▲ | BizarroLand a day ago | ||||||||||||||||
It's like the transatlantic internet cable. One really beefy interconnect is more than enough for two halves of the planet to talk. We wouldn't need to blanket the solar system in data centers to be able to communicate with other planets. We would only need enough connections so that no matter where in their respective orbits they are, there is a line of radio "sight" that is clear enough for high bandwidth communications to work. I don't have access to the specifics, but I imagine something between 5 and 10 satellite data centers orbiting the sun in between earth and mars would be enough to maintain communications with minimum delay regardless of when in the solar year the comms take place. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | macintux a day ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
At their maximum separation, Mars & Earth are about 20 minutes apart. If we had 10 satellite data centers all in perfect alignment (disregarding the sun, which obviously makes a hash out of things) they'd still each be 2 minutes apart. Once you take into consideration the sun, plus the fact that the you'd need to cover the full disk to keep all data centers within a few minutes of another one in an unbroken chain back to both planets, I just don't get the math involved here. But, I'm also terrible at both math and visualization, so I readily concede I may be missing something obvious. | |||||||||||||||||
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