Comment by paulluuk
12 hours ago
I think your astronomy skills are correct, but if we have to worry about actual travel then you would also have to consider things like fuel capacity, refuel opportunities, the fact that you probably don't want to actually fly through a star but around it, etc.
I think it's still valid to have a distinction between travel logistics and having a route that's at least theoretically possible. I suppose what they've calculated would work with a star gate like system, but then I'm not sure what the point of having minimal distance would be.
The bar problem has its own issues. With that many bars some may close or new ones may appear during the time of the walk.
Isn't the flying around problem just "e" since it is so many orders of magnitude less than the distance between stars that for this calculation it is irrelevant anyway?
At that point we should also factor in time relativity, making it hard to measure the actual location of the stars at all.