NASA Designs Near Light Speed Engine That Breaks Laws Of Physics

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  • čas přidán 4. 05. 2024
  • NASA Designs Near Light Speed Engine That Breaks Laws Of Physics
    ► Subscribe: goo.gl/r5jd1F
    The planet Earth isn’t going to be habitable forever. If the human race is going to survive, one day we’ll have to pack up our things, and move to another planet. It sounds easy, until you realize the vastness of space, and even how big our solar system is.
    No matter where we’re going in space, we need to travel fast, and not just at the speed of light either. We’re talking about ludicrous speed.
    But some researchers have designed an impossible engine that violates the laws of physics. And another group of scientists’ are now saying a warp drive is possible. Is NASA really working on this technology, and what does the future hold for space travel?
    We are on social media:
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    Sources: pastebin.com/raw/D9kaCa9C

Komentáře • 10K

  • @Splashbang_OW
    @Splashbang_OW Před 2 lety +19529

    If it works it doesn’t violate or break the laws of physics, it expands it, and our knowledge of it. The laws of physics is just the human observation and our current understanding of it.

    • @Aaron25thinfantry
      @Aaron25thinfantry Před 2 lety +258

      @Ryan Pokorny Both were beautifully said

    • @KimJungDwayne
      @KimJungDwayne Před 2 lety +184

      Thats what breaking and violating the laws of physics means... 😂 it means that it is more than we know

    • @stwanspressurewashing2282
      @stwanspressurewashing2282 Před 2 lety +24

      Facts

    • @WigoKing
      @WigoKing Před 2 lety +64

      It's called figure of speech

    • @liamrmorgans921
      @liamrmorgans921 Před 2 lety +45

      If it expands our knowledge then how is it a “law”? Wouldnt that make it a theory? Or, a broken law

  • @adamsteeds1267
    @adamsteeds1267 Před 2 lety +2979

    So in conclusion, NASA doesn't design near light speed engine that breaks laws of physics

    • @josis90
      @josis90 Před 2 lety +219

      Thank you

    • @gre7310
      @gre7310 Před 2 lety +467

      You saved me 11 minutes of my life

    • @Psi34ax
      @Psi34ax Před 2 lety +318

      Thanks captain anticlickbait!

    • @stormapex7014
      @stormapex7014 Před 2 lety +79

      Thanks for saving my precious 11 minutes.

    • @angelchiriboga3904
      @angelchiriboga3904 Před 2 lety +124

      I hate these headlines-
      No engine VIOLATES the laws of physics-
      Warp requires antimatter and a temporal crystal- Dilithium.
      Antimatter requires Fusion reactors to make, AND, Dilithium is a cool Idea, but temporal crystals have not been found yet.

  • @cald1421
    @cald1421 Před rokem +70

    A year later and it appears that the EM drive has been pretty handily refuted as a feasible means of generating thrust by experts. However, we also just recently successfully generated energy using FUSION so not all is lost!

    • @earthprotector1
      @earthprotector1 Před rokem +1

      The added benefit of fusion power is its fuel. Water is abundantly available in the cosmos.

    • @paulrendell8797
      @paulrendell8797 Před rokem +6

      It doesn't matter what type of propulsion system we invent, even a propulsion that would enable light speed. The problem is the spacecraft itself. Everyone seems to think that space has nothing in it, it's just empty space right? Wrong, space is full of all sorts of debris. Hitting something even the size of a grain of sand at near light speed would completely destroy any space craft we can presently design. And space is full of stuff just floating around and a lot of it is bigger than a grain of sand! And then you're into designing complex shielding systems. Maybe in the far off future?

    • @cald1421
      @cald1421 Před rokem +2

      @@paulrendell8797 yeah which is why we’d need light speed lanes to keep clear of debris or maybe we use the warp kind of travel, compressive space in front and expanding space behind along clear lanes

    • @paulrendell8797
      @paulrendell8797 Před rokem +2

      @@cald1421 I don't even know if any of what you mentioned is even theoretically possible, I have only a basic knowledge of physics. But it all sounds a bit like science fiction to me. One thing is for sure, it won't be happening in our lifetime. And very soon, it appears that AI will make humans redundant. So probably never then? Maybe we should ask chatgpt to design us a warp engine?!!!

    • @aqrxv
      @aqrxv Před rokem +1

      @@paulrendell8797 Getting to any high fraction of light speed is probably pretty unlikely anyway. But the interstellar medium - as opposed to the space around the solar system - has very little stuff in it, so it's more like "if unlucky you might hit some microscopic dust" rather than "you're hitting grains of sand." Some studies of this suggest that it's a bit of a problem if you're zipping about with a multi-kilometer wide light sail (big, thin target) but otherwise at about 10% of light speed some relatively light-weight shielding should deal with the sort of obstacles you are likely to encounter. Of course, this does mean you'll need a century or so to get even a fairly nearby star. Some propulsion designs especially those that can be built with a narrow frontal area and no need for big sails or radiators should be able to carry shielding sufficient for 20% to 30% of light speed. Beyond that, well, making advanced material technology and hardened electronics is probably actually easier than making the propulsion system and power sources...

  • @calebcliftonmastersefyroth6563

    If you wanna be successful, you most take responsibility for your emotions, not place the blame on others. In addition to make you feel more guilty about your faults, pointing the finger at others will only serve to increase your sense of personal accountability. There's always a risk in every investment, yet people still invest and succeed. You most look outward if you wanna be successful in life.

    • @lucialuzgilosluz2114
      @lucialuzgilosluz2114 Před rokem +9

      Sure! Is a better way to counter this foreseen inflation, because all this wars everywhere are politics.

    • @janiceluckyspring6979
      @janiceluckyspring6979 Před rokem +1

      Living in one's "comfort zone" is a contributing cause to the plight of young people.

    • @patrickwalter5742
      @patrickwalter5742 Před rokem +3

      Fear is a total failure when you give up Ambitiousness; and Success is a game of dice, you throw your $coin while your investment decides your goal.

    • @tinagottschallcunningham4691
      @tinagottschallcunningham4691 Před rokem +1

      @@samiraabubakar2963 they said when you invest little money you earn big,

    • @tinagottschallcunningham4691
      @tinagottschallcunningham4691 Před rokem +1

      Can't even imagine how it is possible

  • @beanX21
    @beanX21 Před 2 lety +1402

    The moment we finally test a warp drive craft that’s when Vulcans will make contact

    • @quincybryant5231
      @quincybryant5231 Před 2 lety +10

      😂😂😂

    • @lilspittin313
      @lilspittin313 Před 2 lety +23

      & announce it was really their blueprints lol

    • @neilcronje1458
      @neilcronje1458 Před 2 lety +51

      Still a few years to go. Zefram Cochrane will perform his first warp flight in 2063 I believe.

    • @Ryan-eu3kp
      @Ryan-eu3kp Před 2 lety +2

      @@neilcronje1458 sounds about right lol

    • @buttface1202
      @buttface1202 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah but didnt the world have to undergo a eugenics-based nuclear war first

  • @therealbahamut
    @therealbahamut Před 2 lety +1503

    I've come to a conclusion: Nothing "breaks" the laws of physics. It just works on laws we don't know yet. That's why science fiction often becomes science fact.

    • @dalehammers4425
      @dalehammers4425 Před 2 lety +48

      It also proves why statements like "trust the science" are stupid and dangerous.

    • @captaindave88
      @captaindave88 Před 2 lety +128

      @@dalehammers4425 its only stupid if you don't understand science.

    • @eianfederle2715
      @eianfederle2715 Před 2 lety +17

      Not great wording and also not true. What you're basically saying is that literally _anything_ is possible. There are limits when it comes to physics. There's just no way to exceed those limits. The EM drive is one of those examples. It does "work" but it's useless because its limited. For it to actually fully work to its potential, we'd need to make it infinitely more inefficient. Physics isn't something that just goes "oh hey, ya sure ill make it possible" at the snap of a finger. Another notorious limit is the Hadron collider. Collide too many atoms and/or the wrong ones will create a black hole. Because of us humans, there are limits. If you are god, then the black hole's creaton means nothing, but because we're mortals it means certain extinction of the human race.
      In conclusion, and to put it less dramatically, anything is possible, though it can mean the extinction of the human race.

    • @captaindave88
      @captaindave88 Před 2 lety +27

      @@lacku2677 Science implies scientific method, reasoned scepticism and peer review. That's trusted science.

    • @judegnelson
      @judegnelson Před 2 lety +28

      @@captaindave88 He's just saying we shouldn't take science and scientists as arbiters of truth, because we did that pre-enlightenment with religion, with priests.
      Digging into the science yourself is encouraged, seeing what scientists are talking about and understanding the intricacies and credibility of it all. Blindly trusting that they are right, and not digging into the empirical evidence, is exactly what we did with religion for hundreds of years.
      Dale here, I think, is saying we shouldn't do this. And I agree

  • @scottwrezenski2356
    @scottwrezenski2356 Před rokem +11

    Love the video. Glad we're pushing forward to the future. Wrap drive in my lifetime I would love to see it. But not sure if it would happen. I bet be a lot easier to make it happen if the world could put all it differences aside and work together.

    • @JohnSmithGlobeLie
      @JohnSmithGlobeLie Před rokem +2

      Scott Wrezenski
      The reality of space travel is a figment of your imagination in your own lifetime!

    • @carlsmith5545
      @carlsmith5545 Před rokem +1

      Even if they came out with this, only a small few from the science community would benefit, not you or me. Now bullet trains, yeah i will support that,,,

    • @MelzarAbayabay
      @MelzarAbayabay Před 8 měsíci

      We are just strangers on this planet and our Citizenship is in heaven as what Paul said but on Christ's way not our way.

  • @agustinliden6189
    @agustinliden6189 Před rokem +16

    I believe and hope that we will see it during our life here on earth.

    • @whowhatwhydoyouknow
      @whowhatwhydoyouknow Před rokem +6

      I do not. I hope that humanity will not develop such powerful technology until it has matured. Modern humanity today simply is not ready for such power. We would destroy everything, and eventually even ourselves for greed and stupidity. Only once we understand our place in this universe can humans handle such technology.

    • @donaldmarwitz2046
      @donaldmarwitz2046 Před rokem

      Remember with all these advances and wants, we move farther and farther from our lives now, and as I am starting to see, there are consequences with are forward movement. For you young ones, I remember entering into high school and personal computers we're starting to be made available in schools, I remember the Apple 2 and the Apple 2E and then the macintosh. Back then all this was so exciting and great and very addictive , then I remember when the Internet 1st came round and was made avaliable to the public, good old AOL, 😝😆
      So what I'm saying is in such a long time when the time I was born there was my online telephones there was no cell phones heck a pager was a big deal when I was young . I graduated in 1984 and thought none of these things would have a bad effect on society and only good would come of all this matter fact I was confident a 100% of it. Now I look at how the world is and how divided and stubborn everybody has become how harmful Internet and cell phones can be as we are discovering all these new downsides. I wasn't worried about global warming I didn't care I used wasted thru things away right on the side of the highways, it wasn't my problem. All I'm telling you right now is Exactly how I felt back then. All these big changes really came within about 35 years people that's not that long and what how much damage there really yes. At the same time I love the idea of AI and can see many uses. I also worry about how much truly downside there's gonna be from all that. How much of the core soul and humanity are we gonna lose in the next 100 to 500 years. I remember watching terminator and thinking how scary that was but it could never happen not a mine at lifetime. Then I remember I think in the nineties when I Robot came out and I'm like yeah there's no way we'll see that kind of devbut meant, but we're knocking on the door right now. With all these advancements the amount of diseases we have obesity all across the major developed countries how unhealthy people are, I ended up With crowns by the time I turned 20 years old but I've managed it. But what I'm wondering is what more are we gonna have to lose of what I feel is the core of what makes us order to get To that final point before what we hope is good. No I am told that I actually will be alive by the time the planet heats up to the 1.5゚ mark. Wow And I have to face that I know my son will probably be around when the global warming hits past the 2゚ I wonder what the world's gonna be like when I'm gone then and how much suffering there's really gonna because the turnaround isn't gonna be fast enough any longer from the modeling that they've done. So I'm gonna leave you with this be careful what you wish for and I truly believe there is such a thing as karma and it has a way of finding people. I don't want English it's to be around by the time we actually land people on verse, but what I want to be some of the 1st people to do that absolutely not I don't know why anybody would want to be the 1st to do it when there is a very good chance that none of them will ever make it back To Earth. I would miss the little things that we can enjoy here the sun on our face a cold glass of water for me Mountain Dew a sunrise sunset being able to paddle at Canoe and most of all eat the foods that I enjoy. I'm not ready to give up my movies, Or stop living my life the way that I enjoy now. Adventure is The key purpose to really living a fulfilled life but throwing it away on a barren plan it is not my idea of the Marvel and glory that we had when we made it to the moon and came back. I really do not remember it vecase I was only 6 tears old,lol. Enjoy your family and loved ones and your friends and make the most out of the time you have here because a year goes by like the blank of an eye.

  • @milsimmusic1318
    @milsimmusic1318 Před 2 lety +847

    Something my physics professor taught me. The laws of physics are more like guidelines. Depending on environmental properties they can be bent, broken, expanded, and rewriten they aren't necessarily finite. You can't exist in 2 spaces at once; unless your a quantum particle. You can go faster than the speed of light but you can change the speed of light with gravity. Nature itself bends the rules all the time why can't we.

    • @yodamaster757
      @yodamaster757 Před 2 lety +39

      Just kinda blew my mind there

    • @tis_ace
      @tis_ace Před 2 lety +17

      Wait, you can change the velocity of light, not the speed with gravity.

    • @sipofsunkist9016
      @sipofsunkist9016 Před 2 lety +20

      Should word it like this. Quantum particles can exist in multiple places while most normal matter can not. And yes nothing can go faster than the speed of light, how fast it is relative for you doesn’t change this. That’s not bending the laws of physics (because that’s literally impossible) both of these are just more laws that we recently discovered. Not breaking old ones if that makes since (WE CAN BE WRONG AND DISPROVE SOMETHING LATER but that’s not breaking physics, people were just previously ignorant to something)
      TLDR: the Laws of physics are finite, but what some smart human thought was a law can be found to be kinda off later

    • @alexrossouw7702
      @alexrossouw7702 Před 2 lety +21

      So it's like when Newtonian physics explained everything (at the time, pre-1900) until someone found that Mercury's orbit didn't behave as expected according to Newtonian physics. Then Einstein came along and said there's more to the picture. Hence relativity better explained what's going on. But Newton's laws are still laws tho. Newer laws are just like amendments to the existing law book.

    • @doyleperkins4916
      @doyleperkins4916 Před 2 lety +8

      @@alexrossouw7702 Very well stated. I like your "amendments" analogy a lot.

  • @AutarchKade
    @AutarchKade Před 2 lety +686

    The EM drive was confirmed debunked. When the test models were activated, they produced a small amount of heat which led to the materials expanding slightly. When researchers accounted for this effect, there was absolutely zero forces produced by the device.

    • @pawelhyzopski6456
      @pawelhyzopski6456 Před 2 lety +30

      That explains it. Cheers.

    • @onaughto
      @onaughto Před 2 lety +3

      Yes I heard that too. This was about 5 months ago maybe 4. Its a drag for sure but true.

    • @teleportdinero
      @teleportdinero Před 2 lety +1

      @@onaughto only i can save you

    • @ACTIVATEDADNANSALIMI1969
      @ACTIVATEDADNANSALIMI1969 Před 2 lety +1

      That was crazy.

    • @magmadude35
      @magmadude35 Před 2 lety +9

      Beat me to it, though i thought it was debunked because it was getting affected by the earths magnetic field. Either way this is a far cry from light speed even if it worked

  • @MichaelJohnson-dt8tv
    @MichaelJohnson-dt8tv Před rokem +3

    To Bristen: That’s a Great question. Due to the almost unimaginable distances involved, space is considered to be relatively “empty”. But at anything like the speeds being discussed here, all you’d need is maybe a grain of sand, or maybe something smaller than that. The energy released in a collision would be immeasurable and annihilation would be total. Clearly that’s something that will probably be a completely separate field of study. But we should remember the old adage that if it can’t be conceived of, it’s possible.

  • @lazarusblackwell6988
    @lazarusblackwell6988 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Im excited to see this incredible progress of mankind happening right before our eyes.

  • @user-zw5jj2uf1p
    @user-zw5jj2uf1p Před 2 lety +1796

    The title is deceiving
    EM Drive: "We built something that we'd never thought would work, and it still doesn't work. But if fairies exist, maybe it will work." Oh and even if it worked, it probably wouldn't go near the speed of light.
    Ion Drive: Not anywhere near the speed of light.
    Nuclear Drive: Most promising so far, but it's not developed by NASA

    • @sully9832
      @sully9832 Před 2 lety +197

      Finally someone in this comment section with some brain texture

    • @swccstar
      @swccstar Před 2 lety +50

      Yeah. When I got to the end I was kind of thinking the same thing. Wtf 🙄

    • @starfieldcommand
      @starfieldcommand Před 2 lety +6

      Ion drive will work eventually and power future cars

    • @blueberrywilbur315
      @blueberrywilbur315 Před 2 lety +11

      You lost me at EM drive

    • @Jacob-og9pz
      @Jacob-og9pz Před 2 lety +8

      Oddly enough I’ve witnessed ufo phenomenon teleport and I’ve seen two small golden fæ folk

  • @DMS-pq8
    @DMS-pq8 Před 2 lety +674

    People who think this is impossible should remember that we went from depending on the wind to travel the oceans to nuclear engines in less than two hundred yrs

    • @Whoopdido777
      @Whoopdido777 Před 2 lety +101

      I do agree with this. As far as technology goes, the human race is basically advancing exponentially. I mean your iPhone is over 100 million times more powerful than the Apollo 11 computers.

    • @wut6922
      @wut6922 Před 2 lety +41

      @@Whoopdido777 Transistors went from being the size of your pinky to the size of a few dozen atoms. That's a lot of transistors.

    • @tristintaylor7999
      @tristintaylor7999 Před 2 lety +19

      The only problem is the math. something the size of a passenger carrier plane Moving JUST the speed of light is a mathematical nightmare I really hope we discover FTL travel but if we cant discover full depth physics ( if that's even a thing) then we're stuck in this star system and a relatively short distance out.

    • @DMS-pq8
      @DMS-pq8 Před 2 lety +12

      @@tristintaylor7999 Not just speed but also ways to shield from solar radiation and will have to have somekind of artificial gravity for long trips

    • @gollings3410
      @gollings3410 Před 2 lety +3

      Made so many advancements now we stuck on iPhone waiting for next model we’ve slowed down and coming to a halt back to horse and cart when all oil is gone haha

  • @NeoMorphUK
    @NeoMorphUK Před rokem +5

    The ship in the thumbnail still looks futuristic. Lots of sci-fi ships don’t age well and only a few still look awesome over 30 years later. 2001 still looks awesome today. Another excellent ship was the Enterprise 1701 No A, B, C or bloody D (or E, F… and J for that matter)
    Note: I recognised the ship because I had an air fix kit one when I was a kid.

    • @JohnSmithGlobeLie
      @JohnSmithGlobeLie Před rokem

      NeoMorph WTH
      Your imagination and science fiction has your brain locked in the matrix of illusionary space travel.

    • @NeoMorphUK
      @NeoMorphUK Před rokem

      @@JohnSmithGlobeLie SILLY BOY… spaceflight science fiction like in 2001 and Star Trek is BY DEFINITION ILLUSIONARY SPACE TRAVEL. 😂😂😂😂
      Science Fact is things like the ISS, SpaceX and Apollo. But true science fiction is Flat Earth…. I’ve even read loads of it… it’s called TERRY PRATCHETT’S DISCWORLD.
      Which is true? Flat Earth on a Space Turtle or a globe flying through space like other globes flying through space.
      P.s. if you aren’t a Flatturd Earth idiot I’m sorry for overreacting… But if you ARE one though… HAHAHAHAHAHAHA Who’s in the matrix biatch lol.

    • @ylleba
      @ylleba Před rokem

      @@JohnSmithGlobeLie What the hell is this even supposed to mean?

    • @JohnSmithGlobeLie
      @JohnSmithGlobeLie Před rokem

      @@ylleba
      The only thing that has ever been to space is your imagination.

  • @smoticus
    @smoticus Před rokem +1

    Makes me wonder if the area of space time contortion can be shrunk yet still result in superluminal travel... small shrink and stretch added to the first engines he talked about to just tap it forward to surf the spacetime bubble

  • @neonshadow5005
    @neonshadow5005 Před 2 lety +518

    "It could be that all of this will be a waste of time and money." Nothing ventured, nothing gained. Some times you have to take risks and be wrong because if you try several ideas and one of them actually works, then none of the others were a waste if they led to something that works.

    • @alantasman8273
      @alantasman8273 Před 2 lety +21

      A famous quote from Thomas Edison (the guy who designed the electric light bulb) puts this in perspective. Edison said "I have not failed, I have just found 10,000 ways not to make a light bulb."

    • @PanglossDr
      @PanglossDr Před 2 lety +16

      A similar way of looking at it is:
      Good judgement comes from experience. Experience comes from bad judgement.

    • @alantasman8273
      @alantasman8273 Před 2 lety +2

      @@PanglossDr True...and marxist democrats have more experience at bad judgement but never seem to learn..they do double down however.

    • @Jacob-es5tv
      @Jacob-es5tv Před 2 lety +15

      @@alantasman8273 way to make a non political comment, political. you out did yourself man.

    • @alphalex88
      @alphalex88 Před 2 lety

      Completely absurd and a total waste of time and taxpayer monies.

  • @TubeTAG
    @TubeTAG Před 2 lety +302

    “Do you think we’ll see warp drive in our lifetime or do you think it will be centuries away?” These two statements might not be mutually exclusive. Dramatic life extension is a rather significant field of study itself

    • @majesticpbjcat7707
      @majesticpbjcat7707 Před 2 lety +2

      I'd definitely like to know more about that. Do you know where I can look to find more info on life extension?

    • @majesticpbjcat7707
      @majesticpbjcat7707 Před 2 lety +1

      Or, where's the best and must pertinent info?

    • @grantbishop1961
      @grantbishop1961 Před 2 lety +1

      Humans used to live hundreds of years, question is what happened to our DNA and "Junk" DNA

    • @grantbishop1961
      @grantbishop1961 Před 2 lety +2

      @@majesticpbjcat7707classified Codename: Project Ibis and the Emerald Rooms. That is what the Cabal use for bio-regenesis

    • @Luminarada80
      @Luminarada80 Před 2 lety +7

      @@majesticpbjcat7707 look at the research of David Sinclair, he's a leading lifespan researcher at Harvard. He has a very good and easily understood book that I highly recommend. It's what I want to research for my PhD!

  • @ShinobiVuDU
    @ShinobiVuDU Před rokem +1

    I love how the stock video of someone doing trig on a board is seen as complex.

  • @josesuro3981
    @josesuro3981 Před rokem +5

    The holy grail of human space travel is a propulsion system that can accelerate/decelerate a vehicle at 32 feet/second/second for an unlimited period of time....

  • @waffleiron7740
    @waffleiron7740 Před 2 lety +359

    EM drives were debunked quite some time ago I’m afraid, the minuscule amounts of “impossible” thrust were caused by thermal radiation which isn’t self-sustaining, meaning you’d need fuel/power to continue the effect - defeating the object of the drive.

    • @TheD1rtyNarwhal
      @TheD1rtyNarwhal Před 2 lety +4

      We've also have had people on Mars since the 80s

    • @marybean2231
      @marybean2231 Před 2 lety +21

      @@TheD1rtyNarwhal lol

    • @FZ2HELL
      @FZ2HELL Před 2 lety +10

      Warp drive may be possible but not the human body.....

    • @robertrosenthal7264
      @robertrosenthal7264 Před 2 lety +17

      Actually they've eliminated the possibility of thermal radiation causing the detected thrust.
      However, they think they've identified what it is, it's reacting to the Earths magnetic field.
      As such, it's of no use for interstellar travel.
      On the other hand, it could be useful for satellites around a world with a decent magnetic field like Earth.
      Satellites often end their useful life because of the expenditure of all reaction mass. The EM could possibly eliminate that issue.

    • @blakelantz9173
      @blakelantz9173 Před 2 lety +1

      @@robertrosenthal7264 even if they've eliminated the possibility of thermal radiation, a drive using thermal radiation would still be useful in space some what. if you could find a way to make it work on solar energy then it should behave somewhat like an ion drive, only no need for fuel. that said you would still probably get little in the way of thrust.

  • @Wheelassassin
    @Wheelassassin Před 2 lety +587

    We are getting ever more closer to discovering Xur’s next location

  • @arthurzettel6618
    @arthurzettel6618 Před 7 měsíci

    They said man couldn't fly, and Wright Brothers did it. They said the speed of sound could not be broken, and the X1-A with Chuck Yeager did it. Now we look into a new frontier of speed but only in space. Traveling at or beyond the speed of light 186,000 miles per second. In no way will the law of physics be broken but instead expanded into a new territory. A new territory of physics that could take us to the reality of warp speed.

  • @kuyang100
    @kuyang100 Před rokem

    The concept was already mentioned by Bikash Kunwar in his Nobel Deity's Planet which was published in 2016 . He explained as:
    Kishan was a scientist in SSO and he had invented a fastest flying object theory. Ship was designed in such a way that the energy could not lose but was changed in one form to another due to which energy was sufficient for the ship to travell long distance on a very long time and there were no other elements in space to loose energy for which required energy was rotated within the ship’s engine. Speed was increased with a continuous strike of light which made ship fast and traveled 15 times faster than of sunlight, elements used on all parts of ship were special and could exist on a very high temperature

  • @sik249
    @sik249 Před 2 lety +483

    "Ships that travel use fuel. Fuel has limits. Even fuels that are derived from solar energy have limits. Even fuel that is derived from nuclear power has limits. If you go too far, you cannot return. If your exploration takes you too far afield, you cannot return. If you enter an uncharted region, you will face physiological hazards and the possibility of entering another’s territory who could prove to be hostile to your presence. You certainly could become lost in uncharted territories, as many travellers have." - An excerpt from Life in the Universe, Chapter 3: The Limits of Space Travel. Very interesting read.

    • @julieann1975
      @julieann1975 Před 2 lety +4

      Ty!

    • @jarimakkonen6320
      @jarimakkonen6320 Před 2 lety +7

      Oh wow

    • @johnchapman5125
      @johnchapman5125 Před 2 lety +4

      Thank you, Stojan.

    • @green_growz1997
      @green_growz1997 Před 2 lety +6

      Awesome going to grab this book

    • @apolyeyeng
      @apolyeyeng Před 2 lety +3

      Remember if we get into high civilization the impossible is possible - scientific everyone is possible in the so far far far future but our god the creation hes thhe only one who an stop us

  • @michaelwaters6829
    @michaelwaters6829 Před 2 lety +602

    This video should be titled "When someone who doesn't know what their talking about makes a video about propulsion"

  • @Metal_Master_YT
    @Metal_Master_YT Před rokem

    That's crazy, I had the same idea for traveling faster than light speed! since you can't travel faster than light, you have to mess with space and time so as to technically not violate that law, but still get somewhere very quickly. If my guess is correct, then a lot of time should pass between taking off, and landing on a distant planet, only you wouldn't experience it, but the people in the outside reference frame would.

  • @tobynamed7157
    @tobynamed7157 Před rokem

    1:10 I might be wrong here, but:
    Because of how general relativity works, when one is going the speed of light, they reach their destination instantly from their perspective, even if an outside observer only sees them as going ~300m/s. This is the effect of time dilation, and it also means that if one is moving at the speed of light they perceive traveling 1m as taking the same ammount of time as 1 light year.

  • @user-xt9ki6rd9p
    @user-xt9ki6rd9p Před 2 lety +717

    I don't think we will see warp drive in our lifetime, but if that happens that would be phenomenal.

    • @nerusama5195
      @nerusama5195 Před 2 lety +16

      It would be phenomenal indeed, brother

    • @RonsmooveTI
      @RonsmooveTI Před 2 lety +6

      It possible

    • @user-xl4us7se9z
      @user-xl4us7se9z Před 2 lety +3

      We can built but the moneyy.💀

    • @__Thinkfloyd__
      @__Thinkfloyd__ Před 2 lety +16

      There are two mathematically feasible warp drives at the moment, the "Alcubierre drive" and the "Froning drive" problem is both require "exotic matter" with the latter being the best bet.

    • @popsiclestick8405
      @popsiclestick8405 Před 2 lety +17

      I already seen warp drive it happen n front of my eyes at night and there called UFO's

  • @ananthakrishnanm8506
    @ananthakrishnanm8506 Před 2 lety +418

    Physics has evolved in the past...it is evolving in the present... it will evolve in the future... man's understanding of nature has no boundaries or fixed laws... thats the beauty of Science... what Science has achieved in the past will lay the foundation to invent and discover more things in the future...

    • @epicspaces9434
      @epicspaces9434 Před 2 lety +1

      bla bla bla but nobody dares

    • @ionutdanca5446
      @ionutdanca5446 Před 2 lety +12

      nah..take a good look at the world...take a look at newer generations of people.. we wont get far...we will die on this earth because wealth and power is more important than anything..we wont survive as a species for long...resources will finish at some point..or earth will kick us ..

    • @mooserube1786
      @mooserube1786 Před 2 lety

      True

    • @FH-cn3mg
      @FH-cn3mg Před 2 lety

      @John Johnson Where we're going we won't need toilets.

    • @courdell7426
      @courdell7426 Před 2 lety +2

      @Maggie Smith lol you're definitely not focused at all.

  • @waynegroves6922
    @waynegroves6922 Před rokem +9

    So, I'm curious . . . does it matter whether a pea-sized piece of rock, zooming along at who knows what speed, hits you - or, does your going near the speed of light and hitting the rock really matter!? We all know how a tiny, fast-moving object can seriously puncture spacecraft and equipment; what would increasing speed accomplish if you run into grain-of-sand particles and have no way to ward off the impact!? I would think engineering efforts would be better suited to protecting what we have, at currently-known speeds, BEFORE going faster - maybe develop some form of forcefield shielding, ala every space movie ever made.

    • @charliekelsall4134
      @charliekelsall4134 Před rokem

      couldnt agree more despite loving the warp idea since about 1967. p

    • @E-Nigma_
      @E-Nigma_ Před rokem +3

      Common sense at work! Makes you wonder about the veracity of space travel.
      The new nasa mission to the moon that’s going to test the effects of radiation and other things on humans is interesting to. They’re moving as if we’ve never been to the moon. Shielding is an aspect of space travel I’ve never really heard any studies about.

    • @albertthompson9523
      @albertthompson9523 Před rokem

      They don't apply this logic to cars or planes so why would you think rockets would be different? I'm always amazed at how stupid this species really is and how uncommon is "common sense".

  • @coolerester77
    @coolerester77 Před rokem

    technology has been exponentially getting better, probably within the next couple of decades, we will see light speed

  • @oddjob2043
    @oddjob2043 Před 2 lety +433

    I can't wait for the day I will be able to say "punch it chewie" and just travel 10 lightyears in a matter of minutes

    • @paulie3339
      @paulie3339 Před 2 lety +5

      Shiiittt....dont have the parts for that yet!

    • @JHinDAmix
      @JHinDAmix Před 2 lety +2

      I dont think the particles of our body could handle that 🤔

    • @qianaroyal1096
      @qianaroyal1096 Před 2 lety +30

      @Nat20 Damage never say never🥴

    • @TheRewindRoom
      @TheRewindRoom Před 2 lety +6

      Light years means it took light a year to reach there so naaah not in minutes bro

    • @av5txn138
      @av5txn138 Před 2 lety +4

      you’ll be dead by then

  • @DanielSmith-yp7mw
    @DanielSmith-yp7mw Před 2 lety +154

    When the title says “breaks the laws of physics”, you already know that no one broke the laws of physics without even watching it. That being said, it’s cool stuff regardless.

    • @soul_dovah670
      @soul_dovah670 Před 2 lety

      Fact

    • @JMazzaTaz
      @JMazzaTaz Před 2 lety +2

      The title says “designs”, not “created”, just sayin’…

    • @dansmith2863
      @dansmith2863 Před 2 lety

      Yes

    • @davidhomer78
      @davidhomer78 Před 2 lety +1

      No one knows how it works, and it doesn't work. That says it all for this video.

    • @tex6929
      @tex6929 Před 2 lety +1

      Laws of physics are nothing but a bunch of man made “rules” rules that have been broken multiple time

  • @drjdsjr
    @drjdsjr Před rokem

    The inexorable march forward of nanotechnology and the inherently mind-blowing nature of exponential technological progress combine to imply both that we will have lifespans adequate to explore other star systems with near current technologies and/or that we will live long enough to develop the warp technologies to travel that way as well.

  • @DevilbyMoonlight
    @DevilbyMoonlight Před rokem

    space may be big, but it has things in it.. and sod's law states the further the distance between 2 points the more likely it is to have something in between those 2 points, so you may be travelling at warp speed but what are the effects of hitting something at that speed on the vessel?

  • @olsonspeed
    @olsonspeed Před 2 lety +245

    "E M Drive failed to produce any thrust", it was however very efficient at consuming research grants.

    • @chappo8100
      @chappo8100 Před 2 lety +14

      Physicist used confusion. It was very effective

    • @StupidBadITCH
      @StupidBadITCH Před 2 lety +16

      Lol. I wish I could be a scientist. Give some Bs theory that sounds good. Collect the paychecks and take 4 days off on a three day work week. Than after 7 years say "nah didn't work"

    • @konradzuk9661
      @konradzuk9661 Před 2 lety +4

      Nasa is very efficient at consuming research grants, don't you know? Look on fameous James Webb telescope that is preparing for launch for over 10 years.

    • @codemy666
      @codemy666 Před 2 lety +4

      @@konradzuk9661 Still not as bad as the military

    • @bethle3256
      @bethle3256 Před 2 lety

      Wasn't it originally designed by Chinese researchers?

  • @themuffinman2249
    @themuffinman2249 Před 2 lety +171

    Its strange how quickly technology accelerates, seems to be exponential considering just over 100ish years ago the Wright brothers were working out how to make short flights. And for hundreds of years before that we just wandered about looking up.
    I’m 32 now and I always wonder what progression I’ll see in my lifetime

    • @gamingseeks3580
      @gamingseeks3580 Před 2 lety +8

      I'm 36 I also hope I see some kind of break through before I'm gone would be awesome . The space topic has also been a fun subject for me 👽

    • @eianfederle2715
      @eianfederle2715 Před 2 lety +6

      Well, if it makes you feel better, technology invention and innovation happens at an exponential rate. The world's first supercomputer was made in 1964. 57 years later, our cell phones are 2 times more powerfull than that.

    • @Nazio868
      @Nazio868 Před 2 lety +7

      It’s because we’ve been studying UFO’s from space for decades now trying to reverse engineer their tech

    • @nicholasfaber9695
      @nicholasfaber9695 Před 2 lety +4

      @@eianfederle2715 Lmao try a million times faster

    • @michaelbrinks8089
      @michaelbrinks8089 Před 2 lety +4

      Technology seemed to advance most rapidly from the late 1800's to the late 1900's then it seems like it has stagnated.

  • @lazarusblackwell6988
    @lazarusblackwell6988 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Technological and social progress is exploding exponentially.
    We will definitely see many incredible things.

  • @mikemireles2804
    @mikemireles2804 Před rokem

    I love how the future is turning into .
    Everything is awesome .
    Robots, spaceships , new fuel for motor vehicles beautiful 💯💯💯💯💯💯

  • @sabriath
    @sabriath Před 2 lety +117

    I love the part where it's like "it doesn't use any exotic energy, just requires [some magical and natural bending of spacetime that we have to find exists and catch a ride, like an ocean wave]"

    • @andypanda4927
      @andypanda4927 Před 2 lety +3

      Well, this is the Destiny channel. Forget who, but believe Event Horizon, perhaps Mr Godier's channel covered the MW Cavity testing. In testing, but, NOT currently useful.

    • @jamegumb7298
      @jamegumb7298 Před 2 lety

      Well we know spacetime bending really does happen, see gravity waves.

    • @BruceDragon-sf1tr
      @BruceDragon-sf1tr Před 2 lety

      Kalibonga dude 🌊😎

    • @ssgssbeet4133
      @ssgssbeet4133 Před 2 lety

      @@andypanda4927 i see your a man of culture

    • @locklear308
      @locklear308 Před 2 lety

      Lol

  • @Umbra_TuSlayer
    @Umbra_TuSlayer Před 2 lety +277

    As I recall, the EM drive was already disproved. All it was doing is producing waste heat and expanding giving an error reading.

    • @GarettHarnish
      @GarettHarnish Před 2 lety +27

      It was, in 2018. It was magnetic interference from unshielded wires.

    • @815TypeSirius
      @815TypeSirius Před 2 lety +10

      The faster humans realize Earth is where we're stuck for any foreseeable future and space is not a viable frontier the faster we might stop trying to engineer extinction. Too many idiots with no understanding. Even worse, as these two have mentioned, the EM drive was debunked.

    • @mizery95
      @mizery95 Před 2 lety +39

      @@815TypeSirius that’s the stupidest shit I’ve ever heard. That’s like saying a turtle won’t move if a bird is trying to kill it knowing it’s far too slow. It can still try and it may even make it out alive. Humans may never leave earth but we can still try because if we don’t try we will never know if we could. If we could leave but don’t we’d die from the suns death maybe sooner and if we do leave we may be saved

    • @rdblocks5490
      @rdblocks5490 Před 2 lety +10

      @@815TypeSirius we'll see if your "prediction" Is correct my comment and yours will stay on CZcams and if after 10,50,100 years the world will prove you wrong
      Humans have no limits of progress but there are failures in everything so there are in humanity
      So just watch

    • @815TypeSirius
      @815TypeSirius Před 2 lety +2

      I love the hostile inability to comprehend what I am writing in the probably bot replies to my post. Please go take a reading comprehension class and then read my comment again.

  • @user-rc7rn8zr3s
    @user-rc7rn8zr3s Před 7 měsíci

    I love those small fast Space Jet Fighters. Make sure it has an oray of lazers, Gatlin gun, small powerful missiles and the Rod of God firing system.

  • @blindjoe8300
    @blindjoe8300 Před rokem +1

    We need a new voyager probe with quantum communication and an ion pulse drive. When it reaches near light speeds we’ll get instant updates

  • @Tech_Duster
    @Tech_Duster Před 2 lety +453

    When her parents aren’t home and she lives in Alpha Centauri.

  • @matthewgumabon7498
    @matthewgumabon7498 Před 2 lety +193

    I love how varied the ideas are here in these devices.
    From solar sails which are simple, lightweight craft that “ride” a nearby star’s radiation to propel itself… ok reasonable idea.
    To engines that use exotic negative mass matter (that is only theorized to exist) to distort space time locally around a ship, allowing it to surf the fabric of the universe itself…
    I guess if you think about, that is no more crazy than the logic behind our current means of space flight 🚀
    Yeah, let’s just ride a massive explosion into space, sitting on building-sized fuel tanks that will send a tiny craft no further than our own moon.

    • @thirdworldrider6991
      @thirdworldrider6991 Před 2 lety +3

      why do we need exotic negative mass matter, like dark matter tho? if we cant even see or contain it how do we know it would do what we need?

    • @matthewgumabon7498
      @matthewgumabon7498 Před 2 lety +13

      @@thirdworldrider6991 In my limited understanding of the concept of a warp drive shown in this video, the drive works by contracting space-time in front of the ship and expanding it behind the ship.
      We know that mass causes space to contract (giving us gravity), but what would cause space to expand (giving anti-gravity)?
      Thinking about it purely mathematically, a material that expands space and pushes things away from it would have a “negative mass”.
      I think the idea is that researches suggest that such a material is possible, but if it is, it is probably extremely rare in our part of the universe since we have not observed it yet (hence why they call it exotic).

    • @JFDSmit-rm6tw
      @JFDSmit-rm6tw Před 2 lety

      Just curious, mad about space but not an engineer, but didn't the Voyager probes use a very early form of solar sail?

    • @floridaman6982
      @floridaman6982 Před 2 lety +2

      @@matthewgumabon7498 a problem I have understanding mass and anti matter, is that we can’t really define empty space. What exactly is expanding? i think there may be more dimensions than we can perceive bc alone it does not make sense. In flatland, a 3D object moves through and appears to grow then shrink. Our universal perspective says the universe is expanding, but it might be missing more info than that

    • @randyparrott653
      @randyparrott653 Před rokem

      Yeah a big ship the shape of a penis .!!lola o and knowing big chance on absolutely never able to return .I guarantee nobody smart enough to design and engineer these specs are not getting on one of these point blank period.

  • @antisystemicparadise1202

    Who's out there to tell the world that we don't have the resources, nor the unity, nor the body-structure to achieve light-speed?? We haven't even manage to accept each other yet, let alone light-speed or Space travelling in general.

  • @0zyris
    @0zyris Před 10 dny

    Errata: Aircraft and rocket engines don't "push off" the air. Which is why rocket engines still work in space. Remember that old law - "To every action there is an equal and opposite reaction"? Newton, was it?

  • @mada1241
    @mada1241 Před 2 lety +66

    "pack up our bags and move to another planet, it sounds easy."
    Yeah, maybe to the Galactic Empire. No one on earth thinks that sounds "easy"

    • @jacobdecker3310
      @jacobdecker3310 Před 2 lety +2

      For the Empire!

    • @MrMango331
      @MrMango331 Před 2 lety +1

      Once it's done, from there on it will be.

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Před 2 lety +1

      We can't look after this planet, good luck terraforming another.

    • @rollinghippo2940
      @rollinghippo2940 Před 2 lety +1

      Im afraid there will be another stupid slogan like "green life matters"

  • @supdawg7811
    @supdawg7811 Před 2 lety +83

    There are many issues with this video, but I want to point out two things: "almost no exotic matter" (or whatever the quote was) still is a MASSIVE problem because we still have absolutely no idea how to procure such stuff.
    Also, a warp drive would allow us to push past the speed of light; movement within space time itself is limited by the speed of light, but manipulating space time isn't.

    • @dionysius1321
      @dionysius1321 Před 2 lety

      Are you talking about anti-matter because if you are CERN pretty much makes it

    • @grahamtotte7133
      @grahamtotte7133 Před 2 lety +9

      Also he demonstrated a lack understanding of Newton's 3rd law when he stated that an airplane flies by pushing against the air.

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 Před 2 lety +6

      @@dionysius1321 in atomically small quantities, sure.

    • @MrEnjoivolcom1
      @MrEnjoivolcom1 Před 2 lety +6

      @@dionysius1321 yeah, seriously. Like EXTREMELY, TINY, ULTRAMICROSCOPIC amounts. Antimatter is what, like $62.5 _TRILLION_ for a single gram? And you're talking about enough to move tons of metal through space? No, CERN is sooo not "pretty much" making it.

    • @r3dlinemarine632
      @r3dlinemarine632 Před 2 lety +1

      Also he was saying we’d run out of fuel in space but once you reach a speed and aren’t around any large bodies of mass you won’t need to produce any more thrust, you’ll just keep moving at that speed

  • @gerry5134
    @gerry5134 Před rokem

    Used to imagine travelling at the speed of light would be an amazing feat until I learned about inertia !

  • @rene23easting
    @rene23easting Před rokem +1

    Thoughts are timeless. In a split of a second we could be anywhere in the universe. That is and will be the way to travel in the universe.

  • @NobuAlter
    @NobuAlter Před 2 lety +92

    “It turns out scientists have been developing SCP technology for more then half a century”
    Oh no what did Dr Bright leak this time…

    • @cinamontoast2555
      @cinamontoast2555 Před 2 lety +3

      hahah

    • @clennius
      @clennius Před 2 lety +7

      dr bright is not allowed leak any information of anomalous technologies to the outside world. no, not even if it is for the betterment of mankind.

    • @kentaix12
      @kentaix12 Před 2 lety +5

      I swear as soon as I heard SCP my mind immediately thought, "Secure....Contain....Protect"! lmao

  • @APerson-lk3ys
    @APerson-lk3ys Před 2 lety +53

    I can't wait until the Vulkans spot that warp drive signature...

    • @Katrify97
      @Katrify97 Před 2 lety +3

      and then the klingons

    • @berkiaskyclan2948
      @berkiaskyclan2948 Před 2 lety +3

      ..can’t wait to see the NX launch.

    • @fancy39
      @fancy39 Před 2 lety

      🤣

    • @philw8704
      @philw8704 Před 2 lety

      @William and Romulans...but we already have a Space Force with a logo “really”” similar to the Federation symbol, or Motorola symbol. So which is it? Can you hear me now?

    • @klixx_yt2396
      @klixx_yt2396 Před 2 lety

      If we are successful making fusion energy, we can maybe have enough power to travel warp 1 for a few minutes, but if we had a Dyson sphere we could travel at warp speed a bit longer.

  • @sarahweaver1534
    @sarahweaver1534 Před 3 dny

    I think we will definitely see it happen in the next century. After all, we have seen many of the technologies of Star Trek come to pass already. Automatic doors, cell phones, tasers, touchscreen technology to name the more noticable ones.

  • @Warhammer778
    @Warhammer778 Před rokem +1

    Okay my one question since a kid with acquiring such speeds.. what about all the meteors and obstacles in space? Does the force of the speed make for a clear path or are crazy technological advances required to instantly re-route

  • @carlstanland5333
    @carlstanland5333 Před 2 lety +364

    Maybe there isn’t a “breaking the laws of physics.” Maybe we don’t know everything.

    • @sKraat528
      @sKraat528 Před 2 lety +12

      Exactly. Perhaps physical reality .....also isn't the only reality. That just encapsulates what we 'already can' measure and observe. What else might exist that we are unaware of?

    • @clementvining2487
      @clementvining2487 Před 2 lety +2

      @@sKraat528 We don't know what we don't know.

    • @clementvining2487
      @clementvining2487 Před 2 lety

      @Halo Studios XR Yes before the universe existed there was a life form alone he didn't like it and created the universe.

    • @influentia1patterns
      @influentia1patterns Před 2 lety

      And maybe one of those things is that physics can break because it isn’t law, it’s just a habit or tendency

    • @clementvining2487
      @clementvining2487 Před 2 lety

      @@influentia1patterns Maybe it doesn't need to be broken simply bend it a little.

  • @liormalka3550
    @liormalka3550 Před 2 lety +138

    "the US has never put a reactor into space"
    *sad perseverance, voyager, and curiosity noises*

    • @byronwatkins2565
      @byronwatkins2565 Před 2 lety +14

      A radioactive ball is not a fission pile.

    • @saturn5mtw567
      @saturn5mtw567 Před 2 lety +9

      Those were RTGs, not proper reactors

    • @donaldboughton8686
      @donaldboughton8686 Před 2 lety +8

      They were powered by thermoelectric generators driven by the heat produced by radioactive decay not nuclear reactors.

    • @liormalka3550
      @liormalka3550 Před 2 lety +3

      @@donaldboughton8686 true, true...

    • @liormalka3550
      @liormalka3550 Před 2 lety +5

      @@saturn5mtw567 yeah im starting to rethink this lol

  • @musicmademedoit2
    @musicmademedoit2 Před rokem

    Would it make sense to encase the pilots of these vehicles in a viscous fluid to negate the speeds/ g force? Viscous liquid may counter negative effects of space as well🧐

  • @AlienTech-bk5xl
    @AlienTech-bk5xl Před 7 měsíci

    Harold G Sonny White has already discovered the Warp. It's a lot simpler than we thought. The matter is stable, Warp is a local Manifold and an Energy Source, Open a Russian Lancet Product 53 and you'll see one lol.

  • @spacemissing
    @spacemissing Před 2 lety +46

    The universe has cleverly protected itself from the rapid spread of humans
    by making fast interstellar travel extremely difficult.
    Pretty smart for a big load of gas and dust...

    • @debbiehenri345
      @debbiehenri345 Před 2 lety +2

      Ya, maybe we should be thinking of ways to extend the lifespan of the sun instead. At least we've got a billion years to come up with a cunning plan.

    • @sixforks6543
      @sixforks6543 Před 2 lety

      That's what the reapers are for.

    • @ieatwomen8260
      @ieatwomen8260 Před 2 lety

      Underrated

    • @bombtubejamz739
      @bombtubejamz739 Před 2 lety

      aliens of evolution races helped shape this part of the universe in the big multiverse

    • @Blendercage
      @Blendercage Před 2 lety

      Actually it’s protecting itself from wonky cause and effect issues.

  • @Briggsby
    @Briggsby Před 2 lety +41

    EM Drive was confirmed to NOT work unfortunately. Any effects were determined to be due to external factors. Depressing.

    • @stephenlangsl67
      @stephenlangsl67 Před 2 lety

      Perhaps they could combine it with something else to create a hybrid propulsion system. I think that's worth a try.

    • @Davethreshold
      @Davethreshold Před 2 lety +3

      I KNOW!! I saw that here a few weeks ago on another channel. They should do some very quick research to verify what they are talking about. The Guy or Robot has a great voice though! 🤡

    • @taborturtle
      @taborturtle Před 2 lety +1

      I thought he sounded like Thunderf00t so I kept watching. But Thunderf00t completely calls out the Em drive and shows what complete sh*t it really is. We still can't break the laws of psychics guys! The Em drive would break conservation of energy, so I was skeptical from the first time I heard about it. Input always equals output! And just like "free energy" and perpetual motion machines it really doesn't work...

    • @crazietech1984
      @crazietech1984 Před 2 lety

      @@taborturtle brilliant lol

    • @Ecthelion842
      @Ecthelion842 Před 2 lety +1

      @@stephenlangsl67 nope, it is literally less efficient than pointing a big enough flashlight out the back of the spaceship.

  • @user-iq6cc3df3l
    @user-iq6cc3df3l Před 8 měsíci

    I think that approaching the speed of light doesn’t violate physics; meeting or exceeding it does. I believe that mass goes to infinity as you approach light speed so as long as you don’t reach it you should be fine.

    • @TranslationX
      @TranslationX Před 8 měsíci

      Nobody is saying that approaching lightspeed is violating physics. Even meeting lightspeed does not violate physics if you don't have any mass. And it's not really mass that changes with acceleration, it's inertia that increases - to infinity if you have any mass at lightspeed.

  • @etmax1
    @etmax1 Před měsícem

    If I understood it correctly this engine has been tested recently and we've found that our understanding of the laws of physics is correct, this doesn't break those laws and in fact doesn't work.
    Also for light travel or faster, as currently understood you can't go from zero to light speed in a really short space of time, as that would be a deadly amount of G's so you have to include how long it would take to accelerate to that speed. For 1G it's about a year.

  • @savtraffic
    @savtraffic Před 2 lety +30

    All breakthroughs have happened faster than anyone previously thought that they would, I have no doubt the next will also.

    • @glenwaldrop8166
      @glenwaldrop8166 Před 2 lety +1

      I think we'll see some pretty damn interesting propulsion tech in our lifetime.
      Not sure if FTL or even light speed is actually possible, I mean the fastest thing we can use now is light, and it would require 100% efficiency to go light speed while using light as a propellant...
      Some damn interesting things are coming though.

  • @srmatte1
    @srmatte1 Před 2 lety +47

    Until we have shields, light speed travel would end at the first contact with a spec of space dust

    • @rey_nemaattori
      @rey_nemaattori Před 2 lety +5

      Even at subluminal speeds, hitting a peddle at a few thousand km/s would probably end the whole ships career.
      In orbit in this day and age, a piece of space junk can rip a satellite apart and they often only have a difference in speed measured in single digits of km/s or even a few hundred m/s.

    • @JesusChristDenton_7
      @JesusChristDenton_7 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rey_nemaattori Then we need Ludicrous Speed.

    • @WrenchS13
      @WrenchS13 Před 2 lety

      @@JesusChristDenton_7 "Smoke if ya got em'" lol

    • @hecatesowl8688
      @hecatesowl8688 Před 2 lety +10

      @@rey_nemaattori With the warp drive, the ship isn't going fast, the ship isn't moving at all. The space around the ship is moving, he described the space as folding up in the back and down at the bottom. If this was possible, all items that would be in front of the ship would be distorted out of the space ships way. The reason the people inside wouldn't feel like they are moving is because they technically aren't moving.

    • @neontetra1000
      @neontetra1000 Před 2 lety

      Maybe they can create an atmosphere shield that will instantly Vaporise any small
      Debris in front of the bow . Replicating the effect of an object entering the atmosphere .

  • @standingbear9810
    @standingbear9810 Před rokem

    Buzz Aldrin said once that one could fly a brick if you gave it enough power. That Shawyer engine may surprise if one consults the Chinese REsearch. A paper from them some years ago talked about a fourth generation engine using superconductors and very high currents and voltages improved this thruster dramatically to the point that it could take off from earth to space with safety, and land on it as well. Smaller versions could be used for satellite 'stationing' to keep them in position in their proper orbits. Another engine recently proposed is a magnetic connection engine inspired by fusion where near fusion regimes could expel propellant at over 100,000 miles per second of a reflector in the rear of the craft for a very good space propulsion engine...look it up!

  • @robertlee9069
    @robertlee9069 Před měsícem

    in about 2000 I watched the 2nd firing of the ion drive engine at 5 W of power.....in a tiny backroom at NASA's NBL......with just a handful of people, the blue wafting plasma was a very strange sight. I feel very lucky to have witnessed this historical test.

  • @Teriyakicat69
    @Teriyakicat69 Před 2 lety +90

    “Were talking Ludicrous speed”
    Ludacris: “LUDAAAA!!”

    • @philliprogers964
      @philliprogers964 Před 2 lety +5

      Spaceballs lol

    • @a.t.hustle1583
      @a.t.hustle1583 Před 2 lety +7

      He said we gotta travel at "move bitch get out the way" speed 🤣

    • @huskerchuck9212
      @huskerchuck9212 Před 2 lety +1

      @@philliprogers964 What's the matter, Col. Sanders? Chicken?

    • @StephenJacksonRerumFontis
      @StephenJacksonRerumFontis Před 2 lety +1

      Are we stopped? Well why don't we take a five minute break ... smoke if you get 'em ...

    • @huskerchuck9212
      @huskerchuck9212 Před 2 lety +2

      @@StephenJacksonRerumFontis Thank you for pressing the self-destruct button.... LOL

  • @hw2007
    @hw2007 Před 2 lety +294

    I really hope this becomes a reality in my lifetime. I’m not hoping for space travel to become mainstream in my lifetime, I just want ONE successful test of an engine that could get to mars in under 6 months. That would be amazing.

    • @youngkeazy2806
      @youngkeazy2806 Před rokem +8

      You would have to travel 30,000mph non stop to do that.

    • @jeremiahbetty8890
      @jeremiahbetty8890 Před rokem +36

      @@youngkeazy2806 the fastest spacecraft speed was 364,660 mph(achieved by the parker solar probe). with mars being at its minimum distance to earth it is 33.9 million miles. not accounting for takeoff and landing, at a constant speed of 364,660 mph it would take the probe roughly 93 hours to reach mars. all hypothetical with many factors not considered but possible

    • @healthystrong9107
      @healthystrong9107 Před rokem +1

      Good l'UCL cause no matter wgat u think NO one gas or hors to space its all a Bunch if lies

    • @serpentzalaowhy8642
      @serpentzalaowhy8642 Před rokem +3

      Please don´t hope. Its never happen to human...Why ? Ask USA !!

    • @MisterUrbanWorld
      @MisterUrbanWorld Před rokem +6

      Realistic Virtual Reality will be the closest thing to this you'll ever experience in our LifeTime, and it'll still be glorious.

  • @user-nx4ti8xs1o
    @user-nx4ti8xs1o Před rokem

    I couldn't understand the warp drive, from where the energy source would come from?

  • @janwarnawa7946
    @janwarnawa7946 Před rokem

    Nou het duurd nog heel lang om die warpdrive uit te vinden en te later werken dat maak ik niet meer mee denk ik

  • @spondulix99
    @spondulix99 Před 2 lety +103

    I have a better and simpler idea based on my observation that every time I eat spaghetti with marinara sauce on it while wearing a white shirt, some of the red sauce always manages to jump by itself from the spaghetti onto the white shirt. My proposal is to utilize the force that drives the sauce to the shirt to propel a spacecraft forward through the depths of the universe.
    The proposal is simplicity itself. Simply suspend, from a pole hung out in front of the spacecraft, a net containing spaghetti well drenched in marinara sauce while the nose of the spacecraft is covered with white dress shirts. The force attracting the red sauce onto the white shirts will propel the spacecraft forward indefinitely, especially if a means is provided continuously to replenish the sauce on the spaghetti and the white shirts covering the nose of the spacecraft.

  • @SaturnSnapple
    @SaturnSnapple Před 2 lety +297

    This whole channel is like the junk food of science and space. That was 11 minutes of nothing.

    • @tuffue2724
      @tuffue2724 Před 2 lety +29

      Yes, it’s laughable

    • @ndrsg3013
      @ndrsg3013 Před 2 lety +10

      Thank you for saving my time👍 🖖

    • @michaelbrinks8089
      @michaelbrinks8089 Před 2 lety +3

      Like all those videos that talk about how the new super battery that'll change the world is almost here.

    • @skullboi642
      @skullboi642 Před 2 lety

      I agree but the only interesting bit was at the very end where he actually talks about faster than light travel

    • @themacso4157
      @themacso4157 Před 2 lety +1

      But it's the entrance for us legos which know nothing about this stuff, wouldn't mind if you could share some of those better quality channels

  • @drewthompson7457
    @drewthompson7457 Před rokem

    Then there's that thing in Relativity that states as an object approaches the speed of light, it's mass approaches infinity. We're gon'a need a bigger motor to push around something with the mass of the universe.

  • @user-gj8bv6tc9k
    @user-gj8bv6tc9k Před rokem +1

    the way we percieve space travel is not by engines because they break down the real breakthroug for space travel is simply the bending of gravity in space which einstein talked about in his law of relativity

  • @robertpunzell7607
    @robertpunzell7607 Před 2 lety +12

    Recent testing of the EM drive ( not NASA) initially showed thrust , but when they ' changed " the configuration of support points. they could no longer measure thrust and ' theorized ' that it was some sort of thermal heating of the scale . NASA takes these kinds of things into account anyway .

  • @sebastianhjdbejyu
    @sebastianhjdbejyu Před 2 lety +26

    In March 2021, physicists at the Dresden University of Technology (Germany) published three papers claiming that all results showing thrust were false positives explained by outside forces,
    When power flows into the EmDrive, the engine warms up. This also causes the fastening elements on the scale to warp, causing the scale to move to a new zero point. We were able to prevent that in an improved structure. Our measurements refute all EmDrive claims by at least 3 orders of magnitude.
    Additionally, the Dresden University scientists were able to replicate apparent thrusts similar to those measured by the NASA team, and then make them disappear again when measured using point suspension.

    • @thirdworldrider6991
      @thirdworldrider6991 Před 2 lety

      or maybe thats what scientists in rival countries want their counterparts to believe...it doesnt work stop looking into it. when in fact it can work, and they want to be the ones to make it.

    • @dezeefresh5257
      @dezeefresh5257 Před 2 lety

      Whn I saw 1 Reply, I thght it wd say " Uh ? "

  • @neelakantikalpana8960

    Bro I have a question can we use any other energy to bend the space time fabric

  • @charliekelsall4134
    @charliekelsall4134 Před rokem +1

    high speeds approaching light might be ok for unmanned probes but risky for astronauts because collisions with even sand size grains

  • @rockytalkndawoods3057
    @rockytalkndawoods3057 Před 2 lety +68

    You can't break the laws of physics,
    you can only discover their limits.

    • @jeromyzwiers1452
      @jeromyzwiers1452 Před 2 lety +1

      So called LAWS change.

    • @jeromyzwiers1452
      @jeromyzwiers1452 Před 2 lety +1

      It will NEVER happen if democrats keep stealing elections. Their so called infinite money is GOING to run out.

    • @rockytalkndawoods3057
      @rockytalkndawoods3057 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jeromyzwiers1452how embarrassing, is it to keep being a loser? 😆😆😆
      Do you even science bro?!

    • @attrennux0000
      @attrennux0000 Před 2 lety +2

      @@rockytalkndawoods3057 "even science bro" why did u word it like that

    • @rockytalkndawoods3057
      @rockytalkndawoods3057 Před 2 lety

      @@attrennux0000 cause it's funny.

  • @DotKom01
    @DotKom01 Před 2 lety +49

    Imagine how cool it would feel to say "we're jumping to light speed"

  • @ph8429
    @ph8429 Před rokem

    This video oversells several of these concepts to a staggering degree

  • @MichaelJohnson-dt8tv
    @MichaelJohnson-dt8tv Před rokem

    Thought #2, No matter what kind of engines that generate thrust are developed, the speeds they can attain will be limited to matching the speed of whatever is ejected from them to generate the thrust. So even if an engine’s thrust was generated by expelling say, electrons or photons, the spacecraft itself could only theoretically reach the speed of light, but it could not exceed that speed. Einstein theorized that as the speed of light is approached, mass increases to the point of infinity. That implies Impossibility, at least in that environment. The idea of warp engines is intriguing, but the concept seeks to alter the environment of space itself. Suppose someone- somewhere- has figured out how to alter the effect of the environment instead. Consider the laminar flow airfoil. It didn’t alter the environment, it altered its effect. Back to infinite mass. And FTL propulsion. Consider the effects of mass on gravity. Gravity can equate to acceleration. If unlimited mass can be generated and regulated, might it equate to unlimited gravity and therefore unlimited acceleration? Might someone, somewhere, with a background of thousands or perhaps millions of years of technological advancement have figured all this out? Might we, at some point? It’s certainly worth thinking about!

  • @multiversevariant4944
    @multiversevariant4944 Před 2 lety +102

    So basically we just have to warp space around the space ship.

    • @jerometruitt2731
      @jerometruitt2731 Před 2 lety +1

      Yup but the only know way to do that is with physical mass and the amount of mass required to generate significant warping is near impossible to acquire...something like 10% the mass of the sun.

    • @bleedlifedry
      @bleedlifedry Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like the premise of that movie Event Horizon.

    • @danielstokker
      @danielstokker Před 2 lety

      Yup technicly you wouldnt even be moving you would move space wich makes it possible to travel very large distances without experiencing time dialation meaning if you travel to another star and back the same time has passed on earth then in your spaceship without a warp bubble this would have huge time dialation effects resulting in paradoxes you would get back to earth maybe in 2 min but 200 years would have passed on earth

    • @danielstokker
      @danielstokker Před 2 lety

      @@jerometruitt2731 not impossible the enegy requirements will go down b4cause 15 years ago they thought they needed the energy of the entire universe thats A LOT more then a planet the size of jupiter youll see in the future its not gonne take more then a jerrycan of that stuff

    • @Z0mb13ta11ahase
      @Z0mb13ta11ahase Před 2 lety

      @@danielstokker how would it end in paradoxes if you're only moving forward in time?

  • @oprahwinfree2704
    @oprahwinfree2704 Před 2 lety +106

    Light-speed engines don't solve the problems of acceleration forces on the human body, nor running into debris that would disintegrate you instantly no matter how big is the particle you hit. Light-speed ultimately doesn't make sense... Unless you can alter your mass at the same time by interaction with the Higgs field, and also perhaps if you have some kind of "anti-gravity" that you could "project" in front of your ship that would "blow" debris/gases/particles away from you as you traveled through them. Charting from star to star might be simple enough, as long as you don't travel at full speed through the solar systems of any stars...

    • @Omar-kl3xp
      @Omar-kl3xp Před 2 lety +5

      Going at the speed of light also means that u are also going into the future and the time on earth will be a lot slower compared to the people on the ship so it would be pointless to go at the speed of light in the first place .

    • @jvelez5381
      @jvelez5381 Před 2 lety +1

      Phase dampers that actually keep you out of phase enough just enough that the acceleration doesn't collapse you into nothingness

    • @sully9832
      @sully9832 Před 2 lety +2

      Lol you trying so hard to sound smart as everything you said was wrong

    • @oprahwinfree2704
      @oprahwinfree2704 Před 2 lety +9

      @@sully9832 Not trying hard at all. Name one thing I said that you know for certain is wrong. You've got nothing.

    • @swimrocketeer9
      @swimrocketeer9 Před 2 lety +8

      @@oprahwinfree2704 I guarantee you he has nothing

  • @Raja-kr8ul
    @Raja-kr8ul Před rokem

    Respected vedio sir, your placed explanations are excellent. Thanks.

  • @soto44123
    @soto44123 Před rokem

    using mylar in space, and why , was an exhibit at a science Fair in Cleveland Ohio when I was in in the 4th grade late 1950s.

  • @antonmoric1469
    @antonmoric1469 Před 2 lety +10

    Possibly related to the Biefeld/Brown Effect, wherein given a high enough voltage, a capacitor shows movement towards the positive plate. Propulsion is proven to not be ionic wind, as this effect is seen in a properly charged capacitor that is in a vacuum.

  • @bloodwolf2609
    @bloodwolf2609 Před 2 lety +24

    It would be so funny to be like “alright guys time to test the engine” and it just vanishes. I know that’s not how it works but it seems like a funny plot for future cartoons or something.

  • @flash51050
    @flash51050 Před rokem +1

    What's wrong with light wave element drive like the one that runs the TR --C

  • @atrvd960
    @atrvd960 Před 4 měsíci +1

    I hope I get to see us building something that will travel at least half light speed and explore nearby star systems in my lifetime.

    • @dastanrazykov6879
      @dastanrazykov6879 Před 3 měsíci

      You do understand that getting to high speed requires as much energy/fuel as slowing down

  • @nickbauer541
    @nickbauer541 Před 2 lety +18

    We started with sails across the seas, we start with sails across space. History repeats itself.

    • @themacso4157
      @themacso4157 Před 2 lety

      True indeed

    • @themacso4157
      @themacso4157 Před 2 lety

      @@rojeliotamayo171 what about getting an auto-mac in Titan? That would truly be history repeating itself

  • @Malassaf97
    @Malassaf97 Před 2 lety +39

    I hope we will witness "Ludicrous" speed in our lifetime

    • @rafaelortega4151
      @rafaelortega4151 Před 2 lety +5

      Moveeeee bitch get out the waaayyy getttt out the way bitch get out the wayyyy!!! 🎵🎶

    • @absbi0000
      @absbi0000 Před 2 lety +1

      Get a tesla

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 2 lety +6

      We're all going to plaid

    • @GRosa250
      @GRosa250 Před 2 lety

      I hope they can figure out how to extend my lifetime so I can be around longer to see these things happen

  • @DavidByrden1
    @DavidByrden1 Před rokem

    Factual error at 1:20
    "Rockets have their limits, including how fast they can push a spacecraft".
    The truth is, rockets can push you arbitrarily fast, if you just provide fuel. Only "c" itself is a limiting speed, and that is not the rocket's fault.

  • @jamesdylandean614
    @jamesdylandean614 Před 7 měsíci +3

    Much of the technology of our time was thought impossible at one time, practically anything can become a reality with advancing knowledge and the ability to use it.

  • @FrancisXLord
    @FrancisXLord Před 2 lety +35

    There was the Daedalus project, which never went past the design stage due largely to the fact that it used nuclear propulsion and it was designed at the height of anti-nuclear sentiment in the US. Apparently it would have been able to hit 12% the speed of light, which would have got us to Barnard's Star within 50 years or so.

    • @papakilo-2750
      @papakilo-2750 Před 2 lety +4

      sauce

    • @FrancisXLord
      @FrancisXLord Před 2 lety +1

      @@papakilo-2750 Encyclopedia of Space by Ian Ridpath I believe. I read it as a kid.

    • @JohnSmithGlobeLie
      @JohnSmithGlobeLie Před rokem +3

      Francis X. Lord
      Once upon a time in a far-off distant galaxy..... lol
      CGI and Cartoons will make you beLIEve in anything.

    • @retroman5383
      @retroman5383 Před rokem +2

      @@JohnSmithGlobeLie it's real

    • @tryptime
      @tryptime Před rokem +3

      honestly can't imagine us
      ever building anything that goes over 2% the speed of light, which is still an outstanding speed

  • @harrybarrow6222
    @harrybarrow6222 Před 2 lety +33

    One thing that always bothers me about near light-speed travel is that if you hit a grain of interstellar dust at that speed it could be catastrophic.
    When you can travel faster, you can travel further. The volume you sweep through will be greater, and the probability of encountering a dust grain will be greater too.

    • @BrokenLifeCycle
      @BrokenLifeCycle Před 2 lety +2

      Wipple shields, I guess.

    • @phantom_blade555
      @phantom_blade555 Před 2 lety +2

      We’re going to need some pretty impressive technology we’re going to need cameras good enough to see the grains of dust while traveling and we’re going to need AI to be able to calculate quick enough to dodge this dust

    • @clarkhollingsworth9933
      @clarkhollingsworth9933 Před 2 lety +8

      Or if you create a bubble of space time as a buffer zone, it makes dangerous space dust irrelevant

    • @clarkhollingsworth9933
      @clarkhollingsworth9933 Před 2 lety +3

      @Loli4lyf because we don’t actually know how to?

    • @brettpresta-valachovic3631
      @brettpresta-valachovic3631 Před 2 lety +2

      @Loli4lyf Well, that's what a space time bubble will do. Any dust, alpha particles, etc... will just flow around the space craft.

  • @CDTLegends
    @CDTLegends Před rokem +14

    i think maybe warp drive might be the best thing to use as a space engine .

    • @mynameisgus7515
      @mynameisgus7515 Před rokem +1

      He said that you need more energy than the universe to power it

    • @meawiyaothman7872
      @meawiyaothman7872 Před rokem +1

      @@mynameisgus7515 i thought that problem was solved and now it’s only the Energie of 8 jupiters or something

    • @mikuls.8871
      @mikuls.8871 Před rokem +1

      Quit watching star treks

  • @robertpaiva4481
    @robertpaiva4481 Před 21 dnem

    I've always believed that a drive system could be built by using microwaves could be used, not by using the Roman candle thrusts, but just the opposite, but by thrusting the microwaves ahead of the vehicle and opening a vortex hole in gravity space time ahead of the ship, and the next part of this physics is to use magnetics electrifying the surface of the craft and this has already been proven to be used on our own jets, as it was wrote in the Popular Science Magazine back around (2010?). So, by electrifying/electromagneticing the surface of jets, they can get some terrific speeds: in fact, possibly this may be how hyper sonic cruise rocket bombs might work. But using microwaves to open up ahead, a vortex hole in gravity space time ahead of the craft then electrifying the surface of said craft and letting gravity take you where you want to go is not to far fetched. One recent astrophysicist once did a paper stating that the speed of gravity is to be at 20 billion times faster than the speed of light.