 ly
Time "coasting" at Max Speed: 1667.8 years
Shipboard Time: 1666.67 years
Observed Time: 1666.7 years
Deviation: 0%
So, without magical acceleration and speeds you'd spend over one and a half thousand years travelling to a star 10 years away.
Make it 12'000 km/s and
Max Speed: 0.04c
Acceleration: 1 G
Distance: 10ly
Time spent Accelerating: 14.15 days
Distance Travelled while Accelerating: 0.001 ly
Time "coasting" at Max Speed: 250.13 years
Shipboard Time: 250.04 years
Observed Time: 250.24 years
Deviation: 0.1%
You've still got 250 years to cross that 10 lightyear gap.
Not only do those low figures rule out trade UTTERLY, but that make the concept of war between two such powers BEYOND ludicrous.
Impractical, perhaps, but can we assume that practicality will even matter to humans of the far future, seeing that the only factor is really time to make things and transport with all those raw resources from asteroids?A interstellar empire I dunno about, but I could imagine a spaceship chain connected to a neighboring star system being subjugated. Yet with so many interstellar space craft required for a subjugation chain I don't think interstellar empires would be that big, like a couple dozen star systems at most.
Yes practicality will even matter, seeing that yes the only factor is time, but when it would take half your life to get somewhere nobody except the most desperate are going to bother. And interstellar empire is simply not feasible or possible in a 100% Hard Science fiction environment, 100% Hard Scifi is boring.
Of course, I may be absolutely wrong. And as for the ramming, whatever man I think my theories on it are valid enough and what stops the smaller craft form being built in a similar way to a missile? Most a spaceship is not the crew as is.
Then you would just make it an RKKV.