Posted on 07/24/2013 11:36:33 AM PDT by GrandJediMasterYoda
NASA starts building faster-than-light warp engine Get short URL Published time: July 23, 2013 19:06 Edited time: July 24, 2013 14:39
Researchers at NASAs Texas-based Johnson Space Center are trying to prove that it is possible to travel faster than the speed of light, and hope to one day build an engine that resembles the fictional Starship Enterprise.
NASA physicist and engineer Dr. Harold G. White, 43, believes it is possible to bend the rules of time and space that Albert Einstein constructed when he postulated that it is impossible to exceed the speed of light.
White's research is based on the theories of Mexican physicist Miguel Alcubierre, who in 1994 theorized that exceeding Einsteins galactic speed limit was possible if scientists discovered a way to harness the expansion and contraction of space. And Harold and his team are trying to do just that.
(Excerpt) Read more at rt.com ...
Or building a computer with stone knives and a bear skin.
Darn HTML
Once again the star trek time line history has been tampered with. No mention of Zefram Cochran at all.
Agreed, they are attempting proof of concept. That’s a looooong way from building a practical device.
It's all theoretical. BUT.... I have been trying to follow some of the subatomic research that they have been doing. In layman's terms (which is all I can offer on this subject), scientists have been mystified by how certain subatomic particles can be in two places at once. Quantum Mechanics/physics are starting to suggest that there may be another set of laws for physics at the subatomic level, including faster than light speeds (it explains why certain particles can be observed in two places at once).
It's all nerdy stuff. But imagine a universe within the confines of an atom. Whoa! Now scale up that atom to the size of our solar system. Beam me up, Scotty.
We'll be long dead before these fun things come to pass. Either that, or we'll kill ourselves figuring it out. Either way, Weeeeeeeee! lol
The idea is that you won’t run into anything. By literally bending the fabric of space/time, you make a transfer point where your present location and desired destination are at the same point or close enough for practical travel.
Think of it as creating a “tunnel” between the Earth and Jupiter where we can walk into one end of the tunnel and walk out of the other end of the tunnel and be in the orbit of Jupiter. The length of that tunnel is technically finite.
It’s similar to 4 dimensional travel where you attach two points on a strip of paper and create a mobius.
“I had one of those—clipped its antenna to my metal headboard and picked up a lot of stations. “
Ha! I had one of those. Clipped it to my bed springs. Used to listen to Mad Daddy in Cleveland, until he aired a rather “dirty” rhyme.
‘”Hang Loose, Mother Goose, Your ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,juice.”
At that speed, it happened in the future, so nobody will ever know about it....
you assume we KNOW all the laws of physics
There may still be things to learn, like gravity wave propulsion (not prohibitted by Einstein’s equations)
-PJ
They don’t know what they are atalking about- that makes everythign ELSE they write about equally suspect
I've tried to imagine what it would be like to bring an 19th century inventor to present time. Put him in the passenger seat of my truck and go for a 75 MPH ride down the highway at night with the air conditioner blowing and the radio blasting music.
Now imagine what we might expect if we were moved 200 years into the future. We can't imagine what to expect, but we would at least expect to be surprised.
Well played. lol
I hope it doesn't hit the sun.
It's RT, folks. What did you expect? Reality?
Well, actually the idea is to not run into anything, the idea is to move space out of the way and and replace it with more distant space. Several theories say it can be done although only on subatomic scales.
Even Subatomic scales could be useful to communications and energy research, but I wouldn't look for any advances in this field for a few hundred years. The energy likely required would be rather huge.
It would be cool though to step into a machine and a second later be millions of miles away, just don't think it is going to happen for a long time, perhaps in a galaxy far far away.
Well, smart guys said the speed of sound was a physical barrier, too.
Obama to NASA: “ you didn’t build that”
Science is dumbfounded by gravity to this day. In other parts of the universe, current theories suggest gravity may behave differently. Of course, a lot of those theories are formed to patch holes in still other theories, usually on the way to figuring out where our universe came from.
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