SigmasonicX
Member
Wait, am I missing something? Wouldn't you need energy in order to work against gravity?
Yeah, the hoverboard stuff is pretty questionable.
Wait, am I missing something? Wouldn't you need energy in order to work against gravity?
Wait, am I missing something? Wouldn't you need energy in order to work against gravity?
So the emdrive produces more thrust from less leccy compared to the cannae, and an improved version of this is going to built and tested soon.
Yeah, the hoverboard stuff is pretty questionable.
I'm mean, I'm all for this engine being legit, that just sounded wrong.
I'm not very well versed on this stuff so I'm sure someone much more knowledgable can elaborate or correct me on this: I think when they say "does not require energy", they mean from a power source like a battery. That's why they specifically mention a superconductor version. Again, I could totally be wrong about that. Maybe they're just talking about fuel.
Wait, am I missing something? Wouldn't you need energy in order to work against gravity?
My colleague that has been reading up on this for the last few days said that if the speed increase is linear then one can reach 99% of the speed of light in under a year (calculated over at Reddit apparently).Did anyone run calculations on how long it would take to get to the stars? If speed continues to increase as long as the drive is on, wouldn't the time decrease exponentially?
My colleague that has been reading up on this for the last few days said that if the speed increase is linear then one can reach 99% of the speed of light in under a year (calculated over at Reddit apparently).
Alpha Centauri is four light-years away so it would take us about 5 years to get there (externally from the ship, who knows how little time passes inside of it).
But that is if the speed increase is linear.
Wired posted a follow up article, attempting to answer some FAQs about it:
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-08/07/10-qs-about-nasa-impossible-drive
A less conservative projection has an advanced drive developing ten times as much thrust for the same power -- this cuts the transit time to Mars to 28 days, and can generally fly around the solar system at will, a true Nasa dream machine.
Can this be used for weapons? Space weapons?
What would happen if a hundred ton spacecraft rams into a planet at 99% the speed of light?
Could we have our first instant world-destroyer weapon thanks to this?
Holy shit! If they can really get that thing to work, it would advance space travel by several decades.
We could actually start sending probes to Alpha Centauri and get data back in less time it took for Voyager to reach the edge of the solar system. This is crazy!
Indeed. I always waited on his posts and most of the time opted not to post because I knew he would always provide more insight than I could. Really sucks he's gone.Hitokage would have loved this topic![]()
This is really fucking incredible.
The cynical part of me is still waiting on the follow-up article where the experiment is proven to be wrong, however.
You also have to start slowing down at the midway point so double that.
For the people asking about interstellar travel, assuming you have a magical drive that converts energy into acceleration without any propellant, reaching "almost C" on a 1 tonne spaceship imparts a relativistic kinetic energy of 2.330E+21. This is energy that must presumably be imparted upon it from somewhere. It is certainly not coming for free. This is not the removal of fuel, it is the removal of reaction mass. But to get to near-light speed you still need to insert stunning quantities of energy. To give context to the previous figure I gave, the entire world's energy consumption in the year 2013 was three orders of magnitude smaller than what you would need for a perfectly efficient drive to zip that spacecraft up to 1 meter per second below c. This is something you should be thankful for, because if you could get this energy for "free" from somewhere, it would mean every single space craft with these drives is the ultimate weapon of mass destruction, any person with access to one could crack planets apart with weapons that moved so fast you couldn't even detect them coming before they already struck you.
The abolition of reaction mass is still a dream come true for spacecraft design although I am still remaining skeptical for the time being, in no small part because it sounds like some form of minor sorcery.
For the people asking about interstellar travel, assuming you have a magical drive that converts energy into acceleration without any propellant, reaching "almost C" on a 1 tonne spaceship imparts a relativistic kinetic energy of 2.330E+21. This is energy that must presumably be imparted upon it from somewhere. It is certainly not coming for free. This is not the removal of fuel, it is the removal of reaction mass. But to get to near-light speed you still need to insert stunning quantities of energy. To give context to the previous figure I gave, the entire world's energy consumption in the year 2013 was three orders of magnitude smaller than what you would need for a perfectly efficient drive to zip that spacecraft up to 1 meter per second below c. This is something you should be thankful for, because if you could get this energy for "free" from somewhere, it would mean every single space craft with these drives is the ultimate weapon of mass destruction, any person with access to one could crack planets apart with weapons that moved so fast you couldn't even detect them coming before they already struck you.
The abolition of reaction mass is still a dream come true for spacecraft design although I am still remaining skeptical for the time being, in no small part because it sounds like some form of minor sorcery.
Only if you were trying to land. We'd be doing flybys of planets first, so we could do 5 years out, a couple super fast orbits and 5 years back. And the coolest part is, you would only need to pack like one or two years of food!
Hitokage would have loved this topic![]()
Hitokage has passed away? I'm really sad now, I didn't know. I enjoyed his posts. Is there a farewell thread at all where I can leave my condolences?
Possibly not, I mean it doesn't use up any energy to keep your laptop on a desk against gravity. Or if you're lying in bed you aren't using any energy to stop yourself from falling down towards the centre of the earth.
Energy = Force * Distance, so even if you need a force to keep something from falling as long as it isn't actually moving it isn't using up energy.
I still think it's probably all baloney though.
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Only if you were trying to land. We'd be doing flybys of planets first, so we could do 5 years out, a couple super fast orbits and 5 years back. And the coolest part is, you would only need to pack like one or two years of food!
Hitokage would have loved this topic![]()
1. Orbital speeds are measured in kilometers per second, your interstellar cruising speed of 0.999... c is measured in hundreds of thousands of kilometers per second. You literally cannot orbit a body if you are going too fast.
2. If you're not going to start slowing down half way, when will you start slowing down? After you've already overshot your target? This will make your total mission time take longer, because you still spend the exact same time slowing down, then beginning your reverse thrust to come home.
For the people asking about interstellar travel, assuming you have a magical drive that converts energy into acceleration without any propellant, reaching "almost C" on a 1 tonne spaceship imparts a relativistic kinetic energy of 2.330E+21. This is energy that must presumably be imparted upon it from somewhere. It is certainly not coming for free. This is not the removal of fuel, it is the removal of reaction mass. But to get to near-light speed you still need to insert stunning quantities of energy. To give context to the previous figure I gave, the entire world's energy consumption in the year 2013 was three orders of magnitude smaller than what you would need for a perfectly efficient drive to zip that spacecraft up to 1 meter per second below c. This is something you should be thankful for, because if you could get this energy for "free" from somewhere, it would mean every single space craft with these drives is the ultimate weapon of mass destruction, any person with access to one could crack planets apart with weapons that moved so fast you couldn't even detect them coming before they already struck you.
The abolition of reaction mass is still a dream come true for spacecraft design although I am still remaining skeptical for the time being, in no small part because it sounds like some form of minor sorcery.
Sure. If I wanted to attack some distant target (like a comet I saw on a collision course that would hit at some future time), this is the optimal way to design such a weapon. It would build up speed over time and have high velocity when it gets there.
Or I could design something that would settle on the comet and with this tech, use it to push the object out of the way with less "overhead" of making that mission work.
So, assuming this drive is real, how long do you think it would take before we start seeing this in actual usage.
Years, if not decades. And if it is very inefficient and/or weak, it may never get any real use. Just because something is odd or new doesn't automatically mean it is good. Quite a lot of old tech is still in use because they're just so good and effective and efficient.
But if it is true, even if there is no scientific use for this type of engine, the implications surrounding what it means about what we don't yet know are huge
so I say net win either way![]()
The Nasa paper projects a 'conservative' manned mission to Mars from Earth orbit, with a 90-ton spacecraft driven by the new technology. Using a 2-megawatt nuclear power source, it can develop 800 newtons (180 pounds) of thrust. The entire mission would take eight months, including a 70-day stay on Mars.
Err, did you account deceleration into this? Or was that "go there and speed past"?