Slingshot Dynamics for Self Replicating Probes and the Effect on Exploration Timescales
Arwen Nicholson, Duncan Forgan

TL;DR
This study investigates how self-replicating interstellar probes using slingshot maneuvers around stars can drastically reduce exploration timescales, supporting the idea that the galaxy could be explored within a timeframe relevant to the Fermi Paradox.
Contribution
It extends previous work by analyzing self-replicating probes with slingshot techniques, demonstrating significant reductions in exploration times compared to non-replicating probes.
Findings
Self-replicating probes reduce exploration time by up to three orders of magnitude.
Slingshot maneuvers around stars are highly effective for rapid exploration.
Simple decision algorithms can cause race conditions, increasing exploration times.
Abstract
Interstellar probes can carry out slingshot manoeuvres around the stars they visit, gaining a boost in velocity by extracting energy from the star's motion around the Galactic Centre. These maneouvres carry little to no extra energy cost, and in previous work it has been shown that a single Voyager-like probe exploring the galaxy does so 100 times faster when carrying out these slingshots than when navigating purely by powered flight (Forgan et al. 2012). We expand on these results by repeating the experiment with self-replicating probes. The probes explore a box of stars representative of the local Solar neighbourhood, to investigate how self-replication affects exploration timescales when compared with a single non-replicating probe. We explore three different scenarios of probe behaviour: i) standard powered flight to the nearest unvisited star (no slingshot techniques used), ii)…
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