Search found 20 matches
- Thu Feb 14, 2013 8:40 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
Re: Mach Effect progress
I like chrismb's more recent analysis of the issue - *if* a ME thruster is truly thrusting against 'the rest of the universe', then its thrust-energy relationship will be dependent on its velocity wrt the rest of the universe. Would figuring out what the actual rest frame is for 'the rest of the un...
- Fri Dec 07, 2012 2:06 pm
- Forum: News
- Topic: New Engine Technology
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18253
That's funny because I distinctly recall Bond and his team are all from Rolls Royce. They're accustomed to designing turbine engines, not spacecraft. Just sayin', I've been following for several years and I have seen no evidence that any serious work has been done on Skylon itself. There's plenty o...
- Sat Dec 01, 2012 12:33 pm
- Forum: News
- Topic: New Engine Technology
- Replies: 30
- Views: 18253
And still they're stuck with the common sense analysis that Musk has offered each time asked abut Sabre. What you want to do with going to orbit is get out of the atmosphere as quickly as possible, because its like soup, and get in relative vacuum where it's easier to go fast. The weight that Sabre...
- Fri Sep 14, 2012 10:22 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: News from EEStor/ZENN sounds promising
- Replies: 19
- Views: 12604
- Fri Sep 14, 2012 10:15 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
I think it's pretty safe to say Brett is hopelessly confused about coordinate systems and what going faster means. His examples are factually incorrect and his thinking is backward. Facts is, 100X faster is the same in every coordinate system and every frame of reference. Brett just hasn't figured ...
- Thu Sep 13, 2012 10:21 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: News from EEStor/ZENN sounds promising
- Replies: 19
- Views: 12604
These are extremely bad news. Skeptics at theeestory were saying for many years that you can have high permittivity and low breakdown/saturation, or low permittivity and high breakdown/saturation, but you can't have them both high (and thus high ED), because the actual physical limit is connected to...
- Mon Sep 03, 2012 7:45 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: 10KW LENR demonstrator (new thread)
- Replies: 6351
- Views: 2546344
i'm convinced parallel is the RSS feed from rossi's dreams For over a year “parallel”: one of the noblest and longsuffering members of our number has done yeomen’s work in tirelessly bringing us the latest in Rossi's breakthrough technologies, sage wisdoms, inspired utterances, and earthshaking new...
- Tue Aug 21, 2012 7:39 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
- Mon Aug 20, 2012 11:21 pm
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
"Killing a bacteria with a nuke? Flying in atmosphere is easy. Even we can do it. Flying in atmosphere with a Mach drive is even easier. Negating inertia of a whole ship (and who knows how much air around it, to avoid cavitation, extreme friction etc.) is not. It's several orders of magnitude more ...
- Mon Aug 20, 2012 9:13 pm
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
I was thinking in terms of "ordinary" mach thrusters. Using fully blown warp drive to stroll around in atmosphere seems... well, few orders of magnitude less likely (even with the technology given), then "all the people reporting these things being wrong" Why? Killing a bacteria with a nuke? Flying...
- Mon Aug 20, 2012 11:03 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
. . .there is no reason to think that Mach thruster would take away passenger's inertia (allowing arbitrary high acceleration)... What GeeGee said. Basically, all warp craft fly on a time-like geodesic, so passengers and the craft do not experience inertia of any sort. They all experience weightles...
- Mon Aug 20, 2012 8:15 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
Just a thought: do we take into account that movement (velocity) changes the light cone, so what constitutes the far-off distant mass also changes? The "edge parts" that swap would be left with some net momentum. I thought of that, but as I understand relativity, it doesn't actually work that way, ...
- Sun Aug 19, 2012 11:12 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
I should go to bed, but it seems to me that it is in fact the same issue. If the force were exerted on a static background, no configuration could ever result in a PMM2. Linear operation as a 'cosmic MHD turbine' could generate power, but the flywheel idea wouldn't. No, the velocity and orientation...
- Fri Aug 17, 2012 7:43 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
I'm pretty certain that we made the accelerating expansion joke within the last year or two... it's probably between 10 to 20 pages back in this same thread... Yeah, we did. We concluded that someone would need to move whole galaxy clusters around for the observed size of the effect. Well, maybe th...
- Tue Apr 03, 2012 8:54 am
- Forum: News
- Topic: Mach Effect progress
- Replies: 2707
- Views: 1749174
"goodbye second law of thermodynamics" on the other hand is the same dismissal that GoatGuy focuses on. It is the unstated refusal to draw the mass-energy box any bigger than locally, but since without an actual physical reason to make that refusal, that is actually a weak argument. Thus it is thro...