I would use the Asimov solution (which is the one BSG used, too): plug in coordinates, push the big red button (big, clunky levers are cool, too), zap, you are there. No explanation at all.
I've got pictures of a paper that claims to prove that FTL can be possible. I have no bloody if the guy is a wacko or not. But he also has written some stuff about the terraformation of Venus and Mars.
Anyone intrested?
I've got pictures of a paper that claims to prove that FTL can be possible. I have no bloody if the guy is a wacko or not. But he also has written some stuff about the terraformation of Venus and Mars.
Anyone intrested?
How did you get your hands on my paper?
Don't pay attention to Tachy. He's puling your leg.I've got pictures of a paper that claims to prove that FTL can be possible. I have no bloody if the guy is a wacko or not. But he also has written some stuff about the terraformation of Venus and Mars.
Anyone intrested?
How did you get your hands on my paper?
That's yours? I got it from a Mars website.
It always seems a little arrogant when sci-fi writers think they can explain something that the smartest physicists in the world can't.
Hi guys,
I realized Most of the space-based scifi television series I am familiar with were made in the 1980s and 1990s, and most of them used nearly a century-old Einstein's theory of relativity to explain FTL travel. Surely, with the advancement of science over the past 100 years, there must be better tricks for FTL travel?
Suppose you are appointed to create the next great space-based scifi television series and budget isn't a problem. What sort of science would you use to explain FTL travel in your universe? Quantum teleportation? Some kind of string theory trick?
Babylon 5, Deep Space 9 and Stargate uses the Einstein-Rosenberg bridge (aka wormholes) to create a traversable tunnel.
Einstein's Theory of Relativity says there is no Faster than Light travel.
If Enterprise were operating within the Theory of Relativity, it might experience the trip to Alpha Centuri as taking less than 4 years, but the folks on earth and on planets around Alpha Centuri would experience their trip as taking more than 12 years. The idea of warp comes more out of Quantum Theory which supposes the existence of alternative universes close to our own in which space is compressed.
I wouldn't use FTL, if i were writing a sci-fi series/novel i have always been interested in using sub light interstellar travel as a plot point. It would create some very interesting scenarios in any future Human interstellar Empire, the farther out colonies would be technologically backward whilst the closer colonies would be wealthy and fairly modern. An over crowded solar system might offer its prisoners the chance to be deported on a sleeper ship to the outer colonies rather than serve their prison sentence etc...
If faster than light travel was possible and we understood how to do it, we would be doing it..
I like the Heim drive and hope that Heim was right in it's implementation.
Barring that I say strip mine the solar system and sun to create a giant super computer than can simulate an entire universe and make FTL a matter of fact for the rules of your simulated universe.
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