Reactionless Space Drives Taken Seriously
bjn writes "The Observer ran an article on Sunday about reactionless space drives running on zero-point energy. The article was a bit light, but it seems that the concept is now being taken seriously enough that they are organising international conferences." Well, anyone can call a conference. This seems like some very long-range research going on - interesting, but don't expect anything tangible for quite some time.
...they talk about how they can potentially deal with inertia too, so wow, increasing entropy in the Universe through a new means AND reducing inertia, at the same time! I bet that Viacom, the parent company to Paramount, is looking forward to throwing their bloodthirsty lawyers at web sites discussing this, because they are using Star Trek(tm)(r)(c) terms on the pages without paying royalties...
"Titanic was 3hr and 17min long. They could have lost 3hr and 17min from that."
IBM had PL/1, with syntax worse than JOSS,
And everywhere the language went, it was a total loss...
According to the article itself, a scientist who is involved in the research that is currently taking place claims that it might be possible to have these propulsion methods in use for sattelite deployment and maintenance within five years, with other applications to follow soon. Five years is not such a long time; why is this technology very far away?
-- This sig is.
Because Puthoff and company are more than likely pseudoscientists and the technology they're so actively pimping is based on unrealisticly optomistic views of how much energy is available.
See this Scientific American article, from the December '97 issue.
Of course, I'd be very happy if I were wrong about this.... ;)
-- WhiskeyJack
...this is how the UFOs are supposed to work, right?
"How many light bulbs does it take to change a person?" --BMcC-->
set up two zero-point rockets welded nose to nose, turn em on and leter rip, and you've just created an eternal small star.
Play Command HQ online
That this entire subject/article is based off of misinformation and hype brought about by media types/marketing departments of engine building companies. The concept if even plausable is not an easy thing to do or control, and this sort of thing has been discussed in the past. Also many similar scientific discoveries/topics have followed the same plan, for example Fusion power was going to revolutionize our power systems throughout the country in the beginning of the 2nd half of last century; we are still waiting for an efficient stable fusion power plant. This is why movies 30 years ago have flying cars 30 years in the future...people like to dream. I just hope some respectable scientists are put to task on investigating this and the hype people go discuss dotcoms' failure in the marketplace or something else stupid.
"This is where god would go if he wanted to get off blow!"
Do you really think the existing energy companies will let this out? Its another promising technology headed for the back shelf of hidden wonders.
To the Moon!
http://www.beefjerky.com
Not to nitpick or anything :-P, but they called the quantum fluctuations the "zero-points". I always thought it was called zero point energy because the vacuum had a net E of 0, and you could extract the energy from the quantum fluctuations (thank you Heisenberg!).
Of course, there are some theories that say our entire universe is a quantum fluctuation that just got a wee bit out of hand...
General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
the problem with zero point energy is that using it at all or for two long is liable to fubar the universe....it's still finite
___ alwaysBETA.com - Hey, you've got nothing better to do.
I'm almost done reading Park's excellent new book Voodoo Science. I've learned a lot from it about the psychology of pseudoscience, and I've also learned that no branch of the U.S. federal government is really free of it. I'd assumed NASA was run by people with good scientific training, so if they were studying a certain topic, it must not be 100% nonsense. Not true, as it turns out. In the book, Park documents how NASA panders to the politicians by betraying science. (It's also nice to see a cogent and knowledgeable presentation of the case against human space flight and the ISS.)
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I guess it's bad form to reply to myself, but some of the stuff in Park's book also got me thinking about how this is obviously complete garbage. The original "propellantless" drive idea was based on a discredited antigravity device, and that approach, as Park points out, is voodoo science because it violates conservation of energy. The new version would seem to sidestep the energy-conservation issue, since presumably you're leaving the vacuum in a lower-energy state after you're done (no evidence such a state exists, of course), but it has a problem with conservation of momentum. The antigrav version would presumably have involved a momentum exchange with the Earth, but this one is supposed to work in a vacuum. So it violates conservation of momentum unless you believe the sub-normal-energy vacuum state also has nonzero momentum!
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