http://news.bbc.co.u...tech/364496.stm
Will warp drive ever be invented?
#1 OFFLINE
Posted 09 March 2006 - 08:16 PM
#2 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 09 March 2006 - 08:20 PM
I certainly cannot predict the timeframe however.
#3 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
#4 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 09 March 2006 - 09:15 PM
#5 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 09 March 2006 - 10:42 PM
#6 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 09 March 2006 - 10:51 PM
#7 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 02:13 AM
Will we create *quantum leaps* that exceed the limits recognized by Einstein?
The answer is not based on what we *know* as much as what we do not yet fully understand.
Warp/wormhole, transporters and any FTL (or equal to in the case of transporters) concept must alter the physical properties of the experience but more important they might accelerate experience relative to an Earth standard time.
Suppose as a hypothetical point that travel through *warp* automatically also compensates by a shift into the future relative to Earth equal to the restrictions of Special and General Relativity?
Transport would be experienced at the speed of light to the traveller but if you were to turn around and go back your arrival would be measured as a time displacement significantly into the future. This form of time travel is non reversible. You can travel instantaneously relative to *your experience* of time but not relative to the point of origin and destination.
I pose this because it may in fact be an associated risk or hardship. Going through warp may mean being gone forever to those you leave behind. That is unless longevity and immortality become common.
Will warp as presented on television and in movies come about?
Not unless a lot of what we think we understand about physics is drastically reorganized, again.
#8 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 07:13 AM
#9 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 03:29 PM
1) FTL travel is impossible (most likely)
2) FTL travel is possible but the speed cap is something like 10c or 100c but not more
3) FTL is possible and the whole universe has no civilization that has yet discovered it
Given our current understanding of physics - FTL travel is impossible - only bending space and travelling at normal speeds through that bent space. But bending space across long distances seems ridiculously energy-expensive, and if there's no way to recoup the losses (i.e., irreversible), then I doubt it will ever be used.
And why leave the solar system anyway, aside from potentially rescuing primitive species in trouble? We have enough matter here to run 10^30 human-sized minds for 10^30 years, at least.
#10 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 03:39 PM
Why settle for a cubic foot of 'me', when there are enough stars in the milky way to give each person on the planet 10 stars.
And there are ~10 galaxies per person, too.
#11 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 07:16 PM
QJones said:
And there are ~10 galaxies per person, too.
#12 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 09:50 PM
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---BrianW
#13 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 10:02 PM
In addition, I have a dream about attaining the mass of a star as an intelligence ...
#14 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 10:34 PM
Again, I think you and QJones are underestimating really powerful optimization processes. Your notions of freedom and security are probably more self-destructive than is presently recognized.
I agree that totalitarianism is repulsive, but it seems unlikely that individualistic transhumans will be able to weight human-level perceptions of repulsion to totalitarianism to the sufficient extent that they could transcend their surrounding optimization pressures.
But that just represents how I envision things. As of yet I don't know how to prove or present a rigorous case for these things, so I wish you both success anyway.
#15 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 10:49 PM
Two of them, I'd expect.
Anyway, how can something be optimized such that it cannot be improved? I don't think that's possible.
#16 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 11:33 PM
bgwowk said:
QJones said:
Two of them, I'd expect.
Anyway, how can something be optimized such that it cannot be improved? I don't think that's possible.
I vote Null.
#17 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 11:39 PM
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Again, I think you and QJones are underestimating really powerful optimization processes. Your notions of freedom and security are probably more self-destructive than is presently recognized.
I agree that totalitarianism is repulsive, but it seems unlikely that individualistic transhumans will be able to weight human-level perceptions of repulsion to totalitarianism to the sufficient extent that they could transcend their surrounding optimization pressures.
---BrianW
#18 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 10 March 2006 - 11:42 PM
#19 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 13 March 2006 - 08:18 PM
#20 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 13 March 2006 - 08:19 PM
(I just thought we needed another smiley face.)
#21 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 13 March 2006 - 09:16 PM
When the mean of cognitive processing shoots to orders of magnitude faster than what it is today, the world itself will become boring unless we accelerate it also. And we will. (If we survive the Singularity, that is.) The value of g will be artificially accelerated because superfast minds will find it odd to let go of a ball in the air and see it freeze in place.
Soon we will be walking around at speeds close to c. In order to avoid setting everything on fire, a high degree of control over individual atoms will be necessary. This will be easier if there are less atoms to deal with. You will get to have more fun in a given time if you eliminate the superfluous matter making up your body, permitting control systems to more easily manage your physiology and neurology at high speeds. We will become physically smaller, with much more functionality packed into a tiny space. Beings made of neutronium or monopolium are possible end-states.
When your mind is moving a mile a femtosecond, the cosmos looks really far away. Septillions of times further away than it looked before. Sending a signal a few nanometers away could take subjective years, if not longer. Why on Earth would anyone want to travel meters away, much less light-years? I just don't see it happening.
The "hive" perception is all in the eye of the beholder. To beings who evolved on a gas giant who neurons fire once every minute instead of 200 times a second, we look like sardines in a can, spinning our wheels at a furious pace.
The whole grandiosity fetish is the wrong route. It's like the fledging computing industry in 1980 making a roadmap that consists of progressively larger computers rather than progressively faster and better computers with smaller logic gates. If we survive the rapids of progress ahead, I believe anyone should be able to basically do whatever they want... but we should remember that what we want now could easily change in light of new social and technological realities.
PS. Thank you Brian for inventing the concept of Phased Array Optics.
#22 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 14 March 2006 - 12:32 AM
---BrianW
#23 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 14 March 2006 - 12:33 AM
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Micheal you do realize how incredibly short sighted and unimaginative this sounds to those that understand it differently?
It says much more about you and your perspective than the universe.
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Yes and it has started off slowly considering the evolutionary part of it. Even the interpersonal rapport part has been a long time coming. Mind sharing is the synergistic essence of human development and it is an essential aspect of the formation of the singularity.
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This has already begun too though the form is more a market driven dynamic of time/value and *re-creational* activity.
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Soon we will be walking around at speeds close to c. In order to avoid setting everything on fire, a high degree of control over individual atoms will be necessary. This will be easier if there are less atoms to deal with.
This will happen faster than might be expected by many because the metamorphosis to a quantized electronic medium is predicated on the mind being able to *materialize* as an abstract operator on a new substrate. If a copy can be made the copy acquires an existence within the form it exists. Not merely as a program predicated *image* but as a cogent manipulator of computation data and operational selection.
This leads to the Singulaity's FTL limit that reduces it to being a strictly local phenomenon on the universal scale. We have discussed this a little before but if FTL can be created for information (not physical mass) then it may be possible to overcome such a limit.
Without FTL it is impossible to overcome the duality of distance that results from the lack of *simultaneity* for informational experience that even occurs at the level of planetary distances within Sol System. I have always found this to be a profoundly overlooked weakness of the Jupiter brain concept for example.
Once we can experience C as the speed of light we also can differentiate the time delay occurring between two distinct bodies like Jupiter and Earth. The time lag and difference of rate of time would be *perceptible* like watching the flash and smoke from a starter pistol and hearing the bang moments later.
If for example you were on Earth and extending your personal experience to a distance of Mars or Jupiter the time lag would feel excruciatingly long. If you coincided for intelligent sensory presence in both places you may not be able to reconcile the data stream as *here and not here* simultaneously without a division of self that in principle denies the *singularity*.
#24 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 02 August 2006 - 02:58 AM
One consequence of this is that a species widely distributed throughout the galaxy will become "out of touch" with itself. Communication delays of years to hundreds of thousands of years will effectively isolate cultures from each other. New developments in one place will ripple through population centers, crossing and producing interference patterns with new developments from elsewhere. Interesting speculations, but it's a long way off!
It will be interesting to see what the results from Gravity Probe B say about the edges of general relativity. The papers should be out summer 2007. It should help a good deal more with our understanding of relativistic jets from compact objects, and places where the spacetime is severly curved. http://einstein.stanford.edu/
Why would an immortal care if it took him 10 million years to get somewhere? Seems like a great time to read all the books again, watch all the movies, have some late night conversations and cocktails, play immersive video games, and get some sleep!
#25 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 26 August 2006 - 08:57 PM
If we can, we could travel as fast as we wanted without having to worry about relativity. (Since subjectively, the traveling ship would be moving at a speed of zero.) How does a speed if a few million C sound?
If we can't, I guess I'll have a few hundred thousand years in between stops to read every book ever written, and then some.
I personally think we'll discover a means to manufacture exotic matter, but that's more of an opinion than a prediction. (We as a civilization barely understand the physics behind negative energy density, much less negative mass. It'll probably take a superintelligence to solve that problem.)
#26 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 26 August 2006 - 09:23 PM
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If we can, we could travel as fast as we wanted without having to worry about relativity. (Since subjectively, the traveling ship would be moving at a speed of zero.) How does a speed if a few million C sound?
If we can't, I guess I'll have a few hundred thousand years in between stops to read every book ever written, and then some.
I personally think we'll discover a means to manufacture exotic matter, but that's more of an opinion than a prediction. (We as a civilization barely understand the physics behind negative energy density, much less negative mass. It'll probably take a superintelligence to solve that problem.)
You know I just reread the May '06 issue of popsci describing this very strategy.
Maybe I have already run into the coincidence temporal driver.
[airquote] Dejá vú vectors? [/airquote] [tung]
#27 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 26 August 2006 - 10:22 PM
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Again, I think you and QJones are underestimating really powerful optimization processes. Your notions of freedom and security are probably more self-destructive than is presently recognized.
I agree that totalitarianism is repulsive, but it seems unlikely that individualistic transhumans will be able to weight human-level perceptions of repulsion to totalitarianism to the sufficient extent that they could transcend their surrounding optimization pressures.
You should pick up a copy of Castronova's "Synthetic Worlds". An interesting point of reference is on the intentional funneling of human biology from reality, as a function of impenetrable barriers to vertical social mobility, so that certain institutions won't have to deal with people whining for welfare any longer. Creating our own matrix against ourselves? Maybe. In all honesty, the possibilites for total sensory immersion are quite tempting, and even quite beneficial in a vast array of scenarios, but the bottom line still exists that those who currently consider Second Life and other MMORPG's their primary realm of existence (as some do), have been forced into that situation through an inability to cope with reality (just heard a story last night from a friend whose roommate literally attacked him with a knife for not paying the 'net bill on time). We should strive for biological agency of free-will, not settle for a brain-in-the-vat substitute; if you think otherwise, you are truly a danger to our reality.
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Conservatively optimal, yet this intelligence would still be a function of evolving order in the face of entropy; this should lead us to believe that we'd continute to spread virally throughout all of space and time as order has so far, most recently manifesting itself biologically (in our neck of the woods), after all, we'll likely still have some order of intelligence adhering to principles such as...
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And there are ~10 galaxies per person, too.
We're still little old humans and yet already we're speaking of Manifest Destiny on Universal scales. If that's not scary, I don't know what is; personally, I don't really want to imagine what massively intelligent warfare ripping the fabric of space and time to shreds might look like.
It seems that in our reality there might not truly be such a thing as conservation at any scale; as even the constancy of the speed of light is now being heartily challenged.
#28 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 03 December 2008 - 09:01 PM
As for becoming an inter-stellar expansionist civilization, that scares the pants off me. Forget about the restrictions of the speed of light, because as a few of you have said that won't matter to immortals, which is true. But guys, think about what having ~7 billion minds all wanting to gain more and more intelligence and pleasure (matter and energy) at an increasingly exponential rate...
I believe if we go down an uncontrolled path like this we will soon (on the scale of forever of course) run out of matter and energy in the solar system, the galaxy, and even eventually the universe. I don't really have a solution to this, but I think that we should use caution and restraint instead of purely unrestricted expansion of ourselves.
Of course there is the possibility (although I don't really believe it) that we will be able to generate "infinite" energy at some point (through accessing alternate dimensions?)
What I think is a more realistic is to restrict our use of matter and energy and instead of using more and more over time we should strive to become more efficient and use less and less over time instead.
#29 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 04 December 2008 - 03:28 AM
#30 OFFLINE Re: Will warp drive ever be invented?
Posted 04 December 2008 - 06:42 AM
Zenob, on 3-Dec 2008, 10:28 PM, said:
I completely agree that escaping our solar system is inevitable if we intend to survive indefinitely. Again, about FTL: it is possible to the traveler, but any stationary person would observe the traveler going at most the speed of light, which is what causes time dilation.
The only two ways that I could see getting around time dilation are wormholes or quantum teleportation, and neither of those may even work let alone get around time dilation. Also, quantum teleportation, like "regular" teleportation would kill a person, so that's not the greatest of ideas. No, I think that we'll have to settle with light speed travel and deal with time dilation. After all, aren't we planning to be immortal?
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