Interstellar travel concerns the possibility of sending spacecraft to other stars, a challenge dominated by staggering distances: Proxima Centauri lies over 4.2 light-years, or about 268,000 astronomical units, away. With present-day speeds, a probe would take tens of thousands of years to arrive. Achieving journeys in decades or centuries demands velocities that are a significant fraction of light speed, which in turn require colossal energy, precise shielding against interstellar dust, and solutions to intense radiation, weightlessness, and psychological strain for any crew.
The article examines the basic physics—kinetic energy rising with the square of velocity, the rocket equation, and relativistic time dilation that can shorten trips from a traveler’s perspective while millennia pass on Earth. It details challenges posed by the interstellar medium and outlines human factors problems for generation ships, sleeper ships, or missions relying on frozen embryos or “island hopping” among icy bodies.
A large portion surveys propulsion ideas: advanced fission and fusion rockets, nuclear pulse drives, antimatter rockets, and non-rocket concepts like Bussard ramjets and beamed laser sails. More exotic notions include artificial black hole engines, mind transmission via light, RF cavity thrusters, and faster-than-light concepts such as Alcubierre warp drives and wormholes, all requiring speculative physics like exotic matter. Real-world studies—Project Orion, Daedalus, Longshot, Dragonfly, Breakthrough Starshot, and the 100 Year Starship—illustrate serious attempts to scope requirements. Despite emerging discoveries of nearby potentially habitable exoplanets, experts highlight immense energy costs, engineering unknowns, and sociopolitical hurdles, leaving interstellar travel an audacious but distant prospect.