*some numbers*
Potential energy in space is an interesting topic, trust me on one thing though, its never going to be a case of just "dropping" something directly "down". there will always be orbits involved, if your in a stable orbit, it doesn't slowly decay and crash into the sun at a rate of less than billions of years. Remember the object is going sideways fast enough so that by the time it "falls", its already gone to the side and is still the same (for circular orbits) position. If you want to get something back to earth, you need to give it a big enough of a shove so that its going slow enough to be en an elliptical orbit around the
sun* that has its closest point at the distance of the earth (and at the same time the earth goes past, etc), doable for Nasa's probes, yes, because they could launch when they liked so that the planets were in position. for trying to crash into a planet as soon as possible? harder. Not to mention, that if your coming in from Neptune, the fastest you could really expect is a year or so's transfer, IIRC.
All I know is potential energy is not explosive force. Sure, gravity will eventually pull an object from Neptune's orbit to Earth's orbit. It would take millions of years due the incredibly low acceleration. Nobody's doubting the physics, we're (or at least I'm) just saying that's it's silly to attribute the danger of a missile between planetary orbits to solar gravity. A good shove would impart more energy in the same time, so just stick an engine on it and forget all that gobbledygook about gravity.
No, gravity won't eventually pull an object from neptunes orbit to earths orbit (well, if you simplify things). Neptune is still there afterall. To send something across, like i said, you need to slow your orbit enough so that you drop out of it, so to speak (yeah, the drop word
). Unfortunatly, however, your always going to have to not forget about gravity, everything in space always wants to be in an orbit. you'll never have though burn time for propultion of things like rockets, and for things like ion drives their propultion is so low, that you will always have to worry about orbits in your space crafts.
To everyone on here, i would reccomend taking a good orbital dynamics course, it really is quite interesting.
*well, its worth noting that the orbit only has to cross the path of the planet. if you, for instance, slowed your netpune distance orbit right down to it really was "stopped" and let it drop straight down, it would require a much, much greater change in velocity at the top, but a faster transfer time, but smaller boom at the end.