http://io9.com/5963263/how-nasa-will-bu ... warp-drive
We've always though of FTL travel as being achieved hundreds, maybe thousands of years into the future, but looking at this it hits me that the possibility of having at least one functional hyperdrive prototype before my life is over is... well, a lot larger than it was, that's for sure.
Apparently the idea has actually been around since the 1990's, in the form of the Alcubierre Drive. It basically creates a "bubble" of spacetime around the craft, preserving the craft's spatial-temporal state relative to the rest of the universe. It then creates two regions of warped space time off the bow and stern - the frontmost area of space is compressed, while the space at the rear is expanded, much like how an ocean wave will go into a trough and then up into a crest, this allowing the spacetime bubble - with the ship inside - to "surf" the resulting space-time "wave" at speeds that could well exceed the speed of light, without violating the laws of relativity. The space around the ship relative to the ship itself is normal, but the ship is still moving because that area of space is moving with it, kind of like sitting in a moving vehicle - you're stationary relative to the vehicle, but relative to everything else you're moving.
Of course, the original design was deemed highly impractical because of the massive amount of energy needed to maintain the warp field - basically roughly the amount you would get if you took the mass of the planet Jupiter and converted it to energy. However, this new hypothesis makes some fundamental changes in the shape of the drive itself as well as creating an oscillating bubble rather than a static one. According to the theory, a functional hyperdrive utilizing this improved version of the Alcubierre method would only require energy equal to the mass-energy conversion of the Voyager I spacecraft, or roughly 1600 pounds.
Of course, this is all still strictly theory, and we're not going to see any practical application until we get a "Chicago Pile"-esque proof to fortify said theory. But the fact is, if the theory does hold weight under the scrutiny of the astrophysics community, it basically means the prospect of FTL travel just got a hell of a lot more technologically and financially feasible. It's convinced NASA enough to fund the research for the project, so we may be looking at the biggest scientific breakthrough in humanity's history... EVER!
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