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Chrysalis Generation Ship to Alpha Centauri
Do you like long voyages? Well, science fiction writers created the idea of the generation ship to describe a spacecraft able to travel in real space from star to star. And yes, it would take centuries - many generations.

(Chrysalis Generation Ship to Alpha Centauri)
Project Hyperion was established to encourage engineers to create plans for generation ships that met these conditions:
- Habitability for 1,000 ± 500 people over centuries
- Artificial gravity via rotation
- A society that ensures good living conditions, including essential provisions such as shelter, clothing, and other basic needs.
- Robust life support systems for food, water, waste, and the atmosphere
- Knowledge transfer mechanisms to retain culture and technologies
The project's contest was won by a group of engineers who designed the pictured ship, Chrysalis:
The craft, called Chrysalis, could make the 25 trillion mile (40 trillion kilometer) journey in around 400 years, the engineers say in their project brief, meaning many of its potential passengers would only know life on the craft.
Chrysalis is designed to house several generations of people until it enters the star system, where it could shuttle them to the surface of the planet Proxima Centuri b — an Earth-size exoplanet that is thought to be potentially habitable...
he vessel, which would measure 36 miles (58 km) in length, would be constructed like a Russian nesting doll, with several layers encompassing each other around a central core. The layers include communal spaces, farms, gardens, homes, warehouses and other shared facilities, each powered by nuclear fusion reactors.
(Via LiveScience.)
Science fiction writers and artists have also worked on the idea of Multi-Generation Space Vessels; consider this example from The Return of the Murians (1936) by Nat Schachner:
This was their world, their planet —
this swift-traveling, yet seemingly moveless vessel. They knew no other, knew
nothing of the wilder, freer life, except
for tales distorted by the mists of time
and many tellings, legends that smacked,
perchance, of wish fulfillments for that
earlier Golden Age of their ancestors.
Warlo, his tawny beard and high forehead granting him a nobility his slighter
frame could not, turned wearily back to
his instruments. On him devolved the
management of the space ship, the government of its thousand-odd inhabitants.
Their strangely remote ancestors had
builded well. The long ellipsoid of still
unrusted, still unpitted metal was almost
a mile from stem to stern, and half a
mile in diameter at its widest point. It
was a world in miniature, a closed cycle
in which nothing was wasted, nothing
dissipated.
The radiant walls still glowed as of
old, though somewhat dimmer, and furnished light and the stimulating rays
without which life cannot exist. One
half of the ship — toward the stern —
held earth and loam — in which strange
plants — succulent, nourishing — grew and
flourished. Stranger animals, small but
fat and tender, grew to maturity in
crystal-inclosed runs, bred their young,
and paid the eventual penalty for all
toothsome, subordinate forms of life.
By careful, exact measuring a delicate balance was established between
plant and animal, between carbon dioxide and oxygen, between warmth and
cold. A delicate balance, that called for
unceasing, unremitting attention on the
part of the leader and his corps of scientists ; a balance, that, once broken, would
lead to irremediable disaster.

(The landing 'The Return of the Murians' by Nat Schachner)
Robert H. Goddard was perhaps the first to write about multi-generational interstellar voyages in his 1918 essay "The Last Migration". He described the death of the Sun and the need for an interstellar ark. The crew would face the centuries of travel by sleeping and would be awakened when they reach another star system.
Take a look at the article for the first use of the sf phrase "generation ship" from Star Ship (1955), by E.C. Tubb, which has additional references.
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