There's light-speed travel in 'Star Wars' and 'Star Trek.' Is it
possible?
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[March 12, 2021]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Spaceships zipping
at the speed of light or faster are a staple of science fiction. Think
of the Millennium Falcon in the "Star Wars" movies and the starship
Enterprise in "Star Trek." Such travel sounds like fanciful speculation.
But is it?
A new research paper authored by an American physicist offers a
potential blueprint for superluminal travel - faster than the speed of
light - using conventional physics rather than a construct based upon
hypothetical particles and states of matter with exotic physical
properties.
The paper, published this week in the journal Classical and Quantum
Gravity, moves the question of superluminal travel a step away from
theoretical research and a step toward an engineering challenge,
according to physicist Erik Lentz, who did the work while at the
University of Göttingen in Germany.
A huge hurdle remains, Lentz said, in finding a way to vastly reduce the
immense amount of energy needed to power a theoretical 'warp drive'
engine before any hope of building a prototype.
"A 'warp drive' technology is principally envisioned to speed up
transportation in deep space," Lentz said. "It can be used to enhance
current ambitions for interplanetary and interstellar travel by
drastically shortening travel times and widening mission windows."
The nearest star beyond our solar system is Proxima Centauri, located
4.25 light years - the distance it takes light to travel in a year -
away. Light travels at about 186,000 miles per second (300,000 km per
second) and 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km) in a year.
Using traditional rocket fuel, it would take about 50,000 to 70,000
years to reach Proxima Centauri, and nuclear propulsion with proposed
technology would get there in about 100 years, Lentz said. A light speed
trip would take four years and three months.
Lentz's blueprint envisions above-light-speed travel, which "holds the
potential for one-way and round-trip distant interstellar travel within
a human lifetime."
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Visitors to the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum see the fully
restored original USS Enterprise model from the 1960s "Star Trek" TV
series in Washington July 7, 2016. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
"If we are limited to traveling at sub-light speed, then
multi-generational spaceships must be used for destinations beyond
the nearest stars, which is basically a glorified burial casket for
at least the first generation of people. I do not find that prospect
nearly as inspiring," Lentz said.
His paper describes the theoretical construction of a class of
soliton - a compact self-sustaining wave moving with constant
velocity through space - capable of superluminal motion. These
solitons are often referred to as "warp bubbles" and they would
provide the basis for a propulsion system.
"Currently, the amount of energy required for this new type of space
propulsion drive is still immense," Lentz said. For a spacecraft of
about 650 feet (200 meters) in diameter to exceed light speed, that
could mean perhaps the energy equivalent of hundreds of times the
mass of Jupiter, our solar system's largest planet - a preposterous
amount.
A lot of work would be needed to bring this to fruition. Making it
practical, Lentz said, would require lowering the energy needs
drastically down to the range of modern nuclear fission reactors. A
way to create and accelerate the solitons also must be devised,
Lentz added.
Lentz views the task as difficult, but not impossible. He said the
next phase of theoretical research and development work could unfold
over the next several years, with a fully functional prototype drive
possible within the coming decade.
"The first truly superluminal drives may come some decades
thereafter," Lentz said. "I would like to see this technology in use
in my lifetime."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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