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i am not saying David Pares is right, his idea has the strong whiff of the fringe, but if he is right and his measurements are right his thingy (scientific technical term) develops local apparent FTL in an exponential relationship to the power input which is linear. Which is itself unusual per the rules of physics, along with having a reaction in the same direction as the radiated energy (which may be taken as the exhaust for his engine.)
originally posted by: JadeStar
originally posted by: glend
a reply to: andy06shake
Point taken. But if the expense wasn't prohibitive a generation might outlay the funds for a probe for the benefit of future generations.
added... what if speed of light is not a speed barrier at all but a time barrier (which might also explain why we see nothing travelling faster than light). If its possible to punch through the speed of light then time itself might reverse. If so , there might be a goldilocks speed that maintains universal time, so travelling to star 1000 LY takes 13 1/2 years for travellers and observers.
Its a physical barrier in that it is a barrier imposed by physics.
As mass approaches the speed of light it becomes effectively more massive requiring more energy to accelerate at 99.999999999999999% of the speed of light you would need like infinite energy to accelerate any further.
it gets even whackier if your mode of FTL alibi is a wormhole.
originally posted by: glend
a reply to: stormbringer1701
Agree that reference frames is key for a better understanding. Found a page that also argues that time dilution cannot be true as we understand it because we must look at both reference frames. Is it the rocket ship moving at LS away from the earth or the earth travelling at LS away from the rocket ship that experiences time dilution. Perhaps those on a rocket ship travelling 500 LY will age 500 Years, us 13 years! Be great for sending probes to investigate interstellar planets if that was the case.
link
originally posted by: Aleister
a reply to: JadeStar
Damn, you're good at this. As I've said several times before, ATS is lucky to have you posting here.
Forget what year it was, somewhere in the mid 1990s, but I was at the conference and in the room in Madison, Wisconsin when the first exo-solar system was announced (that was in a press conference rather than in session).
Thanks, once again, for sharing, and I'll come back to this thread to really take in the data and the videos.
originally posted by: charles911
Hello and Happy New Year to all on ATS, Do any of these Planets have a similar cycle of Day and Night like Earth ?
Beta Pictoris b is more than 16 times larger and 3000 times more massive than the Earth, yet a day on the planet only lasts 8 hours.
originally posted by: JadeStar
We'll begin to take measurements of other young or nearby exoplanets when they are directly imaged with some of the massive new telescopes like the 30 Meter Telescope which just started construction in Hawaii...
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: JadeStar
We'll begin to take measurements of other young or nearby exoplanets when they are directly imaged with some of the massive new telescopes like the 30 Meter Telescope which just started construction in Hawaii...
Some native Hawaiians (and others) are protesting the construction of that telescope on Mauna Kea, citing that it is a place sacred to them, and building the telescope would desecrate that sacred place. They have vowed to keep up their fight against building it, and have said they will take it to the Supreme Court if necessary.
Here's a good fact sheet on that Protest:
Everything You Need To Know About The Viral Protests Against A Hawaii Telescope
originally posted by: JadeStar
This is old news, the people still protesting it at this point are fringe. The viral campaign referred to here is the last gasp effort of those who didn't get their way during the first protests.
The Honolulu-born actor joined an impassioned group of environmentalists and Native Hawaiian activists on Thursday on Hawaii's Big Island to protest the construction of a $1.4 billion telescope on a remote spot atop Mauna Kea volcano.
Momoa has flooded his Instagram feed with photos supporting the protesters and is urging his celebrity friends to support the cause by signing a Change.org petition to "immediately halt all TMT-related construction" and "stop all arrests" of "those standing in protection of Mauna Kea."
Singer Nicole Scherzinger (who was also born in Hawaii), actors Ian Somerhalder, Jai Courtney, Jill Wagner, and Momoa's step-daughter, Zoe Kravitz, have shown their solidarity by writing #WeAreMaunaKea on their bodies and urging their collective 8 million followers to sign the petition.
originally posted by: Soylent Green Is People
originally posted by: JadeStar
This is old news, the people still protesting it at this point are fringe. The viral campaign referred to here is the last gasp effort of those who didn't get their way during the first protests.
Yeah, but it raised its head again last week when actor Jason Momoa (from Game of Thrones, Stargate Atlantis, Conan the Barbarian, and the upcoming Aquaman film) re-ignited the protest via an instagram post.