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Superluminal Travel.
We seem to be scrabbling about looking at the possibility of faster than light travel. I wonder if anything will come of it.
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The principles of flight were well understood in 1800. It was known that all that was lacking was a light enough motor.
Rockets had been around for millennia so there was no fundamental impediment to getting to the Moon. Just combustion and Newtonian mechanics.
The speed of light is fundamental to the nature of the Universe and it is perfectly clear that no object having any mass can reach that speed. This fact is not going to change.
Rockets had been around for millennia so there was no fundamental impediment to getting to the Moon. Just combustion and Newtonian mechanics.
The speed of light is fundamental to the nature of the Universe and it is perfectly clear that no object having any mass can reach that speed. This fact is not going to change.
"I wonder if anything will come of it."
Probably not.
https:/ /arxiv. org/pdf /2105.0 3079.pd f
It's overwhelmingly likely, at this point, that faster-than-light travel is impossible. Not an engineering challenge that can be overcome with better technical skills, but a fundamental aspect of the Universe.
Still, there's no harm in spending time chasing after "ghosts" in physics. We can't find the limits on what's possible if we never search for them. Never stop dreaming. But in the end our most useful work is always done when awake :)
Probably not.
https:/
It's overwhelmingly likely, at this point, that faster-than-light travel is impossible. Not an engineering challenge that can be overcome with better technical skills, but a fundamental aspect of the Universe.
Still, there's no harm in spending time chasing after "ghosts" in physics. We can't find the limits on what's possible if we never search for them. Never stop dreaming. But in the end our most useful work is always done when awake :)
It's an interesting idea, for sure. There are a couple of questions I'd have about it, though:
1. Gravitational waves are only generated in any significance by ridiculously energetic events (two large-mass black holes colliding, and then only for a few seconds in the last moments as they spin around each other).
2. And even then, they are so pathetically tiny that we'd barely notice them without stupidly sensitive equipment.
3. In particular, they only represent *local* disturbances in spacetime that quickly move on, while the matter is left behind wondering what all that was.
4. So how do you scale this up in order to make the waves (a) bigger, and (b) capable of propelling matter any significant distance.
The answer is that you don't. Even if this fell within the realm of engineering challenge, this wouldn't be all that different from trying to design a helicopter as a sensible solution for going from your house to your next-door neighbours'. Just walk :P
There will, no doubt, be other ways that we can viably explore the stars without deciding which of those stars we should next blow up! For my part, a more viable solution is to explore the concept of safe "sleeper ships".
1. Gravitational waves are only generated in any significance by ridiculously energetic events (two large-mass black holes colliding, and then only for a few seconds in the last moments as they spin around each other).
2. And even then, they are so pathetically tiny that we'd barely notice them without stupidly sensitive equipment.
3. In particular, they only represent *local* disturbances in spacetime that quickly move on, while the matter is left behind wondering what all that was.
4. So how do you scale this up in order to make the waves (a) bigger, and (b) capable of propelling matter any significant distance.
The answer is that you don't. Even if this fell within the realm of engineering challenge, this wouldn't be all that different from trying to design a helicopter as a sensible solution for going from your house to your next-door neighbours'. Just walk :P
There will, no doubt, be other ways that we can viably explore the stars without deciding which of those stars we should next blow up! For my part, a more viable solution is to explore the concept of safe "sleeper ships".
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