Date: Thu, 17 Aug 1995 14:06:04 -0700 (PDT) From: John ---- ---------- <-------@uclink.berkeley.edu> Subject: FTL >Shalom Zaidfeld, if get the name of the publication where that mentioned >paper will be published, could you please inform me. > >Thanks, > >Joni Virolainen Could you inform me as well? Or perhaps just post it to the list? I saw the article describing the Alcubierre drive and I've been thinking how it might be adapted to Trav. Unfortunately, my knowledge of physics is limited. I'll give a brief description of the drive in the hopes of provoking discussion :) The drive creates a local distortion of spacetime that creates and expansion behind the ship and a corresponding contraction in front of the ship. This leaves the ship in free-fall and gives it no "real" acceleration in that it does not suffer time dilation. However the ship does gain "coordinate" acceleration in that it moves. Because the ship stays within its local light cone (the light, and everything within the radius of the disturbance is also accelerated) the ship can travel much faster than light (relative to a stationary observer at the ships starting point). In fact, Alcubierre postulates that the ship could travel almost instantaneously. There are some curious things about the drive though. For instance, the article states that halfway to its destination, the ship must perform a familiar turn-over maneuver to accelerate in the opposite direction. What if the drive failed before turn-over, would the ship continue traveling at FTL speeds essentially forever? Would it be destroyed? And what about the ships local light cone? If it is being accelerated also then it will quickly leave the region of the disturbance and begin to move more slowly than the space craft, allowing the ship to catch up and the light to be caught in the disturbance again. This would seem to my layman's eyes to create something analogous to a sonic boom coming from the ship. There are of course many other interesting things about a ship which travels in this fashion, and since, according to Shalom Zaidfeld this idea is gaining scientific recognition, this may be the way humanity someday reaches the stars. -- M.