
http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index. ... msg1526856
Well that would be strange since Yang's original report of exceptionally high thrust was what got this whole thing started in the first place.GPecchia wrote:SeeShells might disagree. For all we know, China had great results and wants to throw us off the path. I'm still awaiting the report from the NASA experiments.
http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index. ... msg1526982
I see no reason to be happy about it. I am not surprised by the news, though. There is still some small hope, but I would not get it up too high.Carl White wrote:Rather pitiful though how triumphant they're all sounding that we're stuck with hugely expensive, explosion-prone rockets as the only way off Earth for the foreseeable future.
Same thoughts here when reading that!Carl White wrote:Rather pitiful though how triumphant they're all sounding that we're stuck with hugely expensive, explosion-prone rockets as the only way off Earth for the foreseeable future.
Science cares not for what we desire to be true, it deals only in actual truth. Nobody is feeling happy or triumphant that we are stuck, but that our understanding still holds true. If we do find a way to explore the stars, I'm willing to bet it is done via clever use of existing theory and not in some claimed flaw in our understanding of fundamentals.Carl White wrote:Rather pitiful though how triumphant they're all sounding that we're stuck with hugely expensive, explosion-prone rockets as the only way off Earth for the foreseeable future.
Afraid I don't agree. I remember a few decades back how cosmologists were saying that in a few years we would be able to do an accurate census of the Cosmos and know whether the Universe contained enough matter to brake the expansion of the big bang to a stop, and cause a collapse, or expand forever. Then we discovered that the Universe was not only going to expand forever but that it was accelerating; by some unknown agent commonly referred to as "dark energy", making up the bulk of Creation. "Dark Energy" ~70% of creation, really just a term used to describe an effect (the accelerating expansion) of empty space itself not just the increasing distances between galaxies; the true nature/cause of which we know practically nothing. Matter/energy as we understand only being about 4%; with the balance being "Dark Matter", another term used to describe an effect (gravitational lensing etc.) about which we know slightly more than we do about dark energy. This doesn't really jibe with the idea that we can confidently assert that there are no "claimed flaw in our understanding of fundamentals". I would say our fundamental ignorance of the way things really are leaves more than enough room for some kind of mysterious EM Drive to be possible (or maybe even Sonny White's warp drive); to say nothing of other things yet to be discovered.ScottL wrote: If we do find a way to explore the stars, I'm willing to bet it is done via clever use of existing theory and not in some claimed flaw in our understanding of fundamentals.
It will experience "Sonic boom"? I will assume you meant speed of light explorations. My understanding is that Sonny White's warp drive if it works wouldn't technically violate Relativities' speed of light upper limit. That is the ship doesn't actually move faster than light, space is contracted in front of the vessel and expanded behind it. The ship might appear to be rushing off at some insane rate of acceleration/velocity; but really isn't. Kind of like UFO's are allegedly observed to move. It is space itself which would be contracted/expanded at superluminal velocities & that doesn't violate relativity. After all the universe itself is believed to have expanded (early hyper-inflation) at superluminal velocity. The only way the Universe can continue to expand at an accelerating speed (and I don't think that even the rate of acceleration is constant but is increasing?) is that somehow new energy is pouring in from somewhere else. It only appears as if the Universe is a closed system looking at the mass/energy (the 4%) that we can detect and measure. The quantum vacuum then must be awash with energy; maybe the EM drive if it works is somehow interacting with that; it only appears to be violating conservation of momentum and /or energy because we can't properly measure this interaction?ladajo wrote:Probably one of the more entertaining explorations in this can be found in the speed of sound explorations and understandings. Especially regarding the what would happen to an object/organism that exceeded it.
And my point extends this to include "or know it if we did."We simply have no way within our current realm of knowledge to produce it.