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JACK NEON
Does anyone know if any known laws of physics forbid the existance of a hyperspace. Defined as a space-time continuum where faster than light travel is possible.
Lilly
QUOTE(JACK NEON @ Sep 13 2005, 07:58 PM)
Does anyone know if any known laws of physics forbid the existance of a hyperspace. Defined as a space-time continuum where faster than light travel is possible.
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The answer to your question is a resounding, "maybe" possible.
PadawanOsswe
maybe, in The Halo books, humans and aliens travel long space distances through

"Slip-Stream Space" in which the ship goes into another dimention of space.

possibly a dimension without anything in the way of the ship allowing faster travel.

dawu
http://deoxy.org/hs_phys.htm there you go.
Lilly
When it comes to the warp drive concept I kind of like Alcubierre’s "Warp Drive". Snip from the link I posted earlier:



QUOTE
Here’s the premise behind the Alcubierre "warp drive": Although Special Relativity forbids objects to move faster than light within spacetime, it is unknown how fast spacetime itself can move. To use an analogy, imagine you are on one of those moving sidewalks that can be found in some airports. The Alcubierre warp drive is like one of those moving sidewalks. Although there may be a limit to how fast one can walk across the floor (analogous to the light speed limit), what about if you are on a moving section of floor that moves faster than you can walk (analogous to a moving section of spacetime)? In the case of the Alcubierre warp drive, this moving section of spacetime is created by expanding spacetime behind the ship (analogous to where the sidewalk emerges from underneath the floor), and by contracting spacetime in front of the ship (analogous to where the sidewalk goes back into the floor). The idea of expanding spacetime is not new. Using the "Inflationary Universe" perspective, for example, it is thought that spacetime expanded faster than the speed of light during the early moments of the Big Bang. So if spacetime can expand faster than the speed of light during the Big Bang, why not for our warp drive? These theories are too new to have either been discounted or proven viable.


Seems promising and several engineers I know have said the basic idea does have merit.


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