Cheating Reality

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • So many of hopes and dreams for colonizing space rely on faster than light travel, and yet the ability to move between stars in moment seems against the laws of reality... but perhaps we can break those rules.
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    Credits:
    Faster Than Light Travel: Cheating Reality
    Science & Futurism with Isaac Arthur
    Episode 297, July 1, 2021
    Produced, Written, and Narrated by Isaac Arthur
    Editors:
    Darius Said
    Matthew Campbell
    Cover Art:
    Jakub Grygier www.artstation...
    Music by Stellardrone: stellardrone.b...

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @jpaulc441
    @jpaulc441 Před 3 lety +658

    ...and the bartender said "we don't serve hypothetical faster-than-light particles here!"
    A tachyon walks into a bar...

    • @bobologic6849
      @bobologic6849 Před 3 lety +45

      is it better to have theoretical bar tab, an imaginary bar tab or a hypothetical bar tab?

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester Před 3 lety +16

      !ekoj a su llet , C luaPJ

    • @stefanr8232
      @stefanr8232 Před 3 lety +37

      @@bobologic6849 I'll take the negative bar tab. Everyone drink up!

    • @soaringbumnm8374
      @soaringbumnm8374 Před 3 lety +8

      Tachyon Lives Matter

    • @agalah408
      @agalah408 Před 3 lety +8

      Who better to raise the bar on speed of light thresholds than a Bartender?

  • @MultiNacnud
    @MultiNacnud Před 3 lety +500

    The notion of negative cookies, well that really takes the biscuit.

  • @a-blivvy-yus
    @a-blivvy-yus Před 3 lety +158

    The "stealing negative cookies" example makes me imagine someone actually getting charged with a crime for giving someone a gift. "You're under arrest for stealing negative one cookies from this man" - "I gave him a cookie, I didn't steal anything!" - "that's a confession!"

    • @tonikotinurmi2582
      @tonikotinurmi2582 Před 3 lety +3

      It often triggers me how in some countries confession counts even close to one bit of 100 bits of evidence. Oh, except taxation, one has to proof taxman is wrong of course.
      Already proved effect-cause backwards go can ! So, make a tea-party of lawyers, mathematicians and taxmen, they're bound to find way to cheat reality. SEE ? They already did it, now they're semi-respected almost human beings !

    • @official-obama
      @official-obama Před 2 lety +3

      being put on a trial for stealing a cookie

    • @a-blivvy-yus
      @a-blivvy-yus Před 2 lety +4

      @@official-obama Given how strict EU regulations are getting about them, it might happen sooner than you think!
      ...wait wrong cookies.

    • @official-obama
      @official-obama Před 2 lety

      @@a-blivvy-yus cookies are a string of text that tells the website "hey, i'm me!". when you steal it, you can post scam videos, get someone banned, steal their money, or even edit their esolang pages!

    • @a-blivvy-yus
      @a-blivvy-yus Před 2 lety +1

      @@official-obama That was the "wrong cookie" I was referencing in my reply to you, yes.

  • @bigdopamine9343
    @bigdopamine9343 Před 3 lety +468

    Negative numbers do exist. I’ve had a negative balance in my checking account and the effects were very real.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +40

      Well really that was more relativistic, you looked like you had negative money, but actually you were just looking at someone else's money which you now had to pay them back but you had zero money, just like negative velocity this is all perspective.

    • @Mike-sp6tt
      @Mike-sp6tt Před 3 lety +20

      @@atashgallagher5139 you must be fun at parties

    • @stephenlangsl67
      @stephenlangsl67 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes. It's called an overdrawn bank account. It's when You take out more money from You're bank account than what You have in it. Not a good experience at all. Sorry to hear that happened to You Spoiler Alert.

    • @brandonporter6223
      @brandonporter6223 Před 2 lety +16

      For what its worth I found your joke funny.

    • @premiumquinn
      @premiumquinn Před 2 lety +4

      @@Mike-sp6tt you too

  • @bobologic6849
    @bobologic6849 Před 3 lety +228

    “And again, just because it works in math doesn’t mean it does in reality.”
    Isaac Arthur

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety +13

      I'm starting to suspect the opposite. That things work in reality only because they do work in math. That math made the universe what it is.

    • @sweetreamer5101
      @sweetreamer5101 Před 3 lety +2

      @@henrytjernlund I've had my suspicions as well lol. It's just fucked up enough to be true.

    • @outlawscar3328
      @outlawscar3328 Před 3 lety +18

      @@henrytjernlund Well sure, but the point is that just because you can make some assumptions that define a pretty-looking equation that solves your issues doesn't mean it will line up with experimental results. After decades of string theory stagnating, I think it's far more important for a theory to make testable predictions than for it to have elegant looking equations.

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety +5

      @@outlawscar3328 Agreed. But if some work of math results is a structure (Standard Model) which is similar what is in reality then that seems worth looking into deeper. And what about a null result. Such as a theory predicting no new Fermions and experiments failing to find any new Fermions.

    • @somethinglikethat2176
      @somethinglikethat2176 Před 3 lety +3

      @@henrytjernlund isn't there some joke about mathematicians trying to invent some useless maths but every time they do some scientists somewhere finds a use for it?

  • @WyrdBlogger01
    @WyrdBlogger01 Před 3 lety +610

    The speed of light is basically the universe's maximum refresh rate.

    • @bobross4886
      @bobross4886 Před 3 lety +85

      Planck time

    • @jpaulc441
      @jpaulc441 Před 3 lety +96

      Imagine if you could go faster than light - but it would cause lag and possibly freeze/crash reality.

    • @somerandom3257
      @somerandom3257 Před 3 lety +62

      @@jpaulc441 or you start lagging around through your ship and when you trip you might accidentally shoot into space like a buggy game

    • @isaacarthurSFIA
      @isaacarthurSFIA  Před 3 lety +234

      It does sometimes eerily feel that way

    • @bobross4886
      @bobross4886 Před 3 lety +6

      @@isaacarthurSFIA Hi Isaac!

  • @TheCrazyCapMaster
    @TheCrazyCapMaster Před 3 lety +484

    That intro pun just took a few years off my life 🤣

  • @Leonyithas
    @Leonyithas Před 3 lety +544

    “You cant go faster than the speed of light!”
    “Of course not. That's why scientists increased the speed of light in 2208.”

  • @julianwalde4810
    @julianwalde4810 Před 3 lety +144

    "Thou shalt not violate causality within my historic light cone ... or else!" -TheBigE

    • @WokeandProud
      @WokeandProud Před 3 lety +17

      @Portal Opener You really should loosen that tinfoil hat buddy lol.

    • @WokeandProud
      @WokeandProud Před 3 lety +7

      @Portal Opener Time is relative depending on location so if you sent a signal to someone FTL who had a relative time to yours two seconds slower then you, you would infact talking with them in the past breaking causality and creating a paradox therefore it is impossible.

    • @thedripkingofangmar6778
      @thedripkingofangmar6778 Před 3 lety +5

      @Portal Opener yeah, log off the internet pal, looks like you really need It. Go for a walk

    • @jhwheuer
      @jhwheuer Před 3 lety +6

      Ah the ole Eschaton… lovely memories of singular skies…

    • @isaacarthurSFIA
      @isaacarthurSFIA  Před 3 lety +18

      Singularity Sky was a good book :)

  • @MelkorHimself
    @MelkorHimself Před 3 lety +283

    The bartender said, "We don't serve faster-than-light particles here."
    A tachyon walks into a bar.

    • @ctakitimu
      @ctakitimu Před 3 lety +7

      Oh this is copied, thought it was an original

    • @dr.velious5411
      @dr.velious5411 Před 3 lety +2

      That must have really hurt, especially at that speed.

    • @ctakitimu
      @ctakitimu Před 3 lety +4

      Sometimes people will acknowledge the comment wasn't theirs initially, but I guess there's a big chance you'll get away with the plagiarism - and there's no consequences if you don't

    • @Alex-02
      @Alex-02 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ctakitimu The other one was copied, this one just arrived later

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz Před 3 lety +87

    19:40 A "negative twenty dollar bill" is called a "promissory note". As far as being issued by the federal government, those would be "bonds". T-bills exist.

    • @cavalierqoon
      @cavalierqoon Před 3 lety +12

      I thought the same thing exact thing, but then realized those aren't actually negative-Jacksons. A promissory note is a positive bill for negative dollars. Money itself is also imaginary (and mathematically useful) - there is no such physical object as a 'dollar' only 'dollar bills' or 'dollar coins' and so on.

    • @Lusa_Iceheart
      @Lusa_Iceheart Před 3 lety +14

      Also the fact that US Federal Reserve Notes are debt. I owe you $20s in REAL goods and services, so I give you a $20 bill representing my debt, the bill itself isn't really worth much besides a bit of denim and cotton. On the Micro level, it's just passing debt (negative value) around in circles while at the Macro level the Fed tries to pay off those same debts with more debt, pushes into existence even more of those near worthless bills devaluing those little debt contracts that already exist and just running this little game around and around. Who or what is actually putting value in this system and paying the debt? Who the hell knows. The entire world economy is built on imaginary numbers. Really, Isaac shouldn't have brought up money as an example of real numbers, if anything it's proof that trying to compound a negative value is nonsensical and doomed to failure.

    • @extropiantranshuman
      @extropiantranshuman Před 3 lety

      when you give someone a $20, you have negative $20 in your wallet. Does your wallet have a negative $20 bill? Sure, because it was in your wallet at some time and now it's gone - you can't see the negative $20, but know it's there.

    • @extropiantranshuman
      @extropiantranshuman Před 3 lety

      Yes, a negative $20 can be represented as anything, as others said goods and stuff, but it's not a true negative $20 bill. It's a representation. It's like drawing a $20 bill on a board - that's not real - it's a representation that makes you feel the value on that board is $20 when it's not.

    • @Lusa_Iceheart
      @Lusa_Iceheart Před 3 lety +1

      @@extropiantranshuman There is no need for a negative $20 bill b/c debt is already a negative value. The bill is the representation of that negative value (called debt) that's exchanged for things of real, positive value (goods and services). If we had such a thing as a -$20 bill, it'd actually be a double negative. We don't think of fiat currency as debt, but it goes back around to the premise of currency in the first place. My days labor could be traded for an ounce of silver, which in of itself is valuable, that I could then in turn trade to the fishmonger for a fresh fish and a baker for a fresh loaf of bread. We replaced that small medium of trade passing hands with something that is not intrinsically valuable in any meaningful way. The 'Federal Reserve Note' is instead backed entirely on 'faith' (fiat) in a quasi-governmental institution. These bills are a debt contract with the US government, they guarantee that my $20 bill will hold the value of $20s. Rather than the transaction simply ending when I trade my silver to the baker or fishmonger, those merchants now take on my contract with the US government and assume the value of the debt they owed me. The bill is a contract owed (but only theoretically payable) to the bearer. Fiat is debt traded around and around. Debt is in of itself negative value. Economics is a really convoluted and counter-intuitive field, I fully empathize with that, lol.

  • @DestroyerWill
    @DestroyerWill Před 3 lety +53

    “I guess they didn’t see it coming” 😂 that’s a real astrophysicist dad joke… I like it

  • @SzaposJogdan2733
    @SzaposJogdan2733 Před 3 lety +90

    How the hell did I not see that pun coming.

    • @TheReaverOfDarkness
      @TheReaverOfDarkness Před 3 lety +5

      Because it was traveling toward you at a speed equal to or greater than the speed of the signal with which you perceived it.

  • @romzeezthegreat8585
    @romzeezthegreat8585 Před 3 lety +63

    Would be a sad day for that first light speed pilot when he realizes he just travelled to heat death 3 seconds after spooling up his drive.

    • @specter86fl
      @specter86fl Před 3 lety +17

      remember the movie pandora, where they thought they had traveled for so long the stars had went out, yea, fuck that lol

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +2

      @@specter86fl Just remember that a photon can be created out of the blaze of the first star, bounce around for millions of years inside of that star before eventually escaping, then spend billions of years travelling through space and time to reach the earth only to eventually help some weirdo tan their asshole. and in all of that time none passed for them.

    • @redforest9269
      @redforest9269 Před 3 lety +1

      @@specter86fl What movie? Can't find it.

    • @piscesmikey
      @piscesmikey Před 3 lety +1

      @@specter86fl Can you provide some more info, like Red Forest, I can't seem to find anything about it, and it sounds intriguing!

    • @redforest9269
      @redforest9269 Před 3 lety

      @@specter86fl Preferrably, say, an IMDB link or something, or at least a description of "the one directed by this person with this other person as the lead".

  • @invalidstring3447
    @invalidstring3447 Před 3 lety +71

    Could the logical problem of FTL making the fermi paradox so much worse in a scifi setting be avoided, if the propolsion method requires some sort of infrastructure at the destination, like both ends of a womhole needing to be constructed at one place and then seperated at sublight speeds?

    • @chrisiver8506
      @chrisiver8506 Před 3 lety +8

      You could make a warp drive like this, with a path that puts negative energy behind you and positive in front.

    • @kinguin7
      @kinguin7 Před 3 lety +3

      This is mentioned in a previous video as a possible solution.

    • @malcolmt7883
      @malcolmt7883 Před 3 lety +4

      Good point. Space travel is easy in concept, but extremely hard in reality.

    • @chrisiver8506
      @chrisiver8506 Před 3 lety +5

      @John Smith You must be an alien posing as a generic human "john smith"

    • @kinguin7
      @kinguin7 Před 3 lety +2

      @John Smith cool story bro.
      Turns out every idea is made up though....

  • @IndustrialBonecraft
    @IndustrialBonecraft Před 3 lety +127

    Five minutes in: "Voids of existence are appearing at random all over the shop from nowhere in particular." Well then.
    "Tachyons cheat reality by being a particle that exists on the other side of the light-speed barrier" OH SHIT I'M FEELING IT.

  • @procrastinator99
    @procrastinator99 Před 3 lety +58

    "Negative cookies" is the saddest phrase I've ever heard......

  • @neurocell159
    @neurocell159 Před 3 lety +76

    Hopefully, one day we are able to create the ability for FTL.
    For now we'll just have to stick to sci-fi, and its ability to travel at the speed of plot.

    • @romanplays1
      @romanplays1 Před 3 lety +12

      but with scientists being used as political pawns nowadays...same with some doctors (looking at you fauchi) i dont see it happening nearly as fast as i would mere years ago.

    • @Alex_Barbosa
      @Alex_Barbosa Před 3 lety +18

      @@romanplays1 your not a Covid denier are you?

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +6

      @@romanplays1 I will give you the benefit of the doubt and assume you are referring to how science was delayed hamstringed and kneecapped by politics and stupidity. Or like the clusterfuck that is SLS, or with scientists being used as pawns to promote stupid shit like lead in the air is fine or climate extremification isn't real.

    • @housetheunstoppablessed4846
      @housetheunstoppablessed4846 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Alex_Barbosa COVID or not, if you think that scientists can't be bought as easily as politicians then you are foolish. Scientists are human and are not infalliable.

    • @Alex_Barbosa
      @Alex_Barbosa Před 2 lety +2

      @@housetheunstoppablessed4846 a single scientist can, but believe it or not, the scientific field is not the most lucrative. People go into the field because they are passionate and want to learn and use that knowledge to improve humanity. They are not in it for the money because money simply isn't that high or consistent in the field. And scientific research and development is peer reviewed. Meaning no one person or small group of people can make decisions on what is or isn't scientific fact. It takes the entire scientific community to review and test each other for their flaws. Everything is always in question and open to being changed for better results.
      Basically what I'm saying is you can't buy the entire scientific community because the majority are not in the field for money and taking bribes to lie about their research would be antithetical to their chosen path in life. It's ok to be skeptical, that's what science is, but at some point you have to trust the people who have given their lives to becoming experts in their field, because if we don't, then the entire foundation of all technical fields falls apart. We can't be experts about everything so we have to trust each others word when it comes to topics that they're more proficient in than us.

  • @ericcomstock3237
    @ericcomstock3237 Před 3 lety +40

    Ah, cheating reality. A favorite trick in unsuspecting video games. And a further reason to contemplate reality being a video game.

    • @Pythagoras1plus
      @Pythagoras1plus Před 3 lety +6

      it is
      gg

    • @AutismIsUnstoppable
      @AutismIsUnstoppable Před 3 lety +6

      Graphics are amazing but the story sucks.

    • @Pythagoras1plus
      @Pythagoras1plus Před 3 lety +3

      doesn't matter, there are many amazing side quests. currently lvl'ing up magic and shadow work. these quests are quite challenging tho 😅

    • @cavalierqoon
      @cavalierqoon Před 3 lety +3

      just remember, it's all fun and games until Valve Anti-Cheat gets implemented.

    • @pauljs75
      @pauljs75 Před 3 lety +2

      I think most would rather play through than attempt a speed-run though.

  • @R_C420
    @R_C420 Před 3 lety +47

    Nothing can exceed the SoL
    Space can expand faster than the SoL
    Space is "nothing". Zero mass.
    So to get to infinity and beyond, Buzz Lightyear needs to go on a diet.

    • @singularitysquaredllc.895
      @singularitysquaredllc.895 Před 3 lety +2

      Space is not nothing.

    • @lucofparis4819
      @lucofparis4819 Před 3 lety +1

      @@singularitysquaredllc.895 Indeed, and that's not what he said. The air quotes and subsequent clarification weren't there for aesthetic, the use of the word nothing, however, was. He chose it for the appeal of symmetry.

    • @ahmetmutlu348
      @ahmetmutlu348 Před 3 lety +2

      mathematically there is no way do define infinity. as its name defines it says no end defined. still its not being defined is not a proof of it doesnt have an end.
      its just defines the point of end is far beyond reachable limits. but no technical or mathematical definition that it will not end. :D you need infine charge to reach to infinite. wich means you have to charge infinite time. and as you start from 1 :D ...

    • @MisterZimbabwe
      @MisterZimbabwe Před 3 lety +4

      So then instead of designing our ships to travel at the speed of light, we need to design ships that travel at the speed of SPACE!
      Brilliant, problem solved, just make an engine that runs on space

    • @willb5278
      @willb5278 Před 3 lety +1

      I mean, if a ship could delete the space between it and it's destination, that'd technically work.
      You probably need a PhD to describe what that would look like if it passed next to you though.

  • @harmsc12
    @harmsc12 Před 3 lety +43

    "Events happening after their cause, for instance."
    As events usually do.

  • @TraditionalAnglican
    @TraditionalAnglican Před 3 lety +9

    0:15 - “I guess they just couldn’t see it coming.”
    Eddie Murphy - “Laugh or don’t laugh. None of this groaning s**t!”

  • @Totalinternalreflection
    @Totalinternalreflection Před 3 lety +65

    That opener gave me life, you’re my hero haha

  • @sterrre1
    @sterrre1 Před 3 lety +4

    There was a recent study that found that by using certain geometry we can create a warp bubble with normal matter, it'll take a Jupiter's mass worth of energy so it's still not very plausible but better than negative matter.

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety +1

      Is this geometric algebra or something else?

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      I thought that they got it down to around the mass of the moon or something.

    • @gammarayneutrino8413
      @gammarayneutrino8413 Před 3 lety

      I heard something like that as well, but the problem is still accelerating the bubble you created to above the speed of light, which is still impossible.

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety +1

      @@gammarayneutrino8413 But exactly maybe not. Does empty space itself have mass? The bubble may not have a speed limit. The bubble might isolate what's inside to the space outside. When I write my own science fiction I look for plausibility, that's all. If you are going to exclude FTL from all stories then you're going to have a lot of limited freaking boring stories.

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety +1

      In a physics FB group I joined a discussion asking of space-time. can move. Someone said yes. not sure what that would mean or be like but maybe in a super-fluid sort of way the motion might be effectively friction-less. What do we really know about space-time and it's properties. Do we even know if it is Euclidean, spherical, hyperbolic, or something else we haven't figured out yet.

  • @michaelboutilier555
    @michaelboutilier555 Před 3 lety +62

    Just found your vids a few days ago. I've been binging them ever since! Great explanations of complex topics!

    • @Totalinternalreflection
      @Totalinternalreflection Před 3 lety +2

      Welcome

    • @charleswettish8701
      @charleswettish8701 Před 3 lety +4

      Oh man, I'd love to be newly discovering Isaac!
      This man has given me many hours of enjoyment, expanded my understanding of the universe, and improved my critical thinking skills.

    • @Totalinternalreflection
      @Totalinternalreflection Před 3 lety +2

      @@charleswettish8701 me too

    • @Rattus-Norvegicus
      @Rattus-Norvegicus Před 3 lety +1

      Might I suggest Parallax Nick and SEA, both are fantastic channels. Also Event Horizon and John Michael Godier.

    • @lucasgibbs4879
      @lucasgibbs4879 Před 3 lety +1

      Also astrum, cool worlds and kosmo

  • @CyborusYT
    @CyborusYT Před 3 lety +27

    In which Isaac goes on a rant about how negative mass doesn't necessarily exist

    • @Totalinternalreflection
      @Totalinternalreflection Před 3 lety +1

      @Portal Opener how so?

    • @Totalinternalreflection
      @Totalinternalreflection Před 3 lety +1

      @Portal Opener That’s a shit ton of reading, I’ll come back to this and give my thoughts in a few hours.

    • @Rifky809
      @Rifky809 Před 3 lety +4

      @Portal Opener ookay buddy I think you really spend too much time on the internet.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      @Portal Opener You would be a great techno babel writer as a science fiction author, it's too bad that you waste your potential on being a moron on the internet. go write a Sci Fi book, i'm sure it would be cool if you put this much effort into it.

  • @seansargeant7966
    @seansargeant7966 Před 3 lety +142

    Well... I for one will keep hoping that negative mass is a thing, and some nerd will name it 'eezo' while giggling profusely.

  • @CMacK1294
    @CMacK1294 Před 3 lety +20

    That ship 2 minutes in vaguely reminds me of the BC-304.
    *Happy Stargate Noises*

    • @SomeKindaSpy
      @SomeKindaSpy Před 3 lety

      Kree! :D

    • @darkleome5409
      @darkleome5409 Před 3 lety

      Cue Carter's elevator humming

    • @isaacarthurSFIA
      @isaacarthurSFIA  Před 3 lety +2

      I am guessing that's its inspiration, weirdly I always thought the Daedelus was a shout out to the Trek Federation's side nacelle setup

  • @matta5498
    @matta5498 Před 3 lety +15

    Pockets of space emerging randomly are why I'm fat.

  • @pizzas4breakfast
    @pizzas4breakfast Před 3 lety +12

    We have a speed of light because the graphics won't load fast enough if you're moving faster than that.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +1

      SO what you are saying is that we don't have aliens because the simulator of our univers has a shitty GPU? what an asshole, buy a 6900^8 XT at least.

  • @sothasil7716
    @sothasil7716 Před 3 lety +3

    To be perfectly honest if we can figure out FTL travel it will be
    1. Wormholes and/or Warp Drives using gravity or mass manipulation
    2. Higher Dimensional Shortcuts like Hyperspace, Slipspace, Subspace, etc
    Also Mars is not several light years away but a few light minutes away
    Alpha Centauri is about 4 light years away

    • @sothasil7716
      @sothasil7716 Před 3 lety +1

      @John Smith based on current information and theories

  • @Inglonias
    @Inglonias Před 3 lety +36

    The best way to explain why math says things and reality says no is that we made math up (and I should note that this is one view of math, there are others). In this view, math is a fiction that happens to be very useful when analyzing reality, but it is just that: Fiction. PBS Idea Channel did a good video about this, but the reason math is this way is the same reason that language is this way - we made both of them up, and they're totally arbitrary. If we had a better way to analyze the nature of reality than mathematics, we would use that instead.

    • @boobah5643
      @boobah5643 Před 3 lety +9

      Of course, one of the other major views of math is that it's discovered, not invented.
      At any rate, math doesn't care if the numbers you plug into an equation that models a phenomenon are physically possible, or even meaningful. You can still crunch the numbers and get a result.

    • @blkgardner
      @blkgardner Před 3 lety +6

      I believe that math is objective. However, all currently known physical equations are approximations, and we do not know if the approximations break down under certain conditions. For example, the equations of Newtonian physics say that any arbitrarily high velocity can be achieved by a applying a sufficient amount of kinetic energy to an object.
      We know that the current relativity is an approximation because it can not explain quantum effects. Or more generally, we know that all of physics in an approximation because research is still going on in that field.

  • @charleswettish8701
    @charleswettish8701 Před 3 lety +15

    The laser point moving across the surface of Mars "faster than light" is a concept that I'm sure, if I could fully wrap my mind around, would really help me understand this subject.
    I kind of get it, I think. The point may go from one side of Mars to the other faster than light, but from the perspective of the point, no info goes directly from one local to the other, all info moves through the source of the laser and back to Mars, at the speed of causality.
    Am I thinking about this correctly?

    • @Ottriman
      @Ottriman Před 3 lety +12

      The photons have a speed, being fast enough to take minutes to get to mars. You can flick the laser to point at different areas of mars very quickly, changing your angle really quickly. Then that gets multiplied over a large distance until your "point" is traveling "ftl" in terms of distance between when it was still and when you moved it.
      But the effects still only happen at light speed, the laser flies to mars at that speed.
      One can almost imagine the laser like a water hose, you can flick a water hose to point to a new spot quickly, but the water still takes the normal time to get to the targeted location.

    • @thek2despot426
      @thek2despot426 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Ottriman That analogy of the water hose is perfect!

    • @charleswettish8701
      @charleswettish8701 Před 3 lety +3

      ​@@Ottriman Thankyou!
      The hose analogy really worked for me!
      I have a way of "visualizing" it now. (pun intended) ;)

    • @benjaminstarkey9045
      @benjaminstarkey9045 Před 3 lety

      @John Smith dude why bother repeating that 300 times we get it you are very contrarian congrats

  • @Arrynek01
    @Arrynek01 Před 3 lety +4

    So... A whacky idea here.
    1. FTL is not possible because it would break causality.
    2. galaxies are moving away from us faster than light and do not interact with us. There is no causality between us and them.
    3. How about an FTL drive that goes from here to one of those galaxies that are no longer in a causality loop with us? A drive that works on ridiculous distances but not up close.
    Doesn't sound like it should break anything.

    • @TiredRoman
      @TiredRoman Před 3 lety +2

      could be a fun engine idea, one caveat would be that any point in our region would only be able to access a single point in their region.

  • @donaldhobson8873
    @donaldhobson8873 Před 3 lety +18

    Most fiction that doesn't contain timetravel is also full of plotholes. Many authors write plot holes.

    • @LOUDMOUTHTYRONE
      @LOUDMOUTHTYRONE Před 3 lety +4

      Plot armor is a thing for the main protagonist.

    • @isaacarthurSFIA
      @isaacarthurSFIA  Před 3 lety +13

      Fair point, and the usual top 3 scifi novels on polls, Fouindation, Dune, and Ender's Game are all critically dependent on 3 massive plotholes but are still great [Psychohistory, water shortages for interstellar empires, children as strategic geniuses for anyone wondering]

    • @lukasmakarios4998
      @lukasmakarios4998 Před 3 lety +1

      The only space cowboys I've seen who don't leave stray plotholes wandering everywhere are those who stay corralled within one star system.

    • @agalah408
      @agalah408 Před 3 lety

      If a country created a film studio complex with an excess of plots, then you could run a cable to Hollywood where there are major plot holes and create a giant battery. Such a literary potential difference could power the world!

    • @henrytjernlund
      @henrytjernlund Před 3 lety

      Well, you go ahead and write a popular SF series where it takes most of a characters life to get to just one place. Each main character of the book/movie may have to be a descendant of the previous and do new world building every time. See how well that goes.

  • @SmartK8
    @SmartK8 Před 3 lety +4

    Not only absence of FTL prevents Earth colonization, but inability to break FTL is actually the main reason why this Universe exists. When only causal Universes can meaningfully exist, it automatically implies at least rudimentary logic for this Universe. That's why logic is the king.

    • @oldionus
      @oldionus Před 3 lety +1

      But the presumptive impossibility of FTL will NOT prevent colonization. It will just make it a slower process, in which there is no real-time communication between the frontiers and the original star system. Conceivably, Tellurian (earth-origin) life could spread through a wide region of space, even beyond the Galaxy, without FTL.

    • @SmartK8
      @SmartK8 Před 3 lety

      @@oldionus Yeah, but it prevents colonization from not only other galaxies, but also from beyond observable Universe. It reduces chance to possibly surrounding star systems, Milky Way or if we stretch it from Andromeda, but prevents basically the rest of the Universe. That's a big reduction.

  • @user-ty2ry2sk2w
    @user-ty2ry2sk2w Před 3 lety +8

    the opening pun violently murdered me and then brought me back to life to do it again

  • @chijunky6145
    @chijunky6145 Před 3 lety +2

    Isaac: Here's what a universe with FTL would look like
    Also Isaac: Spends the entire episode explaining why FTL isn't possible, instead

    • @chijunky6145
      @chijunky6145 Před 3 lety +1

      i feel like i just fell for a trap. i came to this video because i wanted to know more about FTL and how to achieve it one day, but i've left not only convinced that we won't, but that it's good that we can't.
      Isaac, you cheeky sausage, you.

  • @avonacolyte
    @avonacolyte Před 3 lety +6

    Your early episodes are superb, Isaac. They are where I started and got me hooked, not only on this channel, but on science and futurism CZcams. Don't hush the early stuff up!

  • @theStormWeaver
    @theStormWeaver Před 3 lety +15

    Don't think I didn't notice that modified BC-304 Daedalus :P

  • @spacepiratecaptainrush1237

    another thought though this is the sci-fi writer in me spinning something out. speed of causality gave me an interesting idea for a potential limit on minimal distance that can be traveled by FTL, it could be that you can actually arrive before you leave in objective time but you cannot be perceived arriving by an observer at your starting point. the light from your arrival at a distant star has to arrive at the your starting point sometime after you left to maintain causality or be so far away that the starting point cannot observe the end point do to universal expansion. of course that would make it imposable to go a light year away by FTL but easer to go to the edge of the universe where things have already moved beyond where the light can reach us.

    • @voteindependentforindepend7181
      @voteindependentforindepend7181 Před 3 lety

      Getting to your destination faster than light would mean the light indicating your arrival would by definition arrive after you left, whether you travel 1m or 1lyr. Its you who are traveling faster than light not the light itself.

    • @georgethompson1460
      @georgethompson1460 Před 3 lety +1

      There's been some suggestion on atomic rockets that quantum effects could destructively interfere with time travel. or at least paradox's. So a drive might work as long as no paradox's where created, and might self destruct if used in a way that would cause one.

    • @spacepiratecaptainrush1237
      @spacepiratecaptainrush1237 Před 3 lety

      @@voteindependentforindepend7181 I was referring to the speed of causality and traveling faster than it would by definition be time travel. Meaning that you arrive before you leave in objective time. Which would violate causality.
      To preserve causality and prevent paradox, traveling beyond the point where you can be observed could be a solution. If you go ten lightyears as a speed that results in you arriving 20 years before you leave then the light from your arrival would show up ten years before you leave.
      This is the causal relationship I'm suggesting needs to be avoided. So if you can only go at that speed you have to go to a point beyond 20 light years to maintain perceived causality.

    • @voteindependentforindepend7181
      @voteindependentforindepend7181 Před 3 lety

      @@spacepiratecaptainrush1237 but you dont arrive before you leave. Even if you're traveling at trillions of times the speed of light(causality, Isaac makes the distinction but they are effectively the same) your trip will just be extremely brief, depending on the distance travelled.

    • @spacepiratecaptainrush1237
      @spacepiratecaptainrush1237 Před 3 lety

      Traveling faster than causality is time travel. As you near it time slows, surpassing it time starts moving backwards.

  • @juimymary9951
    @juimymary9951 Před 3 lety +2

    I'd like to mention, the Chronology Protection Conjecture isn't the only response to time travel paradoxes that could be caused by FTL. There are other conjectures as well which I believe stand on the same footing.
    - Cosmic Censorship: If something reaches into the past it cannot affect it due to being behind an event horizon. No interaction no problem.
    - Consistency Principle: Same as before but if something goes into the past it cannot alter the course of the events in a way that would prevent the cause from generating the effect even in the case of inverted causality.
    - Parallel Universe: Similar to the one above but essentially when there is something travelling back in time the universe essentially splits at the quantum level, relegating the altered timeline to another universe, essentially turning the closed timelike curve into a spiral
    And finally, I'd add that Miguel Alcubierre expressed concern about the CPC however he also mentioned that it wouldn't disallow FTL perse but rather that it would make it impossible to use FTL to make a time machine.
    What do you think?

    • @jaredgarbo3679
      @jaredgarbo3679 Před 3 lety

      The Universe really dislikes you changing the past.

  • @noneya2314
    @noneya2314 Před 3 lety +4

    Intelligent and/or Alien Life may very well be common... And advanced Technological Alien Lifeform developing is probably a far rarer event in our Universe and I think most people do not understand the difference! We maybe the only Species to have developed Technology. Besides always remember the old Sci-Fi Movie quote, "To Serve Man, it's... it's a cookbook!"!

    • @meneither3834
      @meneither3834 Před 3 lety

      Rare Earth - Rare Life - Rare Intelligence - Rare agriculture - Rare industrialization - Rare (?)
      Lots of filters and we might not be done yet.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +1

      for all we know dolphins are smarter than us. but dolphins don't have opposable thumbs and they live under water so they can't develop tools and that makes us the only industrialized civilized species on earth. how do you melt metal to develop smithing to develop guns underwater? you can't, which is why dolphins haven't done shit and humans have a massive society.

  • @gelgamath_9903
    @gelgamath_9903 Před 3 lety +5

    2:50 I always like calling the speed of light the speed of causality that's why it's abbreviated as c

    • @geryz7549
      @geryz7549 Před 3 lety

      I always thought it was 'c' because of it being 'constant'

  • @theFLCLguy
    @theFLCLguy Před 3 lety +1

    I think the universe is two counter rotating hyperdimensional black holes and the one we are in has an escape velocity of the speed of causality.
    Also the expansion is the pull of each black hole. The great attractor is the other black hole.
    At the end of time the black holes merge creating a huge burst of energy creating a new universe on the edge of it's event horizon.
    But really this already happened and it's just our limited perspective from being a part of it that gives us the illusion of time and space. Like how from a humans natural perspective the world is flat and stationary.

  • @toriknorth3324
    @toriknorth3324 Před 3 lety +6

    If you only have imaginary velocity then you can only move imaginary distances, which isn't very helpful if you're trying to move a real distance.

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz Před 3 lety +5

    9:15 You made a mistake. Potential energy slows time, therefore time slows *near* black holes. The potential energy increases as you move *farther away* from the source of gravity. Thus, the potential energy's time dilation works in the opposite sign from what you said.
    Time slows near a black hole because of the curvature of spacetime.

    • @Nobody_114
      @Nobody_114 Před 3 lety +1

      It's the curvature of spacetime that slows time, not the potential energy. The potential energy is a result of the curvature as well, not the cause of it.

  • @Lukegear
    @Lukegear Před 3 lety +6

    Lovely pun at the intro lol

  • @fugslayernominee1397
    @fugslayernominee1397 Před 3 lety +1

    Of all the shows i've watched which has time travel only Steins Gate is the one with no paradox. They shift the world-line every time a event happens.

  • @momobhai3792
    @momobhai3792 Před 3 lety +12

    love and respect from india!

  • @Michael18599
    @Michael18599 Před 3 lety +1

    Imaginary speed is when I think about going for a run, but don't.

  • @csb8336
    @csb8336 Před 3 lety +3

    Isaac, your early shows are really great. I've been a big fan since you started doing regular episodes and frequently go back to watch some of the earlier videos. I'd hate to see them go or be replaced:(
    sure the production value is better now, but many of us wouldn't be here if it weren't for those early videos.
    after all the primary ingredient here is hearing the concepts discussed, elaborated, and expanded upon rather than the eye candy...but the eye candy helps. drink in 1 hand, snack in other:)
    keep up the great work!

  • @AndySpicer
    @AndySpicer Před 3 lety +1

    The first 10 minutes of this video is pure gold. The best explanation I’ve ever heard.

  • @cannonfodder4376
    @cannonfodder4376 Před 3 lety +4

    Oh that intro pun. 😅 Yet another great informative video to watch during lunch.

  • @david_ketch
    @david_ketch Před 3 lety +2

    You are very informative and always have excellent visuals. I honestly don't know how you aren't more in the spotlight. More people need to watch you and soak up these information packed videos.
    Thanks for all the journeys you have taken me on so far Mr. Arthur!

  • @ProperLogicalDebate
    @ProperLogicalDebate Před 3 lety +5

    11:22 Does what we call "spun" take energy that would have been used to go faster? Therefore the SoL is slightly slower than the maximum possible if there was no spin?

  • @DreamskyDance
    @DreamskyDance Před 3 lety +2

    Didnt watched whole video yet, but i would like to point out that recently a new paper was published that eliminated the need for negative mass for albecubiere drive...
    then again... it isnt sure that that drive wouls actually go faster than light,
    it still needs a lot of energy untill calculations and warp field geometry are even more refined.
    and last but not least...what to do with all the particles and energy that gets trapped at the bow shock of a warp bubble and should continue to go forwards at warp bubble speeds when ship exits the warp...
    Imho...even a sublight warp drive would be a game changer, even 1% the speed of light warp drive would be a game changer...

    • @Chrisspru
      @Chrisspru Před 3 lety +1

      The warp deathray issue can be solved by creating a convex warp lense infront of the ship while slowing down. This would scatter the trapped particles instead of letting them stay a parallel beam.

    • @thek2despot426
      @thek2despot426 Před 3 lety +1

      The newest models for warp drives, the ones that don't need negative mass, need to be accelerated up to their final speed to assume it; they can't accelerate on their own. Meaning that, while a warp drive _could _*_maintain_* FTL once it gets there, it would need to be accelerated up to that speed first, which still can't happen (for now).

  • @cryptc
    @cryptc Před 3 lety +8

    Theory: actually light speed limit is just enforced in certain areas of the galaxy where aliens has put in the speed limit to help protect primitive civilizations, outside of the Sol sphere of control (around 37 000 AU radius) relativity doesn't apply and linear acceleration is possible on objects up to any speed.

    • @Blowfeld20k
      @Blowfeld20k Před 3 lety +2

      Dude ... thats NOT a theory ..... lol. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_theory

    • @virutech32
      @virutech32 Před 3 lety +2

      not a theory, a hypothesis

    • @Blowfeld20k
      @Blowfeld20k Před 3 lety +1

      @@virutech32
      yup

    • @TiredRoman
      @TiredRoman Před 3 lety

      I too enjoyed Fire Upon the Deep

  • @Fuzen.
    @Fuzen. Před 3 lety +1

    Really love the idea of the “speed of causality”. It’s so much easier to apprehend that idea when talking about limits.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      For non time travel related causality issues I am probably wrong because quantum physics is the realm of masochists but if i am on the earth and there is another guy on the moon one light second away and we are sending signals back and forth to for example argue about the laws of reality on youtube comment threads and I use some FTL method to send a signal to the moon in 0.1 seconds 10X faster than a standard speed of light transmission how does that violate causality?
      I write up my message, then I hit send, then an amount of time passes for both me and the recipient, and then the signal arrives. For it to violate causality wouldn't the recipient have to receive the message before I sent it? that would require it going there in negative time which would be faster than infinite velocity right? like if I have ftl that sends signals to a place one light year away I can send a radio signal and get a reply roughly two years later. if I have FTL radio signals that go 365X the speed of light and I send a signal one light year away on sunday the recipient should get it on monday and ill get a response on tuesday, how would that violate causality? Sure it would be faster than light but why is light necessarily going at the maximum speed of causality?
      for warp drives where you send a chunk of spacetime to some place else in less time than light would take that still takes time and still shouldn't violate causality. now, if you could send a signal to someone on sunday and they received it on saturday that would violate causality but the other ways I don't see how they violate causality.
      I personally find it way WAY *W A Y* harder to understand because rather than just "fast thingy gets heavier as you speed it up so it becomes slower thingy requiring more energy to make it a faster thingy each time" it instead relies on relativistic time and local time and time dilation and all that special relativity masochism stuff.

    • @Fuzen.
      @Fuzen. Před 3 lety

      @@atashgallagher5139 I get what you mean, but that’s not how the video explains it. In the video, and if I’m understanding right, it says more or less that lightspeed it the maximum rate at which information can be exchanged.
      So of course, FTL wouldn’t go against causality as long as the result doesn’t occur before the cause. But once again, that’s not how the video uses the term causality here.
      “Speed of causality” is thus the maximum speed at which causality CAN occur. In that sense, FTL has some vague meaning but “faster than causality” absolutely doesn’ so it’s easier to see it as a limit.

  • @miamijules2149
    @miamijules2149 Před 3 lety +5

    First Rule Of Warfare: Keep Your Eye On The Enemy

  • @deejayaech4519
    @deejayaech4519 Před 2 lety +1

    Whats your opinion in the new paper proposing a potential warp field that could exist without negative mass? Albiet the required energy density would probably collapse into a black hole, but it could be able to be brought down.

  • @KillLoganPaul4
    @KillLoganPaul4 Před 3 lety +3

    The speed of causality fits better imo since if you move faster than it you violate it

    • @rommdan2716
      @rommdan2716 Před 3 lety

      There's a Way to have FTL travel but no Causality violations?
      Like an Anti-paradox law.

    • @KillLoganPaul4
      @KillLoganPaul4 Před 3 lety +1

      @@rommdan2716 that's why I like the speed of causality, if you just alter the speed of information, you are not altering cause and effect and thus no paradoxical bs :3 nice and neat. Tbh it's kinda like the concept of alteration magic in Elder Scrolls, you're not violating time when you paralysis someone, you're alerting their experience of the flow of time on a fundamental scale and time is still flowing naturally.

    • @KillLoganPaul4
      @KillLoganPaul4 Před 3 lety

      @John Smith yes there is lol. You couldn't write this comment faster than is allowed by the speed of light. Light being the most basic information we have

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      @@KillLoganPaul4 But think about it, what is there to think that light speed is the speed of causality? if i'm blind and someone fires a bullet into a balloon and I hear that pop, and then a few seconds later I hear a bang from the gun the bullet didn't impact the balloon before it was impacted the messenger of information was just slower than the event.
      if there is airport A and airport B and they use biplanes to communicate to each other when trains leave the station so that they can prepare for them that system works great. If you then have a fighter jet fly from port A to port B and when the jet takes off they send a biplane to warn port B of the incoming jet obviously the jet would show up and land like an hour before the biplane comes with a message saying that the jet just took off and to expect them, but that doesn't mean that the jet arrived before it left.
      I see no reason that light would be different, if I use a big light to flash a message in morse code then hop in an FTL ship and fly away 30 light minutes in just 15 minutes I can then stop and look back at where I came from and 15 minutes later I will see myself flashing the morse code message. that does not mean that I am now arriving at a destination before I leave, time still flows forwards and cause and effect are maintained, cause, me leaving earth, effect, me showing up at the spot, just because the visual information of my departure shows up after me doesn't mean that I arrived before I left.
      what would violate cause and effect would be if I wrote a text message and sent it on monday to my friend on mars and my friend there received it on sunday before I had sent the message, that's an effect happening before the cause, but if my friend on mars 30 light minutes away sends me a message at FTL speeds in one second he still wrote the message and sent it then I received it and could reply. no effects were happening before their causes, and causality is maintained that doesn't create any paradox like effects, and it doesn't cause time travel.
      just because light is the fastest thing that we know of doesn't mean that it would violate cause and effect to send something faster than it.

  • @marpsr
    @marpsr Před 3 lety +2

    Wasn’t it Picard messing around with tachyons in different times that almost destroyed existence in All Good Things? With a little help from Q of course.

  • @soranezumi5359
    @soranezumi5359 Před 3 lety +4

    So traveling through the Nether could be a form of FTL... like with a super duper Elytra??

    • @ben4R
      @ben4R Před 3 lety +1

      That's the general idea of phase space yeah, but more like if there were more layers, and each one was like that to the one above.

    • @soranezumi5359
      @soranezumi5359 Před 3 lety

      @@ben4R I guess you'd only need to do better than 1/7th the speed of light in the Nether... That's one hell of a firework!

    • @ben4R
      @ben4R Před 3 lety +1

      @SoraNezumi 1/8th, but yeah.
      But going a second layer deeper, it'd be 1/64th you'd need to beat.
      Six layers in, you'd only need to beat 4118 kph (2559 mph) which is slower than our current jet speed world record, let alone spacecraft. If you had ten layers of phase space that worked on the same ratio as the nether, then you'd be ftl on the surface if you were walking at 1.006 kph (0.625 mph)

  • @alexjaybrady
    @alexjaybrady Před 3 lety +2

    Im fascinated by the idea that you can compress spacetime locally to make a drive; i wonder if you could make things tiny by making the space that contains them small lol. would you notice if your body was in such a place?? or jst your hand?? also the fact that photons "experience" no time, yet seem to us to change over time feels like it has some interesting implications for our sense of time..

  • @herbiehusker1889
    @herbiehusker1889 Před 3 lety +3

    Happy Arthursday.

  • @yellowpowr8455
    @yellowpowr8455 Před rokem +1

    19:01 I don't know why the Santa imagery was so funny to me.

  • @BigZebraCom
    @BigZebraCom Před 3 lety +3

    I was going to invent an FTL drive...but things are just so crazy at work right now.

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester Před 3 lety

      "things are SLOW at work" :-)

    • @BigZebraCom
      @BigZebraCom Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheRainHarvester yes we are working so fast that time is slowing down. It's a nightmare, really.

  • @SecretKnowledge_IKnowTooMuch

    around 21:20 i had some crazy nostalgia from when the professor (futurama) explains that his ship doesn't move in space but it moves the universe around it

  • @toptextbottomtext3062
    @toptextbottomtext3062 Před 3 lety +2

    What do you think about the warp drive design that doesn't require negative energy or mass?

  • @simonpender8331
    @simonpender8331 Před 3 lety +1

    This episode has been terribly thought provoking. I never knew that a photon does not experience time. A wonderful lecture, thank you.

  • @ProperLogicalDebate
    @ProperLogicalDebate Před 3 lety +4

    12:42 I've never liked mixing large numbers with smaller directors. Like negatives and exponents.

  • @thomasmullins1783
    @thomasmullins1783 Před 3 lety +2

    That intro pun almost made me crash my car 😂

  • @Arosk.
    @Arosk. Před 3 lety +6

    YOOO WHATIFALTHIST AND ISAAC ARTHUR MY TWO FAVOURITE CZcamsRS COLLABORATE
    a Blessing from the Sacred Baguette

    • @vincentcleaver1925
      @vincentcleaver1925 Před 3 lety

      Whatifalthist is wildly overrated

    • @Arosk.
      @Arosk. Před 3 lety

      @@vincentcleaver1925 Kinda true, But I mostly enjoy his videos more than I agree with them, I do agree with a lot of his stuff, but I also disagree with other things He says, Plus I never said He is one of the Best Historians on CZcams.

  • @coreysayre1376
    @coreysayre1376 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm sure most of us are familiar with the idea that space/time, but this video and the way you reframed the concept so thoroughly and articulately, might very well be the first time the concept really made it 'click' and make sense to me, beyond just being able to repeat the law.
    Very well done!

  • @thedoruk6324
    @thedoruk6324 Před 3 lety +7

    Team *Alcubierre drive* Go!

    • @rommdan2716
      @rommdan2716 Před 3 lety +4

      I'm in the *Wormhole Team* but GO WARP DRIVE!!

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      I am still rooting for mass effect drives which are in a way a modified warp drive so I say someone should go nuke Charon a few times. but the Alcubierre warp drive is possible without negative mass using only positive mass, now how you would actually manage to do it is another question entirely, but theoretically it is possible to make an FTL warp drive using only positive mass.

  • @blueredbrick
    @blueredbrick Před 3 lety +2

    Learning that the speed of light and speed of gravity waves are the same speed of causality and neutrinos just a tad slower still was awe inspiring, and it those were fairly recent discoveries. Go science.

    • @blueredbrick
      @blueredbrick Před 3 lety

      @John Smith Just stating that does not make it true. There was a experiment that confirmed that withing experimental sensitivity both the gravity wave and photon wave arrived at the same time at earth from some explosion far away. Im happy to change my thinking if other better data comes up, until that time Im going with the boring mainstream view.
      Do I want the speeds to be different ? Yes.

  • @peterxyz3541
    @peterxyz3541 Před 3 lety +12

    I got no clever joke for this one. No Doctor Who, No Hitchhiker’s, No Blake 7. ANYONE EXCITED ABOUT The Foundation TV? 😂😂😂

    • @TheRainHarvester
      @TheRainHarvester Před 3 lety +2

      When does foundation begin?

    • @peterxyz3541
      @peterxyz3541 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheRainHarvester supposedly September

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      Maybe we should start hitting Charron with some really heavy shit until we get it broken apart.

  • @zxuiji
    @zxuiji Před 3 lety +2

    Imaginary is a bad name for those numbers, they're just as real as "real" numbers, the best way to think of them is not as a single number but a pair of numbers that are just the reverse of each other, so rather than `i5 * 5 = -25` it should be `i5 * i5 = -25` which in programming is equivalent to `r = i[0] * i[1]` or `r = i[r < 0] * i[r < 0]` so always think of imaginary numbers as square root pairs, this also implies an infinite number of number axis, not just "real" & "imaginary" but rather "n", "n[2]", "n[3]", etc, etc.

  • @ravenlord4
    @ravenlord4 Před 3 lety +3

    When you break entanglement, you are still sending information. The "contents" or value are not as important as the fact that it has been broken. Think of "one if by land, two if by sea". The difference between 1 or 2 pairs being broken is information transmission.

    • @TiredRoman
      @TiredRoman Před 3 lety +1

      but being unable to force a specific outcome removes any "value" from being transmitted.

    • @ravenlord4
      @ravenlord4 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TiredRoman The point is that the value is irrelevant. All that you need to know is whether the entanglement is broken. Take the letter analogy. You have some number of "entangled" letters on your desk. If you see one letter being "opened" on your end then you know that it was opened on the other. If you see two letters being opened, then again you know they opened two on the other end. The content of the letters is meaningless. You just have a pre-arranged agreement that opening one letter means one thing, and opening two letters means another. It is the number of broken pairs that conveys information.

    • @TiredRoman
      @TiredRoman Před 3 lety +1

      @@ravenlord4 There is no way to know if the other letters are opened though

    • @ravenlord4
      @ravenlord4 Před 3 lety +2

      @@TiredRoman Sure there is. The whole point of the entangled particles is that both are in a superpositioned state. As soon as you see that the particle on your side is no longer in a superpositioned state (ie it has some value, and it does not matter what that value is). then you know that the entanglement has been broken on the other side.

    • @TiredRoman
      @TiredRoman Před 3 lety

      @@ravenlord4 if you "see" the particle then you have already broken the entanglement. You won't able to tell the difference between you inciting it breaking vs your partner doing it.

  • @alexjaybrady
    @alexjaybrady Před 3 lety +1

    I really enjoyed Alaistair Reynolds House of Suns, a fun and thrilling look at what a sublight galactic empire (or rather the galaxy-wide churn of human and posthuman civs) might look; the big tehcnologcal advance that enabled it is stasis and self repairing machines that can survive 10000(light)year journeys as a matter of routine as the pilots sleep.

    • @johnpatz8395
      @johnpatz8395 Před 3 lety +1

      Interesting, I’ll have to check it out.

  • @SpecialEDy
    @SpecialEDy Před 3 lety +3

    Hyperspace is the nether.
    If you travel 1 block in hyperspace, you move 8 blocks in the overworld.

  • @rauhamanilainen6271
    @rauhamanilainen6271 Před 3 lety +1

    22:11 Basically a real-world Nether portal. Space in the Nether is 8 times more compressed than in the Overworld.

    • @johnpatz8395
      @johnpatz8395 Před 3 lety +1

      That was my thought as well, although i haven’t played much Minecraft, but I’ve heard that comparison used in another video on this topic.

  • @Andrew-zq3ip
    @Andrew-zq3ip Před 3 lety +7

    This is why a Dyson swarm of a billion artificial worlds is our only real hope for a sci-fi future.

    • @lukasmakarios4998
      @lukasmakarios4998 Před 3 lety

      Think "Firefly" and wear a brown coat. All those little moons and dwarf planets are terraformed worlds. But please, no lunatic undead ...

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +1

      Honestly I think that in the future people will play full dive true to life quality VR games that are written, produced, and voiced in real time by AI as you play, you can then live in a simulation of a world or game as the story plays out around you with everything impacted by what you do.
      The flexibility of D&D ran by a human but the quality of a AAA videogame title and the immersion of direct nerve interface VR with the capacity to make decisions that you normally only have in a story when you yourself are the author. In fact you might get people playing games where they have their memories altered or blocked temporarily so that they think that everything is real or that they are someone as a character in the story.
      If you have some matrioshka brain AI god machine it would be no problem for it to manage writing a story, producing the world, simulating all of it, and basically being an actor for every single NPC in the game giving them all sapience in there quality of interaction but without creating people because it is just an AI controlling them not new synthetic people made just for your game.
      Then you can finally fulfill your dreams, or get a well written ending to mass effect 3 or an actually well made mass effect andromeda. I bet people will spend decades in single worlds / stories before moving on sometimes, and it will be way better than sitting around doing nothing on your couch in a giant mansion as an AI does every single job better than you ever could. And reality would get boring after the first few thousand years if everyone is trapped in the solar system and maybe the few nearest neighbors.
      But it is proven mathematically that the Alcubierre warp drive is possible without negative mass only using positive mass which makes it much more likely to be possible and as they work on it the energy needed goes down, so it could very well be that warp drives and FTL are possible just really hard.

    • @Andrew-zq3ip
      @Andrew-zq3ip Před 3 lety

      @@atashgallagher5139 vr on the scale you've described would make reality obsolete. Who would even care about ftl at that point?

  • @soundesrexgaming9169
    @soundesrexgaming9169 Před 3 lety +1

    This guy blows my mind every day!

    • @johnpatz8395
      @johnpatz8395 Před 3 lety

      Yeah, I consider myself at least somewhat intelligent, and very science literate, and what I understand most of what he discusses, at least on a basic level, but often he also makes me feel like a caveman that thinks fire is trapped inside of a sod log. 😳🤯😵‍💫

  • @KillLoganPaul4
    @KillLoganPaul4 Před 3 lety +3

    This might be of interest to you but the US Navy DID file patents that very much look like they might have an answer to travelling at speeds relative to the speed of light. These are real patents and even if nothing comes of them soon, the math and concepts check out

    • @georgethompson1460
      @georgethompson1460 Před 3 lety +1

      which patents? Might have been a sting or misinformation camaign.

    • @willb5278
      @willb5278 Před 3 lety

      I'd be interested in looking those up in the patent office, if you have specifics.
      Though that does seem like the kind of thing done by someone clueless in charge "just in case" or to provoke russia/china to waste money investigating dead ends.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      It is also mathematically proven that you can make an alcubierre warp drive with only positive mass, the practical feasibility of that device is questionable but it is technically physically posssible.

    • @willb5278
      @willb5278 Před 3 lety

      @@atashgallagher5139 I mean, yeah, but that tech now is at the stage that electricity was when Maxwell came along. It's gonna be a long while until we can even meaningfully test it.

  • @alliciayork2815
    @alliciayork2815 Před 3 lety

    My own Sci-Fi universe has no FTL travel or communication, as a result of this channel.

  • @ZetoBlackproject
    @ZetoBlackproject Před 3 lety +4

    I think these discussions fall short logically, rather than mathematically. I'm no physicist, however I fail every time to understand how time and space are the same thing, and causality is tied to this concept. So I too separate causality from the idea of a speed limit.
    Say for instance that I live here, on Earth, and Betelgeuse has JUST exploded into a supernova. The speed of light dictates that I'll see that light only once it has reached me. But does that mean that the event hasn't occured? No, it just means that light has a distance to travel towards me. The conflation between time and space is not present here. Likewise, if I travel towards Betelgeuse, even at a lower speed than the speed of light I'll reach that light sooner than if I stayed on Earth. The causality is not violated here. Likewise traversing space over the speed limit does not in any way create a paradox, because the event HAS happened, the LIGHT merely hasn't reached me.
    It's like arguing that a supersonic jet emits no sound because you can't hear it yet. I just can't wrap my head around it and keep thinking it's solipsism on the part of the scientists. Maybe clearing THAT up will help people understand the underlying problems with FTL, or make the scientists realize they are perhaps talking about another SPACE dimension, not a time one.
    Lastly I'd like to point out that it is theoretically possible to eliminate the event horizon of a black hole with spin, without breaking lightspeed, which would also break causality (the naked singularity problem), so I guess we have no choice other than kugelblitzing a Black Hole into existance and immediately spinning it to open this pandora's box once and for all. Who knows? Maybe that's the Fermi Paradox explanation right there. Fusion Power > Overpowered Lasers > KugelBlitz > Unlocking the secrets of the cosmos > Death?

    • @GarageSupra
      @GarageSupra Před 3 lety

      @John Smith you have to be the least open minded person that follows this channel, why are you even here?

    • @ZetoBlackproject
      @ZetoBlackproject Před 3 lety

      @John Smith Energy requirements does increase exponentially the closer you reach c however. Though I still think that is the work of another dimension causing this effect, rather than time itself.
      Don't have any proof, but it is an avenue I'd research, were I a physicist.

  • @atashgallagher5139
    @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety +1

    So what you're really saying is that we should go send some mining equipment to Charon right away to do some exploratory digging and scanning for large metallic structures in the middle that are currently dormant but can be reactivated? That seems to be what is being suggested here.

  • @Lion603
    @Lion603 Před 3 lety +3

    Stuff like this makes me wonder, why do we still measure speed in arbitrary units, like m/s or km/h? (not even mentioning other units. Looking at you, USA)
    We could measure speed in nc (Nano c) or pc (Piko c). That might remember humanity how irrelevant they are. And it could also shift the way we think from zero speed as absolute towards max speed as absolute.

    • @thegreatdream8427
      @thegreatdream8427 Před 3 lety +1

      In so called "natural units" the speed of light is exactly 1 planck distance per planck time.

    • @spacejunk2186
      @spacejunk2186 Před 3 lety +1

      Because these units to the common man are just as arbitrary as inches/second or cm/hour. You would arrive at a °K vs °C/°F situation again.

  • @MrHominid2U
    @MrHominid2U Před 3 lety

    The explanation of entanglement using the two letters was excellent. It made me understand that concept so much better. Thanks

  • @MusikCassette
    @MusikCassette Před 3 lety +3

    2: 50 I prefer: Speed of causality.

  • @michaela2634
    @michaela2634 Před 3 lety +1

    WhstIfAltHist is my second favorite to this one. Should be a great episode!

  • @davidbrennan660
    @davidbrennan660 Před 3 lety +3

    Poor Science Fiction writers/ hacks do this all the time.... STD did it with “Sonar” in space for example.

    • @musafawundu6718
      @musafawundu6718 Před 3 lety +2

      Not having FTL makes stories involving interstellar states and entities boring... If would be impossible to communicate in any 'meaningful' time with others 500 light years away for example.

    • @atashgallagher5139
      @atashgallagher5139 Před 3 lety

      @@musafawundu6718 Holly hell, the aliens from alpha centauri have fired a missile into the UN headquarters, we must fire a return attack. Humans build a giant missile and launch it at alpha centauri. Ok boys, time to wait ten to twenty years to see if we won the war or if we need to send another return shot.
      or we get contacted by aliens in alpha centauri asking for us to communicate we send a response, and then then next eight years there is no response as we wait for them to gt ours and send one back.
      see, that could be interesting if your book took place over thousands or millions of generations.

  • @mwtatom
    @mwtatom Před 3 lety +1

    21:20 Yes, I love how people say the warp ideas won't ever work because they still don't allow FTL speeds due to massive radiation doses, atomic impacts, or whatever, but even a barely-functional "warp drive" operating at a small percentage of lightspeed would open up the entire solar system to us, reducing the travel time to even the most distant planets and objects to days instead of years.

    • @virutech32
      @virutech32 Před 3 lety

      well we already have drives that can do that. light/beam sails & nuclear drives are the only ones i can think of off the top of my head & they allow speeds of multiple percents of c with the light sail being able to get arbitrarily close

    • @mwtatom
      @mwtatom Před 3 lety

      @@virutech32 True... eventually. A light sail could eventually reach some % of c given years or decades of acceleration. Some versions of a nuclear drive could eventually reach that after expending a lot of fuel (nuclear drives are basically steamships, that steam still comes from fuel). An on-off warp drive does the same thing, only instantly. You don't even need to be going very fast at all when you hit the switch. And it solves the deceleration problem that light sails can't and other drives have with a deceleration time (and fuel) equal to their acceleration. Just sit in orbit until you're pointed roughly at Pluto, hit the switch, squish space in front of you so you make 0.01c and reach Pluto in 28 days. Flip the switch, and spend whatever fuel you need to achieve orbit. Granted its an oversimplification, but achieving that 1%c drive would make even our current rockets into interplanetary vehicles.

  • @alanboulter7319
    @alanboulter7319 Před rokem +1

    I think the hardest clue that “Light Speed” is an unbreakable upper limit is E=MC2.
    WHY should the energy of mass be a multiple of C??? But somehow it is .. woven right into the fabric.

  • @jackricky5453
    @jackricky5453 Před 3 lety

    Erik Lentz devised a solution back in March to the negative energy problem by making use of a soliton, the math figured out, it requires only positive energy. It was a pretty big deal as well.

  • @melgross
    @melgross Před 2 lety +1

    The problem with going to other universes with other laws to enable ftl or something else, can’t work. What I don’t usually see mentioned, included here, is that if we somehow go to another universe with different laws, even if those laws are different in a minuscule way, it would result in us disappearing at the speed of light, as our matter and energy changes to match that of the new universe. We can’t take our laws with us. They change instantly in the new universe.

    • @isaacarthurSFIA
      @isaacarthurSFIA  Před 2 lety

      Oh yes, those little physical constants shifting around is a pretty big deal :) I think for the purpose of scifi and purely theoretical discussion the notion tends to be that you're able to shift to one that's only the most trivial bit different, or not at all, beyond the specific parameter one wants to change. That's a bit of a handwave of course, and yes folks tend to forget that suddenly being in a Universe with E=Mc² but also a c that's much higher is presumably either requiring a big output to enter it, somehow, or a lot of your mass disappearing from not having enough energy to exist anymore.

    • @melgross
      @melgross Před 2 lety

      @@isaacarthurSFIA exactly. Of course, if you move to one that’s such a small amount different that you could exist, it would gain you nothing as to travel advantage. It could still kill you though. Instantly.

  • @toasteduranium
    @toasteduranium Před 2 lety

    I used to love reading sci-if, and this channel has brought back that charming feeling.

  • @TheManWithTheFlan
    @TheManWithTheFlan Před 3 lety

    You know it's gonna be a banger when he opens with a pun.