From: Larry Klaes (lklaes@bbn.com)
Date: Fri Nov 12 1999 - 17:14:54 MST
http://deseretnews.com:80/dn/view/1,1249,130006848,00.html?
'Rocket Boy' predicts fast voyages to the planets
By Joe Bauman
Deseret News staff writer
OGDEN — A new propulsion system using antimatter soon may open up the
solar system to much swifter exploration, the original "rocket boy" of
the movie "October Sky" says.
"I think the next time we go (to the moon) we're going to go with a
whole new manner of propulsion," Homer Hickam said Tuesday, speaking
before a rapt audience of hundreds of students and members of the public
at Weber State University's Val A. Browning Center.
"And these devices, which I call 'space drives,' are actually in the
works today in Huntsville, Ala."
Researchers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville are
working on a system using antimatter, he said. Antimatter is an exotic
form of matter that annihilates ordinary matter as soon as it
comes into contact with it, releasing tremendous amounts of energy.
"October Sky" was the movie version of Hickam's best-selling autobiographical
book, "Rocket Boys," about his struggle to obtain a higher education while
growing up in a hardscrabble West Virginia coal town.
He and his high school partners won university scholarships when their
extensive rocketry experiments led to first place in a national science
fair. Hickam became a NASA engineer, and before his retirement last year
he was payload training chief for the International Space Station.
"Huntsville got its first delivery of antimatter about six months ago,"
he said. Researchers there are encouraged about the possibilities of using
it to power a new type of space drive, he said.
"We're talking about engines 1,000 to 10,000 times more powerful than the
most powerful chemical rocket system that we've got today."
If the federal government properly funds the research, he added, "they
believe, and I believe too, that they could actually field one of these
space drives within a 10-year period. . . .
"We would basically be able to bump out to the Moon in a matter of hours,"
rather than take several days, as the Apollo astronauts did. A visit to
Mars might take 10 weeks each way, instead of the projected 10 months in
each direction.
During a Deseret News interview, Hickam described technical problems
that face the development of the space drive.
"The major technical hurdle, of course, is how to handle large quantities
of antimatter. It's extremely powerful stuff. And that's what they're working
on right now."
Electromagnetic fields would be used to contain the antimatter, and that
will require a great deal of energy, he said. Probably antimatter will be
used as an energy source to start a fusion reaction to power a spacecraft.
Other technical hurdles must be overcome, including developing new forms
of metallurgy. "I really think that we're up to it. So I think we could do
it in 10 years."
Would it require a research and development program on the scale of the
Apollo Moon landing project?
"No, I don't think so — I think a much smaller scale. Of course, we'd
be building smaller drives at first, primarily for robotic type missions."
According to Hickam, a project on the scale of the Apollo effort might be
needed to build a true starship using the space drives, and "we're a long
way from that."
In his Browning Center talk, he said the space drive could open the solar
system not just to exploration or scientific research but actually to
colonization. People could go there to work.
"I am, after all, a West Virginia boy, so I would personally like to see
the Moon mined," Hickam said.
The United States could use the new space drives, leading the way to
colonizing the solar system, he believes.
Ever since the end of the Cold War, the United States has been
"really . . . looking for something greater than itself," Hickam said.
As far as Hickam is concerned, that "ought to be going out and settling
the solar system and bringing to the United States and the world all that
it contains."
He recalled an incident that profoundly affected him during his youth
in West Virginia.
Hickam was in trouble for his rocket experiments. But then a preacher
comforted him, telling him that he had had a dream that men would go to
the Moon and that Hickam would be one of them.
When the minister awoke he went to the Bible. His eyes happened to fall
upon 2 Peter 3:13,
"Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new heavens and a new
Earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness."
It took Hickam a long time to understand what the preacher meant, he said.
Then he finally understood, "my life would be dedicating to fulfilling the
promise," which would be the opportunity of mankind to look for new heavens
and new Earths.
The solar system is filled with mineral wealth, but more importantly, it has
an inexhaustible supply of energy. He believes one of the most significant of
these supplies is the helium-3 that covers the Moon, the result of deposits
from the solar wind that continually blows from the Sun.
"Helium-3 is the perfect fuel for fusion reactors," he said. Hickam thinks
it is no coincidence that mankind is able to reach the Moon to mine it just
at a time when fusion reactors may become practical.
"The root problem there (in Third World countries) is the lack of cheap
and plentiful energy resources," Hickam added.
The United States can lead the way into space, harvesting energy and
other resources that can benefit the world, he believes.
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