I don't think we can just go near speed of light. Even hard vacuum out there contains particles. Heliosphere is chock full of them, then Oort cloud has stuff way bigger than that (or any probe), even if sparsely spread out. Then there is cosmic stuff outside, as Voyager found out.
Getting hit by some random molecule when orbiting Earth or just travelling say 30,000 kmh is one thing. Getting hit by swarms of molecules with say 0.5c can be catastrophic to the material. Now imagine wading through some space dust cloud, or even plasma cloud (ie remnant of some bygone supernova).
Star trek had shields, and for good reasons. Super strong magnetic field may divert some charged particle, but helium molecule is just a helium molecule, no extra charge to play with.
Getting hit by some random molecule when orbiting Earth or just travelling say 30,000 kmh is one thing. Getting hit by swarms of molecules with say 0.5c can be catastrophic to the material. Now imagine wading through some space dust cloud, or even plasma cloud (ie remnant of some bygone supernova).
Star trek had shields, and for good reasons. Super strong magnetic field may divert some charged particle, but helium molecule is just a helium molecule, no extra charge to play with.