Faster Than The Speed of Light Around The Corner?

fmdog44

Well-known Member
Location
Houston, Texas
For the science buffs of which I belong to...….this stuff makes me wish I could live a thousand years.

A concept for a faster-than-light drive that does not violate the laws of physics has been gaining momentum. Right now the idea of traveling to planets orbiting distant stars is something that we can only dream about - even a spacecraft moving at just under the speed of light would take four years to reach the next closest star and over two million years to reach the next nearest galaxy.
The problem is that the laws of physics would seem to prohibit the possibility of anything traveling faster than the speed of light, making long distance space journeys impractical. But what if there was a way to bypass this limitation?
Enter warp drive - a concept that, as it turns out, is not solely limited to the Star Trek franchise.
At this year's American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Propulsion and Energy Forum, undergraduate engineer Joseph Agnew put forward the notion that warp drive might actually be possible and that it can work without violating the laws of physics. His research was based on an existing concept known as Alcubierre Warp Drive which has been gaining some traction in recent years, even though it is purely theoretical at the moment. According to the theory, this real-world warp drive would work by stretching the fabric of space-time in a wave, contracting the space in front of the ship and expanding the space behind. A spacecraft riding this wave could effectively ride the 'warp bubble' and reach speeds far exceeding the speed of light. Because the ship is not actually moving through space-time (but is in fact moving space-time itself), it would not be subject to the negative effects of traveling at relativistic speeds.Interestingly, the recent discovery of gravitational waves has bolstered this concept because it confirms a prediction that Einstein made and proves that the basis for warp drive actually exists. "In the past 5-10 years or so, there has been a lot of excellent progress along the lines of predicting the anticipated effects of the drive, determining how one might bring it into existence, reinforcing fundamental assumptions and concepts, and, my personal favorite, ways to test the theory in a laboratory," said Agnew.
 

It would be a really cool looking space ship.

space-ship.jpg


Don
 

I'm sure that mankind will someday be able to travel to the distant stars....if human stupidity doesn't wipe out our species. Just think of the technology we take for granted today, and what someone from a couple hundred years ago would think if they were suddenly thrust into today's world. We can only imagine what life will be like in another couple of centuries...but it will certainly be a far different world than we know.
 
I don’t wanna be a spoilsport but I wish that we would solve some problems here on earth before we go traveling anywhere else, just my thoughts 😄
 
Thank you for explaining how the Alcubierre Warp Drive works. I've heard it referenced in a few science fiction novels but this is the first explanation of how it might work. I suspect it would require a fusion power source to provide enough energy. Hope it works out!
 
There’s so much to be taken care of here on planet earth before we spend that money somewhere else. I stand by what I said
But if private industry wants to do it fine with me.
 

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