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Quantum Setback For Warp Drives

KentuckyFC writes "Warp drives were generally considered impossible by mainstream scientists until 1994 when the physicist Michael Alcubierre worked out how to build a faster-than-light drive using the principles of general relativity. His thinking was that while relativity prevents faster-than-light travel relative to the fabric of spacetime, it places no restriction on the speed at which regions of spacetime may move relative to each other. So a small bubble of spacetime containing a spacecraft could travel faster than the speed of light, at least in principle. But one unanswered question was what happens to the bubble when quantum mechanics is taken into account. Now, a team of physicists have worked it out, and it's bad news: the bubble becomes unstable at superluminal speeds, making warp drives impossible (probably)."

627 comments

  1. Hiesenberg says.... by MeNotU · · Score: 5, Funny

    Or is it *both* Impossible and not Impossible?

    1. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by ByOhTek · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's the only statement you could come up with?

      What a Bohr.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Don't Asimov about it bro. Sometimes you just gotta Kepler.

    3. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by thrillseeker · · Score: 2, Funny

      oh, that's the cat's meow

    4. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 4, Funny

      I always just have Mr. Scott handle the warp drive. He does the impossible instantly, miracles take longer. When Spock lends a hand, hours can seem like days...

    5. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by discord5 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Or is it *both* Impossible and not Impossible?

      Only when you're not observing and you don't hear it meowing

    6. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by maxume · · Score: 1

      Are you BLIND?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    7. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by rilles · · Score: 1

      What about trans-warp drives?

    8. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Brian+Edwards · · Score: 2, Funny

      "So many of our dreams at first seem impossible, then they seem improbable, and then, when we summon the will, they soon become inevitable." - Christopher Reeve

    9. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by RMingin · · Score: 5, Funny

      Perhaps it's only Infinitely Improbable?

      --
      The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
    10. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Mr.+Bad+Example · · Score: 3, Funny

      > Or is it *both* Impossible and not Impossible?

      Well, yes and no...

    11. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by kinnell · · Score: 1

      It's neither possible nor impossible until someone observes it. If it's impossible nobody can observe it in any case. It follows that the only case in which there is uncertainty is if it's possible. Because we are uncertain, it must therefore be possible. But if that is the case, there is no uncertainty. We can therefore conclude that the only thing we can be certain about is that we are uncertain.

      --
      If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
    12. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      "So many of our dreams at first seem impossible, then they seem improbable, and then, when we summon the will, they soon become inevitable."
          - Christopher Reeve

      ...then you fall from a horse and reality hits you like a freight train.

    13. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by enemi · · Score: 1

      possimpable?

    14. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by RichardJenkins · · Score: 5, Funny

      If I were you I'd stop poking about with things we don't understand. After all, it was curiosity that did and didn't kill the cat. ...

      I'll get my coat.

    15. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by bytethese · · Score: 5, Funny

      Warp drives that wear dresses and makeup?

    16. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 4, Funny
      But exactly how improbable is it?

      Frankly, I never get invited to any of those parties, either.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    17. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by mrops · · Score: 3, Funny

      You guys talk as if you haven't heard of the Heisenberg Compensator.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transporter_(Star_Trek) states, "Heisenberg compensator remove uncertainty from the subatomic measurements, making transporter travel feasible."

      Its clear this is a dual use technology used both for Warp drives and transporters.

    18. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Your logic is faulty: merely being uncertain of something does not make it possible. States can be uncertain until observed, but there are plenty of states that cannot be entered into irrespective of observation.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    19. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by gsgriffin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're still thinking binary. In Quantum, there are lots of possibilities in between possible and impossible. Only the extremes of which are possible and impossible.

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    20. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Fourier information, I thought it was pretty funny.

    21. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by phrostie · · Score: 1

      So if we close our eyes when we flip the switch it all still works?

      AWESOME!!

    22. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by jank1887 · · Score: 1

      first, you must have both tea and no tea...

    23. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Funny

      I always just have Mr. Scott handle the warp drive. He does the impossible instantly, miracles take longer. When Spock lends a hand, hours can seem like days...

      And sometimes Spock gets radiation poisoning and indirectly gets Kirk's son murdered. All in all, much better to let Mr. Scott handle things ;)

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    24. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      show me an example of an impossible state and I'll show you a state that just hasn't been observed.

      yet...

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    25. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      And, in the case of impossible states, that yet will hold for the life of the universe.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    26. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by nomorecwrd · · Score: 5, Informative

      I think he said this words were _after_ his accident.
      He was slowly recovering, something that seemed impossible at the beginning.

    27. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Or is it *both* Impossible and not Impossible?

      Man, even I, a liberal arts major, know that Heisenberg studied dead cats, not space travel!

    28. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by tcolberg · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sometimes Scotty the God of Engineers demands SACRIFICE!

    29. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by discord5 · · Score: 3, Funny

      So if we close our eyes when we flip the switch it all still works?

      Well, maybe. Technically because you haven't seen it or work or not work it's both working and not-working at the same time. So, the trick is to keep your eyes closed at all times, and you'll be able to visit strange new worlds, boldly going where no man has gone before. When you open your eyes, you'll find yourself doing that, or simply daydreaming at the office instead of writing that documentation you promised so long ago.

      I imagine that a more feasible technique would be applying buttered toast to a cats back and harnessing the power from that to travel the stars. Sadly, my experiments in that area have all resulted in failure, often with the cat scratching me. I have to admit that my neighbours refer to me as "that weirdo from nextdoors" ever since they saw me and I yelled in an ominous voice: "Stand back, I'm doing SCIENCE!" while holding a cat and a piece of buttered toast.

    30. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by inerlogic · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      screw him....
      i was 7 years old at the supermarket (no less) with my mom.... and saw superman waiting in line at the supermarket (it was confusing because he didn't have the cape and tights... but he wasn't wearing glasses....) and i asked him for an autograph and the bastard was all "sorry kid, i don't have the time"

      after the accident i felt like writing him a letter, "bet you wish you could sign an autograph now ya bastard -signed supermarket kid you turned down 25 years ago"

      but i figured that'd be a one way trip to hell... so i fought the urge.....

      he was still an ass though....

    31. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      absence of proof is not proof of absence.

    32. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      Heisenberg eh?

      thought that was Schroedinger....

    33. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      Ok, I have no idea what those names are supposed to be puns for.

    34. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by interkin3tic · · Score: 2, Funny

      Heisenberg eh?

      thought that was Schroedinger....

      (/liberalartsmajor)

      Yes, and he didn't actually study dead cats.

      (liberalartsmajor)

      Is this going to be on the final? Man am I hung over!

    35. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 3, Funny

      Curiosity didn't kill the cat. It was Ignorance that killed the cat, and framed curiosity.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    36. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by supernova_hq · · Score: 1

      "Stand back, I'm going to try SCIENCE!" while holding a cat and a piece of buttered toast.

      There, fixed that for you!

    37. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Asimov fits with "worry" pretty well

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    38. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by discord5 · · Score: 1

      "Stand back, I'm going to try SCIENCE!" while holding a cat and a piece of buttered toast.

      There, fixed that for you!

      That certainly explains their reaction.

    39. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Warp drives that wear dresses and makeup?

      Considering Scotty referred to the Enterprise as "she", wouldn't wearing dresses and makeup be normal? ;)

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    40. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by waldo2020 · · Score: 1

      try Heisenberg, dumkopf!

    41. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't he die soon after that?

    42. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by bytethese · · Score: 1

      That's the ship, not the warp drive. :)

    43. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by IvoryRing · · Score: 1

      Not at all... it is the collapse of ignorance that either did or did not kill the cat!

    44. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by eleuthero · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yet, reality hit him in the end, because I seem to recall he died as a result of sickness that would not have been dangerous had he never been in the accident. More important than the above tongue twister, his quotes were often planned in order to promote what he viewed as the most successful way to regain his ability to walk--thus, he may not have believed the ultimate truth of them, but he did feel that they would effect a means towards his desired end. Strangely enough, his focus on removing bans on certain technology may have kept him from noticing significant strides in other areas.

    45. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      yup, just theoretical maybe/maybe not dead cats....

      and he was a moron anyway....

      EVERYONE knows that if you lock a cat in a box, it's going to meow... especially if there's no food in the box... so you'll know the cat is alive....

    46. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by servognome · · Score: 1

      Depends on which universe

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    47. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Like Delaware. It's not really there. When you see that sign that says "now entering Delaware", turn around as you pass it. It say the same thing on the other side.

    48. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to interject this but 'Fourier' is pronounced 'Four-yay', not 'For-yer'.

      This may or may not help anyone to point out, but isn't offered up as a snarky word-police comment.

    49. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by aqk · · Score: 0

      Schroedinger called. He wants his cat back.
      It should never have been locked in that hard drive. That's what is causing the screech, not a head crash.

      Seriously, wtf is this? OK, I didn't rtfa, but is this something that happens to be 2 days late?

    50. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by JRIsidore · · Score: 1

      Interesting, this might explain why Picard always orders a cup of hot Earl Grey...

      --
      :w!q
    51. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he said this words were _after_ his accident. He was slowly recovering, something that seemed impossible at the beginning.

      And how did that work out for him?

    52. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Mt._Honkey · · Score: 1

      You're still thinking binary. In Quantum, there are lots of possibilities in between possible and impossible. Only the extremes of which are possible and impossible.

      This gets modded "insightful"? No, things are either possible or impossible, even "In Quantum", whatever that means. People who don't know physics shouldn't post declarations about it.

      --

      Don't Bogart the fish sticks
    53. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by gsgriffin · · Score: 1

      I was actually shooting for funny, not insightful. As you know, Quantum physics, especially as it relates to computers and electronics (ie. /.), is about making use of not just the on/off but all of the variation inbetween. It is difficult for most to think about let alone try to develop in. That is why my statement is somewhat humorous (and perhaps a little insightful).

      --
      jsut athnoer menagiensls ltitle psrhae for you to dcoede. Why do we wtsae our tmie dnoig tihs?
    54. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by scottrocket · · Score: 1

      Or use the Quantum Zeno effect, & just have a bunch of redshirts stare at the engines.

    55. Re:Hiesenberg says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have and haven't written the documentation!

  2. improbability drive by phrostie · · Score: 4, Funny

    is this where the improbability drive comes in?

    yeah, someone had to say it.

    1. Re:improbability drive by Lord_Frederick · · Score: 5, Funny

      Will that allow ludicrous speed?

    2. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We've gone plaid.

    3. Re:improbability drive by aliquis · · Score: 1

      With an improbability of 27591:1 it will.

      I assume it can take you anywhere in space at a reasonable time at a varying improbability.

    4. Re:improbability drive by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Hi, Stats-nazi here. Probabilities are represented as a real number between 0 (nigh impossible) to 1 (almost certainty).

      Probability = 0.00003624

      kthxbai!

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    5. Re:improbability drive by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      or the FTL.

    6. Re:improbability drive by tuxgeek · · Score: 3, Funny

      Q: "is this where the improbability drive comes in?"
      A: 42

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    7. Re:improbability drive by TheCycoONE · · Score: 1

      But... the question and the answer can't both exist in the same universe. It would be unstable.

    8. Re:improbability drive by francium+de+neobie · · Score: 4, Funny

      Opening a small bistro in your spaceship will allow it to go beyond light speed without turning you into a sofa.

    9. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      1 is only "almost" certainly? And 0 is "nigh" impossible? What values then for absolute certainly and definitely impossible?

    10. Re:improbability drive by JamesP · · Score: 2, Funny

      No, no, the Bistromatic drive is much better...

      Even though now it's been replaced with the CDS drive, so you can have ludicrous speeds without an actual propulsor...

      --
      how long until /. fixes commenting on Chrome?
    11. Re:improbability drive by alexj33 · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think you've got a point. All this time we've been trying to invent warp drives. What we really should be doing is inventing Cylons, so that they can in turn invent better propulsion systems than us.

    12. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hi. Literature Nazi* to the rescue, here! The improbability drive's figures are always given in terms of "X to 1 against" where X is greater than 1. While you are correct about probabilities, the figure above was an improbability. Also, 0 is not "nigh impossible" - it is the definition of impossible. Easy mistake, I know.

      * - Possibly also Nazi-Nazi.

    13. Re:improbability drive by francium+de+neobie · · Score: 5, Funny

      Very large values of 1 and very small values of 0.

    14. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      I hope you know where your towel is.

    15. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would it include the Somebody Else's Problem Field?

    16. Re:improbability drive by Jurily · · Score: 1

      is this where the improbability drive comes in?

      Only if you can figure out exactly how improbable it is.

    17. Re:improbability drive by bytethese · · Score: 1

      We've never gone that fast before...

    18. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will that allow ludicrous speed?

      You mean "doin' a hundred on the highway?"

    19. Re:improbability drive by MatthewCCNA · · Score: 1

      Is it alright if I send this wine back?

      --
      "He is so stupid. And now back to the wall!" Moe Szyslak
    20. Re:improbability drive by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 4, Funny

      Is a Nazi-Nazi someone who insists you spell "Eichmann" with two 'n's?

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    21. Re:improbability drive by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      What's the matter, Col. Sandurz? Chicken?

    22. Re:improbability drive by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Informative

      So THAT'S where the republicans came from...

      Downmod INCOMING!!! Hit the deck!

    23. Re:improbability drive by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Tightly wrapped around my head to shield the Bugsblatter beast of Traal from my gaze.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    24. Re:improbability drive by Camann · · Score: 1

      What's the problem Col. Sanders? Chicken?

      --
      I can't believe you don't know what a Hasemalphaginnojinglanaporphomism is.
    25. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That explains why I felt like the Earth was literally blown up today.

    26. Re:improbability drive by nscott89 · · Score: 1

      Good question... :whistle:
      According to my calculations, we could very well send Ludacris to travel at these speeds. As long as he holds on to this special magic pen, it will stabalise the bubble and prevent ANYONE within the bubble from being harmed...
      Muhahahahaha!
      Mein Fuhrer, I can walk!

    27. Re:improbability drive by Captain+Sarcastic · · Score: 1

      Would it include the Somebody Else's Problem Field?

      I wasn't expecting anyone to ask that question... but I figure somebody else will deal with it.

      --
      Strike while the irony is hot! -- The Freethinker
    28. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, 0 probability events occur all the time.

      Any discrete event in a continuous spectrum is 0 probability. An example I was given in a statistics class was the probability of it ever being exactly the same temperature outside as it is this instant is 0 (as temperature is a continuous quantity, thus even the tiniest variation leads to a different temperature), however, since it is currently that temperature, it is obviously possible.

      0 probability isn't impossible and conversely probability 1 events don't always occur. This is, in essence the difference between mathematics where even these fringes are taken into account, and engineering, where these are 'close enough.'

    29. Re:improbability drive by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also, 0 is not "nigh impossible" - it is the definition of impossible.

      Not necessarily. It may be that there are an uncountable number of possible outcomes, and each individual outcome has a zero probability, but large sets of them collectively still have positive probability. At least, models exist where this makes sense...

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    30. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ratio is wrong. The correct ratio is 12345:1

    31. Re:improbability drive by Azaril · · Score: 1

      Whats your example of this? One of the basic tenants of probability is that P(A v B) = P(A) + P(B) - P(A ^ B), P(A ^ B) = P(A) * P(B), P(A v B v (A ^ B)) = P(A) + P(B). Under none of the possible sets of them collectively can you have any value, save a product or sum of 0s. By definition the probability of the set must be zero, or the probabilities of the individuals cannot be 0.

    32. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Makes sense in mathematics, but I doubt that there is a physical experiment for which can be proven that the possibility for the outcome of a measurement at a certain time t is zero, but that it can happen anyway.
      In the end the computational power of the universe is limited, if I assume that matter and energy are limited and time is limited. So I somehow doubt that it can create a chain of events during that limited time with limited computational power that ends with an event that has probability zero.

      Maybe someone is bored enough to prove or disprove it. lol.

    33. Re:improbability drive by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 1

      Does Godwin apply to self references?

      --
      Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
    34. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      That's fair enough. But they're still not "nigh impossible." They're just too precise.

    35. Re:improbability drive by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      What we really should be doing is inventing Cylons, so that they can in turn invent better propulsion systems than us.

      No, we should be inventing Cylons so we have lots and lots of 6s and 8s.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    36. Re:improbability drive by oreaq · · Score: 1
      Consider the random experiment "picking any natural number". What is the probability that the number 17 gets picked? The probability for every natural number to get picked is the same, the sum over all probabilities is 1, and there is an infinite number of natural numbers.

      In probabilistic theory nothing is certain or impossible (except for trivial cases with a finite set of outcomes).

    37. Re:improbability drive by alexj33 · · Score: 1

      I think that we should therefore merge this thread with this one.

      There are many here among us that feel that life is but a joke...

    38. Re:improbability drive by Quothz · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. It may be that there are an uncountable number of possible outcomes, and each individual outcome has a zero probability

      No, the individual outcomes can approach zero. Mathematicians like to treat zero and "really, really close to zero" the same, but that doesn't always work. Doing so dogmatically leads you to absurd results like "zero probability events happen all the time".

    39. Re:improbability drive by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      2+2=5*

      *for large values of 2

      and with that, this thread has gone......
      to plaid...

    40. Re:improbability drive by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      ye gods man.... have you learned NOTHING?!?

      the 8's just get all bi-polar and stab you in the back.....

      or shoot you in the front....

      +1 for the 6's though....

    41. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Godwin would be proud... a new record!

    42. Re:improbability drive by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      My statistics prof used to use the term "infinitesimally small but non-zero probability" when describing things that were regarded as impossible. He was a fun guy, for a math geek.

    43. Re:improbability drive by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      Deal with what?

    44. Re:improbability drive by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      They've gone to plaid!

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    45. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uncountable sums of real numbers are not well defined - even if every summand is 0.

      To take a more concrete example, imagine you start flipping a coin repeatedly right now and never stop. The odds of any particular infinite sequence (like HHHHH..., or HTHTHT..., or a binary representation of pi, or...) is 0. The reason for this is that there are infinitely many sequences and they are all equally likely to occur. Thus, if they occur with probability p, with p being greater than 0, then we can take (1/p + 1) distinct sequences, and the probably that you will flip one of those sequences is p*(1/p + 1) = 1 + p > 1.

    46. Re:improbability drive by siglercm · · Score: 1

      Is a Nazi-Nazi someone who insists you spell "Eichmann" with two 'n's?

      No, that's a Nazi-Spelling-Nazi.

      A Nazi-Nazi is someone (likely a male with blonde hair and piercing blue eyes, or alternately with a minature painter's-brush black mustache) who ruthlessly and cruelly enforces correct identification of members versus non-members of the National Socialist Party.

      (ba-dum-bump! I'll be here all week! Try the veal!)

      --
      sigfault (core dumped)
    47. Re:improbability drive by oatworm · · Score: 1

      Oh no... this clears the way for "Pimp my Boson", doesn't it?

      We're goin' to give dis Higgs some RIMMZ!

    48. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maths Nazi here.

      Actually, zero probabilities do not always mean impossible. There is a zero probability of picking an integer out of a bag containing all the real numbers, yet it can happen.

      Easy mistake, I know.

    49. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually impossible implies a probability of 0, but a probability of 0 does not necessarily imply impossible. Easy mistake, I know.

    50. Re:improbability drive by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      number 3 is way hotter than number 8, even if she is 5 years older than the other two hot cylons.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    51. Re:improbability drive by FiniteSum · · Score: 1

      Wrong. When there is a continuous range of outcomes, a probability of zero doesn't mean "this event is impossible." A probability _density_ of zero, however, would mean that.

    52. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Nazi-Nazi is someone (likely a male with blonde hair and piercing blue eyes, or alternately with a minature painter's-brush black mustache) who ruthlessly and cruelly enforces correct identification of members versus non-members of the National Socialist Party.

      Looks at the mirror..everything fits, except the eyes having a shade of the cruel and emotionless bluish gray..starts to hum "Deutsche, Deutsche ueber alles" while starting to ponder the ultimate meaning of the military style hair cut..

    53. Re:improbability drive by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1

      True, but I said an uncountable number of outcomes, whereas the axioms you list only hold up to a countable number of sets. For example, if you're choosing a random integer, then yes, I agree, an integer with a probability of zero will never occur.

      On the other hand, if you're choosing, say, a random (real) number between zero and one, with uniform probability, then every possible outcome has zero probability -- but there's still a 1/10 chance that I will choose a number in the range [0.15, 0.25]. In that case, only masses of events have probability, so saying an event has probability zero is not the same as saying it's impossible.

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    54. Re:improbability drive by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1

      Doing so dogmatically leads you to absurd results like "zero probability events happen all the time".

      If I'm choosing a uniformly random real number between zero and one, then zero probability events will happen all the time. I can't simulate that process in the real world, but then, that's true of much (most?) of mathematics as well... but in any case, "probability zero" only means "impossible" over certain spaces.

      Admittedly, those spaces may include the physical world, though it's hard to really be sure. If the universe is infinite after all, then every moment of existence is arguably another zero-probability event.

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    55. Re:improbability drive by Garse+Janacek · · Score: 1

      Also, just to be pedantic: Mathematicians are usually really particular about "really, really close to zero" still being different than zero. It's engineers (and physicists, and... well basically anybody that has to work in reality) that treat them the same :-)

      --

      I am the man with no sig!

    56. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      0 != 0 for sufficiently non-zero values of 0.

    57. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      Only a mathematician would put an uncountably infinite number of things into a bag.

    58. Re:improbability drive by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Would that be a +0 or -0?

      Yes, it does make a difference. One of my first software bugs was trying to root out a negative zero. (Yes, it was a one's compliment machine BTW).

    59. Re:improbability drive by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Only a mathematician would put an uncountably infinite number of things into a bag.

      Try putting uncountably infinite items into a Kline bottle. That would do the trick!

    60. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      I stated the general case. It applies equally to positive and negative zero. Of course, neither of those is equal to zero.

    61. Re:improbability drive by ari_j · · Score: 1

      At least there's room for all of them inside a Klein bottle!

    62. Re:improbability drive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is a Nazi-Nazi someone who insists you spell "Eichmann" with two 'n's?

      Perhaps he iz not zee Nazi.

  3. Longer lifetimes is the answer by tjstork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The SCI-FI buff in me holds out hope that physics will uncover a trick to FTL, but...

    It doesn't really matter if we cannot travel faster than the speed of light so long as we can live long enough to get there.

    Who cares if it takes 50 years to fly to Alpha Centauri if we can engineer ourselves to live for a thousand!

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by SnapShot · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Depends on whether we can engineer ourselves to live 50 years in a tiny spacecraft with a bunch of strangers.

      --
      Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
    2. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Depends on whether we can engineer ourselves to live 50 years in a tiny spacecraft with a bunch of strangers.

      Someone's been watching Space Mutiny.

    3. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Twisted+Willie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It doesn't really matter if we cannot travel faster than the speed of light so long as we can live long enough to get there.
      Who cares if it takes 50 years to fly to Alpha Centauri if we can engineer ourselves to live for a thousand!


      Either that, or we can just figure out how to get really close to the speed of light, and reap the benefits of time dilation to make the journey only last hours from the traveller's point of view.

    4. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Exitar · · Score: 1

      And what do you think the bunch of Big Brother like shows are for?

    5. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by arekusu_ou · · Score: 1

      You missed those Sci fi horror thrillers of cold sleep during long travels, and people waking up out of cold sleep unexpectedly to find either something went wrong and most of the people died locked in the cold sleep chambers, or some alien is loose on the ship and is slowly killing everyone off till only you and one other is left alive and you realize, the alien is him or in him or wearing him.

      Anyways, cold sleep to deal with the travel :)

    6. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      From the traveler's point of view, wouldn't it be space dilation? Someone on the ground would see the traveler experiencing time slower, but to the relevant individual (the traveler), the stars would get closer.

      Probably quote: Is it just me, or did the universe suddenly get small?

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    7. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      Depends on whether we can engineer ourselves to live 50 years in a tiny spacecraft with a bunch of strangers.

      On a tiny spacecraft they wont be strangers for long.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    8. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by John+Hasler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why make the ship tiny?

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    9. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure Big Brother's sole purpose is destroying my faith in humanity. Just when the networks put a good show on - like Pushing Daisies or Arrested Development, it inevitably gets canceled. Yet, Big Brother? Let me check... yup, still on SEASON 11.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    10. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      That is totally wrongheaded. If you mine asteroids in space and build your craft in orbit then you can afford to take a large spacecraft. Nobody says they have to be a bunch of strangers, either. You're just a negative nancy.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    11. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Earth 2's pilot. The humans entered cold sleep for ~50 years but were suddenly awakened when the ship went off course & plunged directly into the planet. Ooops. Later we learned the government did it on purpose because the politicians didn't want citizens leaving home.

      (sigh)

      Yet another good show canceled by the idiots at NBC.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    12. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by weber · · Score: 1

      If we can accelerate at one g (internal reference) all the way (changing thrust direction halfway), we pretty quickly get close to light speed, which means that we can travel many light years in only a few years (internal time).

      Of course there're several obstacles (power, collisions, etc.), but it would make it possible to travel great distances within one's lifetime even at below light speed.

    13. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by rilles · · Score: 1

      Any hot chicks on board??

    14. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by tuxgeek · · Score: 1

      There is always the Serenity Scenario
      Build large passenger and freighter ships and then fly off to colonize a neighboring star system.
      Just think of the cool Jetson type outfits you can wear while hanging out in an artificial gravity environment.

      Personally, I'd just settle for my jetpack right now.

      --
      "Suppose you were an idiot...and suppose you were a member of Congress...but I repeat myself." Mark Twain
    15. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by hummassa · · Score: 1

      Why do you categorize TV executives as "humanity" ?

      --
      It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
    16. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by bytethese · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but would you want a space journey to emulate Big Brother? I sure wouldn't want to get voted out of the air lock...

    17. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by ajlitt · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't say I was missing them...

    18. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Kelbear · · Score: 1

      It's neat, but it's not the same vision of a human interstellar empire that most people fantasize about. The group in Alpha Centauri would be completely separate from the rest of humanity. It'd be a self-sustaining and self-reliant group with its own set of problems to contend with.

      It wouldn't be a colony of Earth, it'd be two separate entities like the USA and Great Britain, but even further detached.

      The only thing tying the two together is the fact that they're the same species. It's pretty tenuous connection to create a bridge with.

    19. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After 50 years? Doubtful.

    20. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by porl · · Score: 1

      that was an awesome show. i had forgotten about it but it is all coming back now :)

    21. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I wish that were the case. Big Brother clearly has more viewers. Googling around it seems like Big Brother gets about 5 million households. Pushing Daisies got a whopping 2.9 last time it aired, and it has to be much more expensive to produce.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    22. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      It's got to be more than just a matter of construction, no?

      Bigger ship == More mass == more force required to accelerate it, to light speed or otherwise.

    23. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      Or you wind up in a dream where you're a NYPD cop in 1973.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    24. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by cagrin · · Score: 1

      From my understanding of the extraterrestrial fields ;) it is a matter of changing your density/vibration to a higher level, then you can travel much much faster than light. Some beings of a higher plane of existence can do this naturally, others have to use technology to do it. Apparently another way of traveling quickly is using existing "tunnels" or shortcuts through space that were created a long time ago by very advanced beings that to my knowledge do not exist in this universe anymore. *shrug* ;) Take the Red pill ;)

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
    25. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by DerCed · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You forget that the human brain would need to evolve or be changed radically to adapt to this vast travel durations. We're programmed to think in terms of seconds, minutes and hours. We stop having clear concepts of time already at days..

    26. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by CTalkobt · · Score: 3, Funny

      The problem with traveling faster than light is that my wife would never go with me on a trip:

      "Traveling that fast is going to make my ass look big."

      (Hmm, leaving her behind might be a good thing... )

      --
      There's a gorilla from Manilla whose a fella that stinks of vanilla and has salmonella.
    27. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      With relativity time and space are pretty much the same thing.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    28. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Razalhague · · Score: 1

      So, you're thinking everyone will live that 50 years in celibacy?

      There's be a whole new generation of hot chicks halfway there.

    29. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 2, Informative

      Either that, or we can just figure out how to get really close to the speed of light, and reap the benefits of time dilation to make the journey only last hours from the traveller's point of view.

      Hours?

      1g to Alpha Centauri - 3years, 205 days.

      Compress that trip to, say, sixty hours...

      2575g.

      It gets worse fast. 1g only gets us to 95% lightspeed. Higher acceleration pushes us way up into relativistic effects.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    30. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      While this is completely true, it's also true that there's stuff in asteroids that can be used as propellant. You don't have to ship up the fuel, either.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    31. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Alvare · · Score: 1

      Why don't we try to actually travel at the speed of light first?

      --
      4 - A robot may not masturbate, except where such action would conflict with the Second Law.
    32. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by camperdave · · Score: 1

      So, instead of just sending the parts into orbit and assembling them, you propose to send an entire mining operation, plus a smelting and precision fabrication plant into orbit?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    33. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Cytric · · Score: 0

      Depends on whether we can engineer ourselves to live 50 years in a tiny spacecraft with a bunch of strangers.

      Well hopefully they aren't strangers the entire time.

    34. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The SCI-FI buff in me holds out hope that physics will uncover a trick to FTL, but...

      It doesn't really matter if we cannot travel faster than the speed of light so long as we can live long enough to get there.

      Who cares if it takes 50 years to fly to Alpha Centauri if we can engineer ourselves to live for a thousand!

      Actually, even if we are able to live forever, there may still be parts of the universe that we will never be able to explore if we cannot travel faster than the speed of light.

      Many physicists believe that there are regions of the universe that are causally disconnected from one another. In an expanding universe, certain destinations may be moving away from you faster than you can make up the difference even if you travel at the speed of light.

    35. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      True, and I'll stipulate to an asteroid-based refinery too. But that still doesn't change the fact that you don't want to WASTE the fuel by making the ship bigger than it has to be.

    36. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I thought the whole point of this line of discussion is that it needs to be of a sufficient size that you don't go bugshit loco crazy. I submit that means you need a large open space to move around in (with some plants in it would be nice) and some other apparent "wastes".

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    37. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by tepples · · Score: 1

      Why make the ship tiny?

      Tiny ship == less mass == less fuel == less cost.

    38. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Shakrai · · Score: 1

      Pretty sure reality TV's sole purpose is destroying my faith in humanity

      Fixed that for you.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    39. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen to Pushing Daisies. I miss that show.

    40. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by pnewhook · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually it sounds crazy but it is not.

      I was part of a proposal to NASA to build a massive (150 meter diameter) GEO based telescope. When you do the math, it works out to be far cheaper and much less fuel to mine the moon for all the raw titanium and fuel you need, manufacture the parts and then robotically assemble them in orbit, than it would to launch from earth all the pre-manufactured component parts.

      It's the fuel spent escaping earths gravity that kills you.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    41. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Zordak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, it's time dilation and space contraction. If you're traveling at 0.9c relative to earth, your gamma is something like .44. So if you travel one light year, an observer on earth will see you go one light year in about 1.1 years. But from your perspective, you will have traveled only about .44 light years, and it would take something like .48 years. If you travel fast enough, you can reach even distant stars in very short times from your perspective. But you won't get a nice, tidy Galactic Federation, because people on earth will be getting very old very fast. That's the real problem with relativity. It's not that you can't get somewhere fast. Tell me where you want to go and how fast you want to get there, and we can calculate how fast you need to go (relative to the earth) to make it in that time, and it will be less than c.

      In other words, we could (in theory) colonize all of the habitable planets in the galaxy in a fairly short time. But the colonies would all basically be cut off from each other. Even sending a radio message to another colony would take prohibitively long. And forget about "rescue" or "supply" ships.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    42. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by ArsonSmith · · Score: 2, Funny

      3 years 205 days is 31,200 hours. so yes the trip will only last for hours, 31k of them.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    43. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by timholman · · Score: 2, Informative

      It doesn't really matter if we cannot travel faster than the speed of light so long as we can live long enough to get there.

      Who cares if it takes 50 years to fly to Alpha Centauri if we can engineer ourselves to live for a thousand!

      Ah, but you could travel to the stars without immortality at FTL speeds - at least from the point of view of a ship's occupants - as long as you choose not to go home again. A constant acceleration drive would enable you to cross the galaxy in a few years of ship time, thanks to time dilation. Take along a large enough group of people to form a stable society, and for all practical purposes those people will be traveling at superluminal speeds. Relativity will make it impossible for them to return home (at least to the home they remember), but as long as the passengers are willing to accept a one-way trip, effective FTL is absolutely attainable.

    44. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I am trying to. Squinty eyes and all.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    45. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why make the ship tiny?

      ... because mass is at a severe premium in propulsion? Because every extra pound you add to the ship requires more fuel to push it, along with more fuel to push the added amount of fuel? Because it therefore pays to make a craft as small as possible for the things it needs to be able to do?

    46. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if the first generation is hand-selected for hotness, the second and third generations, for practical reasons, cannot be:

      1. The ratio of "hotness" will be very close to its ratio in the general earth-side population. i.e. not that high.
      2. It will be impractical to hand-select any of the subsequent generations for beauty. By the time an embryo has developed to the point where its final beauty is known, it is far too late for an abortion.
    47. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Somehow, I just knew one of you mumble-headed nutjobs would crawl out of the woodwork for this one.

      If you're going to take your science knowledge from Art Bell, and your history from Stargate: Atlantis, please don't tell anybody about it. You help nobody, and only make yourself look a fool.

    48. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The solution is obvious clone the hot chicks!

    49. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by BigBlueOx · · Score: 4, Funny

      it needs to be of a sufficient size that you don't go bugshit loco crazy

      Inadvertently, a Slashdot poster stumbles upon the reason that aliens, intersteller travelers who travel in very small ships, abduct people on Earth and stick things up their butts.

      And then ...

    50. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      well.... that would be at warp 1....
      at warp 2 it might take 5 years.....
      warp 3.... 6 months maybe....

    51. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by inerlogic · · Score: 3, Informative

      actually, as you approach lightspeed, your mass become infinite.... that's why the warp shortcuts need to be created....

      secondly... P=mv
      momentum equals mass times velocity....
      higher the mass, the higher the momentum, the more force it takes to change velocity (or stop the object)

      personally i'd prefer to catch a 40MPH baseball than be on the tracks trying to catch a 40MPH freight train.....

    52. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      are you sure this is the way to alpha centauri?
      didn't we pass that nebula 10 minutes ago?
      you're going to fast, i told you the limit is c...
      why don't you pull over and ask that monolith for directions?

    53. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      Shotgun!

    54. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      3 years 205 days is 31,200 hours. so yes the trip will only last for hours, 31k of them.

      So Voyager will pass Alpha Centauri in hours? 1,130,000,000 or so of them?

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    55. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      Is that 1g the whole way there? or is that assuming that you only hit max speed when you are half the trip away and must brake at -1g for the other half?
       

    56. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      You're just a negative nancy.

      Just the sort of phrase I want to hear from a person I'm going to be stuck with in the midst of space, in cramped quarters.

    57. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The grocer on the planet Xeon has this wonderful vanilla in stock, I'll just run down there real quick...

      Oh wait, it'll take 50 years to get there.

      Just because you have a lot of time doesn't mean it suddenly isn't valuable.

    58. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by oatworm · · Score: 1

      It's funny, but is it going to get them off their tractors?

    59. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      Is that 1g the whole way there? or is that assuming that you only hit max speed when you are half the trip away and must brake at -1g for the other half?

      The latter. It's pretty pointless to fly by at >95%c.

      Unless, of course, you're planning on ramming the inhabited planet to wipe out those godless bemmies....

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    60. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      True, but my point was that, without those shortcuts, you still have to get UP to lightspeed.

    61. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Relativity is wrong. Both the people on the spaceship and the people on the earth's watches will be moving at the same speed. One year on the space ships watch will happen at the same moment in time as the people on earth. The issue is that when they look at each other it will take 1.1 years to view each others watches. It is only the appearance of light that changes. Time is still constant. In internet speak we call that lag.

    62. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by CTalkobt · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Traveling that fast is going to make my ass look big."

      Just figured out my reply: "Dear - it's all relative... "

      --
      There's a gorilla from Manilla whose a fella that stinks of vanilla and has salmonella.
    63. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by gad_zuki! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lets say we do that tomorrow. Now you still need to figure out how to keep food and water on that ship for 50 years. Engineer a fuel source that can carry you with strict safety controls to keep the bag of flesh that is you in alive. Oh, while we're at it we'll need a new groundbreaking psychology that can keep 1,000 yo humans sane, especially ones stuck in a smelly spacecraft for 50 years. I wont hold my breath.

    64. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like someone's got a case of the mondays.

    65. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Alarindris · · Score: 1

      I think the analogy would be something more like rather catching a 40mpg baseball than a 400mph bullet. Or a 1mph train.

    66. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by kinnell · · Score: 1

      (Hmm, leaving her behind might be a good thing... )

      What you might call a "hinterectomy"?

      --
      If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
    67. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by meta-monkey · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The scariest part about light-hugging spaceships to me (with thanks to Alastair Reynolds) is the impossibility of rescue. If you've got a ship that's able to continuously produce thrust, you fire that thing up, continue to accelerate until the mid way point to your destination, then flip the ship around and decelerate. Yeah, what happens when the drive fails while you're booking along at .95c? It's not like Star Trek where you "drop out of warp" and stay still. There's no "crash landing" there's no friction to slow you down...you just keep right on going at .95c until the end the universe, with no possibility of rescue. That is some scary shit.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    68. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Zordak · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, it makes for some great SciFi.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    69. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Razalhague · · Score: 1

      Limited resources -> very few fat chicks. That alone significantly raises the average hotness.

      Also, genes do account for something.

    70. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and here come the cranks and lunatics.

    71. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by gardyloo · · Score: 1

      I will pay substantive amounts of money to have that face-stab-over-the-internet machine now.

    72. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by kars · · Score: 1

      And more importantly, where would you keep that much lube?

      --
      Take life easy: one bit at a time.
    73. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by cagrin · · Score: 1

      Ignorance and apathy are the two most dangerous diseases of our time, and very difficult to cure.

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
    74. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      no.. i had it right....
      keep the speed constant and vary the mass of the object.... ie...

      i'd rather have to burn fuel to slow a 10 ton vehicle from .9c than need to slow a 1000 ton vehicle from .9c

    75. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, you're claiming the knowledge:
      What is the "frequency" of a human, how might it be raised, why would it allow super-luminal travel, and why doesn't my tuning fork travel faster than the one an octave lower?
      Who are these "higher beings", how might they be contacted, and what possible proof of any contact could be obtained?
      What evidence of any kind have you for alien-made "tunnels" through space, what do you mean by "tunnel", and how could the existence of one be proved?

      Unless you can provide answers for every one of those questions, and answers that don't rely on metaphysical quackery or mystical feelings, then clearly the ignorance is yours.

    76. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      For NASA, yes.

      In Russia though, er, I'm not sure. Would you kill the gravity or the fuel spent?

    77. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Great. Now I have Spinal Tap's Big Bottom "stuck in my head"

    78. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Harness the power of internet geeks?

      Give everyone a computer and a room that looks like a basement dungeon, and they'll be fine for fifty years, arguing about cats and the politics of gun control on a local Usenet in between marathon sessions of WoW. I mean, if you can go 30 years in your mother's basement, what's an additional 20?

      Problem solved.

    79. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by cagrin · · Score: 1

      I don't have the technical knowledge myself to do these things, but only know of their existence from others, so perhaps both of us are ignorant, though if you don't believe me, or more accurately believe certain alien contactees, i would argue the greater ignorance is yours. Unless you have a high enough security clearance with the US government, i suggest you contact Alex Collier for possible answers to your questions, his first interview(in 1994) about his extraterrestrial contacts can be found here. There are other contactees in the world as well, but i believe Alex would be the best chance to get your questions answered(that is unless you can get info from US Government). Btw, i wouldn't get too concerned about space travel yet until we can take better care of our own world, which was why Alex(and others) were contacted in the first place.

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
    80. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by drjoe1e6 · · Score: 1

      you just keep right on going at .95c until the end the universe, with no possibility of rescue. That is some scary shit.

      That's the dilemma in Tau Zero by Poul Anderson. I won't give any spoilers, but he came up with an interesting resolution.
      -Joe

      --
      Lose = not win ...... Loose = not tight
    81. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by cagrin · · Score: 1

      Honestly, who cares about the possibility of "warp" drives...our own world is what matters now, for example: Alex Jones - You Were Warned About The NWO! Wake up people.

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
    82. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, what happens when the drive fails while you're booking along at .95c?

      You find a Class M planet moving at .95c relative to Earth to set down on and make repairs.

    83. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the fuel spent escaping earths gravity that kills you.

      Actually, the fuel is one of the least expensive parts of a rocket. Engines are probably the most expensive. But there's also the launch facilities, tracking and communication facilities, insurance, electronics and guidance equipment, administration, engineering and design teams, and all sorts of other personnel.

    84. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by meta-monkey · · Score: 1

      I just added that to my Kindle. Thanks for the recommendation.

      --
      We don't have a state-run media we have a media-run state.
    85. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by JRIsidore · · Score: 1

      Nitpick... the time dilation for a constant relative velocity is, as the term 'relative velocity' suggests, symmetrical. People on earth see the ships clocks go slower as the crew sees the clocks on earth go slower. Both age at the same rate, that's the Twin Paradoxon of special relativity.
      A constant high velocity is not the reason why this works, you have to take the acceleration into account a real ship would have to undergo.

      --
      :w!q
    86. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      But can we isolate the genetic sequences for crippling boredom?

    87. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by arekusu_ou · · Score: 1

      I hope that wasn't a reference to Office Space.

    88. Re:Longer lifetimes is the answer by BiggerIsBetter · · Score: 1

      Just figured out my reply: "Dear - it's all relative... "

      Nah man, don't go bringing her family into it.

      --
      Forget thrust, drag, lift and weight. Airplanes fly because of money.
  4. WARP 10 by Flyin+Fungi · · Score: 2, Funny

    We all know what happens when you try to travel that fast!

    1. Re:WARP 10 by wooferhound · · Score: 1

      But you ain't done nothing till you've gotten up to Warp 11 . . .

      --
      We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
    2. Re:WARP 10 by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Super skidmarks!

    3. Re:WARP 10 by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 2, Informative

      you and Kate Mullgrue transform into a lizard like species and have mad lizard sex then produce offspring on a planet in the delta quadrant?

    4. Re:WARP 10 by MaxwellEdison · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's just silly...No one would mate with Kate Mullgrue...

      Unless...
      Go East
      You have been molested by a Mullgrue

      --
      -=Bang Bang=-
    5. Re:WARP 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, don't remind me of one of the stupidest Voyager episodes ever. And there was a lot in the first few seasons.

    6. Re:WARP 10 by pete_norm · · Score: 1

      Only on Slashdot could this post be modded "informative"

  5. There is no fabric! by psb777 · · Score: 0

    "His thinking was that while relativity prevents faster-than-light travel relative to the fabric of spacetime, it places no restriction on the speed at which regions of spacetime may move relative to each other."

    There is no fabric, see Michelson Morley http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michelson-Morley_experiment

    And oh yes there is a restriction!

    --
    Paul Beardsell
    1. Re:There is no fabric! by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Actually, it proves that there is no "Aether" that propagates light waves, analogous to air (or other matter) that propagates sound waves.

      That does not discount the possibility of a space-time fabric, it simply states that it is not the thing that propagates light.

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    2. Re:There is no fabric! by Grokmoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      In fact there is a fabric of sorts, see Casimir Effect for an experimental result of that "fabric".

      It is not at all like the aether that people were thinking of in the 19th century, but it does exist. One way of looking at it is that the vacuum is filled with particles that are constantly popping in and out of existence. Another way is to look as the vacuum as having a "zero point" energy. Either way, it is not truly "empty".

    3. Re:There is no fabric! by dpilot · · Score: 1

      If we want to treat Star Trek technology as something real, I seem to remember once reading that their warp drive involved many layers of shells of subspace, so that no superluminal travel was needed. Each layer was moving fast, but not superluminally with respect to the adjacent layers. The net result of all of those layers was added to be FTL. My impression was that Alcubierre suggested a 2-layer system.

      OTOH, if you want to stick with the 2-layer system and are merely upset that it's "unstable", wire up a Conjoiner and ship him/her inside the drive. (Alistair Reynolds reference)

      Other relevance... I went to CWRU, where Michelson and Morley did their experiments. Great to have your school's claim to fame being one of the most important failures in history.

      --
      The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    4. Re:There is no fabric! by PerfectSmurf · · Score: 2, Funny

      My people are taught that it's a fluid, not a fabric. When particles pop into existance, or exist as matter, in our dimensional space their probability function becomes highly localized and creates a "void" between dimensions and a pressure density gradient at that point in space. This pressure forces the fluid of space to flow into these voids and it's this flow of space fluid that creates and explains the drag known to us as gravity.

      We are also taught that if enough matter is brought together in a region of space the flow of space fluid into other dimensions becomes so strong that nothing, not even light, can escape the currents. We call these objects deep blue holes. Technically they are black because no light escapes, but we're smurfs and we think we're cool, so since cool blacks are bluish blacks we call them deep blue holes.

      I'm pretty sure I got that explanation right. Brainy lectures on and on about it but it's hard to pay attention when the discussion is about deep blue holes... Smurfette sits next to me... droooooool....

      --
      I smurf everything and everything I smurf is perfect.
    5. Re:There is no fabric! by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 2, Informative

      A 'failure' in science is an erroneous result. A valid negative result is still a scientific success (even if it's not as publishable).

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    6. Re:There is no fabric! by master_p · · Score: 1

      And if we could collapse a specific area of the universe in the same way the particles pop out of existence, we could connect the space around the collapsed part.

  6. So we can't go there, big whoop... by bhunachchicken · · Score: 5, Funny

    Just do what the Planet Express Ship does and use a Dark Matter drive to move the Universe around us instead... :)

    1. Re:So we can't go there, big whoop... by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      or dark energy
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dark_energy
      I think it is interchangeable with dark matter. That way you have a forward and a reverse for your time machine, Einstein.

    2. Re:So we can't go there, big whoop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's pretty much exactly what Alcubierre was describing. Good job understanding what you're talking about.

    3. Re:So we can't go there, big whoop... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's what they're talking about doing sort of... My guess is, there's some (as yet undiscovered) element or alloy that will remain stable at 'superluminal speed', and they'll use that to build the ship, and a housing for the decidedly unstable warp drive which by nature has to be unstable. Then all we have to worry about is the Philadelphia Experiment effect which again should not be a problem if they use alloys that are stable to build the hull.

    4. Re:So we can't go there, big whoop... by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 1

      Not any more it doesn't, now that all dark matter has been rendered inert.

      Now it uses whale oil.

    5. Re:So we can't go there, big whoop... by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      Or use Whale oil.

  7. Proof! by cjstaples · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article... "strongly implies that such a bubble would be unstable." Sounds like proof to me! Right. Just like it was proved impossible for planes to fly. It might indeed - eventually - prove to be impossible, or impossible to do meaningfully / reliably, but it's pretty unlikely we're in a position to make that call at this time. That's why we do research.

    --
    =cjs
    1. Re:Proof! by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Informative

      THANK YOU. Once upon a time we all knew that the gods made things fall to the ground. Then we knew that things have the falling nature, and the world was flat so things fell "down" no matter where you were. Then we knew that F=MA. Now we know that E=MC^2. What will supersede relativity? (QM is just too wacky, it has been said that if it doesn't confuse you, you don't understand it. I think that means it's a bad model, and we should just abandon particles. But whatever.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think anyone said planes are impossible, seeing as birds and insects manage flight just fine.

    3. Re:Proof! by geckipede · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This isn't anything new, it's an old idea being analysed more rigorously with quantum mechanics.

      The problem is that in order to have a region of spacetime moving in relation to the outside universe, space has to expand behind it and contract in front, which demands negative and positive gravity in those regions. You need a large negative mass held in place in front of you, and a large positive mass behind. (We'll leave aside the problem that nobody has demonstrated the existence of negative mass, I personally don't believe it could exist precisely because it would enable FTL, but that's seperate to this point.) What you have to achieve is to have the centre of gravitation of the two masses at the centre of the edges of distortion. It means inevitably that half of the negative mass you are using has to stick out of the bubble ahead of you into normal unwarped space, and so that in order to keep generating the field ahead of you, it has to travel faster than light in its local frame. That is strictly not allowed.

    4. Re:Proof! by goltzc · · Score: 1

      At the time it violated the laws of physics. Someone correct me if I'm wrong but I believe physics still lacks an explanation for how honey bees are able to fly with their large bodies and small wings.

      --
      Our bugs are smarter than your test scripts.
    5. Re:Proof! by jibster · · Score: 1
    6. Re:Proof! by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

      You are wrong. It is explainable and has been explained.

    7. Re:Proof! by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 1

      We'll leave aside the problem that nobody has demonstrated the existence of negative mass

      really?

      --

      "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
    8. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the negative mass is a singularity?

    9. Re:Proof! by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2, Informative

      Antimatter still has positive mass. It takes 2*.511Mev to make an electron and a positron. If antimatter had negative mass, it would take 0.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    10. Re:Proof! by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      nope, that one is just creationist bullshit.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    11. Re:Proof! by radarsat1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      E=MC^2 doesn't contradict that F=MA.

      F=MA doesn't contradict that things fall down.

      What makes you think that new developments in physics will contradict that E=MC^2?

      In short, physics is further and further refined by research, not contradicted, because new theories don't change the empirical evidence that was used to determine old theories, they just explain it better.

      Of course, that doesn't mean new theories don't help development of new technologies, so your point stands.

    12. Re:Proof! by wgaryhas · · Score: 1

      Anti matter has positive mass.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." - H.L. Mencken
    13. Re:Proof! by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      The misconception is that small insects do not fly using classic airfoil theory (ie pressure difference in continuous transverse flow) - instead they use induced vorticies at the leading and trailing edges of their wings to produce lift.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    14. Re:Proof! by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      To me, the proof that (significant, practical) faster than light travel is not practicable comes in the form of a complete lack of evidence of other life forms bopping around the universe.

      To think that we're the first to achieve this level of understanding of the universe is beyond conceit, possible, of course, but highly improbable. So, if it were possible to spread life faster than light, I would think that some evidence would have presented itself by now, not necessarily little green men landing in the desert, but some observable phenomenon somewhere in the universe.

      We should be capable of observing faster than light travel phenomena long before we are capable of achieving it.

    15. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      strongly implies...

      If its good enough for global warming...........

    16. Re:Proof! by wgaryhas · · Score: 1

      Found out I'm wrong; the gravitational interaction of antimatter is considered to most likely the same as regular matter, but there has been no experements to proove that yet.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." - H.L. Mencken
    17. Re:Proof! by simcop2387 · · Score: 1

      antimatter has a normal mass, all that is different is that its charge is the opposite of normal matter

    18. Re:Proof! by BotnetZombie · · Score: 1

      Still not everyone agrees, see here

    19. Re:Proof! by squoozer · · Score: 1

      While QM is exceedingly complex and I would say probably not completely correct or at least not the whole picture the effects that it predicts have all been observed by experiment. The "wierdness" is therefore actually what is there and any better theory (a theory of everything perhaps) will predict exactly the same weirdness.

      --
      I used to have a better sig but it broke.
    20. Re:Proof! by geckipede · · Score: 1

      Positive mass can form black holes as it is self-attracting. If you tried to do the same with negative mass, which has repulsive gravity, it would have an infinite force of repulsion on itself. Not a stable structure.

    21. Re:Proof! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      E=MC^2 doesn't contradict that F=MA.

      It wasn't a very good way of putting it because I'm not a very good physicist or mathematician. My point is that we have moved through various models of physics which describe what happens in situations that earlier models couldn't predict, yet each of those models actually makes valid and testable predictions (even QM.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    22. Re:Proof! by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Don't get carried away with the old "we just haven't done it yet" line. It might have been "impossible" academically for us to fly, but there have always been birds around and other things that can either glide or fly. Its pretty easy to keep plugging on an eventual solution when you know that something is actually doing it.

      We've never actually observed anything that travels faster than light in a vacuum. Those things simply aren't there. FTL is something that we really want to have because it would be really useful, but then so would be mutant super powers. No one really has those either.

      Don't get me wrong, this only seems to cast doubt on the most likely of a set of possible solutions for FTL, but let's not kid ourselves here, its not simply a matter of extending ourselves a little to pull it off. Even when they were suggesting the "warp drive", no one really expected it to work, it was just a more reasonable idea than the others.

    23. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you need is a way of manipulating hawking radiation itself.

      hawking radiation is the result of virtual particle pairs hitting a quantum barrier of one sort or other; (Black hole event horizon, strong tensor field of warp envelope, etc--) virtual particles spontaneously erupt and re-submerge from spacetime randomly, and seemingly uniformly. In that time they exhibit a small, but uniform scalar mass field. Inhibiting the the process (possibly redirecting a portion of the probability cloud of formation toward the front of the ship, vs aft) would create the same effect. You dont need to INFLATE spacetime, just reduce it's native compression.

      What we need to do is experiment with controlling virtual particle density.

    24. Re:Proof! by green1 · · Score: 1

      You say we should see it before we're capable of it. Ignoring for a moment that the universe is rather large, and that we often can't even tell if a star has planets around it, let along see a starship zooming around. And assuming that we would in fact see it before we're capable of it, this still doesn't prove it's impossible, just that the first species to achieve it hasn't done so yet (or at least they haven't passed close enough to us for the light from them doing so to have reached us yet).

      Nothing about that particular situation proves impossibility.

      Now this particular article seems to show that one particular method of faster than light travel is unlikely with our current understanding, that doesn't mean it's completely impossible, just that we don't yet have any idea how to do it.

    25. Re:Proof! by sean.peters · · Score: 1

      Just like it was proved impossible for planes to fly.

      Except that no one ever produced any "proof" that it was impossible for planes to fly. There was some spouting off to that effect (did they have Slashdot then?), but no proofs. Of course, we haven't "proved" this spacetime bubble concept wouldn't work either, but really, the burden of proof is the other way - FTL travel has to be considered an extraordinary claim, and anyone who wants people to believe it's possible needs to pony up some evidence. We've got a lot of good reason to believe that it's not possible.

    26. Re:Proof! by geckipede · · Score: 1

      There have been one or two ideas coming out of string theory that give similar possibilities, stuff like adjusting the size of dimensions in order to change the properties of space. All but one share the same problem, of having to propogate an effect ahead of you at faster than lightspeed locally.

      The exception was an idea coming out of the concept that there might be something acting a bit like an extra extended space dimension that was only accessable to gravity. If that were true you could curl the bubble that the ship was in around in this extra dimension and partially ahead of itself, using conventional mass outside of the space being affected to give the effect of repulsive gravity. I don't think anybody takes that hypothesis seriously anymore though.

    27. Re:Proof! by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      The exception was an idea coming out of the concept that there might be something acting a bit like an extra extended space dimension that was only accessable to gravity.

      It is mentioned in Brian Greene's Fabric of the Cosmos. I don't remember if he took it all that seriously or not.

      -l

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    28. Re:Proof! by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      What we can observe in the universe consists of an expanding shell going back in time (just to mix some imagery...)

      Given the nature of robust life on Earth, I would assume that robust life elsewhere would spread itself more or less as rapidly as it is able to. If significant, practical faster than light travel is possible, the life forms that know how to do it would be spread across a vast swath of their galaxies, farther if they could. Maybe they remain insignificant specks while they do this, but probably not - there should be some funky (Niven style) stellar scale engineering projects, bizarre coded signaling, and similar stuff going on at least some of the time during their evolution.

      The thing that would make faster than light travelers more likely to spot would be that they should intersect our sphere of vision (shell of space-time awareness, whatever) across a fairly broad swath (of the past), and they should be "closer" to us than non-faster than light travelers who started at the same time (relative to the big bang.)

    29. Re:Proof! by servognome · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that new developments in physics will contradict that E=MC^2?
      In short, physics is further and further refined by research, not contradicted, because new theories don't change the empirical evidence that was used to determine old theories, they just explain it better.

      Theoretical physics can, and has been contradicted by experimental physics. Refinement sometimes means dismissing old ideas, revisiting old ideas, or throw everything out the window and start over. Theories may fail to account for new data and need to be modified, or shown to be intrinsicly flawed. String theory and cosmological constant were considered, dismissed for a period, then later reconsidered. The long-standing concept of aether was abandoned once theoretical and experimental discoveries rendered it unnecessary.
      At the most extreme, changes in the discipline may be necessary to further develop human knowledge. Alchemy and natural philosophy evolved into modern chemistry and physics. These fundamental shifts did not change the empirical evidence, nor throw out all of the previous concepts, but they significantly changed how we gather and interpret such evidence.

      It may be possible that at some point in the future, physics evolves into a new discipline that interprets our universe differently and comes up with solutions to problems we thought impossible. At the very least, there are lots of paths in existing physics to explore which may give us faster than light travel.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    30. Re:Proof! by green1 · · Score: 1

      Even if that were the case (and I still doubt we would see them unless they've had it for quite some time)

      But even if another civilization were to get FTL before we did, that doesn't mean they have to have had it for any length of time now, we could simply be a very long way away from getting it.

      But none of this speculation precludes FTL travel. a lack of observation of some phenomenon happening elsewhere in the universe does not make that phenomenon impossible.

    31. Re:Proof! by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      a lack of observation of some phenomenon happening elsewhere in the universe does not make that phenomenon impossible.

      True, with the observation qualifier, but again with the perspective, the Universe is big... really big. If 'it' can happen, in all likelihood 'it' has happened and will happen again, many many times (for any given 'it'.)

      Also, the tremendous progress humanity has made, from animal and sail power to nuclear power and a planetary computation/communication grid within less than 500 years, while mightily impressive (to ourselves, at least), probably isn't unique within our own galaxy, and almost certainly has happened before in any number of slightly older galaxies. It's likely that life on Earth was little more than jello balls until about 600 million years ago, once the jello balls started getting competitive with one another, things got interesting relatively quickly. Even 600 million years is a pretty small slice of the estimated 13.5 billion years that things have been going on in this universe.

      If you swallow the Kurzweilian kool-aid about continuing exponential progress, another 500 years should see humanity mastering pretty much every trick available in the universe's play-book. Somewhere in there is cheap, safe, abundant controllable energy. With that, nothing should stop us from terraforming Mars, Venus, and probably planets around the nearby stars. As I understand it, we could put water and an atmosphere on the Moon if we just drop enough wet comets on it and top it up every couple of hundred years. After stunts like that, I imagine we'd probably pull some flashy stellar engineering in systems where the star isn't meeting our needs. etc. etc. etc.

      Turn us loose with "warp drive", and we'd pretty much mow down the galaxy and anything else within travel range within another 1000 years. This is why I think that such a thing isn't likely possible, at least not in a Star Trek bop on over to the next star system in a couple of hours sense. With the scale of things, it's really hard to believe that no other life in the universe has beat us to this "technological awakening" and made it through to off-planet colonization, etc.

    32. Re:Proof! by servognome · · Score: 1

      We'll leave aside the problem that nobody has demonstrated the existence of negative mass, I personally don't believe it could exist precisely because it would enable FTL, but that's seperate to this point

      Just because negative mass hasn't been experimentally demonstrated, doesn't mean it hasn't been seriously postulated. Further, you would only need something that behaves like a negative mass. For example in solid state physics an electron can have different effective masses, including negative values.
      What's required is the property of bending space-time the opposite direction of gravity. This could come from an exotic particle either with negative mass, or positive mass with negative gravitational constant. It could also come from clever exploitation of physics to create a "negative mass field," or even some new discoveries that change our understanding of the rules of the universe.

      It means inevitably that half of the negative mass you are using has to stick out of the bubble ahead of you into normal unwarped space, and so that in order to keep generating the field ahead of you, it has to travel faster than light in its local frame. That is strictly not allowed.

      We are children still learning the rules of the game, we can't reasonably say "That is strictly not allowed"

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
    33. Re:Proof! by AntiSol · · Score: 1

      "No flying machine will ever fly from New York to Paris." - Orville Wright

    34. Re:Proof! by nanomanc · · Score: 1

      The pressure difference theory accounts for only a fraction of the generated lift. The majority comes from the the reaction from deflecting the air downwards.

      Laminar flow causes the air to stick to the top of the wing and is redirected slightly downwards, the underside pushes yet more air downwards in a more obvious way. The vertical component of this is what generates most of the lift.

      Couple of quick links.

    35. Re:Proof! by green1 · · Score: 1

      yet again you fail to account for the fact that when we look at distant stars we're only just now starting to be able to tell if there are planets around them, how do you expect us to be able to tell if another civilization is zooming around in space ships?.

      The only way to know would be if they stopped by in (or near) our own solar system, and as you say, space is rather large, there's no reason to think they'd choose us as a destination.

      also once again, to think that we'd be first may be arrogant, but to think that we're guaranteed to be a long time behind the first may be rather pessimistic too.

    36. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not saying we'd see ships - but if a civilization has ready access to a whole galaxy, I'd expect to see some intelligible stellar output modulation, seriously anomalous matter-energy conversions, etc.

      I agree that we may not be far behind the first, but take the age of the universe as 13.5, if the first came around at 13.499, that's a million years ago. The Milky Way is only 100,000 light years across, and contains 200 Billion+ stars. Put life around one star in a million, and intelligent life at 1/1000 among those who have life, that leaves 200 stars in the Milky Way with intelligent life. I'd be surprised if they are all subtle and self-restrained enough to not do flashy things that we could see, especially if they're operating in our general (100ly) neighborhood.

      It only took the scourge of western civilization 500 years from discovery of North America to complete domination of the landscape, and that was starting with sail and animal power, moving at less than 10mph sustained for 70% of that time.

    37. Re:Proof! by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Please use proper notation, that hovering dot doesn't cut the mustard. And what do you have against the kilo prefix?

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    38. Re:Proof! by green1 · · Score: 1

      and what if the first isn't until 14.0? does that make it impossible?

    39. Re:Proof! by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I realized that I forgot to capitlaize the "V". Sorry.

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
    40. Re:Proof! by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      ZOMG! I didn't see that 'till you mentioned it! WTF?

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
    41. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm... Would be interesting to see if the frame dragging effect of mass can be altered by density. Then you could create a mass flow situation that has a density flux gradient put into it. Perhaps this could be done by crossing some of the effects of a peltier device with a charge coupling device, but on a fairly large scale. A flux capacitor perhaps?

      No need to have actual negative mass if you can figure out how to create a net differential around a given volume per unit time that creates an effective negative mass. Just like to make cold isn't negative heat, but the effect of removing heat from something.

      If it was easy enough to convert mass to energy and back and do it within a plasma state, you could cycle a stream that converts mass to energy as it expands. So now you'd have a light side. Then circulate the energy back around and condense back to mass on a heavy side. And if the mass is moving to impart inertia on one side when converted into energy, but energy carrys no inertia on the return trip before conversion back to mass. Perhaps that's what all those plasma conduits were for on Star Trek?

      Only problem I suspect is that even if an idea like this could work, it'll take a serious amount of energy to do it.

    42. Re:Proof! by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1
      This is one of those complicated chicken and egg type things that aerodynamics throws at you. Is the deflection of air caused by the pressure difference, or is the pressure difference caused by the deflection of air?

      Also, it is wrong to say that the majority of lift comes from the deflection of air downwards - if you plot the pressure gradient around an airfoil (Mark Drela's X-Foil is a great tool for this), you will find that the majority of lift is developed by the top surface of the wing.

      I could mix things up with vortex theory by claiming that lift is derived from the circulation of fluid around the wing... but frankly, I've never found that description helpful.

      YIAAAETYVM (Yes, I Am An Aero Engineer, Thank You Very Much).

      --
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    43. Re:Proof! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not impossible, but you've just got to listen to Carl Sagan say "BILLLions and BILLLions" to get a sense of how improbable it is. It would be more likely for you, personally, to win the powerball lottery with a single ticket purchase. Sure, somebody wins, I actually know a $14M jackpot winner in Florida, but I know an awful lot of people and he's the only one, after ~1000 jackpots have been awarded.

  8. Warp Drives?? by rodrigoandrade · · Score: 3, Funny

    So you mean to say my brand spanking new SSDs have become obsolete already???

    1. Re:Warp Drives?? by wooferhound · · Score: 2, Funny

      My wife likes my Hard Drive much better than my Floppy Drive . . .

      --
      We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
    2. Re:Warp Drives?? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's a shame they're both 3.5"

      Zing!

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      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    3. Re:Warp Drives?? by TheDreadSlashdotterD · · Score: 1

      Please, be kind, rewind.

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      I have nothing to say.
    4. Re:Warp Drives?? by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 1

      Oh come on, it was the perfect opportunity to point out that the 3.5" is the width.

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    5. Re:Warp Drives?? by mrdoogee · · Score: 1

      Or that it runs at 7200 RPM.

    6. Re:Warp Drives?? by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      No, you just need to install OS/2 on them.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    7. Re:Warp Drives?? by DinDaddy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but then the length becomes something like 1mm.

  9. Causality by QuoteMstr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes, so a priori, FTL drives are impossible unless special relativity is wrong. (That's is a bit like saying that perpetual motion machines are impossible unless thermodynamics is wrong.) The proposed mechanism behind the FTL drive doesn't matter -- it'll still cause a time paradox.

    Just like we know any proposed perpetual motion machine must have a flaw, any proposed FTL drive must also have a flaw. They belong to the same class of impossible device, and deserve the same degree of consideration.

    1. Re:Causality by Exitar · · Score: 1

      You bring as proof of a scientific statement an article that demonstrate it using an item (ansible) found in SciFi books?
      "An Ansible is an instantaneous communicator in Ursula LeGuin's Hainish books, the best of which are The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed.

    2. Re:Causality by delt0r · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There have been some papers that even survived peer review on possible resolutions to this. But this is by far the biggest stake in FTL heart. Ironically this is not the biggest problem with the Alcubierre drive. Negative mass energy being one of them.

      IIRC Einstein said they GR and SR may be proven wrong, but that the laws of entropy will never be broken (ie entropy is always getting bigger). I would aggree with this. ie FTL is less sci fi than "vacuum energy" or anti inertia drives.

      But if I were a betting man, I would bet on light speed as the ultimate speed limit of the universe.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    3. Re:Causality by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Informative

      You bring as proof of a scientific statement an article that demonstrate it using an item (ansible) found in SciFi books?

      Um, yes. To show how FTL communication causes paradoxes requires an FTL communication device. None exist in reality, and thus a fictional one must be posited. Ansibles already exist in fiction, so the author lifted that just to make use of the word.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    4. Re:Causality by JerryLove · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm not sure perpetual motion is, strictly speaking, impossible.

      Thermodynamics doesn't seem to preclude 100% efficiency, allowing motion in perpituity. Some real-universe examples:

      Light on the fringes of the universe will continue travelling forever (unless we assume something new to stop it).

      The electron on an atom that never falls into a star, black hole, or the like will forever circle the nucleus.

      Heck: the atom itself will never stop moving.

      Nor, best as we can tell, will the universe. It will be in motion perpetually (I suppose unless it all disintegrates into Hawking radiation, but then *that* will be in motion.

      There are two problems with perpetual motion machines. One is the false math that you can derive infinate energy from one. That's not true at all. You could derive exactly the energy put into one.

      The second is 100% effeciency, which is required for perpetual motion to obey thermodynamics, is not possible in what we would likely call "a machine"

    5. Re:Causality by mblase · · Score: 1

      Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes,

      But that's why we have the Eschaton's Third Commandment: Thou shalt not violate causality within my historic light cone. Or else.

    6. Re:Causality by locofungus · · Score: 1

      Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes

      I'm not sure this is actually correct. The whole point about the Alcubierre drive is that it doesn't violate causality because it actually changes the shape of space.

      Two clocks can be synchronized if they are at the same point in space.

      I've not read the paper but the linked article seems to suggest that it's a moving bubble that causes the problems with QM. Build your bubble large enough and you don't have to move it at all.

      (I'm not convinced that a "warp drive" can exist and I quite like the idea that QM is placing restrictions on GR. But we already know that GR allows some forms of FTL - the inflationary universe being the obvious example)

      Tim.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    7. Re:Causality by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      Does time and gravity really exist? Who knows? The Earth sucks though.

    8. Re:Causality by maxume · · Score: 1

      It's a thought experiment. The ansible is the thing that is violating relativity (because it is instantaneous); unless you have a real thing that violates relativity, you have to make something up for the thought experiment.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    9. Re:Causality by DriftingDutchman · · Score: 2, Informative

      Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes, so a priori, FTL drives are impossible unless special relativity is wrong. (That's is a bit like saying that perpetual motion machines are impossible unless thermodynamics is wrong.) The proposed mechanism behind the FTL drive doesn't matter -- it'll still cause a time paradox.

      Just like we know any proposed perpetual motion machine must have a flaw, any proposed FTL drive must also have a flaw. They belong to the same class of impossible device, and deserve the same degree of consideration.

      The size of the universe has expanded faster than the speed of light due to the expansion of space. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

    10. Re:Causality by locofungus · · Score: 1

      But if I were a betting man, I would bet on light speed as the ultimate speed limit of the universe.

      Ditto. There are only two possible universes to consider, one with an ultimate speed limit or one with no speed limit.

      If there is a speed limit then the universe _has_ to look like our universe does up to the speeds and energies we've probed with the speed limit being the speed of light.

      Newton could not distinguish - his experiments were consistent with both possible universes.

      But if there is a way to break the speed of light limit[1] then relativity doesn't just need a minor correction but is completely wrong and needs a completely new theory from which relatively falls out as a trick approximation at low speeds.

      Tim.

      [1] other than some possibly tiny exception where some things can travel at (1+10e-700)c for example where there is still a speed limit but it's so close to the speed of light that we cannot spot that it's not actually the speed of light.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    11. Re:Causality by SafeMode · · Score: 1

      A perpetual motion machine is not an analogue to FTL travel. Superluminal speeds have been seen and documented. They're not impossible. Hawking radiation is an immediate example of direct evidence of FTL. Then you have the idea of inflation and direct astronomical evidence (like the jets coming off a particular galaxy who's name escapes me at the moment that is moving at something like 6x the speed of light).

      The thing is, we're fairly certain when it comes to nothing being 100% efficient. Entropy demands that some energy will be lost to heat to a degree that can't be converted back to something else under it's own energy.

      We're not so sure that causality is a reflection of how our brain works or how the universe works. Superluminal things exist, and occur, yet the universe hasn't become an unpredictable chaotic soup. It doesn't require that our current theories are wrong, simply incomplete.

      So, evidence for FTL exists, evidence for perpetual motion machines not so much. The problem is if FTL be utilized, and that thus far has been disproven.

    12. Re:Causality by QuoteMstr · · Score: 1

      The universe can do things you can't. Inflation is a change in the scale of the universe, not the motion of some object within it. They're entirely different effects.

      That jet only appears to be superluminal due to the relative motion of the solar system and the jet's source. It's not actually moving faster than light in its own reference frame. Also, Hawking radiation doesn't count: we're dealing with distances on the order of a Planck length, where speed becomes meaningless. You might as well say particles do the Macarena as say that they move faster than light.

      We're not so sure that causality is a reflection of how our brain works or how the universe works.

      A bit solipsistic are we? There is an objective universe out there, and it obeys laws of causality and logic without our being involved at all. To imagine otherwise is arrogance (especially if your name is Penrose.)

    13. Re:Causality by SafeMode · · Score: 5, Informative

      entropy dictates that that everything loses to heat. This heat is at such a low energy level eventually that it can't cause any increase in energy to anything at all around it. This is how a system winds down, eventually all the energy in the atom will get sapped off this way and then it will start breaking down. Eventually devolving into the quantum soup that makes up the subatomic particles. Eventually, those too will lose energy to the space around them until everything is the same indistinguishable quantum soup.

      This is the cold death scenario, and the only thing that can stop it is space itself increasing the density of energy instead of forever decreasing it. It's the expansion of space that continually provides for this loss of energy.

      so no, atoms aren't perpetual motion machines. Though, for practical reasons, unless you need the machine to be functioning billions of years from now, you can call it perpetual.

    14. Re:Causality by 2names · · Score: 1

      No offense, but how can we take your argument seriously when you are completely inflexible in your basis for the argument? For all we know, the "laws" of thermodynamics ARE wrong but just coincidently work in instances that we are currently able to observe and measure. The same could very well be true for a perpetual motion machine (such a thing could exist and we just haven't found it yet.)

      While I tend to agree with what you have stated, I find it difficult to support anyone with such an absolutist perspective particularly regarding any scientific topic.

      --
      "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    15. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if travel at lightspeed (or faster) could be insulated from effects of time dilation?

    16. Re:Causality by locofungus · · Score: 1

      Are you sure?

      Inflation would eventually tear the atom apart. But in the absence of inflation an electron in its lowest orbital state remains in orbit in perpetuity.

      Proton decay might also eventually be a problem. Quick google give current minimum lifetime of the proton as 6.6x10^33 years. (and the standard model has it stable)

      Tim.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    17. Re:Causality by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Funny

      A bit solipsistic are we?

      No, it's just you.

    18. Re:Causality by jbssm · · Score: 1
      The argument you give is wrong, it doesn't apply in this case.

      This is not the mater of an object travelling faster than light, it is not travelling faster than light in the case of the warp theory! It's in indead the metric of the universe that is causing that behaviour.

      As an example I can tell you that near the big bang, the universe expanded much faster than the speed of light and that is perfectly ok in relativity, since it was not the particles that were travelling by themselves faster than light, it was the metric of the universe that was increasing faster than the speed of light. Just imagine 2 points in the surface of a balloon, if you blow the balloon fast enough the points can separate faster than light .. but still those 2 point will be at rest, they will not even have a velocity.

    19. Re:Causality by smallfries · · Score: 1

      No, ignoring the fact that the "thought experiment" proposed is gibberish, there is a more serious problem with your argument. According to the article you link to infinitely fast communication causes causality violations. If the communication was merely faster than light, but not instantaneous then the problem wouldn't exist. So a universe with FTL travel and FTL communication would be fine, but one with FTL travel and instantaneous communication would not. Hence, it is not the FTL travel that causes the paradox.

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    20. Re:Causality by Targon · · Score: 1

      This goes to the limitations of humanity, and our perception of reality being limited. Since we use light to see, it really limits what most humans believe is possible. You can't accelerate faster than the speed of light because it would take infinite amounts of energy. People take this as an absolute, because they do not understand the idea that the REASON for the increasing amount of energy being needed is not fully understood.

      The moment you go from "how do we do this?" to "what is stopping us from doing this?", many impossible problems become solvable.

    21. Re:Causality by mdwh2 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Indeed, the difference is between perpetual motion, and a perpetual motion machine.

      Perpetual motion is not a violation of conservation of energy - although it's still in practice impossible due to the 2nd law of thermodynamics (I'm not sure your examples would really be 100% perpetual, just very close?)

      A perpetual motion machine however implies doing work, suggesting that energy can continually be transformed from one form to another.

    22. Re:Causality by khallow · · Score: 1

      I mostly agree with you.

      A bit solipsistic are we? There is an objective universe out there, and it obeys laws of causality and logic without our being involved at all. To imagine otherwise is arrogance (especially if your name is Penrose.)

      Observer bias is always a problem. In our case, we may have self-imposed limits on what we can observe of the universe due to our nature. First, we are, as far as I can tell, causal and classical observers. Second, there's the usual Anthropic Principle stuff that means we can only exist in a universe which could have created and supported us. But to continue with the train of thought, the universe may be deeply non-causal (for example, there may not be a timelike dimension in general), but we can't observe that because our awareness and observations are limited only to a small slice that is causal.

    23. Re:Causality by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Superluminal speeds have been seen and documented.

      By FTL, he means transmitting information faster than the speed of light, which has not been observed. The examples you cite do not, and hence are no violation of causality. They are no more relevant examples than waving a laser pointer on the moon, or a pre-programmed set of LEDs that scroll a message "faster" than the speed of light.

    24. Re:Causality by master_p · · Score: 1

      Or not.

      When the event A happens, I am already at that event and not at the event C, and therefore Bob, even if he receives the message in my past, he can not affect me in any way, except by sending me another message using the ansible.

      In other words, by the moment Bob receives the message, a photon will take so much time to travel from Bob to me, that when the photon reaches me, I would be at event A.

      I don't see how a causality paradox can take place. Bob can not affect me in any way. By the time Bob is in range that he can affect me, I will already have sent the message. Even if Bob had a death ray, and fired it towards me instantly after the reception of the message, the ray would take so much time that it would reach me just as I sent the message.

      It seems to me that the very definition of relativity protects causality, actually, without forbidding FTL. Of course, the above assumes that whatever is sent down the FTL tube is 'information only', i.e. not a material that can interact with the universe in any known way. Entangled photons is a good candidate for such a thing.

      (by the way, until relativity is unified with quantum mechanics, we can't way which is correct and which is not.)

    25. Re:Causality by master_p · · Score: 1

      By the way, FTL does not mean to 'travel' or to move a bubble of space. FTL means to collapse or expand the universe.

    26. Re:Causality by cool_story_bro · · Score: 1

      I don't know enough about relativity to say that FTL won't always cause paradoxes. HOWEVER, I read the article you linked to and noticed that the paradox required instantaneous communication (not once, but twice). This in itself violates our working knowledge of the laws of physics

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    27. Re:Causality by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Unless there are extra constraints outside the current relativity theory, any FTL travel or communication can violate causality. This is a simple relativity problem. It does not matter *how* you achieve FTL travel/communication.

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    28. Re:Causality by cool_story_bro · · Score: 1

      nevermind. I see now that ansible is meant to fill in for "warp drive" technology. Therefor I revert to my stance of "I don't know enough about relativity."

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    29. Re:Causality by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Don't be so sure. Atomic and subatomic particles do spontaneously decay - it just happens quite infrequently.

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    30. Re:Causality by little1973 · · Score: 1

      This whole causality thing will go away if we accept that time is not a dimension but only an illusion. In short, time does not exist. It is only the human brain (and some animal's) that cause the illusion because we remember the past and, to a certain extent, can predict (calculate) the future.

      How does this affect the causality paradoxes? There will be no more paradoxes simply because the observers receive false information due to the fact the speed of light (which is the information carrier) is limited.

      You provided a link to a paradox, but it does not explain anything. Why should Bob get the message from Carol at C? The FTL bullet paradox is much better explained. IIRC, the paradox is that the target of the bullet is dead in A person's time frame but still alive in B person's time frame. So, B can send an FTL message to the targeted person to save his life and this is a paradox as the person is already dead in A's time frame.

      However, B obviously receives false information due to the information carrier's limitation (limited speed) and in reality the person is really dead. So, B cannot save him and there is no paradox here.

      --
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    31. Re:Causality by LotsOfPhil · · Score: 1

      Light on the fringes of the universe will continue travelling forever (unless we assume something new to stop it).

      The universe has no fringes. Think of it in the same way as "the surface of the earth has no fringes."

      --
      This post climbed Mt. Washington.
    32. Re:Causality by delt0r · · Score: 1

      Any (effective) FTL travel or communication methods can be used to violate causality. Period. This means that in some frame of reference you can get outside you light cone. AKA total travel time is less than lights travel time. Unless you add extra constraints to the system. You can violate casualty.

      This warp bubble has many other problems. Like that the inside is casually disconnected to the outside. That it does not conserve some "invariants" of space time and the use of negative energy that does not exist and is not predicted via the standard model. Finally most warp drives need more energy than the entire visible universe.

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    33. Re:Causality by Tacubaruba · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you can dismiss a theory of what is possible in the universe because you encounter a paradox. Paradoxes say more about the limits of human comprehension than they do about the reality of the universe. Much of quantum physics involves what we perceive as a paradox and yet there it is - the most successful theory ever devised. In fact, quantum theory provides a possible escape from the causality paradox of FTL travel with its many-worlds interpretation. The MWI gets into the whole parallel univeres thing and I really don't want to try to describe it here. (Google it for an explanation.) It's an interpretation that is being taken seriously by many physicists, though. My point is that too many basic assumptions about our universe are still unresolved and so things like FTL really can't be ruled out.

    34. Re:Causality by jbssm · · Score: 1

      Any (effective) FTL travel or communication methods can be used to violate causality.

      But there are no (effective) FTL travel or communication methods. As I already replied to another post about FTL comms using quantum entanglement principles, after doing the maths it now know that it's impossible to do so since you always have to have a classical information channel travelling along the 2 sites of entanglement to pass communication.

      Also, about the standard model, it only works within the limits of general relativity. There is no room for quantum mechanics there or for superstrings.

    35. Re:Causality by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Entropy is statistical, you can't use it to outlaw stuff, because when it can't be applied to individual photons.

      IANAP

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    36. Re:Causality by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Explain something for this layman.
      If Bob and Carol were going the same speed, wouldn't bob be passed point A just like Carol is? Why would Carol's transmission to Bob arrive at point C, instead of a location past point A?

    37. Re:Causality by delt0r · · Score: 1

      I think you are agreeing with me.

      I don't disagree on any point and should add that I meant within our current understanding/models. We already have some cracks in the standard model, neutrino mass is one of them. The results from the LHC could be quite interesting to say the least.

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    38. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paradoxes, travel blabla... My bubble of spacetime just goes "POOOF" here and "SHOOOSH"...I'm 200 million light years from here instantly. Why would anyone want to "travel" anymore?

    39. Re:Causality by Jdodge99 · · Score: 1

      Faster-than-light does necessarily not mean instantaneous. Ansibles (as Card used the term anyway) allow instant communication. What your reference claims is that ftl and instant communication end up being the same thing. "For any faster-than-light system there will be some inertial frame in which it appears to act instantaneously, and so the same argument may easily be applied to any such system." But this is completely unproven in the reference, and doesn't seem quite right to me. If you are saying that special relativity does not correctly explain the behavior of faster than light travel or communication, you are completely correct. That says nothing about whether such things can or do happen.

    40. Re:Causality by locofungus · · Score: 1

      Unless there are extra constraints outside the current relativity theory, any FTL travel or communication can violate causality. This is a simple relativity problem. It does not matter *how* you achieve FTL travel/communication.

      It depends on how you define FTL.

      Theory does not prohibit the idea of distorting spacetime and relativity also doesn't prohibit that distortion travelling faster than light within spacetime. That is the key to the Alcubierre drive. You travel at the centre of your warped bubble slower than light (infact, IIUC you are in freefall) but your bubbles distortion of spacetime moves through undistorted spacetime faster than light.

      Tim.

      --
      God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
    41. Re:Causality by wgoodman · · Score: 1

      The problem with that argument is that while a perpetual energy machine is a device that creates infinite energy, a FTL drive does not make you go infinitely fast. time still passes. if you were to warp X distance away, have a smoke, and warp back, the time passing to people on earth would still be ~5 mins. now if you could just get a perpetual motion machine to supply the power for the FTL drive...

    42. Re:Causality by Quothz · · Score: 1

      It's a thought experiment. The ansible is the thing that is violating relativity (because it is instantaneous); unless you have a real thing that violates relativity, you have to make something up for the thought experiment.

      And thought experiments have as much value to science as umbrellas have for fish. I personally guarantee that any method found for FTL travel will not cause paradox. That's right, it's my promise to you.

    43. Re:Causality by inerlogic · · Score: 1

      special relativity *is* wrong,
      it is a subset.. a "special case" (straight line, constant speed)

      GENERAL relativity is more.... general..... for obvious reasons.... and includes curves and acceleration....

    44. Re:Causality by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't think it's that FTL is impossible or special relativity is wrong-- the third option is that time travel is possible. Of course, if time travel were possible, that would raise a lot of potential problems and paradoxes, and we can't say how those paradoxes would resolve themselves. I'm not saying that the third possibility is a likely one, but it's there.

      You're right, though, to point this out as a problem. Lots of people don't realize that, according to our current understanding of space-time, faster-than-light travel and time travel are essentially the same thing. Also, being able to send information faster than light would be the same thing as being able to send a message backwards in time.

    45. Re:Causality by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Also, about the standard model, it only works within the limits of general relativity. There is no room for quantum mechanics there or for superstrings.

      The standard model, is a quantum model and only works within the limits of special relativity.

      --
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    46. Re:Causality by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      I think you need an understanding of special relativity to appreciate how wrong you are. Basically anything that travels faster than light can then fire a beam of light back to were it started, so it is instantaneously sending a message back to itself. If you sat on a beam of light coming from the sun to earth, it would not take 7 minutes to complete the journey but 0 seconds, that is why traveling at the speed of light is considered infinitely fast, so anything faster than this would also be infinitely fast.

      --
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    47. Re:Causality by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      Please define reality.
      You seam to imply that there is some all powerful ticking clock that decides what time it really is who is dead and where the bullet is.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    48. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just some thoughts...

      What's next under light as far as speed goes? Let's say that light wasn't there anymore to be the top of the speed list. When you put it in that perspective it would then appear that that the runner-up was "the ultimate speed of the universe". Just because we don't *know* of something faster, doesn't mean that it doesn't exist.

      What about black holes? They pull light in so fast that you can't see the light, only the light getting sucked in. So, wouldn't THAT be faster than light? If so, and put into the perspective from above, then FTL would seem very feasible relative to it *not* being "speed limit of the universe".

    49. Re:Causality by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

      It's an interpretation that is being taken seriously by many physicists

      That's nice, but neither it, the Copenhagen interpretation or any other interpretation is actual physics. But just because a possible philosophy can be used to account for the paradoxes doesn't actually make it possible.

      --
      IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
    50. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heck: the atom itself will never stop moving.

      If I remember correctly, protons disintegrate into energy eventually. So, atoms cease to exist at one point in the "future".

    51. Re:Causality by maxume · · Score: 1

      Are you discounting relativity entirely? Einstein developed relativity using a thought experiment. To date, experiments have only served to verify that he got it right.

      I promise to give you my life savings when you make your first FTL trip.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    52. Re:Causality by soapdog · · Score: 1

      I label you causality-nazi!!!!

      --
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    53. Re:Causality by DMUTPeregrine · · Score: 1

      The second law of thermodynamics only applies to a closed system. IF the universe is infinite and contains infinite energy to begin with then the second law wouldn't apply to the universe as a whole.

      --
      Not a sentence!
    54. Re:Causality by myrdos2 · · Score: 1

      What do you think of my perpetual motion device?

      'Dark energy' is causing galaxies to accelerate away from one another. This effect is proportional to the distance between two objects. While dark energy exists between the Earth and the Moon, it's effect is so small as to be negligible. Instead, the Moon's orbit is slowly decaying, and it would one day crash into the Earth. This is why tidal wave generators aren't a perpetual energy source, tidal energy can be thought of as continually robbing momentum from the Moon.

      Take two bodies that are orbiting one another. Increase the distance between the two such that the orbital decay is exactly offset by dark energy. Install a tidal generator (which will be very large and produce a very, very tiny amount of power). Infinite energy?

    55. Re:Causality by Neflyte_Zero · · Score: 1

      No - the moon is not going to crash into us, the tidal forces are robbing the earth of rotational velocity and in fact moving the moon to higher orbits. That's why in about 600 million years we're not going to have any total eclipses of the sun anymore.

      --
      Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn.
    56. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just because something moves faster than light doesn't mean that it moves backwards in time. That is a faulty assumption.

      What would actually happen is that the object would "appear" to be in multiple locations at the same time. Things would appear the instant the left and possibly would leave a trail, similar to those when a photographic image is overexposed.

    57. Re:Causality by Prune · · Score: 1

      Protons are expected to decay at around 10^35 year half-life, so your atom won't be around forever. In 10^100 all blackholes would be evaporated, so so much for that as well. All that's left is unstructured energy (QM will smooth out any structure over large enough timescales). The only structure would be on Hubble volume scales, where space between regions is expanding too fast for light-speed information to cause homogenization, but that's not very useful in terms of efficiency, and you can't use it to do work (in the physics sense of the word) to sustain life or whatever. If protons don't decay, the timescales above are much larger but quantum tunneling will still cause the same end result.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    58. Re:Causality by holmstar · · Score: 1

      Of course, the above assumes that whatever is sent down the FTL tube is 'information only', i.e. not a material that can interact with the universe in any known way.

      Except that information IS material. "Information" is just a mental construct that we use to describe a specific state of matter or energy. For example, on hard drives, information is the orientation of the magnetic fields on the platter. In a book, it is the pattern of ink on the paper. In our brains, it is a pattern of electrical impulses and chemical messengers.

      There is not such thing as pure information.

    59. Re:Causality by Capitalist1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Technically, he didn't get it right unless he derived the idea from observations by a valid method.

      If you just make up some stuff, say in a science fiction book, which then turns out to sound like something scientists discover 100 years later to be a fact, that doesn't mean you were right. It's just an interesting coincidence.

      --
      One man's religion is another man's belly-laugh. - LL
    60. Re:Causality by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      Entropy only makes sense in a closed system, which we've never actually observed yet. The universe may be a lot stranger than we think.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    61. Re:Causality by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      A perpetual motion machine however implies doing work, suggesting that energy can continually be transformed from one form to another.

      Indeed, it is... perpetually transferred from anything into entropy. Haha.

      Let the beatings begin!
      -l

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    62. Re:Causality by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      I haven't seen anything that supports the notion that inflation will tear anything apart. Rather, common forces act as a countermeasure to dark energy in local space. Eventually, the entropy increase of inflation will rob local systems of their energy, but in general, I wouldn't call this a "tearing apart".

      -l

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    63. Re:Causality by Quothz · · Score: 1

      Are you discounting relativity entirely? Einstein developed relativity using a thought experiment. To date, experiments have only served to verify that he got it right.

      We're using different values of "thought experiment". The train-and-platform thought experiment is a real experiment which produces seemingly-bizarre results. The ansible thought experiment uses a fictitious device in a fictitious world to demonstrate bizarre results.

      The latter is useless in any sense of contributing to the development of science. It's interesting and thought-provoking but can never be reproduced, falsified, or applied to the real world. Any FTL theory need not answer questions raised by the ansible concept; it should address relativity directly.

      The former is completely different, in that it highlighted a discrepancy in our theories of the real world. It is indeed a thought experiment, but not in the sense I meant the phrase.

    64. Re:Causality by maxume · · Score: 1

      You are being needlessly pedantic and obtuse. The description at the link does not depend on the ansible, it uses it as a stand in for 'a device that makes the casual FTL transmission of information possible' (FTL travel, by definition, satisfies this). While it is quite true that no such device exists and it is thus impossible to test such a device, it works perfectly fine to bypass the question of the existence of the mechanism and study the implications of the device inside of current theoretical frameworks.

      So sure, the link doesn't demonstrate that FTL is impossible, it just demonstrates that any device that makes FTL possible raises some difficulties for relativity.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    65. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes, so a priori, FTL drives are impossible unless special relativity is wrong." ...or causality.

      For hundreds of years, until we developed technology to measure the speed of light, there were no conditions mankind was capable of observing that didn't correspond to Newtonian physics. The gap between phenomena we could observe that didn't fit (radiation, electromagnetism) and the technology required to understand the mechanisms of those phenomena took a while to close,

      What we've observed so far is "simple" causality. Anything not proceeding in an absolutely monodirectional linear fashion is labeled a "paradox".

      Interestingly, we can actually imagine "complex" causal relationships (i.e. those that describe geometries other than vector), but we have no way to observe them (no FTL travel). Assuming that FTL is impossible because it violates causality is like assuming that measuring the speed of light is impossible because it's instantaneous.

    66. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmm. Quantum soup. But it's really not that tasty without Quantum Croutons.

    67. Re:Causality by Ardeaem · · Score: 1
      All of your "real world" examples of perpetual motion are based on mistaken understanding.

      Some real-universe examples:

      Light on the fringes of the universe will continue travelling forever (unless we assume something new to stop it).

      Photons don't have mass, so they don't require energy to move. This isn't what "perpetual motion machines" are about.

      The electron on an atom that never falls into a star, black hole, or the like will forever circle the nucleus.

      Electrons don't "circle" nuclei - that's a century-old model of the atom.

      Heck: the atom itself will never stop moving.

      In other instances when atoms are cooled to near absolute zero they cease to be individual atoms. Groups of them become Bose-Einstein condensate. I'm not sure it is meaningful to talk about whether individual atoms can "stop moving".

      Nor, best as we can tell, will the universe. It will be in motion perpetually (I suppose unless it all disintegrates into Hawking radiation, but then *that* will be in motion.

      The universe is not in motion. Space-time is a property of the universe, and so there is nothing for the universe to move relative to.

      The second is 100% effeciency, which is required for perpetual motion to obey thermodynamics, is not possible in what we would likely call "a machine"

      Huh? What does what we call it have anything to do with it?

    68. Re:Causality by Praseodymn · · Score: 1

      Where's all that heat gonna go? Seems like if things spread out infinitely, there's gonna be quite a bit of heat, and things attracting to each other via gravity, things absorbing heat..

      --
      Sometimes, you can, you go to hell for the rest of your life! That's a true thing.
    69. Re:Causality by Mal-2 · · Score: 1

      But if I were a betting man, I would bet on light speed as the ultimate speed limit of the universe.

      In a sense, you ARE a betting man, whether you intended to be or not. You have already "bet" enough of your resources (time, money, attention span, etc.) that you have decided it is not a good bet to specialize in developing FTL travel. For almost any individual, this is the winning move. Certainly it is unlikely to be done in our lifetimes. That does not mean SOMEONE shouldn't be investigating it. Maybe it ends up possible, maybe it doesn't, but we still learn something likely to have unexpected benefits.

      Mal-2

      --
      How is the Riemann zeta function like Trump rallies? Both have an endless number of trivial zeros.
    70. Re:Causality by F'Nok · · Score: 1

      Inflation acts by increasing the space.
      As the rate of inflation becomes faster and faster, eventually it's fast enough to separate galaxies, then solar systems, then planets, etc

      Eventually the inflation is so fast the electrons would be pulled from the atoms. Eventually so fast the atoms would be pulled apart.

      These effects ARE present in local space, but are so small to be negligible. The whole point is that inflation eventually ends in these being locally significant.

    71. Re:Causality by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      Are you thinking of the Big Rip? I think that one requires quintessence, whereas the accepted model thus far has been the cosmological constant. That one leans toward entropy eating up local spaces.

      -l

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    72. Re:Causality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure if this will get any reply since it is so far after the fact (had this open in the browser a while before I got to it), but I thought I'd ask in case you have reply emails on :)

      Basically I don't understand the problem. The example in the root post doesn't make a lick of sense to me, and neither does the explanation above.

      Let's say I have two places - like Earth and Alpha Centauri. They are 4 light-years apart.

      So I have a ship that make an FTL jump in a fraction of a second - where the ship itself is not really moving anywhere near light speed, but simply disappearing from Earth orbit and appearing in orbit of some planet in Alpha Centari.

      I don't understand how this violates causality or allows time travel or anything like that. The moment I arrive in AC, I could send a beam of light back to Earth - but the beam of light would take 4 years to get there.

      Likewise I could jump back to Earth a moment later - but I wouldn't arrive before I started - I would arrive a moment later than I left - so I couldn't kill myself in the past or anything crazy like that.

      I'm willing to accept I'm a complete idiot and don't understand something here. I just want to know what that something is.

      Thanks in advance . . if you even see this.

    73. Re:Causality by F'Nok · · Score: 1

      That's mostly because entropy becomes the determining factor before space is ripped to shreds. :P

      When space is cold and dark and dead though, inflation will still be going, assuming it doesn't reverse or stop for some other reason. I was just addressing the case of inflation itself, not which outcome is most likely.

    74. Re:Causality by Luyseyal · · Score: 1

      That's the thing with the cosmological constant, though. It won't rip atoms apart because the acceleration is just too slow. If you're going with a strong scalar field ala phantom energy, sure, that's a possibility.

      Unfortunately for us, the data points to w =~ -1 which means that we won't be able to distinguish between the cosmological constant and a scalar field based solely on that parameter. We'll need some new experiments instead.

      I did read this, which was pretty cool:

      It is of interest to note that if the equation for gravity were to approach r instead of r^2 at large, intergalactic distances, then the acceleration of the expansion of the universe becomes a mathematical artifact,[clarification needed] negating the need for the existence of Dark Energy.

      "clarification needed" indeed!
      -l

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  10. Helicopters! by agorist_apostle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Back before helicopters were successfully demonstrated, people dismissed the idea, saying basically they violated the laws of physics, too...

    1. Re:Helicopters! by wooferhound · · Score: 1

      Not to mention the Bumble Bee is to heavy for it's wings thing.

      --
      We are Dead Stars looking back Up at the Sky
    2. Re:Helicopters! by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      We're not talking about violating some esoteric theoretical physics. We're not even talking about violating run of the mill everyday physics (like gravity and aerodynamics). We are talking about some of the very core concepts of physics that make our universe work the way that it does.

      FTL leads directly to Time Travel; regardless of how it is performed. Not only does that violate causality (which we experience and rely on everyday but isn't technically proven in theoretical physics) it also violates thermodynamics. Sending something back in time produces a huge (in relative terms) reduction in entropy, something that the universe doesn't allow.

      People that argue FTL is inevitable, that our theoretical physics must have a tiny flaw that will allow it to happen, don't understand that this isn't about quantum physics or string theory or even relativity. It's about the basic rules that allow us to understand the universe.

    3. Re:Helicopters! by delt0r · · Score: 1

      I like these "claims". Check who made them and check the details of the claim and you might find that the story is a little different from what you think.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    4. Re:Helicopters! by delt0r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People that argue FTL is inevitable, that our theoretical physics must have a tiny flaw that will allow it to happen, don't understand that this isn't about quantum physics or string theory or even relativity. It's about the basic rules that allow us to understand the universe.

      Have to disagree there. It is about relativity. Its relativity that says we live in "4 space" with one time like dimension. Its relativity that makes the prediction that FTL travel can result in causality violations. So it can't not be about it.

      You don't even need to modify it that much to prevent causality violations with FTL either. If FTL travel *does* have a preferred inertial frame, IIRC then thats enough. A FTL ether if you like. This however may not be interpreted as a "small" change to relativity.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    5. Re:Helicopters! by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that if you scroll up a bit, you will see 2 links to the explanation of how they fly.

      --
      This is the sig that says NI (again)
  11. Bah, just reverse the polarity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Any warp engineer knows that.

  12. So what they are trying to say is by MSDos-486 · · Score: 1

    ...The bubbles can't take no more Capt.

  13. Paper was submitted 1. April by 49152 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Please note the submission date:
    Semiclassical instability of dynamical warp drives

    1. Re:Paper was submitted 1. April by AdmiralXyz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not saying it's necessarily a hoax, as the math seems valid at a casual glance (although IANA theoretical physicist), but they misspelled "a priori".

      --
      Dislike the Electoral College? Lobby your state to join the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
    2. Re:Paper was submitted 1. April by sanjosanjo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Darn, it's from 2009. I was expecting the submission date to be from in future.

    3. Re:Paper was submitted 1. April by Prune · · Score: 1

      The authors are Italian too... talk about wiseguys! :P But seriously, I skimmed the paper and it's not a joke.

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
  14. They won't be strangers for long. by wiredog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Heck, after 8 weeks of army basic training none of the 50 or so people in my company were strangers.

    1. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by commodore64_love · · Score: 5, Funny

      Oh my.

      This is why we need women in the army to stop that nonsense.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    2. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even with warp drives, it would still be don't ask, don't tell.

    3. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by inerlogic · · Score: 4, Funny

      nah, 8 weeks of basic training doesn't generate THOSE kinds of issues....

      the real problems, and a closer analogy, (pun? what pun?) would be the Navy....

      500 men leave on the ship, 6 months later 250 couples return

    4. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by raddan · · Score: 1

      Yes, a killing machine that runs on love. Good idea.

    5. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by BikeHelmet · · Score: 1

      I really wish I had mod points right now. That cracked me up!

    6. Re:They won't be strangers for long. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      better they keep that nonsense in the army and leave the woman to the rest of us /. reading basement dwelling men.

  15. Just reinvent Physics by MSDos-486 · · Score: 1

    Hey its not like it hasn't been done before, I propose we call the new version Post-Modern Physics.

  16. Alcubierre didn't figure out how to build anything by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

    What Alcubierre did was prove that faster-than-light travel within a bubble of spacetime does not conflict with the laws of general relativity. What he didn't do was figure out exactly how to generate that bubble of spacetime. In fact I don't believe any laboratory experiments were involved.

    In other words, he was pretty damn far from figuring out how to build anything. This is not to understate the importance of his work -- he never claimed to have invented anything practical or even to have set out to invent anything.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  17. Progress in theoretical physics by worip · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is best guess at the moment. We don't have a unified theory of everything proven and in the bank. We are not yet even sure how many dimensions the universe is constructed out of (the total varies between 4 and some large number every month). So it is an improbability with current physics knowledge versus a distinct impossibility (a small but significant difference in argument)

    --
    A picture is worth exactly 1024 words.
    1. Re:Progress in theoretical physics by RKThoadan · · Score: 1

      (the total varies between 4 and some large number every month)

      My head just asploded as I tried to comprehend that being the literal truth. It was kinda fun though.

  18. Great! by kristinuk21 · · Score: 1

    now it's the good moment to start the reaserch for a superluminical speed Stabilizer! Maybe we can use the flux capacitor. :)

  19. Oh, nonsense.... by LibertineR · · Score: 1
    What about the inertial dampeners, bitches?

    SOLVED!

    ...and if not, tell Jordi to fire up that holodeck scientist bitch who built the engines, and GET ON IT.

    1. Re:Oh, nonsense.... by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      What about the inertial dampeners, bitches?

      Frankly, I'd much rather have inertial dampers than inertial dampeners. One keeps your body from turning to goo at high acceleration and one makes you moist, presumably with some relationship to your momentum.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  20. Re:Alcubierre didn't figure out how to build anyth by VShael · · Score: 1

    In fact I don't believe any laboratory experiments were involved.
    In other words, he was pretty damn far from figuring out how to build anything.

    Sounds like Da Vinci and his helicopter to me.

  21. Cancel the Star Trek movie by Onyma · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's it, cancel the Star Trek Movie. Now that I know it's all fake it just ruined it for me.

    --
    Play me online? Well you know that I'll beat you. If I ever meet you I'll "/sbin/shutdown -h now" you. -Weird Al, kinda.
    1. Re:Cancel the Star Trek movie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What ruins it for me is that I will be expecting Spock to cut open the heads of his enemies to steal their powers.

      Especially when there is a mind-meld scene (which we all know will happen).

  22. The postulate seems screwy in the first place by Roland+Piquepaille · · Score: 1

    relativity prevents faster-than-light travel relative to the fabric of spacetime, it places no restriction on the speed at which regions of spacetime may move relative to each other. So a small bubble of spacetime containing a spacecraft could travel faster than the speed of light

    This whole proposition seems like flawed logic to me. It's like saying "air is odorless, so let's wrap a fart in a small bubble of air, so it won't stink up the room".

    I have trouble believing the concept of a bubble of spacetime that moves relative to another without any interaction between the two, especially with mass inside the bubble. The other thing is, the whole idea seems to forget that everyday notions of relative speed (the "speed of a bullet shot inside a moving train" logic) don't work at relativistic speeds.

    Or is this a late april fool?

    1. Re:The postulate seems screwy in the first place by Roland+Piquepaille · · Score: 1

      Nevermind, nevermind, TFA was posted on Apr 1. It's just an april's fool joke with Slashdot lag.

    2. Re:The postulate seems screwy in the first place by thrillseeker · · Score: 1

      This whole proposition seems like flawed logic to me. It's like saying "air is odorless, so let's wrap a fart in a small bubble of air, so it won't stink up the room".

      doesn't pass the sniff test, eh?

    3. Re:The postulate seems screwy in the first place by Spatial · · Score: 1

      This whole proposition seems like flawed logic to me. It's like saying "air is odorless, so let's wrap a fart in a small bubble of air, so it won't stink up the room".

      I think we need to wrap your analogy in a bubble of air...

    4. Re:The postulate seems screwy in the first place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As the text you quote says, "warp bubbles" which carry matter along with them are perfectly legitimate mathematical solutions of the general relativistic field equations. That is to say, general relativitity says that they can theoretically exist. The problems with warp bubbles are (1) there may not be any solutions to the quantum field equations which permit the mass-energy distribution necessary to set up such a warp bubble in the first place, and (2) even if there are, such warp bubbles may be unstable (as in TFA), and last but not least, (3) they violate causality. (GR permits causality-violating solutions, e.g. closed timelike loops, but whether reality does is another matter.)

    5. Re:The postulate seems screwy in the first place by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Roland, aren't you supposed to be dead?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
  23. Mod parent up by John+Hasler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Right. At about one G acceleration you can reach any point in the universe in a few years of ship time.

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    1. Re:Mod parent up by commodore64_love · · Score: 1

      Yeah but you need a massive amount of fuel to accelerate to C and then slow down again. About 40,000 times the size of the shuttle's boosters.

      Perhaps this is why, despite our best efforts, no other civilization has contacted us. It's simply too hard to bridge the huuuuge gap between the stars.

      --
      "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
    2. Re:Mod parent up by maxume · · Score: 5, Funny

      With magic, you can ride a unicorn.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Mod parent up by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      with an invisible pink unicorn, you don't even need magic to ride anywhere

    4. Re:Mod parent up by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      the fuel is out there already, Bussard ramjet ftw, bitches!

    5. Re:Mod parent up by Spatial · · Score: 1

      Although you do need to sew up all the holes the damn thing pokes in your socks.

    6. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's your penis, find something else to masturbate into.

    7. Re:Mod parent up by geminidomino · · Score: 4, Funny

      Perhaps this is why, despite our best efforts, no other civilization has contacted us. It's simply too hard to bridge the huuuuge gap between the stars.

      More likely, they've just chosen not to. Like why we tend to not talk to people from Alabama.

    8. Re:Mod parent up by tgd · · Score: 1

      Yow, just be careful where you sit.

      Not that there is anything wrong with that ...

    9. Re:Mod parent up by mgv · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yeah but you need a massive amount of fuel to accelerate to C and then slow down again. About 40,000 times the size of the shuttle's boosters.

      Perhaps this is why, despite our best efforts, no other civilization has contacted us. It's simply too hard to bridge the huuuuge gap between the stars.

      Yes, if I was going to build a universe with all sorts of playthings in it, I'd probably separate the experiments with enough spacetime that when the odd experiment blows up it doesn't really affect any others around it.

      Not that I think that the universe was actually designed, but if it was, that would be how I would do it.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    10. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I the only person that notices this is not insightful at all?

    11. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but you can't reach Alpha Centauri in "only hours", unless you count 32,000 hours to be "only hours", or you increase the acceleration to the point where you arrive as a pancake. So how is he "right"?

    12. Re:Mod parent up by BForrester · · Score: 1

      Absolutely. Of course, unless we're talking about launching an impact projectile, also factor in an equal number of years for deceleration. (...or develop some sort of arrestor system.)

    13. Re:Mod parent up by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      ...and if you rub the magic pink unicorn horn it releases lotion. At least that's what uncle Jim said.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    14. Re:Mod parent up by vertinox · · Score: 1

      Yeah but you need a massive amount of fuel to accelerate to C and then slow down again. About 40,000 times the size of the shuttle's boosters.

      I would think they would need a nuclear if not fusion reactor.

      Then if you could collect the hydrogen and helium in the vacuum, then you could use that. Yes there isn't that at any given location, but when you are traveling that fast, think of it like bugs hitting your windshield.

      --
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    15. Re:Mod parent up by maxume · · Score: 1

      What about the big experiment to find out what happens when the little experiments interact?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    16. Re:Mod parent up by nine-times · · Score: 1
      Even if you can employ the benefits of time dilation, that might make the trip shorter for the travelers-- but what about when they get where they're going, and what about when they come back?

      You start colonizing some distant world, and then you set out to get there. By the time you get there, the colony has reached the height of civilization and destroyed itself thousands of years ago. By the time you get back to Earth, that's gone too.

    17. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's a bit too optimistic...1/2a*t^2...alpha centuri is 4.3 light years or 4E16 meters away. Assuming a=g=10 m/s^2, we're looking at sqrt(8E15)~ 9E7 seconds or about 3 years. Okay, damn you were kind of correct, but I hardly call the nearest non-solar star "anywhere." Personally, my STAR TREK dvds won't last me 3 years, even if I force myself to watch ENT...

    18. Re:Mod parent up by iluvcapra · · Score: 1

      This is exactly the reason why Solarbonite poses such a threat.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Baltar.
    19. Re:Mod parent up by Wescotte · · Score: 1

      We're not in that particular experiment it seems..

    20. Re:Mod parent up by rilles · · Score: 1

      The body snatcher experiment where they steal your bodies and clone it have gone well. I'm not sure why more people don't know ab..

      NO CARRIER

    21. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Calvin says "Sometimes I think the surest sign that intelligent life exists elsewhere in the universe is that none of it has tried to contact us."

    22. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As far as I know, there's no reason to assume that any alien civilizations out there are more technologically advanced than we are. Even if they are capable of communicating with us at such a distance, the message may not have reached us yet. There's also a high chance of civilizations destroying themselves before they get to that point. So I'd say that it's a bit hasty to assume we'll never make contact with another sentient species.

    23. Re:Mod parent up by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Wait, do you even feel any acceleration if it's space-time that's being distorted? Sounds like you're not moving, it's space-time that's moving for you, or something like that?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
  24. Oblig. quote.. by gzipped_tar · · Score: 1

    "... The people of your world once believed the world was flat. Columbus proved it was round. They said the sound barrier could never be broken!... It was broken. They said warp-speed could not be accomplished."

    Oh wait...

    --
    Colorless green Cthulhu waits dreaming furiously.
  25. Guild Spacer by wcbsd · · Score: 1

    Personally, I'm stocking up on Melange so I can fold space.

    1. Re:Guild Spacer by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      damn the guild and their monopoly on interstellar travel.

  26. Hans Solo said to Luke on the Millennium Falcon: by SpzToid · · Score: 1

    "Hyperspace ain't like dustin' crops, boy! Without precise calculations you could blast yourself into a star, or bounce of a supernova; and that'd end your journey Real Quick."

    --
    You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
  27. This problem has been solved. by benwiggy · · Score: 2, Funny
    I think I've seen this episode.

    Don't they remodulate the shield frequency (or reconfigure the emitter array), and that keeps the bubble stable just long enough?

    1. Re:This problem has been solved. by epr · · Score: 1

      No. No they didn't.

  28. Stabilize the bubble... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can't they stabilize the bubble field by reversing the polarity of the magnetic probe?

    It just might work!

  29. Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatible? by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I thought we knew that combining these two theories resulted in answers we know to be nonsense. So the implication is one or both of them are wrong in some way. So I'm a little confused why we should trust results based on the combination of two theories that don't work together.

    Granted I'm just a laymen, but does anyone else want to comment about the intersection of these two theories?

    --
    AccountKiller
  30. Wrong film! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wrong film!

    1. Re:Wrong film! by JB19000 · · Score: 1

      Wrong medium!

    2. Re:Wrong film! by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      Psychics aren't wrong - they just have a limited probability of success.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
  31. I don't think that means what you think it means.. by AcquaCow · · Score: 3, Informative

    Quantum would be an atomically short distance...

    IE: a "Quantum leap" is just an electron jumping to another valence level in an atom... it's not a very large distance =)

    --

    up 12 days, 22:30, 2 users, load averages: 993.20, 994.21, 994.56
    *makes note to limit user processes...
  32. Not impossible, just not invented yet by WCMI92 · · Score: 1

    One component of most Sci-Fi "warp drives" is a forcefield/shield etc that would reinforce or protect the ship within that bubble.

    So while the hyperspace bubble may be inherently unstable there could be a way given enough power (think fusion or matter-antimatter power) to stabilize it with a forcefield.

    We're clearly at least a century if not more from having the technology to even think about building a warp capable space craft, and I believe that's largely because we need to get to the point of practical nuclear fusion or a practical way to manufacture antimatter in quantity.

    --
    Corporatism != Free Market
    1. Re:Not impossible, just not invented yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An ablative outer hull made of layers of ice I would think would be more probable for main shielding (a LOT of ice), maybe laser mounts on top of that.

    2. Re:Not impossible, just not invented yet by socrplayr813 · · Score: 1

      I fully agree that we're a long way from traveling that far/fast, but fusion is likely a good bit closer than 100 years...

      There are a number of groups making significant progress in Inertial Electrostatic Confinement (IEC) fusion

      My personal favorite is the Polywell, but there are a number of others. There are still issues of course, but with everything these groups are learning, I doubt it'll take 100 years.

      --
      The confidence of ignorance will always overcome the indecision of knowledge.
    3. Re:Not impossible, just not invented yet by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      And the sharks would go where?

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
  33. Unless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless it does work for some reason... sorta how the controls on an airplane reverse after Mach 1, which surprised the crap out of everyone the first time they did that.

  34. Superluminal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... hey... loom.

  35. Reverse the Polarity! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    It always works.

    1. Re:Reverse the Polarity! by Wescotte · · Score: 1

      Don't forget to recalibrate too

  36. Got a Better Idea? by d3ac0n · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While what you say may be very true, the problem is that we have yet to come up with a more feasible method of reaching distant planets in a reasonable amount of time.

    The next closest idea that Science and Science Fiction have come up with is Wormhole/Space Fold travel. And unless you have some safe way of generating more power than a large star in a safe and contained manner, that's going to be even tougher than FTL or Warp Bubble drive.

    So our best bet is to spend the time doing a full scientific inquiry into FTL/WB drive including actually attempting to BUILD something and testing it. If after that we can show that FTL/WB drive is the cosmic equivalent of a perpetual motion machine, then OK. But let's do the hard Science and prove it first. IANAQP, but it seems to me that your theory and TFA theory are as about as likely as the Mexican guy's theory. Let's find out, shall we?

    --
    Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    1. Re:Got a Better Idea? by delt0r · · Score: 1

      You don't need FTL travel to explore the local star system (or further). A antimatter drive is not theoretically impossible and reasonable mass ratios can give you 50% the speed of light. Thats only 40 or so years travel time out to 20ly (about 100 stars) and add life extension or hibernation methods and your golden. 80 years gets you out to 40 ly distances and your looking at more than 500 stars. There are other possibilities for sub light speed travel too.

      The universe is not required to conform to our instant gratification culture, or too our SciFi faith.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    2. Re:Got a Better Idea? by MozeeToby · · Score: 2, Informative

      As has been pointed out, there are many answers to the problem of interstellar travel that don't involve rewriting the physics of the past 150 years.

      Medicine may allow us to live indefinitely, making travel to the stars possible by the sheer power of our lifespan.
      Computers may allow us to upload our consciousness into them, leading to an indefinite lifespan.
      Medicine may allow us to freeze ourselves and re-thaw when we get to the destination.
      Space propulsion may allow us to accelerate at 1g for long periods of time, thanks to relativity you would get just about anywhere in a matter of years (ship time).

      The problem with doing a full scientific inquiry and building a prototype is that first and foremost, every theory that allows FTL requires negative mass, which has never been produced or discovered and isn't included in any of the common particle models. Unless there's a stable, negative mass particle that the Standard Model doesn't predict, FTL is impossible. I would go so far as to say that since such a particle makes FTL possible, such a particle cannot exist in our universe; it simply leads to too many contradictions of too many basic physics concepts (causality & thermodynamics especially).

    3. Re:Got a Better Idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Computers may allow us to upload our consciousness into them, leading to an indefinite lifespan.

      This idea is as dangerous as Star Trek's teleporters. Uploading your consciousness into computers doesn't lead to an indefinite lifespan - it leads to an exact simulation of your mind at that instant. That's fine if you're okay with being cloned, sending your clone out into space while you stay on Earth, and dying on Earth.

      It is not a way for YOU to get into space.

    4. Re:Got a Better Idea? by gclef · · Score: 1

      You can't experimentally prove impossibility. You can only show that all your attempts so far failed. For example, do all of the failed perpetual motion machines prove that perpetual motion is impossible? No, because each of them had a flaw...the fundamental issue comes when you say that you can't build a device *without* a flaw like that. That's not experimentally provable.

      However, there's another way of looking at it: if we are pretty sure that FTL is impossible, then what you're proposing is an *enormous* waste of money.

      It's always possible that there just isn't a feasible way of reaching distant planets. Sometimes the universe just kicks you like that.

    5. Re:Got a Better Idea? by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      The point is that it's a way for humanity to get into space. Unless medicine improves dramatically within the next 20 years or so there isn't really any chance of me exploring other planets anyway. I suppose it's possible (if the singularity folks are right) that advances in spaceflight and medicine will happen on that kind of time scale, but I find it unlikely.

      Besides, if you're not satisfied with uploading your mind how about this. You send nanomachines into your skull to replace one brain cell at a time with a computer simulated brain cell. Over the course of say 10 years, every brain cell in your head is replaced by the simulated version. You never stopped being you, and now your consciousness is hosted on the computer.

    6. Re:Got a Better Idea? by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      I recall reading about this online a few years ago. Hopefully someone can find the article. It theorized that an object falling into a black hole would actually be traveling faster than the speed of light. Although local time to the object they would not break any rules, assuming they were traveling at the speed of light or very close to it as they fell into the event horizon, from the outside observer, they are actually moving on compressed space-time and the space time itself is actually being pulled in a circular motion by the black hole and therefore allows them to travel faster than the speed of light as observed by by someone outside of the warped space-time.

      Kind of like water down a drain. The water by the drain is moving much faster than the surrounding water and although no laws are broken, they could in theory end up moving faster than light on the locally warped space-time as seen by an outside observer.

    7. Re:Got a Better Idea? by holmstar · · Score: 1

      Or, your consciousness slowly disappears as your cells are replaced. Eventually replacing you with an exact simulation, while you have effectively died.

    8. Re:Got a Better Idea? by Prune · · Score: 1

      If you move one end of the wormhole relativistically, it will time-lag from the other and you can use the wormhole to travel to the past, and again this causes paradoxes (say you come out of the lagging end before you go in the other one and kill yourself before entering). Wormholes also don't work out for other reasons (need negative energy to keep it open).

      --
      "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason."
    9. Re:Got a Better Idea? by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      So you make the argument that you would become a philosophical zombie (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophical_zombie)?

      Personally, I would argue that such a concept is impossible but even beyond that, what's to say that everyone else in the world other than you isn't already without consciousness?

  37. Spice by jimbudncl · · Score: 1

    Obviously, they're missing a key ingredient...

    1. Re:Spice by modmans2ndcoming · · Score: 1

      spice is only used to get the pilots high enough to see the future and make the navigational changes necessary to travel.

      The drives themselves to not use the stuff.

    2. Re:Spice by jimbudncl · · Score: 1

      Don't make me pull your heart plug...

      <g>

  38. So what you're saying is by FauxPasIII · · Score: 1

    The Science Directorate has stated that faster-than-light travel is not possible...

    --
    25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
  39. Re:Alcubierre didn't figure out how to build anyth by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

    Sounds like Da Vinci and his helicopter to me.

    Let's just hope that the time from original concept to working prototype is a bit shorter with this one.

    --
    Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
  40. Quantum Hard Drives by V50 · · Score: 1

    Ugh. Read this early in the morning, still haven't had my caffeine yet, and only after reading through all the comments did I realise this was about travel, not hard drives.

    After skimming through it, I thought it was talking about a hard drive that stored data in a bubble of faster-than-light speed, using quantum mechanics or something. My first thought was that you'd probably end up with a hard drive where all your data is both there and not there at the same time.

    Ugh. Need. More. Tea.

    1. Re:Quantum Hard Drives by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      My first thought was that you'd probably end up with a hard drive where all your data is both there and not there at the same time.

      Actually, that sums up my experience with Quantum hard drives pretty well...

  41. We already have faster-than-light communication! by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Sorry, but we already have faster-than-light communication trough quantum entanglement. The change in state happens instantly, without any delay, no matter what the distance is.

    Of course in praxis, you would first have to fly a large mass of entangled matter to the other place at sub-light speed. But when it's there, you could communicate at FTL speeds, until the matter is used up.

    I think with moving matter, you are basically correct. But even thermodynamics is just a theory of how things work. It can always happen that we find an exception to it. Pretty much all our scientific knowledge got refined more and more over the time, showing us how there are exceptions here and there (eg. superconductivity).
    So it may be pretty unlikely, that searching for FTL drives will bring some results. But it is not per-se wrong or impossible.
    Special relativity just has to hat so be a little tiny bit wrong.

    Please stop acting as if theories were absolute unchangable laws. They may look, or be very close to that, but they never are exactly that.
    (So I agree with you for 99.99999%. But not 100%! And say that there is a very important difference there.: )

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  42. What about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about powering said warp bubble with a cup of really, really hot tea?

    No wait, bad idea. Remember what happened when Wesley made a warp bubble?

  43. Oh well by Sir_Lewk · · Score: 1

    We can still get hella fast moving at subluminal speeds.

    --
    "linux is just DOS with a UNIX like syntax" -- Galactic Dominator (944134)
  44. Just use the Heisenburg Compensator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This can be accomodated by using the Heisenburg Compensator

  45. FTL FTL :( by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    try the veal!

  46. We all know how this ends. by Icegryphon · · Score: 1, Funny

    It ends with Sam Neill plucking out his own eyes and telling you, that you will not need them where you are going.

  47. Re:Alcubierre didn't figure out how to build anyth by SirGarlon · · Score: 1

    "Sounds like Da Vinci and his helicopter to me."

    Well put. That's my point, and why I said "[t]his is not to understate the importance of his work." I am not so much putting down Alcubierre as I am putting down the summary, which asserts he "figured out how to build a warp drive." Not true, and Alcubierre would probably be the first one to tell you that.

    --
    [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
  48. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by QuoteMstr · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sorry, but we already have faster-than-light communication trough quantum entanglement. The change in state happens instantly, without any delay, no matter what the distance is.

    That doesn't work. You can't transmit information faster than light; contrary to popular conception, quantum entanglement does not involve classical information transfer.

    If you have one of a pair of dice, and the other is a thousand light-years away, one way to think of entanglement is to imagine that whatever number you roll is the number that shows up on the other die the next time it is rolled. Even if the two dice are linked, you can't control which number shows up, so you can't use the dice to communicate information.

  49. One major reaction by Dasher42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I am completely hopeful for the sake of knowledge and experience that we get to into space like in Star Trek. However, I do note a bit of escapism in some of the hopes for a warp drive. I think people are a bit afraid of the idea that this Earth might be the only world humanity will ever live on. The cynic in me suggests that people want this world to be disposable.

    We co-evolved with the planet all the way back to when we were microbes. This world is a part of us. Yes, let's try to break past the speed of light, for the sake of science and achievement. Are we existentially okay with our fate as a species being completely contained in this world? I think we can be.

    1. Re:One major reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are we existentially okay with our fate as a species being completely contained in this world?

      I'm not okay. I really do want the slight hope that at some point there will be the Federation/2nd Great and Bountiful Human Empire/Galactic Republic etc.
      Even if it's another thousand years till we send out a bunch of Generation Ship's n they take a few hundred years to get anywhere decent.
      If the entire human race end's up on this planet all crammed together for million's of years it won't end well.
      Also I hope there is something else out there cos it'll be really sad if Humans are the only sentient beings the universe produces in it's Billion Billion year life.

    2. Re:One major reaction by Targon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      People do not want this world to be disposable, but they want the option to get off this crazy panet, in the hopes that there will be some sanity once you get away from the current cultural stupidity we see from terrorists and those who support terrorism.

      There is also the concern that the stupidity of a few may destroy the world, so getting off the planet is also a survival instinct for the species at this point.

    3. Re:One major reaction by cagrin · · Score: 1

      According to some, we are a created being, and though there is indeed evolution of species, that is not the complete answer, as some beings out there can indeed create life(and some who can genetically manipulate what already exists). The bible does indeed contain some of the answers to creation and the universe but is only one of many sources of information out there. Take the Red pill ;)

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
    4. Re:One major reaction by Five+Bucks! · · Score: 1

      The stupid won't destroy the world... it'll probably be fine. We'll be fucked though.

      --
      52 52'23" W 47 32'07" N
    5. Re:One major reaction by SquirrelsUnite · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Are we existentially okay with our fate as a species being completely contained in this world? I think we can be.

      Without the possibility to colonize other planets humanity will almost certainly tend towards conformity and ultimately stagnation. In many ways I find that fate as sad as extinction.

    6. Re:One major reaction by ZonkerWilliam · · Score: 1

      Without the possibility to colonize other planets humanity will almost certainly tend towards conformity and ultimately stagnation. In many ways I find that fate as sad as extinction.

      How true! on all accounts.

    7. Re:One major reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't need FTL to get off Earth. The solar system has millions of times the resources of this planet. A good fusion rocket would get us there cheap. Give us a hundred years of that and we can turn the Earth into a park, and protect the only biosphere we know of, instead of chopping down mountains and leveling forests.

    8. Re:One major reaction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no we are not, as species we fight for survival, stay long enough in this world and extinction will catch up with you eventually.

  50. Re:Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatibl by maxume · · Score: 1

    There isn't any way to prove that the same rules apply at all scales. We sort of assume they do, but they might not.

    --
    Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  51. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Informative
    Sorry, but we already have faster-than-light communication trough quantum entanglement. The change in state happens instantly, without any delay, no matter what the distance is. Of course in praxis, you would first have to fly a large mass of entangled matter to the other place at sub-light speed. But when it's there, you could communicate at FTL speeds, until the matter is used up.

    No we don't, and no you couldn't. I suppose you're thinking of the EPR paradox? Very well. Let us say that I have a set of electrons in equal spin superpositions, and you, at some distant location, have their entangled counterparts. What's the protocol for communication?

    Well, if I measure the spin of my electron 0 about the x axis, then in doing so I will also establish the spin of your electron 0 about that axis. The superposition on your electron has vanished without you touching it. Terrific, that's communication, right? I collapse your electrons in sequence, this one on the x axis, this one y, this one x, and so on, a binary code?

    Well, no, it doesn't work like that. How can you tell if I've done anything at my end? By making measurements of your electrons? No - because that will collapse the superposition too. Let's say I measure electron 0's spin around the x axis to be positive. Immediately and instantaneously, faster than light across the universe, the superposition on your electron 0 collapses and I know it to be positive about the x axis.

    But you don't know that. You might pick the y axis to measure, which is still a superposition. Or you might pick the x axis, and certainly you'll get a +, but you might have got that anyway. You can measure each electron only once - you change its state in doing so - so you can't do a series of tests, build up the statistics and find that on the y axis it's a 50/50 shot but on the x axis it's + every time. That's what you'd need to do in order to determine that I'd chosen the x axis. That's what you'd need in order to communicate faster than light. But since you only ever get one measurement, you get no information about what I did at the other end.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  52. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by locofungus · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but we already have faster-than-light communication trough quantum entanglement. The change in state happens instantly, without any delay, no matter what the distance is.

    Of course in praxis, you would first have to fly a large mass of entangled matter to the other place at sub-light speed. But when it's there, you could communicate at FTL speeds, until the matter is used up.

    No. EPR does not allow FTL communication. FTL communication means causality violation: A causes B but B happens before A.

    Tim.

    --
    God said, "div D = rho, div B = 0, curl E = -@B/@t, curl H = J + @D/@t," and there was light.
  53. You're right by CaptainStumpy · · Score: 1

    Liquid schwartz. Instant space tracks.

    --
    It will be better to purchase from an owner who is a good farmer and a good builder.
  54. A Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes! Simply wrap the ship in a space-time bubble. We do that all the time in the mail room.

    Why didn't they just say "simply invent a flux capacitor and then you'll be able to go back in time" too?

  55. Re:Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatibl by jbssm · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The two theories in fact do not work well together.

    The only "somewhat" reliable theory we have so far that should work when both quantum and relativist thresholds are reached is the superstring theory (or it's advanced counter part or M-branes). Unfortunately nobody can tell if that theory is right or not since we don't have the means to measure any of the results that are predicted by that theory and are not in conformity with the general relativity or quantum physic.

    Maybe with the LHC that with be possible, but that may not be the case. The maximum energy that LHC will be able to handle will in principle not be enough to put some of those principles in practice. BUT, perhaps we can observe a sub-"product" of superstring (M-brane) theory, the unfolding of extra spacial dimensions (6 or 11) and in that case, that should give us a pretty good idea that M-branes are the way to go.

    Still, even if we don't see any of that with LHC, it doesn't mean the theory is wrong until we build a powerful enough particle accelerator that finally confirms or dismisses M-branes theory.

  56. Quantum Tunneling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's easy to travel at speeds faster than light all you need to do is harness a quantum tunnel with an FTL factor of 36.7 recurring.

  57. Since when does.... by ghetto2ivy · · Score: 1

    Since when does quantum physics make something impossible? Probably never.

    1. Re:Since when does.... by damien_kane · · Score: 1

      Since when does quantum physics make something impossible? Probably never.

      To be fair, while quantum physics can make something deterministically possible (and relatively probable, at that), that same thing is quite indeterminately improbable.

  58. Just how unstable? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How unstable are we talking about?

    Does everything within the bubble get destroyed when it collapses, or does the faster-than-light portion of the trip just end? How far could you get before it collapses? Since you are already breaking C anyway, is there some limit to what factor you can exceed it by?
    If everything survives, what's the problem with just making another one? Even if it lasts only a picosecond, but another could be created relatively quickly, it could still be usable - your trip would be a series of *very short* faster-than-light hops, but as long as you survived the creation and destruction of the bubbles, you'd be getting somewhere. And if you are exceeding C by large enough factors, you don't need very many.

  59. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by JustinOpinion · · Score: 2, Informative

    Sorry, but we already have faster-than-light communication trough quantum entanglement. The change in state happens instantly, without any delay, no matter what the distance is.

    You're mis-interpreting quantum mechanics and entanglement. The second sentence in that quote is right, but it doesn't imply the first sentence, which is wrong.

    When a quantum entanglement collapses, both of the entangled particles will end up in states that are strongly correlated, even if the two particles are very far apart. So yes you could have two entangled particles that are separated from each other, have them collapse, and there would be "instantaneous" correlations between them.

    However this cannot be used for faster-than-light communication. (It makes for cool sci-fi, but isn't correct when you really look into the details of quantum mechanics.) The reason it cannot is because the collapse is (at least to the local observers) random. Neither side can predict nor influence* what random state their end of the entangled pair collapses into. So if we have two streams of entangled particles (one on Earth and one at Alpha Centauri), both sides would read out a random stream of answers (up/down, yes/no, 1/0 ... or whatever). Only once you compare the two streams do you realize that they were correlated more strongly than random chance (and classical mechanics) would allow. A cool experiment, to be sure! But it can't be used to transfer information.

    Many people have tried to devise ways around the rules of quantum mechanics, to allow entanglement to be used for FTL communication. But all such proposals (to date) have been found to have mistakes with respect to our current understanding of quantum mechanics. To date, there is no loophole that allows one to circumvent the (local) randomness of quantum mechanics to allow FTL. Of course it's possible that modern relativity and quantum mechanics are both wrong. But at least for now there is no evidence of any information ever being transmitted faster-than-light.

    * Actually you can try to influence the answers you get from your stream by selecting a particular measurement method. And while doing so does influence the states of the distant particles, your faraway friend won't know what sequence of measurements you selected. So he will select his own set of measurements, and end up with what seems like a random stream, and no way to correctly interpret what the stream "means" without knowing the sequence of measurements you performed. Of course the two sides can pre-arranged what measurement sequence to use, but that's not FTL communication... that just becomes old-fashioned communication. The point is that "communication" means "transfer of information", and one cannot transfer information via entanglement (which may be FTL), because one has to additionally transfer the measurement information in a sub-luminal way. This may sound "contrived" to prevent FTL communication, but that's just what our best equations currently describe.

  60. "relative to the fabric of space-time" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "relative to the fabric of space-time" - when ever anyone says something like this I know that they have no idea what they are talking about. The whole point of relativity (in any sense) is that the motion of something is always relative to something else. There's no invisible "grid" throughout space like some video game. When we're talking about FTL, we're asking if there's anything that can get us moving faster than light relative to the earth. Hell, right now, I could be considered to be moving at a superliminal speed in a frame of reference centered on some imaginary point that would appear to me to be moving FTL, if it had some physical marker to make it visible. Or perhaps in the eyes of an alien spinning in a circle on alpha centauri

  61. What scientists do not know could fill a universe. by Targon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The very people who should be aware how little they know compared to what is possible. They come up with these statements, and they forget that for every problem, there IS a solution, even if they can not figure it out themselves.

    The question their current "findings" should be asking is "what makes it unstable?". They may not know, but that is the key to solving the problem.

    People forget that scientists used to think that it was impossible to break the sound barrier for various reasons. Then they came up with the idea that the speed of light could not be broken. Time has proven again and again that the only thing stopping ANYTHING is not having the knowledge to do it. Not having knowledge does not make something impossible, it just means a CURRENT inability to do something.

  62. White Hole by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    None of this matters if we find out there is a quantum unit of space. Redefining space as a lattice of pockets that mass fills would cause the very dynamics of our existence to change such that the very discovery and subsequent observation of said space would cause our universe to instantly +++h

  63. Shows how it is possible. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The original showed it to be impossible as well due to extreme negative energy density requirements. This paper just points the way toward an engineering solution: build the bubble in stages with rotating nested space bubbles to reduce the quantum stresses.

    This would also (hypothetically) reduce the energy requirements for each layer to possible amounts.

  64. Re:Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatibl by JustinOpinion · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First of all it's worth remembering that quantum mechanics and relativity are not 100% incompatible. In fact "relativistic quantum mechanics" has been around for a long time. Quantum theory was greatly advanced when relativistic effects were included.

    But you're right that we have good reason to believe that something is wrong with either quantum mechanics or relativity (or both), since they give contradictory predictions in a certain number of extreme cases. (Quantum gravity is not yet solved...)

    However we also have ample evidence that quantum mechanics and relativity are incredibly accurate and predictive theories in a vast range of circumstances. We have every reason to believe that the correct "Theory of Everything" will reduce to conventional quantum mechanics and conventional relativity in the appropriate limits. And thus we have every reason to continue using those theories to make predictions all over the place.

    Now a warp bubble is one of those extreme situations where the two theories might be expected to give contradictory results, in which case only the hypothetical theory-of-everything would give the correct answers. But it is certainly still useful to ask what our current theories would predict for these extreme situations. It helps us better understand the theories. And, again, we have reasons to believe that many of the things our current theories predict (even in extreme situations) will be right. Absent the theory-of-everything, quantum mechanics + relativity will give us the "best guess" about how such objects would behave

  65. Re:I don't think that means what you think it mean by Rayban · · Score: 1

    Hah... it's probably just my engineering background, but I always found "atomic" as a description of a quantum unit to be funny.

    --
    æeee!
  66. Set back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow,

    With this I think that warp drive production will be set back by 10 years or so. What a disaster..

  67. Scientists claiming something is impossible? by JM78 · · Score: 1

    Everything is impossible until proven otherwise - don't they know better?

    --
    I am Jack's smirking revenge.
  68. Sorry Cap'n! by bugeaterr · · Score: 1

    I canna change the laws of Physics!

  69. Impossible mean by SolarStorm · · Score: 1

    Impossible only means "Everyone else gave up"

  70. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by jbssm · · Score: 1
    That is wrong unfortunately.

    We are not capable of faster than light communications based on quantum entanglement since to be able to decode the information you may transmit with quantum entanglement you need to transmit beside the information in the entanglement also a classic channel and that puts everything back in the slower than light (or as fast as light) domain.

  71. LoL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MIT Technology Review? Who the hell trusts them anyways?

    But in all seriousness, stuff like "strongly implies that such a bubble would be unstable" makes me think this is a far-fetched half-baked article that has little to no solid facts on what the problem is, was, or will be.

    FTL FTW

  72. Or... They're further away than that by EgoWumpus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One of the nice things about the universe is that it's actually pretty hard to hide phenomenon. We, for instance, have been making no attempt to not blatantly broadcast our location and existence - while the sample size is small, do you really think any other civilization is going to have their first thought upon discovering radio waves be "Damn, better be careful about using lest an impossibly distant alien race finds out where we are!"?

    No, far more likely is that if there is life out there, it's simply far enough away (or, correspondingly, too young) that we haven't had the chance to see any evidence of them. But to assume that 'if there is life, of course they see us', is entirely illogical.

    --

    [Ego]out

    1. Re:Or... They're further away than that by agw · · Score: 1

      I thought all the early Nazi TV transmissions are already dispersing and that after a hundred years/lightyears any regular transmission will become white noise.

      Any inner or inter galactic transmission would have to be specially designed for that purpose.

    2. Re:Or... They're further away than that by EgoWumpus · · Score: 1

      a) Our broadcasting power is quite a bit more powerful now.

      b) While transmissions do disperse, and are thus correspondingly harder to read, that does not mean that they're impossible. Just harder - you'd need better equipment of some sort, be it telescopes or computers to interpolate data, or something else entirely. The point still stands; alien civilizations are unlikely not to have contacted us because it's to hard to get to us. Chances are they haven't contacted us because it just hasn't been a physical likelihood yet - and that due to distance.

      --

      [Ego]out

  73. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Floody · · Score: 1

    No. EPR does not allow FTL communication. FTL communication means causality violation: A causes B but B happens before A.

    There is no causality violation if you travel FTL to some point in the expanding universe that is beyond our light cone, as long as expansion never reverses. In other words, FTL is "causality safe" between two reference frames that can never come in contact with each other.

    Additionally, within a local reference frame, causality violation presumes the existence of free will. Dr. Robert L Foward posited that the instant one transmits information FTL (i.e. time travel), restrictions begin to be placed on free will such that causality can not be violated, and thus preventing paradoxes.

    You might be able to go back in time, but you can't go back and kill your own grandfather.

    Forward saw this as essentially the inverse of forward causality, i.e. if I'm going to break my leg tomorrow skiing, I don't really have any choice in the matter.

  74. Quantum drives... by homesnatch · · Score: 1

    Are they talking about Quantum Hard Drives or Tape drives? I thought they stopped making hard drives.

  75. Circular Argument by Comboman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    (We'll leave aside the problem that nobody has demonstrated the existence of negative mass, I personally don't believe it could exist precisely because it would enable FTL, but that's seperate to this point.)

    That's sounds like a circular argument:

    • Negative mass can't exist because it would allow FTL travel.
    • FTL travel can't exist because it would require negative mass.
    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
    1. Re:Circular Argument by grimw · · Score: 1

      He doesn't mean he necessarily thinks it doesn't exist. I think he is willing to accept that negative mass could exist, but not because someone says it must exist for FTL to be solved.

    2. Re:Circular Argument by geckipede · · Score: 1

      My reasoning is: I don't believe FTL can exist as it could lead to paradoxes, and as negative mass could be used to create FTL it follows that I don't believe it can exist either.

      It should be mentioned that this is not changed by what I said above about warp drives, because that is not the only way that negative mass could be used to create paradoxes. A more practical method would be to use it to stabilise wormholes for example, which could then be used for either FTL or time travel.

    3. Re:Circular Argument by T+Murphy · · Score: 1

      That's sounds like a circular argument: * Negative mass can't exist because it would allow FTL travel. * FTL travel can't exist because it would require negative mass.

      Negative mass can't exist because it would allow FTL trave
      * iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l
      s iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii *
      s iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii F
      am evitagen eriuqer dluow ti esuaceb tsixe t'nac levart LT

    4. Re:Circular Argument by servognome · · Score: 1

      My reasoning is: I don't believe FTL can exist as it could lead to paradoxes,

      There are a number of accepted theories that could lead to paradoxes, you shouldn't just dismiss FTL for that reason.

      --
      D6 63 0D 70 89 81 BB 8E 7B 7C 5F 5D 54 EA AB 73
  76. Re:Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatibl by Manchot · · Score: 1

    You have a good point: we cannot definitively rule out warp drive until a theory of quantum gravity becomes well-established. Of course, that doesn't mean there aren't clues that tell us that the universe behaves a certain way. Unfortunately, both quantum mechanics and relativity predict that information can't be transferred faster than the speed of light, so I wouldn't get your hopes up.

  77. 3 laws by davek · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Arthur C. Clarke formulated the following three "laws" of prediction:

    1. When a distinguished but elderly scientist states that something is possible, he is almost certainly right. When he states that something is impossible, he is very probably wrong.

    2. The only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible.

    3. Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

    (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clarke%27s_three_laws)

    I assume then, a statement about superluminal travel being impossible, is actually good news.

    --
    6th Street Radio @ddombrowsky
  78. Can't catch a break! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not only is the automotive industry in trouble now, but it looks like warp cars are going to be trouble too. Someone tell China we're gonna need more $$$!

  79. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by A.+B3ttik · · Score: 1

    Forgive me for being stupid, but why can't you just "roll" until you get whatever you want?

    I'm looking at this Particle on Earth, you're looking at it's Entangled Twin somewhere in the Delta Quadrant, and beforehand, I told you "If I roll a six and stay there, bring me back Anti-Matter. Otherwise, bring me back dark matter."

    I then roll my particle dice until I get a six, then perform no more rolls. Otherwise, I roll until I _don't_ get a six, then perform no more rolls.

    Why doesn't this work?

  80. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So what happens if inside the "spacetime bubble" once reaching the destination you wait for space-time outside the bubble to catch up - arriving a very small time after you left? Does that still break causality?

    So, it's yet another theoretical stress condition to the traveling speed (like how super-sonic materials have to handle friction differently) - not the mechanism it self.

    Even if it proves beyond our reach for faster than light travel through a warp drive - a close to speed of light engine is still rather useful :)

  81. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by GerardAtJob · · Score: 1

    Well said :)
    But even if it's proven impossible, it could at least be usable to travel at light speed! Much better than our current max speed... no?

    --
    I can't call that English ;-)
  82. the warp drive is still more likely than by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

    the transporter

    both are currently ridiculous notions

    but to disassociate matter, transport it instantaneously, and then reassociate exactly as it was- alive and thinking, somewhere else without any type of confinement in that other place... this brings to mind even more impossibilities than just the singular major problem facing us with a warp drive

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  83. QM & GM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had no idea we finally merged quantum mechanics and general relativity!

  84. Helm, I said "Make it so!" dammit! by zenshadow55 · · Score: 1

    ~Piccard (and boy is he going to be pissed off when he find out!)

  85. Good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well I for one am happy at this news. There are billions of inhabited planets out there in all likelihood, and the denizens of earth cannot be the brightest bulbs in the universe. So if FTL travel is possible, others will figure it out.

    And then they'd be coming for our women and our beer. mmmmm, beer... mmmm, women...

    what were we talking about?

  86. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Timmmm · · Score: 1

    You can only roll the dice once. After that they are no longer entangled.

  87. Re:I don't think that means what you think it mean by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Informative

    Yeah it is funny hearing people say they have made a "quantum leap" which would mean "the smallest possible discreet leap". I mean even the show with that name wasn't implying huge leaps, so I don't know how it came to mean that in their heads. Or maybe they mean it's an advancement worthy of Scott Bakula?

    I actually liked how the last Bond movie, "Quantum of Solace", used the term correctly. Though this probably confused some people. My roommate thought the name was stupid till I told him what "quantum" really meant and then he thought it was cool. :)

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  88. stablization mechanism exists by JungleBoy · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The Protoss were very familiar with the warp field instability problem. And they obviously overcame them so it's just a matter of time until we do too.

    Why else would an Arbiter say, "Warp Field Stabilized" every time you click on him?

    --
    "You never know when some crazed rodent with cold feet might be running loose in your pants."
    -Calvin
  89. cue new Star Trek buzzword by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

                            QUANTUM COMPENSATORS

    You read it here first!

  90. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by _Quinn · · Score: 1

    This doesn't seem like it could be the right explanation. Suppose you measure 2^10 of your electrons on the x-axis. Some time later, I come along and measure the equivalent electrons in two groups of 2^9 each, half on the x- and half on the y- axis. One of those two groups won't be correlated, and one will. (If the probability isn't high enough, use more electrons.) That gives me one bit of classical information with an arbitrary degree of confidence.

    --
    Reality Maintenance Group, Silver City Construction Co., Ltd.
  91. if we applied every drop of every gdp by circletimessquare · · Score: 0

    of every nation on the planet, with existing technology, today, we could build a large dumb slow moving ark for a tiny group of humans whom we could send to a nearby star system. we could do that with today's technology. sure, only their great great great great grandchildren will see the destination, and they might not make it at all (plenty of opportunities for failures/ running out of stored foods/ unknowns), and the ark we could build for them with todays technology would be extremely miserable and cramped, but it IS possible

    so you have a fallacy in your thinking that just because we can't do warp drive, that we are stuck on the earth

    now its just a matter of finding a suitable earth-like planet. and its rapidly becoming apparent that other planets are not rare, they are in fact common, and we are buiding lots of new telescopes and sensing methodology right now for finding them, its a hot field. i don't think we will find anything with exactly 1 earth atmosphere of pressure of exactly 20% oxygen and exactly 1 unit of earth-like gravity and suitable resources of water and such, but we have some wiggle room on those requirements, and we could live in terraniums. terraforming would take a HUGE amount of time, but if we get there in terraniums and they are self-sufficient, then we have a go

    and this line of thought entirely ignores the concept of just going to venus, or mars, or a moon of jupiter/ saturn

    further evolution in technology such as energy creation/ harvesting, robotics, nanotechnology, and fields of research that are only a gleam in someone's eye today will only make the whole process easier

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  92. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by delt0r · · Score: 2, Informative

    People forget that scientists used to think that it was impossible to break the sound barrier for various reasons.

    No they didn't. Some idiot writing for a news paper may have however.

    --
    If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
  93. Sort of compatible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strictly speaking, they do not work together. This analysis is within the context of "semiclassical gravity", which is the study of quantum fields in a fixed background spacetime (i.e., one that does not itself react to the mass-energy of the quantum fields).

    Semiclassical gravity is the same theory which is used to derive Hawking radiation. It is able to say some useful things. In the analysis here, the authors find that a warp bubble creates a huge flux of Hawking radiation.

    While it's impossible to fully understand the gravitational effect of these particles without a theory of quantum gravity which can calculate their gravitational back-reaction, an exponentially-growing flux of particles is a hallmark of instability: you can't keep up exponential growth forever.

    The authors believe this flux, which is concentrated on the bubble's leading surface, will quickly disrupt the warp bubble. Another possibility is that some unknown quantum gravity effect will step in and stabilize the flux. However, since true quantum gravity effects are likely to show up only at very high (Planck-level) energy densities, it's probably not plausible that quantum gravity effects will kick in soon enough to save the warp bubble. However, this cannot be proven for sure within the approximation of semiclassical gravity.

  94. Bad April Fool's joke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The source was submitted on April 1 (http://arxiv.org/abs/0904.0141).

    I don't suppose this was a bad joke to crush the hopes of all trek/star wars (etc.) fans everywhere...

  95. Stability is a relative thing, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stability is a relative thing,ask any F-117 pilot.

    I'm hopeful that by the time we have figured out how to generate a "subspace field" we will have computers fast enough to micro manage out the instabilities in said field

  96. That would explain why the aliens aren't here yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just wait for the big-crunch and we'll all be together soon enough.

  97. Whew! by pnewhook · · Score: 1

    From the headline I thought they were talking about OS/2!

    I hope IBM doesn't do anything rash.

    --
    Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  98. Same thing was said about going faster than sound! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The same type of scientists said that the automobile was impossible. The same type of scientists said that the sound barrier could not be broken, the same type of scientists say that the light barrier cannot be broken.

    As a species we constantly say things are impossible until someone drops by and makes it possible. After all this time we still have not learned!

    Engines, light bulbs, green tubes, super sonic speeds! None of these would have been if people kept listening to the superior minded "It's impossible" pseudo scientific community. Science has primarily become every bit a religion complete with its own dogma!

  99. Too many loopholes by mangu · · Score: 1

    Faster-than-light travel always causes causality paradoxes

    Paradoxes sometimes have explanations that aren't immediately obvious. Take, for instance, the twins paradox, which can be explained by the fact that one of the twins suffered accelerations and changed his velocity, therefore using two different frames of reference. Likewise, the site you linked has two different frames of reference, moving relative to each other. There are two different "ansible" communications, sharing one common event "B". Perhaps one event cannot have two ansible communications.

    Let's say somehow an ansible is invented, based on entangled photons. In order to transmit instantaneous communications between two observers a source of entangled photons should be positioned exactly midway between both observers. If both ansibles send a message to event B, the sources of entangled photons should be physically positioned in a line between Me and Alice, the A-B source closer to Alice than the B-C source.

    At event B, Alice and Carol are receiving photons from both sources at the same time coming from the same direction. Maybe that causes interference into the ansible communications? Without knowing how that "ansible" works, no one knows, but one can imagine an instantaneous communication system that has limitations that will not let it violate causality.

    Also, it's important to note that, at a microscopic level, causality does not exist, only correlation exists. Causality, i.e. the "arrow of time", is a macroscopic phenomenon, microscopic effects are reversible. Maybe someday we will find limitations to causality that will permit some violations to the no-FTL rule. It will be a strange world, but no stranger than quantum mechanics seem to us now.

    1. Re:Too many loopholes by thegreatemu · · Score: 1

      Time does have a preferred direction even at the quantum level, as evidence by CP Violations - it's one of the reasons that antimatter is so rare in the universe.

  100. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

    Well, if I measure the spin of my electron 0 about the x axis, then in doing so I will also establish the spin of your electron 0 about that axis. The superposition on your electron has vanished without you touching it. Terrific, that's communication, right? I collapse your electrons in sequence, this one on the x axis, this one y, this one x, and so on, a binary code?

    Well, no, it doesn't work like that. How can you tell if I've done anything at my end? By making measurements of your electrons? No - because that will collapse the superposition too.

    I've been around long enough to see this as a serial communications synchronization issue.

    Simply guarantee that the collapses will happen at a given time frame, then check them at any time thereafter.

    Sure its inefficient, but its simple serial binary transmission -- we've been doing it a while now.

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  101. Unstable? by MSTCrow5429 · · Score: 1
    Unstable meaning what? The bubble will "pop," leaving the ship half-way to its intended destination, requiring a second jump? Or "unstable," meaning the ship will be torn into meaty bits?

    I accidentally Hawking radiation. Is this bad? Can a drone ship survive Hawking radiation?

    --
    Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
  102. Simple solutions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have everyone name their kids Zephram Cochrane and eventually one of them will figure it out.

  103. I Still Prefer Option 2 by BJ_Covert_Action · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I think achieving superluminous speeds may certainly be possible as our understanding of physics develops, it seems like it could be a moot point.

    The idea for traveling large distances within the universe which involves folding space/time into a higher dimension seems both more efficient and generally better understood today. As was noted above, working with something like superluminous velocities is going to inevitably require analysis involving two of our most powerful models of physics, relativity and quantum mechanics, which at this point still don't play well with each other (at least not in every circumstance).

    However, it seems like the general trend towards the theory of everything research continues to lean to higher dimensions as an accurate model. That being said, ideas that have been expressed that involve folding and or dropping out of the space/time continuum and reentering at a different location/configuration in the universe seems like it might still be a more viable option for traveling large distances.

    Still though, superluminous speed does seem like it would be cool...

    1. Re:I Still Prefer Option 2 by ZonkerWilliam · · Score: 1

      The idea for traveling large distances within the universe which involves folding space/time into a higher dimension seems both more efficient and generally better understood today.

      It is? I missed that tid-bit of info somewhere.

  104. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by RiotingPacifist · · Score: 1

    but neither person can alter the probability distribution, you can only measure it.
    when i see
    110111010001000100000
    i know that you have
    001000101110111011111
    but that doesn't help me comunicate with you in anyway, switching axis and what you collapse makes the situation more complex, but there is still no way to write a message, just for both of us to read the same random message (that's why this is useful for cryptography).

    --
    IranAir Flight 655 never forget!
  105. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by meringuoid · · Score: 1
    Suppose you measure 2^10 of your electrons on the x-axis. Some time later, I come along and measure the equivalent electrons in two groups of 2^9 each, half on the x- and half on the y- axis. One of those two groups won't be correlated, and one will.

    So: I measure 2**10 electrons on the x axis and get a random string of + and -.

    You then measure 2**9 electrons on the x axis and get a random string of + and - (which happen to be identical to the first half of my string), and then another 2**9 electrons on the y axis and get another random string of + and - (which bear no particular resemblance to the second half of my string).

    Until you get my slower-than-light email telling you what values I measured at my end, how can you prove which of the two strings is correlated? You can't tell whether I chose the x or the y axis, so no information has been transferred.

    --
    Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  106. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Outstanding explanation. Mod parent up.

  107. 1 G isn't magic by jmichaelg · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Sustaining 1G for several years isn't magic. It's just advanced technology.

    James Powell, the co-inventor of super-conducting maglev, described a mechanism to build a 1G rocket to travel to the stars. His basic idea was to use Mercury as a solar collector to manufacture a few tons of anti-matter. When you react the anti-matter, you get both power and ejectable mass moving at very high speed. A sci-fi author, Charles Pelligrino, wrote up the idea in the appendix to his book, Flying to Valhalla.

    The Orion designers were thinking that once they got the first version working to ferry between the planets, they could build a star ship that would get to Alpha Centauri for $100 Billion in 1960 dollars. The cost was so far out of reach, the idea was almost forgotten.

    The point is, you don't need magic to travel at 1G, you need resources.

    1. Re:1 G isn't magic by maxume · · Score: 1

      Yeah, resources that don't actually exist, and are thus comparable to magic.

      I mean, containing a few tons of antimatter is 'just' an engineering challenge, but until someone manages to contain a few micrograms, it is also 'just' an idea.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
  108. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know Kung Fu...

    --Show me!!

  109. I'm trying it anyways by locopuyo · · Score: 1

    Whatever, I'm going to try it tomorrow, if I get ripped apart in my unstable time bubble I'll piece myself back together and try again next week.

  110. *sigh* by jpellino · · Score: 1

    Yet another thing that will somehow managed to be blamed on Barack Obama and the Democrat Congress.

    Where's Zefram Cochrane when you need him?

    Oh yeah - likely passed out.

    --
    "Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
    1. Re:*sigh* by jameskojiro · · Score: 1

      Well they are spending dollar bills faster than you can place them end by end at the speed of light so they are sucking up all of the FTL effects for their Trillions of dollars of Debt.

      --
      Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
  111. Does this disprove the big bang theory also? by bigpat · · Score: 1

    It is believed that during the big bang areas of space expanded faster than the speed of light, so does this disprove the big bang theory also?

  112. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Quothz · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You can only roll the dice once. After that they are no longer entangled.

    So Joe carries 1000 particles, which have twins back home, to Joe's Space TV/VCR Repair Center, which is out near Betelgeuse. I want to send him a message: "Pound pastrami, can kraut, six bagels--bring home for Emma."

    I "roll" particles to encode a 1 and leave 'em alone for 0. Sez I:

    01010000 01101111 01110101 01101110 01100100 00100000 01110000 01100001 01110011 01110100 01110010 01100001 01101101 01101001 00101100 00100000 01100011 01100001 01101110 00100000 01101011 01110010 01100001 01110101 01110100 00101100 00100000 01110011 01101001 01111000 00100000 01100010 01100001 01100111 01100101 01101100 01110011 00101101 00101101 01100010 01110010 01101001 01101110 01100111 00100000 01101000 01101111 01101101 01100101 00100000 01100110 01101111 01110010 00100000 01000101 01101101 01101101 01100001 00101110

  113. Wrong name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His name is Miguel Alcubierre:

    Miguel Alcubierre

  114. Time Dialation by chaynlynk · · Score: 1

    Nobody seems to take into account time dialation. You don't need to travel faster than light when it only takes you 4 months to get to Alpha Centauri from your perspective.

    1. Re:Time Dialation by jameskojiro · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but paying to put all of your family and friends into cryo-sleep back on earth so when you get back no time has passed for them either is getting so darned expensive these days.

      --
      Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
  115. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, why don't you and I agree that it'll be the x axis we're testing/sending messages through before we fly our separate ways?

  116. What to do for Lunch? by jameskojiro · · Score: 1

    If you can do one Impossible thing after breakfast but before lunch why not stop by at Millyway's and have Lunch at the Restaurant at the end of the universe?

    --
    Tsukasa: All I really want, is to be left alone...
  117. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Impossible, no. Infinitely Improbably, yes.

  118. Easy! by rgviza · · Score: 1

    >Warp drives would become rapidly unstable once superluminal speeds are reached

    So invent a warp core stabilizer.

    [where's my easy button?]

    --
    Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  119. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Whorhay · · Score: 1

    Going out on a limb here but I think the problem is that if you observe the dice roll then it's disentangled. And nobody is actually rolling the dice. We are simply rattling the dice in a an overturned cup. Once you remove the cup you can see the result the entangled die is set to the same thing. But the guy on the other end doesn't know how many dice you have looked at and when to stop looking at the dice on his end. In order for him to know that you've stopped he'd have to look at the others but doing so sets the ones on your end.

  120. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Timmmm · · Score: 1

    I'm not really sure what you're getting at, but you definitely can't transmit information using entanglement. You can only know that both parties have them same *random* data.

    It is effectively the same as writing a random number down on two bits of paper. Each party goes off and can now look at the paper if they like. Obviously there's no way to transmit information because they can't affect anything the other person sees or does.

  121. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by JustinOpinion · · Score: 1

    I agree with your caution against scientists over-stating their knowledge. But...

    Time has proven again and again that the only thing stopping ANYTHING is not having the knowledge to do it.

    I don't think that's right. If that were true, it would imply that the physical universe has no immutable laws. That every physical law can be somehow circumvented. But such a universe is de-facto a universe without actual laws. What I'm saying is that if you accept that the universe operates based on some set of rules/laws (and this is a basic assumption in science), then this means that there are some things that simply cannot be done, no matter how smart you are.

    Now we can't know for certain that the "speed of light limit" is one of those laws. But all the evidence we have so far (and this includes a boatload of experiments and all of our most predictive theories) is that matter/energy/information cannot travel faster than light.

    for every problem, there IS a solution, even if they can not figure it out themselves.

    A romantic notion, but one without any particular evidence. The idea that technology can become arbitrarily powerful, that "anything" can be done if only one knew how, is completely at odds with a universe having a specific set of physical laws. The physical laws define a set of possible and impossible behaviors... and there is no guarantee that a given problem has a solution falling into the "possible in this universe" class.

  122. Re:I don't think that means what you think it mean by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh boy . . .

  123. Re:taxdayteaparty.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut the fuck up, capitalism failed and you lost, go fuck yourself...sure as hell that noone else will fuck you...

  124. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    False. There is one piece of information communicated: The number that showed up on the dice thousands of light years away.

    You don't need to create the information in order for information to be communicated.

  125. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So how does Joe know which ones have been rolled, and which ones were "naturally" a 1?

    You don't know the initial state of the particle, and checking it "rolls" it.

  126. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by MetalFlow · · Score: 1

    The construction of your argument is sound, but the foundation is not. Obviously, communication protocol is something that requires a predetermined agreement between both parties. Just sending someone out into space with no agreement as to what axis to analyze is equivalent to sending someone out into space with no agreement on which radio frequency to listen on; only with a more ludicrous selection of possibilities. The real trouble is this, you have a limited amount of bits that can be transmitted that must be transported from the source to the destination... This is not a practical solution until we can remotely entangle (or at least re-entangle) these elements. My quantum physics, quite frankly, sucks, so I have no idea if this is even a remote possibility.

  127. Sort of compatible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I posted a reply to your question, but I accidentally posted it at top-level instead of in this thread: here.

  128. Simple solution by dannys42 · · Score: 1

    Dude, just turn on the quantum instability compensators.

  129. Re:Quantum mechancs+General relativity incompatibl by RJBeery · · Score: 1

    For a thorough discussion of QM vs SR you may read my thoughts on it in the following thread: http://www.sciforums.com/showthread.php?t=91001

  130. Remember the speed of sound? by Mr.Fork · · Score: 1

    A lot of 'qualified' and 'educated' scientists said that it was impossible to break the speed of sound 60 years ago. Yet here we are with spaceships and research vessels travelling thousands of miles per hour in space. We '_CAN_' go faster than the speed of light - we just need to figure out a way to bend space to make it so.

    --
    Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things. - Peter F. Drucker
    1. Re:Remember the speed of sound? by sean.peters · · Score: 1

      A lot of 'qualified' and 'educated' scientists said that it was impossible to break the speed of sound 60 years ago.

      I don't know where this idea keeps coming from. No, a bunch of qualified and educated scientists didn't think this. It was widely known that there were many aeronautical ENGINEERING problems that were making supersonic flight difficult, but the SCIENTISTS all understood that there were no underlying laws of physics that prevented it. If you think I'm wrong, well, as they say in Wikipedia... citation needed. Produce a quote from an "educated scientist" who said that supersonic flight was impossible (people of the caliber of the Time Cube guy don't count).

      The situation with FTL travel is different - we know that because of relativity, you can't just blast your way to speeds in excess of c. The out of the detached spacetime bubble seems to be impossible now. And "Just figure out a way to bend space" is no more than question-begging.

  131. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by FrangoAssado · · Score: 1

    You're absolutely right about the impossibility of transmitting information FTL using quantum entanglement, but I have a small nitpick about this:

    It is effectively the same as writing a random number down on two bits of paper.

    It's effectively the same if you're only talking about the ability to send information FTL; but not when talking about other things (like channel capacity). For example, you can use entanglement to double the capacity of a classical channel:

    http://www.quantiki.org/wiki/index.php/Enhancement_of_channel_capacities_with_entanglement

    (and also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superdense_coding)

    This could never be done with the two bits of paper.

  132. But a great show by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    eom

  133. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by ZonkerWilliam · · Score: 1

    People forget that scientists used to think that it was impossible to break the sound barrier for various reasons

    There was no physical law prohibiting going faster than the speed of sound, ie, "the sound barrier", it was mostly a engineering issue as compared to the speed of light which is a physic's issue.

  134. Wut? by CyberDrgn · · Score: 1

    Does this moving region of spacetime or warp bubble or whatever it is actually exist? Either I am misunderstanding something or this is a theory using a theory that is possibly flawed. Why research what would happen to a bubble that has not been proven to exist? Wouldn't it help to figure out if it is possible for the bubble to exist before guessing what would happen to the bubble. It seems to me like this team of physicists have put alot of time and effort into figuring out what might happen if someone elses day dream is correct. Wouldn't it make alot more sense to research whether or not the foundation is there before you build the house on it?

  135. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by holmstar · · Score: 4, Informative

    That doesn't work either because Joe doesn't know if you have rolled the dice or not.

    Entangled particles are like dice that are already rolling, and they stop rolling the moment that either particle is observed.

    So you and Joe each have a dice that, say, always roll the same number as each other. You look at your dice to cause it to stop rolling, and see that it rolled a 6. Joe can look at his dice too, and will also see a 6, but he doesn't know if he was the one that caused the dice to stop, or whether it was you who stopped it.

    You both see a 6, but no actual information was transferred.

  136. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by holmstar · · Score: 2, Informative

    You are missing the point. All you can do is observe the particle, and thus learn something about the distant particle. You don't get to choose what you observe. You cant force the particle to have +y spin. You just observe it. The other observer would see the same thing as you, but that doesn't help you transmit data. It is like you are both looking at the same random set of data.

  137. Well.. by thyristor+pt · · Score: 1

    If we have one space ship moving at 70% the speed of light and another one from the opposite direction moving towards the first ship also at 70% the speed of light... then they're both moving above light speed relative to each other. So it looks possible.

    1. Re:Well.. by Rick+Genter · · Score: 1

      You've never studied relativity, have you?

      --
      Don't underestimate the power of The Source
  138. Sorry, but I'm not buying this by sean.peters · · Score: 1

    When you do the math, it works out to be far cheaper and much less fuel to mine the moon for all the raw titanium and fuel you need, manufacture the parts and then robotically assemble them in orbit, than it would to launch from earth all the pre-manufactured component parts.

    Color me unconvinced. 1) What "fuel" is there to mine on the moon? 2) If you intend to do all this mining, manufacturing, assembling, and so forth in space... that means you have to launch lots of large, heavy factory components up there to do all that stuff. Plus lots of life support equipment, buildings, food, etc, for the people who do the building. 3) No one has the first clue what it would cost to construct said factories, etc... but because of 2), it would be hideously expensive. 4) We don't have the technology to "robotically assemble in orbit" a giant telescope.

    If you did some math that shows anything different, I'd really be interested in seeing it.

    1. Re:Sorry, but I'm not buying this by pnewhook · · Score: 1

      1) lunar dust contains oxygen and metal oxides that can be refined to make fuel. Remember the moon is just a big chunk of earths crust so generally whatever we can mine here we can mine there.

      2) It's all mined telerobotically. You are right if you had to get people up there it would no longer make sense.

      3) There are definite cost risks, but we have a good idea

      4) Sure we do. I work for a space robotics company. Remeber that this is tele-robotics; controlled by humans from earth. We do not havce the technology for autonomous robotics, but the robotics part is challenging but certainly possible.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
    2. Re:Sorry, but I'm not buying this by camperdave · · Score: 1

      Where would you get all the calcium chloride you need? (Titanium is produced by electrolysis in molten calcium chloride). Where would you get the electricity? Where would you get the heat to melt the calcium chloride? Where would you get the graphite for the anodes you'd need. (I can't find any information on those, but I imagine they'd be sacrificial. After all, they're in a hot, oxygen rich pool of liquid salt.) What about the water you'd need to wash the salt off of the finished product?

      Of course this process assumes a relatively pure source of titanium dioxide to start with. Titanium dioxide is refined from ore by converting it to titanium tetrachloride, which involves chlorine gas, and carbon. Water and sulphuric acid are also involved.

      I find it hard to believe that it would be cheaper to haul all these chemicals to the moon, along with all of the equipment necessary to run the process, plus all the casting and CNC milling machines and who knows what other equipment necessary to convert the raw metal into finished pieces, than it would to just fire the finished products into orbit in the first place. Not for something as small as a 150m mirror.

      However, you're the one that did the analysis, and ran formal numbers for NASA. I just grabbed some info off of google.

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  139. All impossibles are wrong by Bardwick · · Score: 1

    Just for the sake of argument, we know about .000000005% of how space/time works.
    Anyone that says, "impossible" needs to clarify that with the word "today".

  140. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by ByteSlicer · · Score: 1

    You are missing the real problem here.

    When observer A measures the electron at his side to be X-aligned, he will measure that 50% electrons are aligned and 50% are not. He has no control over what he will measure. He can just setup the test an observe that electrons are aligned or not.

    Observer B will setup the same test on her side. Suppose she checks the same alignment as observer A, then she will also observe that 50% of the electrons are aligned and 50% are not.

    When A measures an X-alignment, B will measure a non-X-alignment for the same electron. But because B doesn't know what A measured, because that's random, there is no way to use this to exchange information. Only when A and B later meet and discuss their results, they will find that A observed a sequence of alignments, and B observed the opposite sequence.

  141. Sounds like a sci-fi story I once read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't remember the name or author (and if anyone knows, please let me know), but the idea was that the bubble around an object would exist in another universe, where the speed of light was faster. So the object could travel faster than light in our universe, but it would be under the speed limit in the other. A scientist did a great deal of research, although there were some people trying to discourage him from doing it, and he didn't understand why. Finally he had a breakthrough and realized why they had been pushing him to give up. It seemed that the alternate universe we could use had a SLOWER speed of light than ours.

    Xesdeeni

  142. We've... by Drone69 · · Score: 0

    ...had Warp Drives, yes even Micro-Warp Drives, for years in EVE Online. So there.

  143. Naysayers unite!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm sick of people spewing reasons why I will never see my hoverboard or warp drive. I would much rather the considerable percentage of the worlds population who happen to be smarter than I focus on making this crap work rather than assuming its impossible.

    Hawking radiation is mearly a prediction that has never ever in the history of the world been directly experimentally observed.

    When some talk about FTL travel they fail to see that everythings realitive. The person in a space craft from their own perspective can actually travel at any speed they damn well have the means to achieve. The only catch is when they get back home they will be a lot younger than their friends on earth who were for all those years constrained to seeing the progress of the same spacecraft at a fraction of c.

    So in order to get back from your intergalatic journey before everyone you knew on earth dies you have to futz with the metric in a way that does not require acceleration energy/forces to move large distances in reasonable amounts of time.

    My feeling is that only negative pressure is needed. You don't necessarily need the other component as you can push your damned self with conventional 'impulse engines' if you had the means of generating significant amounts of localized space stretching negative pressure.

    Now the chorous of naysayers will chime in and say that negative gravity does not exist and we have no way of creating it. DUH? Its not going to exist either until you all get off your fat asses and invent it.

    1. Re:Naysayers unite!! by cagrin · · Score: 1

      Don't forget about time travel ;)

      --
      ~ awaiting spiritual enlightenment ~
  144. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

    The only thing quantum entanglement tells you is that there is a correlation between the observed states of the two particles. It does not tell you if the other particle has been observed or not.

    You and I both have a quantum particle, and neither of us knows the state.

    I check my particle. It has spin 1/2. I therefore know that if and when you observe your particle, it will have spin -1/2. I do not know whether or not you have actually done so. You may have already done so and observed -1/2. You may not yet. Therefore I know nothing about your situation other than what I already knew when I gave you your particle -- that you will observe a result that is correlated with mine. That's it.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  145. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by gknoy · · Score: 1

    But, the other side needs to be able to measure the change in order for it to be useful. Doesn't the act of measuring change its' state, also? I must be missing something, as I'm by no means an expert.

  146. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    uhhuh. And how does Joe know which ones to roll and which ones not to roll?

  147. No big deal by Punto · · Score: 1

    Just reverse the polarity of the plasma manifolds and re-route power from the shields relay, and it should hold up fine. It's so easy a vulcan child could do it.

    --

    --
    Stay tuned for some shock and awe coming right up after this messages!

  148. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by thegreatemu · · Score: 3, Informative

    The entanglement usually occurs to conserve some physical quantity, such as spin or momentum. So for the dice example, let's say that every pair of entangled dice must add up to 7.

    The problem is that they can only become entangled while they're still in luminal communication range - so you have to roll all the dice before the ship leaves.

    If neither of you looks at your dice, then the number rolled remains undefined. As soon as one of you looks at a given die, both it and it's twin instantly take on their respective values (or you spawn 6 universes identical in every way except for the values rolled, if you like the multi-universe theory.) But when you look at a die, all you see is a number. You know that the number on the previously entangled die must be 7-#, but you have no way to tell whether you looked first or your counterpart on the ship.

  149. Someone call clevernickname by uberjoe · · Score: 1

    All we need is Wesley Crusher. Can't he do anything?

    --

    The days of the digital watch are numbered.

  150. What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just change the gravitational constant of the universe.

  151. Faster-than-light travel or not, it doesn't matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our politicians are too self-absorbed to even bother letting us go back to the fucking Moon. Who cares if we have a spacecraft that could put someone on Alpha Centauri tomorrow. You think anyone would bother to put up the budget to do it? You had better hope that a private company is going to come up with new ways to travel (into) space, because the government is too busy trying to grab power for 2/4 more years to give a shit about absolutely anything else. And no, it's hardly different in other countries. Countries whose space tech is just emerging (India, China, et al) are doing it to put spy satellites and weapons in space before the others. They don't give a shit about Alpha Centauri -- or for that matter, the Mars or the Moon -- either.

    The priority of our politicians is to score points by trash talking the other side, so they can get re-elected. That's the state of mankind today.

  152. Squad! Camp it, up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops, get her! I've got your number ducky,
    You couldn't afford me, dear. Two, three.
    I'd scratch your eyes out.

    Don't come with Brigadier bit with us dear,
    We all know where you've been,
    You military fairy.

    Don't look now girls
    The major's just minced in
    with that dolly colour Sergeant.
    Ooh!

  153. wow by GWBasic · · Score: 1

    wow the quality of the comments from the 99 article are better then todays comments they have grammar complete sentences and paragraphs

  154. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given: Scientists have demonstrated quantum entanglement and the observation of simultaneous state changes across a distance.
    Given: To know the state has changed simultaneously, scientists *must* be able to observe that the state has actually changed.

    A simple, observable, change in state is all that is required for communication.

    1) We agree ahead of time that we use the x-axis spin of two atoms (each) for communication.

    2) I only manipulate two atoms of my set of 4, and only observe the other two.

    3) You only observe the pair entangled with my 'write' set, and only manipulate to the pair entangled with my 'read' set.

    4) I continuously toggle the spin of one atom from my 'write' set back and forth between two previously agreed upon states, and change (or don't) the state of my other atom between two agreed upon states.

    5) By continuously observing your 'read' pair of atoms (the pair entangled to my 'write' pair), you can see the one is constantly flipping states, and use that to determine the binary pattern I am sending. (1bit parity, 1bit data)

  155. Plato thought so by chebucto · · Score: 1

    And if there were only some way of contriving that a state or an army should be made up of lovers and their loves, they would be the very best governors of their own city, abstaining from all dishonour, and emulating one another in honour; and when fighting at each other's side, although a mere handful, they would overcome the world. For what lover would not choose rather to be seen by all mankind than by his beloved, either when abandoning his post or throwing away his arms? He would be ready to die a thousand deaths rather than endure this. Or who would desert his beloved or fail him in the hour of danger? The veriest coward would become an inspired hero, equal to the bravest, at such a time; Love would inspire him. That courage which, as Homer says, the god breathes into the souls of some heroes, Love of his own nature infuses into the lover.

    Apollodorus, in The Symposium by Plato.

    Gotta love those Greeks

    --
    The English word fart is one of the oldest words in the English vocabulary.
  156. Gragnar of Planet Xclarset laughs... by jeko · · Score: 1

    ...because the Stupid Humans don't get that it's EXACTLY that instability that makes FTL possible. You CAN'T go FTL UNLESS it's unstable.

    Of course, Gragnar forgets it took him and his multipodia brethren a hundred years and 892 "chunky salsa" incidents before they figured out how to make a "mostly stable" instability...

    --
    He put his boots up on the table and made a face. "The sig," he smirked. "You can waste your life in search of the sig."
  157. Karlan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why don't you just move the universe like the professor's ship?

  158. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, what scientists don't know does fill a universe.

    I am a scientist, and I am only too well aware of the limitations of science. Occasionally science is wrong because scientists are people and occasionally people are wrong. But what separates science from other endeavours that attempt to explain the universe is that science is self-correcting. If you can confirm a theory is correct, that's good. If you can demonstrate that a theory is wrong, that's great: you have discovered new science or corrected old science.

    Many scientists have gained recognition from proving that a theory is wrong. If there is something wrong with the arguments in this paper, you can bet that some scientist somewhere will point this out. And in this way, science continues to improve.

  159. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That wouldn't work. How would the Repair Center know the difference between a measured particle and an unmodified one?

    Let's say a particle is measured as either 0 or 1 and has a 50% chance of being either and is entangled with a second particle so that they always have opposite values. You modify one and have a result of 50% being 1 or 50% being 0. The RC doesn't know your result, so they measure a 1 in 50% of the cases and a 0 otherwise. You could predict the result, but they can't.

    Now, if you don't touch a particle, the RC will get exactly the same result of a 1 in 50% of the cases and a 0 in the other 50%. Thus, they can not tell what you particles you have chosen!

  160. I read about it in Big Whoop magazine by Dachannien · · Score: 1

    Alternatively, you could just increase the speed of light, which scientists did in 2208.

  161. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for every problem, there IS a solution

    Tell that to Bertrand Russel's barber. If you can find him.

  162. Obvious by Torodung · · Score: 1

    Yeah. You see that star that's 45 light years away from here? You ain't getting there unless you can become energy and not die. Then it'll take 45 years or so, lord knows what it's like being pure energy, and everyone who remained as matter will be long since dead when you get there.

    Get it? Good.

    We have a better shot at traveling into "inner space" as gods than we do "outer space," as waveforms. Get out the microscopes, colliders, and deep sea environment suits, there's lots of exploring to be done *right here*, and we aren't getting away from *right here* if we don't solve the problems *right here, right now*.

    --
    Toro

  163. So... by FuturePastNow · · Score: 1

    If the "bubble" is unstable at superluminal speeds, would this still work as a sublight propulsion system? What properties would that have? Would it still be immune to the effects of relativity?

    --
    Give a man fire, and you warm him for the night. Set a man on fire, and you warm him for the rest of his life.
  164. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very well. Let us say that I have a set of electrons in equal spin superpositions, and you, at some distant location, have their entangled counterparts. What's the protocol for communication?

    What about the Bose-Einstein Condensates? How fast does the shared quantum state "travel" on a BEC?

  165. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Hurricane78 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Ask Franz Embacher and his team from the university of Vienna. They do exactly what I described and transferred information over half the city. I think he can control which number shows up.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
  166. I wont hold my breath. by tjstork · · Score: 1

    This whole conversation isn't practical anyway. The only way we can even practically travel around even our own solar system is with nuclear power and too many people are trapped in 50's monster movie world to let that happen any time soon.

    --
    This is my sig.
  167. Wrong warp field ? by jonfr · · Score: 1

    It looks like his warp field is wrong, but his image is unclear so I can't read it properly. I guess it breaks down after warp speed 2,2 has been reached. Warp speed is calculated like this, light speed is equal to Warp 0.

    What needs to be done is to create a stable field. However, I do not know how to do this. As I don't know what basics he used. to create this theoretical warp field.

    Warp field and warp speed is a subject that I have been looking into for a long time now. The biggest problem with warp field is the power. The need for anti-matter engine is clear.

  168. who is unstable? by lpq · · Score: 1

    original poster:

    "a small bubble of spacetime containing a spacecraft could travel faster than the speed of light, at least in principle. What happens to the bubble when quantum mechanics is taken into account -- a team of physicists believeit's bad news: the bubble becomes unstable at superluminal speeds,"

    Problem:

    The bubble isn't moving relative to itself. It would be "us" that is unstable? The bubble can't destabilize because in its frame of reference it is not moving -- we are, thus wouldn't we equally likely to be 'unstable'?

    Implication: a field moving through our universe faster than speed of light would cause instability of entire universe? Something seems wrong with some assumptions somewhere (could be FTL can't happen, but claiming instability seems an unlikely paradigm on the surface).

  169. It's Miguel not Michael by 1jpablo1 · · Score: 1

    The guy's name is "Miguel Alcubierre", not "Michael Alcubierre".

  170. Impossible by stanjam · · Score: 1

    Pretty stern word for a science we know so very little about. I would rather state that there seems to be a problem that needs to be overcome, and I assume it is neither the first, nor will it be the last. Remember, there was the large assumption by scientists that the problems that occur when approaching the sound barrier would tear a ship apart when it gets to that speed. This didn't pan out. I think that these are likely just more problems that need to be overcome. Not that I know much about it. Quantum mechanics is NOT my strong suit!

    --
    Open Source: Eroding the Digital Divide
  171. Instability != Quantum Decoherence by Whomp-Ass · · Score: 1

    Looking over the findings presented I have a difficult time agreeing with their model. It would appear they assume a static structure. A static model of a helicopter, or snowboarding session, or rifled-bullet would not work. It's the counterintuitive stability-through-dynamic adjustment thing that I suppose still hasn't caught on yet.

    If one were to look it over it appears as though that if they were to assume a non-periodic, elongated-toroid-bubble, with the hawking radiation in the middle bit and the instability happening on the outer-and-inner shells, they'd have nary a problem: the weather inside stays peachy.

  172. antichrist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yes, if I was going to build a universe"

    My Lord Jesus, The Son of God, will find and bury thee, thou blasphemous Anti-Christ minion!

  173. It may not mean what you think it means. by Livius · · Score: 1

    A "quantum leap" refers to any change which is not continuously incremental, and therefore includes advances which are qualitative differences.

  174. "Take us to Warp 2, Seven Of Nine" -- ooops by UnixUnix · · Score: 1

    Never mind, Seven. You can get dressed now.

  175. Pain Express: Achieving Extra Light Speed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was in increasing pain in my lower regions. It came and went but one week it got particulately bad. It felt as if something was gnawing on me inside. I mixed together vaseline, Capsaicin, some $60 a tube stuff for my psoriasis that soon as I paid for it it came out it was responsible for causing cancer, so I threw in some of that for good measure right? I guess I put some 3 hemorrhoid suppositories been sitting in the refrigerator for several years, so I thought I'd get rid of them too. Plus to finish off the mix I squeezed in some 3 antibiotic ointment.
     
    Warming it in the microwave helped it mix up butter oops better and I put some on the finger and inserted it. The painful gnawing inside my colon stopped immediately. Apparently I had mixed together a home remedy and killed an s.o.b. tapeworm that actually was eating me inside. After that I saw how to make space travel at extra light speed. That's all anyone ever had to do.

  176. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by TheTurtlesMoves · · Score: 1

    That is in fact a great analogy. Without a car! Mind if I use with my physics teaching?

    --
    The Grey Goo disaster happened 3 billion years ago. This rock is covered in self replicating machines!
  177. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by iacvlvs · · Score: 1

    1) We agree ahead of time that we use the x-axis spin of two atoms (each) for communication.

    2) I only manipulate two atoms of my set of 4, and only observe the other two.

    3) You only observe the pair entangled with my 'write' set, and only manipulate to the pair entangled with my 'read' set.

    Ok.

    4) I continuously toggle the spin of one atom from my 'write' set back and forth between two previously agreed upon states, and change (or don't) the state of my other atom between two agreed upon states.

    No. You measure the spin of one particle from your write set. The entangled particle from my read set silently agrees to return the complementary value when I measure it. The entanglement is now broken. You continue to "toggle" the spin on your particle, where "toggle" means "measure and receive non-deterministic, random, unpredictable results". I can measure my particle's spin at any time after your initial measurement and will find the random counterpart to your random first value. I have no way of knowing whether I've received the random result of your having measured, or if I've primed your first result by measuring before you did.

    5) By continuously observing your 'read' pair of atoms (the pair entangled to my 'write' pair), you can see the one is constantly flipping states, and use that to determine the binary pattern I am sending. (1bit parity, 1bit data)

    By continuously observing my read pair of particles, I can see that I get a stream of random results. Coincidentally, the first random value from each particle correlates with the first random value you get from each of your particles.

    --
    GENERATION 25: If you haven't yet, copy this into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. (Social experiment)
  178. Re:I don't think that means what you think it mean by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

    I think the article is using the term literally in its quantum mechanics meaning. The paper discusses a theory stemming from quantum mechanics that would defeat this theory of faster-than-light travel. In this regard, it is literally a setback coming from quantum mechanics.

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
  179. Whaaa? by tekshogun · · Score: 1

    Well, if you consider the Universe a bubble of space time, it at one point had to expand faster than light to grow from it's smaller than a pea size to what it is now. Quantum mechanics is the alchemy of physics and should be taken with large grains of salts.

  180. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by Praseodymn · · Score: 1

    Say I had 50 electrons, all of which I chose x, and you measure those 50 electrons, 70% of which come up x.. pretty good measure of x, no?
    Just because we haven't figured it out yet doesn't mean its impossible.
    I thought that was a core principle of science, that we can never really know anything with certainty. Especially in such a young field.

    --
    Sometimes, you can, you go to hell for the rest of your life! That's a true thing.
  181. Re:What scientists do not know could fill a univer by Targon · · Score: 1

    Ah, but here is an odd way to look at things, if there is an edge to the universe(the universe is expanding), then there must be something beyond the edge of our universe. This means that there must be some set of laws that govern what is outside of the universe, and there is the possibility that in time, humanity COULD make use of those laws, which may circumvent the laws of this universe.

    My own feeling is that people spend too much time accepting conventional wisdom, rather than looking for the reasons why things either work or do not work.

    As with programming, the majority look at how to make something work. A smaller number look at how things may break. Then you have those who accept that things may break, so try to figure out WHY things may break. So, you have people trying to prove a theory, you have those who try to disprove a theory, but there are a small number trying to figure out why something "can not be done".

    Now, keep in mind that by the time humanity is able to answer certain questions, humanity will have evolved into a much more advanced form of life, and solutions may be obvious to those "future humans". Thinking in four dimensions, perceptions that extend beyond the current five senses, and so on may be possible for some forms of life, and once your perceptions go beyond the three, who knows what laws may be governing the universe?

  182. Re:improbability driven by aqk · · Score: 0

    No...
    But you damn well better spell it with two "Eich"s!

  183. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by toddestan · · Score: 1

    The problem is that I can't control what the dice will roll. So if I roll my dice and get a 7, then I know that your dice will also show a 7. But if I wanted your dice to show a 9 - which would be a form of communication - I would need to force my dice to roll a 9 somehow. However, there is no way to do this, hence no way to communicate. Keep in mind that with entanglement, you only get one dice roll then the number is set - so I can't just keep re-rolling until I get the desired number to show up like I can do with real dice.

  184. Re:We already have faster-than-light communication by joeljkp · · Score: 1

    I'm not a physicist, so bear with me here.

    So why can't you have a protocol agreement and a clock?

    We both agree that electrons 0-15 are for sending, electrons 16-31 are for receiving (for a single message only), on the x-axis. All electrons must be set to + or - to eliminate any default state.

    Then you say that at clock time t, we assume the message has been sent.

    --
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