Posted 26 September 2012 - 08:29 AM
I spent about 1 hr yesterday evening in front of an A3 printout, it's fascinating stuff. It's obviously outdated as it was compiled pre90's: the team didn't anticipate the kind of progress made on e.g. computing technology, nanotech and robotics. But it's still amazing.
In fact, "good" sci-fi literature touches on many of the issues raised here, and gives multiple interesting scenarious as to how such things could play out: between Peter F. Hamilton, Stephen Baxter, Reynolds, Iain Banks, Arthur C. Clarke, or Ian McDonald, you get loads of ideas, some of which are well based on hard science (at least in my laymen understanding, I'm no physicist or anything like that)..
XphR, in Revelation space, scacecraft of several km size travel decades between human outposts. The crew and passengers are frozen, pretty much the usual cryo-coffin stuff. Some crew opt to stay awake, manning ship systems, some with, some without artificial augmentation.
In terms of generation travel, a tech-only centred perspective risks to overlook social developments: after decades of travel, how will the in-ship society evolve? How can it be ensured that the crew maintains an understanding of mission objectives and procedures that doesn't diverge or actual put at risk the original plan?
Going a step further, S. Baxter goes as far as describing a development of a totally secluded human society which evolves away from our individualist society, into a more swarm-like type where roles and function actually translate into strong biological / physical differences (like queens, drones, solders etc.).
On one of the websites where I found the material, someone said that the plan is good and alright, but the implementation is the issue. Obviuosly we're a couple of decades behind. The US have drastically scaled back the space program, they don't even have proper orbital lift capacity at the moment (although that's temporary), The Russians have been set back by accidents lately. Europe has other issues for the time being. The only ones scaling up their space programme are the Chinese at the moment as it seems..
In any case, I don't see this changing any time soon. I'm afraid that the revival of a substantial move towards space will not come on a voluntary basis, but rather when we're forced to look beyond Earth either in search of resources, or when we've pushed our ecosystem too hard.
If only a fraction of the resources going into R&D of consumer products (or military, for that matter) would go into propulsion systems, we might be much farther with even creating a presence in Earth orbit, or on the moon nearby. But again, financing depends on whether there's a business case or not, and that again comes down to whether there's pressure or not...