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  • [♪ INTRO]

  • A lot of our ideas about the future come from popular works of science fiction,

  • like how the Star Trek communicators of the 1960s became the cell phones of the '90s.

  • But go back to the 1800s and some of the most important stories about space travel

  • had nothing to do with rockets, like you'd think they should.

  • Instead, authors like Jules Verne and H. G. Wells

  • thought we'd get things into space withguns. Really big guns.

  • If you think about it, it makes a lot of sense.

  • Things need to go very fast to reach space, and bullets are very fast. So, voila!

  • Unfortunately... the physics don't really work that way.

  • But that definitely hasn't stopped us from trying to build space guns of our own.

  • Obviously, guns differ from rockets in a bunch of important ways.

  • They're an example of what's called ballistic flight, which means that, once a projectile's launched,

  • only external forces like gravity and drag can affect its trajectory.

  • Guns are an advanced form of creating ballistic flight, but the basic idea goes back to the days

  • of things like trebuchets and, you know, just, like, throwing rocks.

  • All of that is different than something like a rocket, which can be steered in flight.

  • What guns have going for them, though, is simplicity.

  • We've been using the same basic design for hundreds of years and,

  • by now, we understand pretty well how to build something efficient and reliable.

  • They're also pretty cheap, since you get to reuse the barrel and just replace the propellant,

  • like gunpowder, after each shot.

  • Still, guns do have some major downsides as a launch tool.

  • To get to space, you need to go really, really fast,

  • and the payload in a gun just gets one shove to get it going that quickly.

  • So the acceleration experienced is incredible.

  • We're talking about thousands of times more g forces,

  • or thousands of times the regular force of Earth's gravity, than when riding on a rocket.

  • Which is not great if you're an astronaut who suddenly doesn't have a skeleton.

  • Reaching those speeds so quickly also really heats things up,

  • meaning your payload needs to be basically fireproof.

  • The real kicker, though, is all the pesky physics.

  • At the end of the day, it's actually impossible to fire something from the surface

  • directly into orbit around the Earth.

  • See, you can think of an orbit like a closed loop around the planet.

  • If you fire a projectile from the surface, that loop is guaranteed to intersect the Earth,

  • meaning your projectile will crash into the ground.

  • Meanwhile, after a rocket launches, it fires its engines to creates a new loop,

  • and an orbit, that doesn't intersect with the surface.

  • Because they don't have a propulsion system of their own,

  • ballistic projectiles just can't do that.

  • Of course, none of this has actually stopped us from building enormous guns to try it out.

  • Because, pff, who needs science?

  • In the 1960s, Project Harp, or the High Altitude Research Program,

  • was our first attempt to reach space with a gun.

  • The U.S. military was racing to improve early intercontinental ballistic missiles,

  • and they needed a cost-effective way to test how designs reentered the atmosphere.

  • With Project HARP, they aimed to reuse the leftover barrels of battleship cannons

  • to launch payloads high into the sky.

  • These massive guns were eventually built in Arizona and Barbados,

  • and they were used to fire more than 200 payloads, each weighing about 180 kilograms.

  • At peak efficiency, a HARP gun launched one of these objects at more than 2100 meters per second,

  • fast enough to reach an altitude of about 180 kilometers.

  • That's about the same height as Alan Shepard's historic Mercury mission

  • and is definitely into space.

  • But that gun also had a heck of a kick.

  • The payload experienced around 25,000 g's at launch,

  • so its electronics had to be encased in solid plastic blocks to avoid breaking apart.

  • Unsurprisingly, it wasn't a sustainable idea,

  • but these guns did help us study the Earth's upper atmosphere, so it wasn't a complete waste.

  • Some tests released objects that left smoke trails and

  • that helped scientists track the movement of high-altitude air currents.

  • After that, the space gun idea was continued in California in the '80s

  • with Project SHARP, or Super HARP.

  • The regular HARP guns used gunpowder, but Project SHARP was a light gas gun,

  • meaning it propelled objects using hydrogen compressed by a piston.

  • Its goal was to launch small projectiles into space, for real this time,

  • but the projectiles only got about a quarter of the velocity they needed.

  • Still, that was good enough for them to plan the final version,

  • which would've had a barrel about 3.5 kilometers long.

  • Unfortunately, the planned gun cost more than a billion dollars and was never approved.

  • And, although some companies have tried to resurrect the idea over the years,

  • we never really got serious about trying again.

  • With enough money, determination, and propulsion systems,

  • maybe someday we could build a functioning space gun.

  • But all told, ballistic flight just hasn't proven to be an effective way to get to space,

  • and its opportunity might be gone forever.

  • The great promise of a space gun has always been that it launches things cheaply,

  • but with the advent of reusable rockets like SpaceX's Falcon 9, even that advantage is disappearing.

  • Modern rockets can carry more stuff, do more kinds of missions,

  • and offer a gentle ride to space, all without breaking the bank.

  • So space guns might be out. But hey, we'll never stop shooting for the stars.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • Over the years, people have thought up all kinds of wacky ways to get to outer space,

  • including space guns and even giant elevators.

  • And believe it or not, we've looked at the science behind that one, too.

  • You can learn all about space elevators, and whether they'd work,

  • over at the main SciShow channel.

  • [♪ OUTRO]

[♪ INTRO]

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宇宙銃は動作しません(しかし、我々はとにかく1つを構築しました (Space Guns Don't Work (But We Built One Anyway))

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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