Warp Drives: New Simulations

Ғылым және технология

Learn more from a science course on Brilliant! First 30 days are free and 20% off the annual premium subscription when you use our link ➜ brilliant.org/sabine.
Hyperjumps, wormholes, and warp drives sound like science fiction, but they’re actually based on real science! Though I believe out of the three, warp drives are the most plausible. The math seems to agree. Today I want to tell you about a new way of analysing and visualizing warp drives.
Code: github.com/pbbp0904/WarpFactory
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#science #sciencenews #warpdrives #physics

Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @curtisblake261
    @curtisblake261Ай бұрын

    "For all we know it doesn't exist" is a breath of fresh air compared to all the popular physics hype out there.

  • @osmosisjones4912

    @osmosisjones4912

    Ай бұрын

    What about that Quantum vortex made in a jar

  • @Nulley0

    @Nulley0

    Ай бұрын

    Tasty jar full of Vortex?

  • @SoulDelSol

    @SoulDelSol

    Ай бұрын

    Everything is hogwash, hogwash i say!

  • @dmitryshusterman9494

    @dmitryshusterman9494

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SoulDelSolhave you washed your hog?

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    Ай бұрын

    Everything is content.

  • @ReversingTheDecline
    @ReversingTheDeclineАй бұрын

    The number of solutions to General Relativity seems to be directly proportional to the number of science fiction plots.

  • @FredPlanatia

    @FredPlanatia

    Ай бұрын

    You are victim to the fallacy the expertise in one area means you are a genius at everything else.

  • @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    Ай бұрын

    parallelism in the computational universe hypothesis would replace GR in a heart beat!

  • @racookster
    @racooksterАй бұрын

    When Sabine said achieving warp drive would take a thousand years, Einstein spoke up in my head. "There is not the slightest indication that (nuclear) energy will ever be obtainable," he said. "It would mean that the atom would have to be shattered at will." Six years later, Otto Hahn did it.

  • @jonathanlanser1129

    @jonathanlanser1129

    Ай бұрын

    I know people forget that just cause someone is an expert doesn't mean they are right.

  • @kkeennssaaii

    @kkeennssaaii

    Ай бұрын

    Well, this is different, the math to smash an atom was known and the amount of energy needed to do it was achievable even in times when Einstein said it. It was nothing out of scope of what we have been producing at that time. The control of this process was the problem. Here we are talking energies far beyond what we can even imagine to produce in future. I have seen many estimates how much energy you will need to create it and the lowest was that you will need more energy than is contained in planet Jupiter. And that is just for curving the spacetime, we have no idea how to move it, how much energy you need to stop it, to steer it and so on. So yeah 1000 years is very optimistic.

  • @flakcannon722

    @flakcannon722

    Ай бұрын

    I'm surprised she is so optimistic as to think humanity will exist as a technological people in a thousand years

  • @jonathanlanser1129

    @jonathanlanser1129

    Ай бұрын

    @@flakcannon722 that's hardly optimistic

  • @juzoli

    @juzoli

    Ай бұрын

    Just because some impossible challenges are resolved, it doesn’t mean all challenges can or will be resolved. Also while splitting atoms were “We don’t know how to do it”, warp drive (and FTL in general) are more like “it is not doable according to our knowledge”.

  • @TheTwober
    @TheTwober28 күн бұрын

    I accidentally built a warp drive into my couch. Whenever I lay down fully on it, I immediately warp forward 1h in time.

  • @brianyoung8999

    @brianyoung8999

    11 күн бұрын

    that's a time machine, silly.

  • @TheTwober

    @TheTwober

    11 күн бұрын

    @@brianyoung8999 That explains the laser raptors...

  • @1112viggo

    @1112viggo

    5 сағат бұрын

    Spooky. I have a black hole under mine. I once dropped a large TV remote under it which disappeared for like 4 month. One day i come home from work and its in the middle of the living room covered in dust. I live alone btw.

  • @arctic_haze
    @arctic_hazeАй бұрын

    The dose of realism Sabine adds to her videos is something YT science related channels usually lack.

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334

    @paulmichaelfreedman8334

    Ай бұрын

    I know plenty down-to-earth channels, they're just not mainstream because they go way over the average person's head.

  • @osmosisjones4912

    @osmosisjones4912

    Ай бұрын

    What about traveling as fare back in time as time is moving forward

  • @krumuvecis

    @krumuvecis

    Ай бұрын

    yay, science, however!

  • @andybaldman

    @andybaldman

    Ай бұрын

    Because everything is content.

  • @arjavgarg5801

    @arjavgarg5801

    Ай бұрын

    List them please​@@paulmichaelfreedman8334

  • @Mark-ef7pi
    @Mark-ef7piАй бұрын

    I mostly ignore topics like cold fusion or warp drives, but when it's Sabine....

  • @TheIgnoramus

    @TheIgnoramus

    Ай бұрын

    LENR is actually what cold fusion is. Reccomend looking into it.

  • @frostbot117

    @frostbot117

    Ай бұрын

    Sabine cannot be denied!

  • @SoulDelSol

    @SoulDelSol

    Ай бұрын

    I trust her bc she says einshtein so she must be smart or German or something

  • @audiodead7302

    @audiodead7302

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheIgnoramus The closest thing to cold fusion in the real world is Gazpacho.🤣

  • @tim57243

    @tim57243

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@TheIgnoramusLENR stands for Low Energy Nuclear Reaction. Cold fusion described by different words. Finding different words is not progress.

  • @chrismantonuk
    @chrismantonukАй бұрын

    Zefram Cochrane has joined the chat.

  • @KlseAdmiralAdama

    @KlseAdmiralAdama

    17 күн бұрын

    Captain Picard has joined the chat.

  • @jimjosemusic5325

    @jimjosemusic5325

    12 күн бұрын

    Yeah man. For real. I wanted to name a kid after Zephram . Now that I'm 60+ I'm beginning to feel like his movie character : )

  • @brianyoung8999

    @brianyoung8999

    11 күн бұрын

    as movies have taught us, we need to live in a dystopian world after a total collapse with zero funding and minimum resources to be able to build advance tech.

  • @carlbrenninkmeijer8925
    @carlbrenninkmeijer8925Ай бұрын

    Some people developed a warp drive. But I cannot find them anymore.

  • @aaronjennings8385

    @aaronjennings8385

    Ай бұрын

    Lol

  • @ConsciousExpression

    @ConsciousExpression

    Ай бұрын

    I have plans for one but they're too complex to fit in this yt comment

  • @seriousmaran9414

    @seriousmaran9414

    Ай бұрын

    I believe that was a SIMULATION, not a real drive.

  • @brian7android985

    @brian7android985

    Ай бұрын

    Must have been a damn good simulation for them to dissappear

  • @kpaasial

    @kpaasial

    Ай бұрын

    People are going to build a statue for them ten centuries ago.

  • @barrystockdoesnotexist
    @barrystockdoesnotexistАй бұрын

    Uncle Roger volunteers Jamie Oliver to test the first warp drive spaceship.

  • @ImperatorSomnium

    @ImperatorSomnium

    Ай бұрын

    Sounds reasonable

  • @singleflow

    @singleflow

    Ай бұрын

    I don't want his cooking to represent Earth if he finds aliens

  • @osmosisjones4912

    @osmosisjones4912

    Ай бұрын

    Why not use Traditional propulsion while warping the space 🌌 around you why and travelling as far back in time as time is moving forward

  • @friedmule5403

    @friedmule5403

    Ай бұрын

    @@singleflow On the other hand, if the aliens think all our food is like this, then do they maybe think that we are not worth invading. :-)

  • @JeffSherlock

    @JeffSherlock

    Ай бұрын

    Which species of Monkey is he?

  • @DuskTheViking
    @DuskTheVikingАй бұрын

    This is one of the best explanations of warp drives Ive seen.

  • @osmosisjones4912

    @osmosisjones4912

    Ай бұрын

    What about the Quantum vortex made in ta jar

  • @ShougoAmakusa
    @ShougoAmakusaАй бұрын

    I like that you present the information genuinely. Yes it would be all exciting but instead of just hypeing things up for the algorithm, you let people know warp drive isn't feasible yet.

  • @DragonKingGaav
    @DragonKingGaavАй бұрын

    I love how Isaac Arthur released a video today on Stargates!!!

  • @KeritechElectronics

    @KeritechElectronics

    Ай бұрын

    Jaffa, kree!

  • @paulmichaelfreedman8334

    @paulmichaelfreedman8334

    Ай бұрын

    Jaffa, Kwee!

  • @chriswhite3692

    @chriswhite3692

    Ай бұрын

    Stargate is an incredibly underrated universe; I esp loved the movie.

  • @KeritechElectronics

    @KeritechElectronics

    Ай бұрын

    @@chriswhite3692 indeed!

  • @tinkerstrade3553

    @tinkerstrade3553

    Ай бұрын

    "We are hung up on matter. Only energetic empathy towards The Whole, has the purity to integrate with the Univers so that everywhere is wherever we are." - My Dog

  • @radiotec76
    @radiotec76Ай бұрын

    Nice nod to Miguel Alcubierre at 2:53 in for warp drive.

  • @Thomas-gk42
    @Thomas-gk42Ай бұрын

    Wonderful, refreshing presentation of physics. I had to lol about the caterpillar, that already invented the warp drive. About curving spacetime, doesn´t that require extremly strong gravitational fields, like, erm, around tiny BHs?

  • @SabineHossenfelder

    @SabineHossenfelder

    Ай бұрын

    Well, strictly speaking any type of energy curves space-time. It's just that the strength of the curvature depends on the density. So really you have to ask what kind of curvature do you need to get any noticeable acceleration. And I suspect that if they ever crunch the numbers for that they will find exactly what you say, that unless you take something that's very close to being a black hole, you'll not accelerate much...

  • @Thomas-gk42

    @Thomas-gk42

    Ай бұрын

    @@SabineHossenfelder Thanks for your explanation!

  • @jonathanlanser1129

    @jonathanlanser1129

    Ай бұрын

    ​​@@SabineHossenfelder I feel like we would really only need star level of curvature

  • @SineEyed

    @SineEyed

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jonathanlanser1129 if you take a look at the graph shown at 03:15 you'll see the energy required to do the work of warping space. Compare what's shown to the known energy output of the sun, and you''ll realize your "star level of curvature" is quite insufficient for the task. Looks to me like you'd need about 10 to 20 quadrillion times more energy output than the sun..

  • @nicholasjh1

    @nicholasjh1

    Ай бұрын

    We would have to find another way to curve space time essentially, with gravity and anti gravity

  • @timmy8709
    @timmy8709Ай бұрын

    I usually avoid these types of videos but I'll listen to you

  • @MarkRose1337
    @MarkRose1337Ай бұрын

    We're only 39 years away from Zefram Cochrane's flight

  • @kutlumzrak2689

    @kutlumzrak2689

    28 күн бұрын

    The eugenics wars didn't happen though?

  • @VonJay

    @VonJay

    27 күн бұрын

    Daaamn you mean if I survive the third world war I’ll be alive to see a Vulcan, and the Borg possibly?

  • @ItsCoreyLynxxYall

    @ItsCoreyLynxxYall

    22 күн бұрын

    @@kutlumzrak2689 That's sort of happening now with the ethno-genocides taking place and reproductive restrictions being reintroduced in the US.

  • @nixdorfbrazil
    @nixdorfbrazilАй бұрын

    I know that you were talking about wormholes, and then warp drives. But in each case showing an X-Wing while talking about warp drives is a big no no. It's likely to rupture the fabric of the Star-Trek Fandom. LOL.😂😂 Love you Sabine. A shout out to the Editor, it's a tough job to please all the nerds out there!

  • @Kaede-Sasaki

    @Kaede-Sasaki

    Ай бұрын

    Due to copyright ©️ laws, that's a multiplication ✖️ wing, not an X wing. 😂

  • @ironfist7789

    @ironfist7789

    Ай бұрын

    Admiral Ackbar will beam down to give a verbal warning

  • @GadZookz
    @GadZookzАй бұрын

    It must work because nobody ever finds the worms, just the little holes in furniture. Those worms are gone! 🤔

  • @Michael-G-
    @Michael-G-14 күн бұрын

    A possible solution to the negative mass problem would be the Casimir Effect. Basically, it’s a negative energy pressure caused by the quantum vacuum between two plates. However it’s important that this is a relative to the overall quantum background energy so if it’s removed, it’s not a negative. It remains to be seen if this is a viable solution. There are several other problems with a potential warp drive such as the energy requirement, possible causality violations, the horizon problem where the inside would be flooded with hawking radiation, and anything that gets stuck in front of the bubble while at warp, will immediately convert to energy once you drop out of warp, the energy jump can be so large, it can destroy whole planets. There is a really good video about the Alcubbiere/Warp Drive on the Cool Worlds yt channel if anyone wants to know more. Ive spent a lot of time researching this topic over the years, and I’m optimistic. Maybe we won’t achieve warp this century, but I can see it in a few hundred years.

  • @EviLPlayeR04
    @EviLPlayeR04Ай бұрын

    I love to understand science, but it takes time to understand, and time is an asset that most people don’t have these days. I still learn as much as I can everyday and you’re facilitating that, thanks!

  • @blinkingmanchannel
    @blinkingmanchannelАй бұрын

    Best. Channel. Ever! 😂❤ Wait! The drawings, including the ones used in this video, are usually consistent with “must fit to space-time…” There’s a tube down through the middle of “fits with” and the negative space (in terms of your drawing) is then “does not fit” right? So isn’t it painfully apparent that spooky action and quantum gravity are gonna be in the “does not fit” part of the drawing? We hear “Do we even need quantized gravity?” all the time… again, doesn’t that lack of connection imply the “not” part of the drawing? Please discuss. Yes I can see that we can’t “get at” the “not space”… isn’t that consistent with so-called “dark this-n-that”? I’m not trying to explain. I’m trying to ask what seems to be unthinkable… most of what we take for granted was once unthinkable right? I love what you do! Please do some more!!! 🎉

  • @osmosisjones4912

    @osmosisjones4912

    Ай бұрын

    Why not Travel with conventional propulsion while warping the space 🌌 around you

  • @gabedarrett1301
    @gabedarrett1301Ай бұрын

    Negative energy might not be needed. A paper by Erik Lentz titled 'Hyper-Fast Positive Energy Warp Drives' states that regular energy can be used; all that's needed is to reduce the amount

  • @TysonJensen

    @TysonJensen

    29 күн бұрын

    The problem is that most of the positive mass used isn't in the warp bubble, so you can't actually go anywhere, and that's fairly fundamental to why the warp drives typically proposed require negative energy. The positive mass is used to basically create a local illusion of negative energy in a particular place, but that place is never going to be "surrounding the whole thing" but rather in an area between positive masses. So it probably can't ever be made to work.

  • @mirkogeffken2290
    @mirkogeffken2290Ай бұрын

    I like that you put the promo at the end. And thanks!

  • @T1Oracle
    @T1Oracle29 күн бұрын

    "Most plausible" is still incredibly generous. It seems that all of these warp drive concepts still have issues with requiring obscene amounts of energy or have inconvenient side effects like vaporizing everything inside the warp bubble with "absolute hot" temperatures.

  • @Overt_Erre
    @Overt_ErreАй бұрын

    Honestly, FTL being impossible would be the best news we can get for the future. Coupled with Fermi's paradox it might make our solar system and galaxy such a rare precious safehaven in a life-averse universe that a slow a methodical space exploration in the next millennia will allow us to slowly transition and evolve to be more space-faring without the fear of being suddenly found and sniped by some advanced civilization. The universe becomes then a very vast sea made of space and resources to build with to our heart's content, but with huge gulfs of space we cannot ever easily cross or simply expand exponentially into. Perhaps in 1000 years vast space colonies will begin slow, centuries-long treks towards nearby stars. For the people aboard life not changing significantly from their daily habits. Perhaps we'll have developed cryogenics and automated seed ships, which, having reached their destination, will find out that in the long time since old civilizations have gone quiet, and new ones have arisen, their messages still too far to significantly impact them in any physical way. It is a comfortable view in my opinion, knowing that we have all the time, space and resources to find a healthy way to exist with each other and progress, rather than eternally growing and running away from ourselves towards new tech, resources, and places before we learned to appreciate the ones we already got.

  • @Aureonw

    @Aureonw

    Ай бұрын

    The biggest fear actually is the theory that technology may one day just stagnate, like a vital resource for making the next step was already used up and we cannot progress any further or humans are not smart enough to make the next step like, WE cannot make FTL drives because in lets say circa 2057 all unobtainum metal was exhausted naturally from the Earth and most of our solar system because it was not stable enough to last for too long so until we found out its uses at 2113 when we were searching of ways to scale up colonisation further in a FTL drive and we're like, ''Yeah we're screwed'' until we find somehow a way to artificially reproduce such material

  • @Tletna

    @Tletna

    Ай бұрын

    Traveling faster than light would allow for some nasty things, including maybe time paradoxes to occur, but it wouldn't all be bad. Light travel or faster isn't all dangers, it gives greatly added exploration, travel, attack and defense capabilities too especially if a potential enemy is vastly more powerful but for whatever reason has not developed light/faster than light travel. For example, if we encountered a civilization with vastly superior weapons, numbers and colonization technologies and light travel did not exist to allow us to first strike them before they notice us (which may be unethical or at least logistically impossible if they're spread far enough) and light travel did not exist to allow us to run away when they inevitably come to destroy us or 'civilize and guide' us (since we probably do not wish to first strike them for ethical, moral, or strategic reasons, there could be 3rd parties or they could have backup after all), then we would be just out of luck if we could not learn to both communicate with them and persuade them that we're more beneficial to them alive and mostly left alone (something we might have to convince our AI creations soon here as well). So, in short, while I mostly agree with your comment, I just wanted to add that just in case faster than light travel or near light travel is possible we shouldn't hope it is impossible but rather hope that we develop it first and that we use it responsibly so that we become the vastly superior civilization. And, this would be to gloat or dominate but simply to keep ourselves and the galaxy/universe safe in general even safe from ourselves hopefully.

  • @peoplez129

    @peoplez129

    27 күн бұрын

    Being trapped in our solar system (or just neighboring systems) would mean a very finite amount of resources available to our civilization, giving us a hard limit on what we can do with all of it. Of course you could say if we could only ever colonize the entire galaxy, that would be finite too, even if massive. But having that boundary known, would put a damper on things. We'd for example, know that we could never become a type 3 civilization, or beyond that, and maybe not even a type 2, because even if we wanted build a dyson sphere to harvest all of our sun's energy, we wouldn't even have enough resources to do it, not enough resources to even make use of all that energy....which would give us a finite limit on how far our civilization could progress. There are other factors, such a spreading out over time, but that's not reliable, because even if we did, we'd also have to ensure there wasn't some greater systematic collapse of our expansion at some point for one reason or another, which the likelihood of increases the slower our expansion is. Or in other words, by the time our expansion reaches X number of lightyears, the inner core of our expansion could already be collapsing, and then start dotting out here and there over time for this or that reason. Like if you left earth to go 10 light years away, and by the time you got there, earth is barren. That's not expansion, that's just changing locations, and with less population, which is actually reduction rather than expansion. Let that creep on long enough with colonies, and you effectively end up with the same problem: Human civilization is wiped out. Now imagine if you didn't try to expand, and instead devoted resources to focusing on keeping your main solar system flourishing. Civilization might actually last longer by not having an extra solar colonization mindset.

  • @stevenmqcueen7576
    @stevenmqcueen757628 күн бұрын

    Sabine is constantly throwing cold water on all sorts of "scientific" hypotheses, predictions and dreams. It's one of her best qualities.

  • @cruise_missile8387

    @cruise_missile8387

    2 күн бұрын

    We would still be using steam power if we didn't have hypotheses based on dreams. It's not only reasonable, but critical for science to move forward. That's how science works, you construct hypotheses based on observations and theory, and test them. Science isn't saying, "It sounds silly and impossible even if it's theoretically possible so no one should ever even try." That's how you stay primitive. Construct a hypothesis, test it, gather as much data as possible over time, and stick to what the data indicate. That's literally the scientific method. Even if you fail you'll gain new information.

  • @karlgoebeler1500
    @karlgoebeler1500Ай бұрын

    Very interesting dialogue. Love the depth of understanding. Do wish for the reconciliation. Question What about recreation. Question

  • @gnorman-ct2lt
    @gnorman-ct2ltАй бұрын

    The amount of energy and mass it would take to warp space is insane not to mention the affects on the solar system it would be used in

  • @marcoottina654

    @marcoottina654

    Ай бұрын

    Kyle Hill calculated the energy required to open a wormhole large enough to fit a human, taking inspiration from the videogame Portal. It would require a *mass* similar to THE WHOLE MOON Every Single Portal (And _second_)

  • @steffenbendel6031

    @steffenbendel6031

    Ай бұрын

    I believe they reduced it from 100 times the mass of the universe to 3kg. So we only need a little bit impossible and with that we can blow it up to maximum impossible.

  • @jaz4742

    @jaz4742

    Ай бұрын

    Total primitive human assumptions.

  • @nahoj.2569

    @nahoj.2569

    Ай бұрын

    yeah but you coud also say that it wouldnt affect it because the regular mass is counteracted by the negative mass.

  • @FredPlanatia

    @FredPlanatia

    Ай бұрын

    @@marcoottina654 ok, but a wormhole and warp drive are two different things (as pointed out nicely in this video). That said, the energy to warp spacetime to forma warp bubble is also enormous

  • @amymason156
    @amymason156Ай бұрын

    Negative masses are so much fun. If we ever get into a sci-fi space future with fast interstellar travel, I can picture the production of negative masses being as important for that as the production of grain, steel, or microchips for recent historical eras.

  • @hammabensaad-cn2eb

    @hammabensaad-cn2eb

    29 күн бұрын

    It is not fun, it is bullshit even for scifi "standards".

  • @MrThacke
    @MrThackeАй бұрын

    Now you are talking my science :) I use scalar knotting technology for field momentum :)

  • @MCsCreations
    @MCsCreationsАй бұрын

    Thanks for the info, Sabine! 😊 Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊

  • @sjzara
    @sjzaraАй бұрын

    Just don’t ever, ever go to warp 10.

  • @kentjoosten8149

    @kentjoosten8149

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, things can get slimy.

  • @Kaede-Sasaki

    @Kaede-Sasaki

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly. You'll abandon your lizard kids. 😮

  • @quokka_11

    @quokka_11

    Ай бұрын

    Mine goes to 11.

  • @Daniel-jm8we

    @Daniel-jm8we

    Ай бұрын

    Well, my console reads _WARP X._ So, I think our ship will be okay.

  • @quokka_11

    @quokka_11

    Ай бұрын

    @@Daniel-jm8we Is the input limited to 280 characters?

  • @IvanToman
    @IvanTomanАй бұрын

    When Sabine changes her hairstyle in the middle of the video, it always look to me like she just jumped out of the warp :)

  • @MCHall
    @MCHall29 күн бұрын

    That's awesome. I just started this rental stuff and I would love to get to the point where I have to stand in the cold getting trained on a stage setup.

  • @bartsluis
    @bartsluis2 күн бұрын

    enjoy watching your video’s. Very educational, fun, interesting and thankful observation for many reasons. Love the responsibility about thinking about our planet, and the human search for answers. 👍😀

  • @alieninmybeverage
    @alieninmybeverageАй бұрын

    Is General Relativity actually "weird," or does it just posit that "flatness" is emergent (if real at all), and our reductionist sensitivities rely on relative flatness (centers of mass/gravity, force vectors etc) that are locally sufficient thanks to the pseudoaxis of gravitational north/south?

  • @SabineHossenfelder

    @SabineHossenfelder

    Ай бұрын

    I'd say that flat space exists only in as much as perfect circles -- it's a maths thing that we don't find in reality.

  • @BBirke1337

    @BBirke1337

    Ай бұрын

    The real problem, for lay people, with relativity formulas is to make real calculations with them. Whenever you see them, they're just highly abstract symbols and constants, for which we don't know units. Who did ever do an actual calculation with E=mc²? That's where this code becomes interesting, so that I may check it out on Github, not for preparing real warp drives.

  • @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    Ай бұрын

    @@SabineHossenfelder any chance we can get some formula breakdown videos? what @BBirke1337 is saying has some merit

  • @P-zp4qs

    @P-zp4qs

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@SabineHossenfelderWe need flat space-time, without it we would not know when energy is conserved, warp deforms space-time plastically as it is a solution that violates several energy conditions and that is why it can produce that movement

  • @johnbrobston1334

    @johnbrobston1334

    Ай бұрын

    @@BBirke1337 E=mc² gives us the energy produced by a chemical or nuclear reaction. The reaction products have less mass than the reactants, with the difference in mass being released as energy according to that formula.

  • @rudolfquetting2070
    @rudolfquetting2070Ай бұрын

    Before we start to design the passenger capsule: 1.) Can the start and boundary conditions for the solution of that simulation be achieved with the differential manifold which describes our universe? (Nobody knows …. ) 2.) How does time go by. In the passenger capsule and outside the warp-bubble? (First answer question one.)

  • @drdca8263

    @drdca8263

    Ай бұрын

    I think your question 1 is missing a word? Also, I think you might be invoking the term “differentiable manifold” without much reason. Yes, in GR we do model spacetime as a differentiable (pseudo-Riemannian) manifold . But I don’t think mentioning that makes your comment any clearer. You can just talk about initial conditions? I get the impression that your question is about “even if GR permits such solutions, using only matter of the sort which we know exists, does it allow for the *creation* of such a drive, given initial conditions like those we find ourselves with?”. Now, I suspect the answer may be “GR does not permit warp drives using the materials we know to exist, period, not even mentioning the construction”? But, at the same time, I don’t see why answering the “assuming the materials needed are available, can one be created?” should need to be answered before people work on the “could the passenger area be habitable?”. They are independent questions which can be pursued in parallel.

  • @rudolfquetting2070

    @rudolfquetting2070

    Ай бұрын

    @@drdca8263 Thanks a lot. There was really one word missing. Regarding the notion of “Differentiale Manifolds” I did not bother to go into too much detail. Of course, the manifold needs not only to be differentiale. If wormholes etc can be „produced“ , it must be possible, that the topological type of the manifold can change dynamically. And I wonder, whether there are solutions, where orientability can change dynamically, too. That might have some consequences with regard to the direction of time, but that wasn’t the point here. And, of course, if all the physical questions can be answered, it still remains unclear, whether we ever will be able to answer the technical ones, too. Anyhow, before we start building warp drives, we most probably have built a collider of the size of the Milky Way before, I guess.

  • @nigelgriffiths5747
    @nigelgriffiths574718 күн бұрын

    This is very fascinating stuff and I love the video

  • @OG_stevedidWHAT
    @OG_stevedidWHAT24 күн бұрын

    “Maybe I’m just getting old and lacking imagination” What a beautiful reality and self aware statement ❤ Sometimes we get so wrapped up in the grind of our own paths and strategies that we forget how enjoyable off-roading can be

  • @Eztoez
    @EztoezАй бұрын

    I find it hard to swallow that Sabine can learn anything from Brilliant. She is an expert theoretical physicist, a master mathematician, and a science educator. What can someone of her genius-level intellect learn from a Janet and Jane internet application ?

  • @FractaLL2103

    @FractaLL2103

    Ай бұрын

    I can respect her getting a good paycheque out of doing the promo. I agree though, not something I plan to use. I assume most people following this channel are undergrad+ in STEM so it is strange.

  • @sluggo206

    @sluggo206

    Ай бұрын

    @@FractaLL2103 I'm not STEM and there must be more people like me, people who just want a general exposure to developments in Science, and find Sabine's delivery the most understandable, non-hypey, and funny.

  • @nahoj.2569

    @nahoj.2569

    Ай бұрын

    reviewing the things you know is important no matter how smart you are. brilliant courses could be used to reinforce what you know and not forget.

  • @beautimous7347

    @beautimous7347

    Ай бұрын

    Brilliant doesn't only have courses related to her field. It has computer science courses, data analysis, and engineering as well.

  • @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    @and_I_am_Life_the_fixer_of_all

    Ай бұрын

    @@nahoj.2569 agreed, but have you seen the costs of using that platform? its super expensive...

  • @myfriendscat
    @myfriendscatАй бұрын

    Fascinating, but very problematic. That's what I love about Sabina's reporting. No. hype allowed.

  • @gregrice1354
    @gregrice1354Ай бұрын

    Hi Dr. Hossenfelder. Thank you so much for all your care, and all you share. You are a living, compassionate, caring, maternal, technically expert who translates and communicates ideas from clearly expert, detailed and precise considerations of details of our world, so even the dullest of minds in your web audience may respect, consider, and possibly grow, aspire, improve our lives and our world. You're great! On more practical forms of feedback, please be aware that your videos are excellent diaries, journals, records of text for fantastic educational content, products, and mind nourishing, world benefiting enhancements.

  • @franksizzllemann5628
    @franksizzllemann5628Ай бұрын

    Here's hoping it comes together for you Sabine. You're creative, if dreaming more helps I highly recommend it.

  • @yakirfrankoveig8094
    @yakirfrankoveig8094Ай бұрын

    I thought some scientist managed to make the energy requierment non negative and the equivelant of the mass of jupiter or something like that

  • @bradysmith4405

    @bradysmith4405

    Ай бұрын

    Erik Lentz. Others debated whether it could be faster than light without it. He still maintains it can, I’ve talked to him. But even if it can’t there are now a few formulas from different people for positive energy warp drives that can get at least close to light speed.

  • @FredPlanatia

    @FredPlanatia

    Ай бұрын

    @@bradysmith4405 hmm... curious you say that, since Sabine (further up in comments) says she's not aware of an estimate of the amount of energy required for sub-light speed warp drives.

  • @bradysmith4405

    @bradysmith4405

    Ай бұрын

    @@FredPlanatia she might not know that but she did do an episode on positive energy warp drives once

  • @jarirepo1172
    @jarirepo1172Ай бұрын

    What I am interested in is if we can create AI that could start sorting stuff like this out.... much faster than we ever could.

  • @sakismpalatsias4106
    @sakismpalatsias4106Ай бұрын

    Definitely something fun to look into. 😊

  • @CanadianPhinsFan853
    @CanadianPhinsFan853Ай бұрын

    Thank you for making these videos. I am enamored with how you present information and how you seem to have a calm and level-headed approach to theoretical possibilities without entertaining the fantastical.

  • @edreusser4741
    @edreusser4741Ай бұрын

    What about a warp drive that goes slower than the speed of light. Even a drive that allowed travel at a small fraction of c would be very useful for interplanetary travel. What would a warp drive that went only 10mph look like?

  • @yeroca

    @yeroca

    Ай бұрын

    I suspect it would still require some unobtainium, negative energy in other words.

  • @SabineHossenfelder

    @SabineHossenfelder

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, making one that goes slower than the speed of light would definitely be easier. But I haven't seen a calculation for what type of energy density this would need. I've been asking about this for years and, you know, maybe I should just do the calculation myself and write a paper... In any case, I suspect that if you want to get to any noticeable acceleration, you'll need very high energy densities, so high that we can't create them. It's a curious fact about nature that fapp we can only squeeze matter together until nuclear density and that's pretty much it. And you might not want to sit next to something that's entirely made of nuclear matter as that tends to radiate off lots of nasty stuff.

  • @Kaede-Sasaki

    @Kaede-Sasaki

    Ай бұрын

    Reminds me of an old American movie The Explorers. Kids get a dream and build a seeming warp bubble and manipulate with an 80s computer.

  • @TheSplendidVids

    @TheSplendidVids

    Ай бұрын

    I wanna break the speed of light, otherwise its soo sad to think we would never roam the universe freely🥲

  • @yeroca

    @yeroca

    Ай бұрын

    @@TheSplendidVids Gotta crawl before you can run!

  • @aaronjennings8385
    @aaronjennings8385Ай бұрын

    Sound travels through air, slow down air and voilá mach speed.

  • @eikobleicher5520
    @eikobleicher5520Ай бұрын

    This seems to be more fun than inventing new particles!

  • @byz-blade
    @byz-blade29 күн бұрын

    It struck me as Sabine described how GR is a non-linear theory with enormous complexity and chaotic in nature, that is relevant to the discussion a few weeks ago about dark matter perhaps not being a particle (or similar) but instead being some potentially chaotic non-linearity that isn't yet understood.

  • @jeffk1482
    @jeffk1482Ай бұрын

    I love your material! Ever since Dr. Alcubierre showed this was possible, I’ve been thinking Star Trek got it right and the warp drive is the way to go. This is just a hunch on my part, but I think it’ll be less than 1K years before we figure it out from an engineering perspective. Far too many people want this to happen and are working it.

  • @Ram0nAlan
    @Ram0nAlanАй бұрын

    I am not a physicist, but recently I've been pondering about this stuff for a short story. I ended up with the following assumption: that warp drives could work, but only under the speed of light, thus not violating causality, and that the ship inside would experience the effects of acceleration, time and spatial dilation, like any other propulsion system. The whole thing would warp space-time around it with coils of architecture similar to those used in MRI (being the closest thing I know of that can manipulate fields in space) creating a gradient field that could, in theory, move and roll the ship in all directions. It's just speculation, I know. Does any one have a thought?

  • @KnugLidi

    @KnugLidi

    Ай бұрын

    the idea that I found interesting was a machine that generated a spherical field. When engaged, the object maintained its motion, but stepped out of time for a short amount of time. When in popped back into time, it had the exact x,y,z location and dx, dy, dz velocity (and axial rotations). The great bit was things like earth continued to rotate on its axis and rotate around the sun and the sun continued around the centre of the milky way,etc. So when it popped back into 'now' it was several hundred thousand kilometers away. By timing the blink properly, it could be used to put very large masses and volumes into orbit around the earth very easily. The downside was the timing is just too fine to be able to get to a spot out in space that you could pop from and then end up on earth at the exact right location, with the right velocity and spin. So you could not use the technology to land.

  • @stevengordon3271

    @stevengordon3271

    29 күн бұрын

    @@KnugLidi You would use the time blink to stay in place while the universe moves past you, but conventional propulsion of some sort to move accurately after the time blink. The trick is to not end up in the middle of a moon or asteroid when you come out of the blink.

  • @KnugLidi

    @KnugLidi

    29 күн бұрын

    @@stevengordon3271 indeed, but to get all the coordinates exactly (to an insane degree) to pop in and out to land on a planet surface is always the problem

  • @peoplez129

    @peoplez129

    27 күн бұрын

    The issue isn't whether things get around causality or not, the issue is what materials/physics would allow one to manipulate space in such a way. Ironically, we kind of know that even gravity makes it impossible, because otherwise blackholes would be zipping around the galaxy under their own mass, and faster the bigger they got. Technically a pull is a push in a way, so you sort of don't need negative energy, but at the same time you do, because otherwise we would already see odd behaviors between any two celestial masses. What this all means is we won't find the answer with anything above quantum levels, and probably only with physics at scales beyond the planck length and quarks.

  • @stevengordon3271

    @stevengordon3271

    26 күн бұрын

    @@KnugLidi Makes more sense to just avoid that problem altogether and only use that technology to get off of planets into open space.

  • @user-if1ly5sn5f
    @user-if1ly5sn5fАй бұрын

    0:38 Wow finaly something that matches what i see in my head. I been trying to say that we ride it but like a bubble. Its like always going down hill. On top of that, imagine this but with lots of room between so the middle is like a hidden dimension between stable blankets or something. We could, hypothetically, use simulations to craft a potential and then use fusion to collapse matter into the potential between the outer fields so they act as a safe environment to construct potentials into reality with qm or fusion technology. Idk but it seems like we could use the area as a safe place or a tunnel and not just for warp driving.

  • @jimslade7319
    @jimslade7319Ай бұрын

    I would love to see a video about the Soliton drive, though.

  • @rickseiden1
    @rickseiden1Ай бұрын

    "Hyperjumps, wormholes and warp drive," OH MY! "Hyperjumps, wormholes and warp drive," OH MY!

  • @freesk8

    @freesk8

    Ай бұрын

    Flying Monkeys!!!

  • @isaganipalanca8803
    @isaganipalanca8803Ай бұрын

    I love the way Ms Hossenfelder pronounces "Einstein" - using the REAL German-language pronunciation.

  • @andreasrumpf9012

    @andreasrumpf9012

    Ай бұрын

    Well ... she is German.

  • @RobinCrusoe1952

    @RobinCrusoe1952

    Ай бұрын

    Love the way she says phithithithz. Sorry Sabine.

  • @Kaede-Sasaki

    @Kaede-Sasaki

    Ай бұрын

    I wonder if she reads that in her language as One Cup (einstein). 🤔

  • @Oler-yx7xj
    @Oler-yx7xjАй бұрын

    It would be interesting to see a video about the weirdness of Relativity

  • @Koodles33
    @Koodles33Ай бұрын

    Would love to see Sabine analyze the warp drive documents that you can find on the cia data archive website. For example the universal toroid and cassimir effect

  • @therizinosaurus214
    @therizinosaurus21416 күн бұрын

    I once had a physics teacher tell me "no matter can go faster than the speed of light, but space can do what ever the hell it wants."

  • @Imagine_Beyond
    @Imagine_Beyond9 күн бұрын

    Erik lentz proposed a method that doesn't require negative energy or negaitve mass. Even though it would require the mass to be extremely dense, it is a step in the right direction, since it only requires positive mass

  • @mrblc882
    @mrblc88224 күн бұрын

    This reminded me to public presentation about gravitational waves organized by my university's ALUMNI. I asked physics professor who was presenting if speed of gravitational waves being speed of light also implies that any space disturbance is limited to this speed, meaning that warp drive would not be possible even if we knew how to make such disturbance. Professor cut me off, sounding almost insulted, with "I'm not here to speak about SF physics". Other professor, who's class I took on university, intervened and said that question is interesting, and while warp is in SF area, considering limitations of space disturbance is surely in area of physics and that while he didn't study it deeper, he thinks that such disturbance could be limited to speed of light.

  • @zenuuleflamesinger1469
    @zenuuleflamesinger146918 күн бұрын

    Element 115 has gravity properties. If a private company has made a stable version of it, that would be all that's needed to create an envelope effectively removing it from our current physics laws. It would also likely bend light around the object as well giving it a cloaked effect.

  • @jakobflunger6173
    @jakobflunger6173Ай бұрын

    0:48 That 100% MATLAB just gave me a heart attack

  • @axle.student
    @axle.studentАй бұрын

    It is an interesting concept. I did something similar many years back by manipulating the Higgs field as a though experiment. In the same sense creating a for and aft density difference. This would make space less dense in front of and around the vessel potentially allowing to "Slip between space". I looked at some concepts (anecdotal) from projects back in the 60s 70 to manipulate the field using super cooled fero fluids in a toroidal flow pattern. Anecdotal said that the proof of concept was OK, but the power requirements for any practical use made it unfeasible. In essence the mass of the energy required to be carried by the vessel was many magnitudes greater than the small amount of mass it could move.

  • @eonasjohn
    @eonasjohnАй бұрын

    Thank you for the video.

  • @randomthoughtinstantiator
    @randomthoughtinstantiator29 күн бұрын

    Okay steampunk version of this: Imagine a line of extending seesaws hinged end to end, weighted at each end, with each hinge and focal point mounted to a pneumatic cylinder. Now take several of these long seesaw-snakes and wrap them around a cylinder so they form a barrel. Next, spin the outside of the barrel such that the fully extruded, weighted ends on each seesaw-snake joint go as fast as the material itself can physically allow. What you have is a spinning barrel of latitudinally placed weights with adjustable momentum. This could allow you to “swallow” through space by producing a halo of space time curvature that occurs at one end and travels to the other. If friction was zero, the material could maintain its integrity, the spinning didn’t rip the ship apart, and the interior could be counter spun to the same amount, then you’d be able to control curvature without energy loss and at any speed. The energy because maintaining spin doesn’t require energy in a vacuum and because radial changes to one ring of weights would be balanced against the adjacent ring, meaning no net gain or loss of momentum. And no limit to speed because the halo of curvature “moves” along the ship according to the synchronized adjustments of the pneumatic cylinders, not any traveling object or signal. The energy cost itself would come from adjusting to pneumatics. Is this a good idea? No. One piece of space debris would turn the ship into a lethal wash machine, and any friction would either fry the inhabitants or burn out the components and send everyone in random trajectories out into space. Death would be a constant, likely scenario, and happen too fast to prevent. But it would make for a good fiction vessel…

  • @Mc1aine
    @Mc1aineАй бұрын

    I aprove of the X-wing anim! :D Thanks as always Sabine!

  • @BBirke1337
    @BBirke1337Ай бұрын

    Like so often, mathematical artefacts. While relativity formulas allow faster than light speed (but not light speed) or negative mass/energy, it is probably impossible to reach those states, or anything that violates causality ("grandfather paradox"). I still struggle to understand the Casimir effect, frequently quoted as example for negative mass/energy. Either, suppressing quantum fluctuations is like sucking the air out of a bottle in an atmosphere (it was "empty" before except air, vacuum is "empty" except quantum fluctuations). And the whole system, with the plates used, can never reach negative mass.

  • @musicbro8225
    @musicbro8225Ай бұрын

    Do we need Inertial dampers? This all makes me happy!!! It's practical.

  • @mathiaslist6705
    @mathiaslist6705Ай бұрын

    I think the closest is by doing stuff with gravitational waves as it is done with electromagnetic waves. Probably just intuition but gravitional waves might be the key to some kind of warp bubbles or just to transfer information seemingly faster than light.

  • @randomdaveUK
    @randomdaveUKАй бұрын

    Great explanation. I personally do not understand the "hype" around warp drives. The common sense approach to covering vast distances in space is the boring option, acceleration, solar sail, cryogenics or generations of life cycles onboard maintaining the ship until it arrives. It's not pretty but it's something we could actually do.

  • @Aureonw

    @Aureonw

    Ай бұрын

    In a way like, we really REALLY don't need a warp drive if like it takes a million years to colonise our galaxy then thats still VERY fast, but if we find a way to move faster we could also for example leave our local group without getting stuck in the middle of the universe's expansion without being able to for example go from group Earth to the next local group, like even travelling at near C its impossible, the universe expands faster than you can move making it impossible leaving our local group, but realistically speaking like all we have acess to on the local group is already WAY more than enough for untold ammount of eons

  • @Mikaci_the_Grand_Duke
    @Mikaci_the_Grand_Duke29 күн бұрын

    They are indeed entirely science fiction, though they are not only fiction or fantasy because there is science heavily involved in the idea.

  • @hpgildwel
    @hpgildwel22 күн бұрын

    there are claims of positive energy solutions in a couple papers, using different geometries of the warp bubble

  • @Kim_Miller
    @Kim_MillerАй бұрын

    The 2014 SciFi novel by Becky Chambers, "The Long Way to a Small Angry Planet" is about a "road crew" who build wormholes for interstellar travel. It's a great read and a lot of fun.

  • @RFC3514
    @RFC351426 күн бұрын

    *_"They're not entirely science fiction, they're based on real science."_* - This suggests a (common) misunderstanding of what science fiction *is.* Science fiction doesn't mean "fake" (or fictitious) science. It simply means fiction (i.e., a made-up story) whose plot explores the consequences of scientific or technological innovation. It can (and ideally should) be based on real science. Just like crime fiction can be based on real crimes and horror can be based on being eaten alive by real rats. Stuff like _The Martian_ is still "science fiction" even if it all the science in it is true (which it isn't, in the case of _The Martian,_ but it's close enough, and it _could_ be 100% correct without fundamentally changing the *story* - which is the _fiction_ part)

  • @HolyMith
    @HolyMithАй бұрын

    Great video. As much as I love science fiction, and the ideas we find in it are often the inspiration for real technologies, it's important not to get carried away (pun intended). If we ever want to become a truly spacefaring civilisation, we need to be realistic about what avenues of enquiry are actually worth pursuing. Whatever the hell negative energy even means, we appear to need it for any kind of non-spherical or non-wave solutions to the EFE's. In an intuitive sense, it seems like the principle of least action rules, and if you want spacetime to do anything that isn't a very natural shape, you need to introduce anti-gravitational effects. Maybe this exists, maybe it doesn't. But there certainly doesn't seem to be any indication of it in nature so far.

  • @koiyujo1543
    @koiyujo1543Ай бұрын

    IM SO EXCITED!!!!!!❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @AlexisOmnis
    @AlexisOmnisАй бұрын

    Why can't we use a warp bubble that warps space the whole distance between points A & B? That's probably how entangled particles react to each other. Some photons are entangled by turning one photon into two so they're probably the very same photon in two places at once. It might be that alien civilizations use this method to hide themselves in a higher spatial dimension/warp bubbles, in relation to an observer. What if dark matter is normal matter hidden in higher spacial dimensions? What if the expansion of space & it's acceleration is just an illusion, relative to an observer (in this case, us)?

  • @MCLooyverse

    @MCLooyverse

    19 күн бұрын

    Entangled particles *don't* react to each other. Imagine a heads-up coin and a tails-up coin welded together at the edge with a fragile weld. Before flipping such a pair, I can guarantee that they will come up on opposite sides, so if I flip the pair and tell you the state of one coin, you can accurately tell me the state of the other. But, if I try to manipulate one of the coins, the weld will break, and their states will no longer be related. This is like how entangled particles work. They don't communicate. What's special is that we know something about how the pair behaves, even if we don't know how either individual behaves.

  • @andrewclimo5709
    @andrewclimo570929 күн бұрын

    That was a really interesting point about what's needed to move a ship forward using warp field propulsion. Is creating a warp field enough on its own? Does the ship need to be displaced within the warp bubble in order for the effects of the field to be useful? One would think intuitively, not, as space time being warped should be sufficient on its own. But maybe the energy requirements of the warp field can be drastically reduced by displacing the ship within the bubble anyhow?

  • @wade8518
    @wade851829 күн бұрын

    I love this ❤❤❤ I'm going to watch again

  • @SRS-GAMES
    @SRS-GAMES29 күн бұрын

    Warp drive doesn't need a propoulsion system based on the third law, it works by compressing the space in front of your ship and letting it expand back again behind your ship. Think of a half-sphere around your ship, the front half is compressed space, the rear half is relaxed and expanded space. Momentum is gained by continually compressing this space and relaxing it, the faster you can do this the faster you move. Like wrinkling up a carpet under an object. The real problem is that spacetime is incredibly stiff and even an object the mass of the Earth only deforms it slightly, you don't have to go far above the Earth to be free of it's gravitational attraction. So instead of mass to deform spacetime we can substitute energy, and of course we are not deforming spacetime over an area as large as the Earth, a few tens of metres is enough, but even then the energy requirement is so vast as to b unimaginable, and we don't have any idea how to do it. Fire a powerful laser in an arc around your ship maybe, who knows. I think it's possible, and not in 1000 years, I'd say around 100-200 years if it is indeed possible. however another consideration is the CPC (Chronology protection Conjecture) suggested by Hawking, although it feels somewhat contrived one does have to think in terms of causality when arriving at a destination before you set off.

  • @mreconomics1125

    @mreconomics1125

    29 күн бұрын

    To talk about compressing space seems strange. Space is a vacuum. So what is being compressed?

  • @SRS-GAMES

    @SRS-GAMES

    29 күн бұрын

    @@mreconomics1125 The vacuum of space is merely a measurement of what's in it, not what it is. E.g. a balloon can be empty but there is still a balloon. Think about gravitational waves, what is it that is waving? It is the fabric of spacetime. To answer your question fully would be very difficult and beyond my level of training, but I suggest you look up stiffness of spacetime or spacetime rigidity but be warned the content includes very high level maths.

  • @DavidEsp1

    @DavidEsp1

    29 күн бұрын

    Disagree with "you don't have to go far above the Earth to be free of it's gravitational attraction". Depends what "far" means I guess. But even then, gravity decays inverse-square, never reaching zero. Navigating to Mars would need to take it into account. Maybe you already appreciate, maybe some don't, but the Moon is held in (a quarter million miles high) Earth orbit by virtue of our planet's gravity (more precisely, both holding on to each other, orbiting around a common centre of mass). Objects in low Earth orbit experience hardly less gravity than on Earth surface. They are weightless only because the inward pull (towards Earth) on them by that gravity is being exactly counteracted by the outward "pull of centrifugal force" (loosely speaking) on them, itself resulting from their orbital path (e.g. considering roughly circular ones, for sake of simplicity).

  • @SRS-GAMES

    @SRS-GAMES

    29 күн бұрын

    @@DavidEsp1 to establish a warp bubble then what I said was correct, however, if you want to be exact then the gravitational effect of any object in space extends to infinity, it's just really really small and to all intents and purposes can be ignored, especially as I was illustrating the point about mass deforming spacetime and how that distortion if you could see it, is very close to the mass in question. I did wonder if I should invoke the inverse square law but I wanted to keep it relatively simple.

  • @gertbenade3082
    @gertbenade308228 күн бұрын

    I downloaded the artice and although the math is above me, I realise that due to space-time curvature, the math might be all around me... which just makes the problem more difficult! Great video, thank you Sabine!

  • @olibertosoto5470
    @olibertosoto5470Ай бұрын

    Maybe bile from the worms of Dune is what we're missing - they knew how to fold space.

  • @romank.6813
    @romank.6813Ай бұрын

    I would really love to see the video in which Sabine shakes her head once Albert gives is a small kick saying: "Sabine, right?"

  • @Thomas-gk42

    @Thomas-gk42

    Ай бұрын

    What I need is a Sabine bobble head

  • @dwmaddawgs
    @dwmaddawgsАй бұрын

    I've figured it out and am looking forward to connecting with the people neccessary to complete the project. It involves high powered fiber optics in a certain geometry to contract spacetime around its structure. This would not be a ship, but more alikened to a stargate. You may need a ship to travel through it though, and it's a one way device.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeillАй бұрын

    5:19 -- "So if you feel like you're destined to be the first to build a warp drive, you might want to check out this paper." **Zefram Cochrane enters the chat**

  • @nunomaroco583
    @nunomaroco58329 күн бұрын

    Hi, always interesting and didactic....all the best

  • @StephenRichmond89
    @StephenRichmond8929 күн бұрын

    Edit: Although I've watched Sabine's videos on spacetime before I didn't rewatch them before posting this and so I *think* my question is still interesting and valid but I will go away and rewatch the videos to make sure I didn't miss the answer already being there! Hi, Idk how much the team reads the comments, and I might sign up to Patreon as well as that seems polite when making a request, but: I know you mostly do science news now but I'd like to advocate for an explainer. I thought I "got" spacetime because I thought of it like warp drive implies, a sheet you can crinkle up in front of you and spread out behind. However, I've now seen other physicists try to explain it and I'm now more confused than before I watched them. The thing that threw me is this: the explanation of time dilation seems to be about speed of the propagation of causation when an object is in motion. I.e. causation has further to travel at the same speed of light (like the photon clock) making time "tick" slower. Length contraction seems to be about when causation/light gets to the observer and how that causes the appearance of length contraction. So... both of those *sound* like optical illusions, not a physical "sheet" of spacetime. At first I thought the guy I was watching videos from was maybe wrong, or explaining it badly, but then a physics professor debunking his videos gave exactly the same base explanation and debunked some other bits that aren't relevant here. My assumption is still that I don't understand something. That there is something that gets us to spacetime being a "thing" that you can pull towards you and stretch out behind you, a lá warp drive, but the explanations given seem to imply it isn't that at all. Time ticks slower not because of a non-euclidean spacial geometry but instead purely because information travelling at the speed of light has a physically further distance to travel within atoms when an object is moving. That explanation requires the longer distance thing, I.e. the distance isn't contracted, there is no spacetime warping, that's *why* the light/causation/information has a further distance to travel at the same speed. That requires euclidean, not non-euclidean space to be true! Add that to the appearance of length contraction just being because of the time it takes for light to hit your eyes from the front and the back, again, no need for fancy stuff here, euclidean geometry works just fine, and then I'm totally lost on where the idea we have a spacetime sheet getting bent comes from. As I say, idk if this is even an interesting topic but it *feels* like the sort of thing that would be a Sabine video. I also assume I just don't understand something! I hope this comment is helpful, it felt appropriate to this video and I do very much want spacetime to be a physical sheet because, objectively, warp drives are really cool and I want them to exist. Other Edit: I realised I didn't make the obvious point about gravity wells/mass. Yes, I get that, BUT, the time dilation seems to imply the non-curved thing and mass/gravity is a thing we don't currently understand, hence the GR/Quantum split. Hence my confusion.

  • @vi6ddarkking
    @vi6ddarkkingАй бұрын

    Well we're talking about needing bonkers amounts of energy. So we'll really need to get to K2 or close to it. Before we start to seriously thinking, about even attempting, experiments with Warp Drives.

  • @hyperbaroque
    @hyperbaroqueАй бұрын

    I love science, for sure. I have degrees in Engjneering and Mathematics. But I love, ❤ love ❤ love, brainstorming about possibilities that are beyond what we currently expect to be possible. Propulsion is not one of my main interests, but, I do believe we are more likely to evebtually come across some method of anti-gravity drive than we are to ever do any of the following; • travel faster than light (survivably) • "go through" a wormhole (let alone a convenient one) • shift any amount of mass through "hyperspace" • discover some endlessly tappable energy source floating around the aether

  • @JunctionSystem
    @JunctionSystem29 күн бұрын

    Regarding getting wormholes that go somewhere useful: the general sci-fi solution is to make both ends of the wormhole close to home, then ship one end to the intended destination at slower-than-light speeds. Takes a while to set up (not accounting for time dilation making it seem faster at the hub of the network), but once you've got the wormhole in place you've got a really convenient way to get around.

  • @Lucius_Chiaraviglio
    @Lucius_Chiaraviglio29 күн бұрын

    Again this brings up the question: Do solutions for warp drives/wormholes/etc. that call for negative mass actually need absolute negative mass, or is a bubble in a sea of extremely dense but otherwise ordinary matter (for instance, the interior of a neutron star) good enough?

  • @gristlevonraben
    @gristlevonrabenАй бұрын

    I believe the inertial gains in mass of moving forward can be blocked by a strong alternating magnetic field at a certain frequency. This means when accelerating or decelerating that the inertia never builds up and in effect is cancelled.

  • @jonloomis5210
    @jonloomis5210Ай бұрын

    The thing I have always wondered about warp drives is how much space actually needs to be warped in order for it to happen. Most of the stuff one sees has a pretty large bubble, but is that absolutely necessary? For instance, if a sphere has the space in front of it contract by like 1 micron, and the space behind expands by the same amount or slightly more, would this both work and require less energy?

  • @Rolancito
    @Rolancito16 күн бұрын

    Quantum mechanics stopped being weird a century ago, when the pilot wave theory was proposed. More recently, QM eventually evolved into bohmian mechanics, which is equivalent to the Copenhagen interpretation but with the twist that at least we can talk about point particles moving in a weird field. Pedagogically it makes more sense to teach bohmian mechanics, but for historical reasons we are stuck with schroedinger mechanics

  • @ThomasMuirAudionaut
    @ThomasMuirAudionaut29 күн бұрын

    We should try creating warp bubbles with sound. Soundwaves can bend space, technically the gravity waves we've detected are the _noise_ of supernovae... or blackhole collisions. gravity waves are like the p-waves of an earthquake, it's not so much the earth moving in waves as the soundwaves of the movement travelling through the earth.

  • @AutisticThinker
    @AutisticThinkerАй бұрын

    "Moving the stuff would require some sort of propulsion system"... Probably... but I suspect only during the transition in and out of warp; to help navigate or stabilize a ship's approach to, or departure from, warp speed. While at warp, the warp drive alone should be able to keep the ship moving.

  • @BooleanDisorder
    @BooleanDisorderАй бұрын

    So it's a worm drive 02:44 rather than worm hole! 😅 Btw Sabine. Do we know if there is an upper speed limit to spacetime expansion? Would such a limit explain why the observed speed is in fact finite? (And get tid of dark energy)

  • @BenMitro
    @BenMitroАй бұрын

    As far as I know, "warping" space can only be done with mass/energy, so such warp drives are going to need a lot of mass and/or a lot of energy.

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