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Authors: David Brin,Greg Bear,Joe Haldeman,Hugh Howey,Ben Bova,Robert Sawyer,Kevin J. Anderson,Ray Kurzweil,Martin Rees

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Visions of the Future (82 page)

BOOK: Visions of the Future
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Type 0:

  • Chemical rockets
  • Ionic engines
  • Fission power
  • EM propulsion (rail guns)

 

Type I:

  • Ram-jet fusion engines
  • Photonic drive

 

Type II:

  • Antimatter drive
  • Von Neumann nano probes

 

Type III:

  • Planck energy propulsion

 

Space advocates have realized that there are almost unlimited amounts of energy available in outer space. That is why it is so important to reach the “Energularity” and become a Type I civilization that can then explore and colonize the universe, beginning with our own solar system and galaxy. Aerospace engineer Robert Zubrin emphasized that:

Adopting Kardashev’s scheme in slightly altered form, I define a Type I civilization as one that has achieved full mastery of all of its planet’s resources. A Type II civilization is one that has mastered its solar system, while a Type III civilization would be one that has access to the full potential of its galaxy. The trek out of Africa was humanity’s key step in setting itself on the path toward achieving a mature Type I status that the human race now approaches.

The challenge today is to move on to Type II. Indeed, the establishment of a true spacefaring civilization represents a change in human status as fully profound—both as formidable and as pregnant with promise—as humanity’s move from the Rift Valley to its current global society.

Space today seems as inhospitable and as worthless as the wintry wastes of the north might have appeared to an average resident of East Africa 50,000 years ago. But yet, like the north, it is the frontier whose possibilities and challenges will allow and drive human society to make its next great positive transformation.

Other authors have considered even higher types of civilizations than the three originally defined by Kardashev. For example, a Type IV civilization could have control of the energy output of a galactic supercluster (approximately 10
42
W in our case) and a Type V civilization could control the energy of the entire universe. Such an advanced civilization would approach or surpass the limits of speculation based on our current scientific understanding, and it may not be possible. Finally, some science fiction authors have written about a Type VI civilization that could control the energy over multiple universes (a power level which could technically be infinite) and also about a Type VII civilization that could have the hypothetical status of a deity (able to create universes at will, using them as an energy source).

 

Beyond the “Energularity”

 

Every time you look up at the sky, every one of those points of light is a reminder that fusion power is extractable from hydrogen and other light elements, and it is an everyday reality throughout the Milky Way Galaxy.

—Carl Sagan, 1991

 

The “Energularity” and Kardashev’s civilization types are originally defined according to the total energy available to a planet. Indeed, our Sun continuously delivers to Earth over 10,000 times the power consumed by humanity today: 174 PW (1.74 × 10
17
W) from our Sun versus 16 TW (1.6 × 10
13
W) used currently by all humans alive now. Indeed, solar energy is by far the largest external source of energy available to our civilization. However, beyond solar energy, we still have plenty of energy sources available on our planet to move us towards the “Energularity.”

Table 3 shows the different energy contents (specific energy measured in terms of Mega Joules per kilogram, MJ/kg) available in several different materials. Hydropower was one of the first extrasomatic energy sources used by humans, but its energy content is very low: only 0.001 MJ/kg for water stored at a height of 100 meters. Bagasse, animal dung, manure and wood fuels were relatively much better, ranging from 10 to 16 MJ/kg. Humanity then moved to coal, whose energy content goes from about 22 to 30 MJ/kg, depending on the type and quality of coal. Now hydrocarbon fuels are the main energy source, with 22 to 55 MJ/kg from methanol to methane, for example. Additionally, since the middle of the 20
th
century, several countries have also started using nuclear fission, and some fast breeder reactors produce 86,000,000 MJ/kg with uranium.

 

Table 3: Approximate Energy Content of Different Materials. Source: Based on Cordeiro (2011)

Fuel type

Energy content (MJ/kg)

Pumped stored water at 100 m dam height (hydropower)

0.001

Battery, lead acid

0.14

Battery, lithium-ion

0.7

Battery, lithium-ion nanowire

2.5

Bagasse (cane stalks)

10

Animal dung, manure

12–14

Wood fuel (C
6
H
10
O
5
)
n

14–16

Sugar (C
6
H
12
O
6
, glucose)

16

Methanol (CH
3
-OH)

22

Coal (anthracite, lignite, etc.)

22–30

Ethanol (CH
3
-CH
2
-OH)

30

LPG (liquefied petroleum gas)

32–34

Butanol (CH
3
-(CH
2
)
3
-OH)

36

Biodiesel

38

Olive oil (C
18
H
34
O
2
)

40

Crude oil (medium petroleum averages)

42–44

Gasoline

46

Diesel

48

Methane (CH
4
, gaseous fuel, compression dependent)

55

Hydrogen (H
2
, gaseous fuel, compression dependent)

140

Nuclear isomers (Ta-180m isomer)

41,340

Nuclear isomers (Hf-178m2 isomer)

1,326,000

Nuclear fission (natural uranium in fast breeder reactor)

86,000,000

Nuclear fusion (Hydrogen, H)

300,000,000

Binding energy of helium (He)

675,000,000

Mass-energy equivalence (Einstein’s equation E = mc
2
)

89,880,000,000

Annihilation of matter and antimatter

180,000,000,000

 

Humanity has continuously increased its energy sources throughout history, starting from different types of biomass and hydropower in the distant past, to coal and hydrocarbons constituting the largest energy sources today. Nonetheless, nuclear energy, first fission and later fusion, will probably become the major energy sources in the near future, while we keep moving towards the “Energularity” and finally become a Type I civilization.

According to Kardashev, our civilization is still at Type 0 status, but we might reach Type I in the next century. Indeed, we have advanced exponentially in our energy uses from harnessing fire about half a million years ago to developing sustainable nuclear fusion in the coming decades. Eventually, we should be able to harness the full energy content of matter and convert matter directly into energy, according to Einstein’s equation, and even annihilate matter and antimatter to produce more energy. To have an idea of the incredible energy potential represented just by our planet, the Earth has an estimated mass of 5.98 × 10
24
kg, which represents a theoretical energy content of 5.37 × 10
41
J. Therefore, just our oceans have enough water to power humanity beyond Type I status over very long geological time scales. Additionally, in the case of our Sun, its mass is estimated to be 1.99 × 10
30
kg, which is theoretically equivalent to 1.79 × 10
47
J. Those numbers are really enormous and they represent more than enough energy for billions and billions of years.

Considering the visible and known universe, its total mass-energy is currently estimated at about 4 × 10
69
J. In a few words, there is certainly no lack of mass-energy in the universe. Moreover, ordinary matter is now considered to be only about 4% of the total matter-energy density in the observable universe, which also includes 22% dark matter and 74% dark energy as well. Since matter and energy can not be destroyed but only converted from one type to another, as scientists believe, there are almost unlimited amounts of energy for our civilization to keep expanding throughout the universe after reaching the “Energularity.”

The Earth, the Sun, the Milky Way galaxy and the visible universe have more than enough energy to power our civilization for the following decades, centuries, millennia, and even billions of years into the future. It is thus possible to convert the immense energy supplies available in the universe into usable power, but it will certainly take massive investments and lots of imagination, creativity, science, and technology. Our civilization is still in its infancy, and barring any wild cards, geopolitical crises, nuclear wars, bio disasters, nano grey goo, environmental disasters, or extraterrestrial contacts, science and technology will keep uncovering the contours of the universe. As Russian rocket scientist Konstantin Eduardovich Tsiolkovsky, one of the “founding fathers” of astronautics, said about a century ago:

 

The Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one cannot stay in the cradle forever.

Планета есть колыбель разума, но нельзя вечно жить в колыбели.

 

 

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