Will interstellar travel be possible? At the current level of our technology, the answer is clearly no. Will it be possible in the future? It is always dangerous to make predictions: reality often strays from what was supposed to happen. But it doesn't look like interstellar travel is going to become feasible anytime soon. Of course, in the scientific literature, both serious and imaginative, various methods have been proposed, some of which we’ll review in this and future posts, by analyzing the relative probabilities of each one.
Many writers consider interstellar travel the next frontier of human spread, and the only guarantee to avoid our extinction, either accidental, if a cosmic catastrophe occurs, or caused by ourselves with a nuclear war. The problem is, a trip to the stars would be much more difficult than planet exploration in the solar system. Apart from the sun, the closest star to us is 4.27 light-years away, just over 40 trillion kilometers. With our current technique, speeds of the order of one million kilometers per day can be reached, so a trip to that star would last more than one hundred thousand years. Taking advantage of the gravitational pull of giant planets, like Jupiter, it would be possible to triple the speed, but even so we are talking about tens of thousand years.