Quote from: WarpTech on 07/27/2017 06:12 pmI know this. I've been trying to teach people this alternative for a long time. Eventually, some people do get it, but others just want to argue. If we work together, we can make it so that FTL is possible and the paradoxes are not. That's my goal. Is it yours?And this is what is wrong with your entire argument. You cannot make anything so simply by working toward it.
I know this. I've been trying to teach people this alternative for a long time. Eventually, some people do get it, but others just want to argue. If we work together, we can make it so that FTL is possible and the paradoxes are not. That's my goal. Is it yours?
Things are so or not so regardless of what you want. You are engaged in motivated reasoning toward a goal. That's how creationists believe in a 7000 year old earth. That's how the flat earth society is still a thing. If you are willing to bend logic reason and evidence to fit your preselected desire then you have killed science. Your goal should not be proving FLT is possible. Your goal should be understanding the truth what ever it may be.Nobody wants the limit of light speed. There is no vast political movement to prevent FTL travel. There is no conspiracy to hide the truth. It is just what the evidence points to. Now you are free to disagree with almost the entire scientific community if you wish. And I wish you luck. Honestly I do. It would be wonderful. But at the same time I gotta be honest and say that your chances are better buying a lotto ticket.
Quote from: meberbs on 07/27/2017 10:38 pmHaving suggested the existence of a special frame to begin with, I feel I should clarify. If there is such a thing as a special frame that you limit FTL to, the entire theory of relativity collapses, because this directly contradicts its most fundamental assumption. I have no idea what, if anything, you could replace it with unless you want to ignore untold numbers of experimental results.Quote from: laszlo on 07/27/2017 10:16 pmSo you're trying to find rules obeying relativity to do something that relativity absolutely prohibits?Which is why the best solution I could come up with is to break the one fundamental assumption underlying relativity.Im not sure I am understanding you. We are probably saying the same thing and just wording it differently. To be clear, you are not talking about changing the universe in a way that invalidates current experiments, correct? All those experiments have to still deliver the same outcomes.Breaking the assumption is fine, If I know what you mean. Relativity can be perfect like a sphere without being a statement that there is no such thing as a cube, or that you won't suddenly come across a cube embedded in your sphere.This is why Im only concerned with paradoxes, or solutions that require current experiments to suddenly deliver different outcomes, and Im still not convinced there is not still a nasty paradox hidden in there somewhere. Im still expecting someone to pull the rug out from under this with an example that shows it is just as nonsensical as general FTL.
Having suggested the existence of a special frame to begin with, I feel I should clarify. If there is such a thing as a special frame that you limit FTL to, the entire theory of relativity collapses, because this directly contradicts its most fundamental assumption. I have no idea what, if anything, you could replace it with unless you want to ignore untold numbers of experimental results.Quote from: laszlo on 07/27/2017 10:16 pmSo you're trying to find rules obeying relativity to do something that relativity absolutely prohibits?Which is why the best solution I could come up with is to break the one fundamental assumption underlying relativity.
So you're trying to find rules obeying relativity to do something that relativity absolutely prohibits?
If we work together, we can make it so that FTL is possible and the paradoxes are not. That's my goal. Is it yours?
Quote from: WarpTech on 07/27/2017 06:12 pmIf we work together, we can make it so that FTL is possible and the paradoxes are not. That's my goal. Is it yours?I would like this to be possible, and I am fine with trying to come up with a theory that would allow FTL. Ppnl does have a ppoint that we need to remember that we can't control how the universe works, so if the universe really says that FTL results in paradoxes/is impossible, then nothing we can do will change that.It will probably be a few days before I can give a detailed response, but as an item for you to think on for now: Special relativity and everything I have been discussing involves flat space-time which, if I am reading what you wrote correctly, corresponds to K=1 everywhere. Even if you say that the FTL requires curvature, that curvature would be fairly local, and sufficient separation of observers and between the ships should be possible where the analysis can be done just considering the flat space time, in the same way that the twin paradox can be resolved without directly calculating what the traveler experiences during acceleration.
Quote from: Bob012345 on 07/27/2017 05:42 pmIn general, is this a debate over whether Alcubierre warp bubbles or wormholes could ever exist, or whether literal FTT travel through space cannot exist? Thanks.Hi Bob012345,When I started this thread, the goal was to find a definition of FTL that avoids paradox. It is not about the theory of any particular method or whether it actually exists, just if you can describe what you are claiming it would allow you to do.Another way of looking at it could be "Guilt-free FTL rules for HardSF writers". You don't need to explain the machine. It Glows. It makes noises. Things spin. But you do have to explain the characters. Who can understand a universe full of characters living in a universe where you could create a paradox with a few simple steps, and no one does it, and no one talks about it?I started this thread thinking we could demonstrate a paradox with a single FTL flight. At the moment we have a claim that you can avoid all paradoxes by limiting FTL to a special frame, such as the CMB rest frame. I don't think anyone has been able to directly discredit that yet.. though we don't necessarily like it :-)Im sort of waiting for some wizzes at relativity to come along and pull the rug out from under that one with a specific example that shows it still produces paradoxes. That is where we are at the moment.One really weird thing about a universe like that, is that travelling in one particular direction you would be travelling into the past, just not far enough to get back in time to cause paradox. So I guess your friend could jump a lightyear to the left and you could see them immediately jump out of their ship and start waving to you, because all this happened a year ago over there, and the light has been travelling towards you all that time!
In general, is this a debate over whether Alcubierre warp bubbles or wormholes could ever exist, or whether literal FTT travel through space cannot exist? Thanks.
Thanks. All of you interested in these ideas should view the 2004 film Primer.
With the Alcubierre warp drive, doesn't the ship stay at local time, even when you get to the other star because it is the fabric of spacetime around the ship moving, and not the ship?
This would be a lot less pressing an issue if instead of being stuck out in the sticks we lived in the galactic core, where stars crowd in on each other, so close you can almost touch them and the folks who live on their planets. Moe's cantina on Tattooine would be real!
I found this. I can't really make heads or tails out of it yet.https://arxiv.org/pdf/1407.2528.pdf
On the other hand, it is certainly possible to construct logically sensible models of spacetime in which observers can disagree as to the direction of time’s arrow. Our results do not undermine those constructions, but they do force us to re-examine which aspects of these models are actually responsible for any apparent paradoxes.
One really weird thing about a universe like that, is that travelling in one particular direction you would be travelling into the past, just not far enough to get back in time to cause paradox. So I guess your friend could jump a lightyear to the left and you could see them immediately jump out of their ship and start waving to you, because all this happened a year ago over there, and the light has been travelling towards you all that time!
No. An FTL jump of one light year means they're over there now.
Quote from: Norm38 on 07/31/2017 04:38 amNo. An FTL jump of one light year means they're over there now.That is the problem with relativity. There is no such thing as "They're over there now", at least not that has meaning to all observers. If two distant events are simultaneous to one observer, typically they will not be simultaneous to another observer moving with a different relative velocity.It is really what this whole thread is about.
Quote from: KelvinZero on 07/31/2017 05:09 amQuote from: Norm38 on 07/31/2017 04:38 amNo. An FTL jump of one light year means they're over there now.That is the problem with relativity. There is no such thing as "They're over there now", at least not that has meaning to all observers. If two distant events are simultaneous to one observer, typically they will not be simultaneous to another observer moving with a different relative velocity.It is really what this whole thread is about.I've read through most of this thread, and it seems to be about two completely different things. There's a theoretical FTL jump, which bypasses all aspects of relativity, and then there's flying through space at near the speed of light and experiencing time dilation. One is FTL, one is sublight. They're not the same.
There absolutely is "over there now".
Earth and Mars being 30 light minutes apart has nothing to do with relativity or paradoxes. They are both existing in space together at the exact same moments in time. Their clocks may be moving at slightly different rates. But once a moment of time, the same moment for both, has become past it is past.1) Via radio, I tell Curiosity to move 10m. It takes Curiosity 10 minutes to move those 10m. 60 minutes later I get confirmation my command was received, 70 minutes later I get confirmation the drive is complete.2) Via ansible, I tell Curiosity to move 10m. Milliseconds later I get confirmation of message receipt, 10 minutes later confirmation the drive is complete.What is different other than the elimination of 60 minutes of delay?Speed of causality is speed of light only because we don't know how to send a faster signal. If we can send faster signals, then speed of causality becomes that new faster speed. Of course an ansible communicates with a different time. It communicates with now as opposed to 30 minutes from now. That doesn't equal time travel, sending messages into the past or creating a paradox.
The problem is that one ansible with high relative velocity would be communicating with 10 minutes ago so you could see the results before you sent the command.