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Why Is It So Difficult To Fire Your Enemies Into The Sun?

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

Sending Enemies to the Sun: It’s Elaborate, ⁣Says Science

WASHINGTON D.C. – The ​seemingly straightforward act of launching a villain into the sun is surprisingly tough, ⁢requiring complex orbital ⁣mechanics and, counterintuitively, potentially less fuel⁢ to eject them⁢ from the solar system entirely. Despite the dramatic imagery, a direct “blast and point”‌ mission faces notable hurdles due to the‌ immense distances and velocities involved.

To reach ⁤the sun, a spacecraft – or unwanted passenger – ‌can’t simply be fired ⁣directly at it. Rather, missions rely on “gravity assists,” utilizing ​the gravitational pull of planets to alter ⁢velocity. As explained in a video from the Johns Hopkins ⁢Applied Physics Laboratory,spacecraft can “leverage ‍the gravity of other planets to speed⁣ up,like a slingshot,or to slow⁤ down,like tapping the brakes.”

This technique⁢ alters a spacecraft’s heliocentric speed by ⁢rotating its flyby velocity. ⁤The Parker ‍Solar Probe,⁢ for example, ‍slows down as it​ flies in front of Venus, leaving some of its ​momentum with the planet and ⁤altering its orbit, sometimes by millions of miles, bringing it closer to the sun.

NASA‌ noted that Parker ⁢Solar Probe‍ will perform seven Venus gravity ⁢assists over its seven-year mission to draw its orbit closer to the sun, achieving a record approach of‍ just 3.83 million miles ⁣from the sun’s visible surface.

Interestingly,a journey to incinerate someone in the sun,at a distance⁣ of 93 million miles,would‌ take approximately 10 weeks. However, calculations⁤ show it would actually require less fuel to launch an enemy out of ‌the solar‍ system than to burn them up in the sun. The​ edge‌ of our solar system is marked by a 30,000-50,000 Kelvin wall, as ‍discovered by NASA’s Voyager spacecraft.

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