They're too vast now with current technology, but in the future it will be possible. We have people working on the problem right now. If it was totally impossible then the research would be pointless.
There isn't anything ruling out future generations solving the FTL problem. Solutions for this have been brought up over the decades. The most well known is the Alcubierre drive that warps space-time by generating a bubble of negative energy. However, this requires exotic forms of matter that we currently don't have or might not even exist.
A few years ago Göttingen University astrophysicist Erik Lentz proposed a way of solving this problem by creating a warp bubble with positive energy sources. Although still theoretical and no real solution is on the horizon in the next few years and some people have pointed out possible issues with Lentz's design, it shows that real people are trying to figure out ways to fix the FTL problem without breaking the laws of physics.
Who's to say how far we'll get to achieving this goal in the next 100 - 200 years?
hasn't he already retired?
No it wouldn't.
Traveling within our solar system is still rife with potential and benefits.
And even if our solar system was completely barren, research would still have benefits.
Knowledge, itself, is beneficial, as it leads to other knowledge.
Most breakthrough technology came off like bullshit to everyone that wasn't involved with tons of naysayers saying x, y, z, is impossible until it wasn't.
We could be one "bullshit" breakthrough away from traveling close to lightspeed or a way around it.
Imagine the people that invented dynamite being told humans would split the atom and be able to annihilate an entire city with 1 bomb or even destroy a country from a single submarine. "Thats fucking bullshit.'
NASA scientists claim warp drive may soon become reality
Warp drive is said to possess the capability of having a propulsion system that can travel faster than light speed travel.www.thebrighterside.news
There was also something else I can't remember that was in the 40-60% speed of light, which would get us pretty far with looming immortality in the next 500 years. It wasn't Nasa though
Although there might be a small problem here, this would require a large amount of mass-energy to make the warp drive function. To propel the spacecraft at such as level, you would need the mass equivalent to that of Jupiter.
In the 1480s, Italian polymath, Leonardo da Vinci drew up an idea for a flying machine (the aerial screw) which functioned very much like a modern helicopter. In the 15th century the technology wasn't anywhere close for humans to take the to skies, but the concept was there.
It wouldn't be until 1903 that the Wright brothers took the first flight. By the end of that century, we had not only mastered flight, but also helicopters, jet engines that allowed us to travel the speed of sound and flights out the earth and into space.
Interstellar travel is currently our dream, but one day it'll be another's reality.
’Warp’ drive is the only posited concept that could possibly shift past the speed of light, as the ship wouldn’t be moving, but the spacetime around it would, however, to warp space requires mass. There’s no getting around that fact. And the mass required would be prohibitively huge.
Yes, interstellar travel will one day be a reality, but it will take years, not hours or days to get anywhere, and we’ll only be visiting the most proximate stars.
That quote you’ve used isn’t in that article?
This is though:
Unfortunately, you can’t just apply the same logic from past scientific breakthroughs to the current situation with faster than light travel.
Our technology (such as the LHC) now allows us to see, and gather huge amounts of evidence, that breaking the speed of light is impossible. Largely because the entire universe around us requires that limit to actually exist.
The same way gravity must exist the way it does.
We can though, because our understanding of the universe is still incomplete. If were at some apex of science you would be right. We're not even close. FTL as you and I understand it(pushing mass with a rocket etc) is probably impossible.
The particle accelerator cannot test warp drives or other methods.
Gravity's existence is a mystery. That's one of the biggest questions in science because sub-atomic components of matter inherently possess the ability to influence spacetime. That's unknown.
Our understanding of the universe is indeed incomplete, but we have reams and reams of evidence that support special relativity, and the science involved in mass, energy and speed.
The LHC is used to accelerate sub atomic particles to near light speeds. From it they can see what the energy requirements are for those kinds of speeds - hence how we know that the amount of energy required to reach light speeds is prohibitively high.
U stoopid
Lol, no, aliens are as real as the loch ness monster or yeti. If adults really want to believe in UFOs and stuff that's their right. But it's a bit childish to be honest.
Show me an animal going faster than light or doing interdimensional travel and I wouldn't question the idea at all.
Not just an animal flying in the vacuum of space but also traveling faster than the speed of light.
That's all it would take to get you to believe it? Be honest, you'd require more evidence than that!
Wait weren't you claiming this is all possible? Why the fucking attitude, I'm just commenting on those scientist's weird remarks.
And it shouldn't even be a vacuum but I guess that might help.
You should check out some HP Lovecraft and Cthulhu Mythos if you haven't before.No attitude, just having fun.
I never claimed animals were traveling at the speed of light. Maybe some intelligence species could get close or find a way around it if they were thousands-millions of years ahead of us.
No I would welcome it
Careful what you wish for
Either way I would welcome it lol
Why though? Because it would be an exciting, to say the least?
If so, well yeah I can understand that lmao
That excitement is part of it
I thought as much. It's more or less inherently tied to such a scenario.
Could you expand on your response if possible?
The Air Force has officially confirmed a report of this incident to the Pentagon’s UFO Agency (AARO).
According to the information known so far, the incident occurred when the sensor systems of a plane that was approaching the US Air Force Base Eglin in the US state of Florida failed along with the sighting of an unknown and to date unidentified flying object over the Gulf of Mexico.
“Initially we were neither given access to all crew members involved nor to the photographs and radar data. After a lengthy discussion about what authorities apply in the USA, we were able to see the photo and speak to the crew member who took the photo.
This recording showed something that I, even my role as a former member of the Armed Forces Committee and a committee that monitors new technological-military developments, cannot attribute to any human development – neither a development of the United States nor of one of our adversaries.
Nevertheless, they initially saw a formation of four objects flying in a diamond formation, which were also detected with radar, a radar recording that I was able to see myself. One of the pilots flew towards this formation to investigate and saw what I can only describe as a large flying ball beyond all human possibility. As he approached the object, the onboard radar and FLIR system failed, forcing him to manually take the existing photo.
I just read that they did CT scans, Floroscopy and xrays and concluded that they are not fake or altered. This is huge news and has to get some people talking.
I want to eat that alien cake.
They always get brought up conveniently when things attention needs to be diverted.
The dumbasses couldn't even breathe in our atmosphere. Nothing to worry about.
What do you think the reasoning for it was in WW2? They were distracting from the world war?