Faster-than-light travel: Is warp drive really possible? – BBC Focus Magazine

Posted: June 9, 2020 at 11:47 pm

In the Universe of Star Trek, humanity ventures out into the Galaxy on 5 April 2063 with the first ever journey on a ship capable of faster-than-light travel. The newly-invented warp drive not only lets humans explore the cosmos, but attracts the attention of Vulcans and brings about our first contact with an alien species.

Its been 54 years since we were first introduced to the Enterprise, and many of Star Treks futuristic technologies have since been invented, from handheld communicators to universal translators. Warp drive is the next obvious choice: Voyager 1, which has travelled furthest from Earth of any spacecraft, took nearly 35 years to leave the Solar System. Not exactly handy for interstellar travel.

Luckily for humanity, theoretical physicists have been working on it. In May 2020, NASA scientist Harold Sonny White released an internal feasibility report discussing the technology from the point of view of early mission planning.

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The first scientific theory of warp drive came about in 1994, when theoretical physicist Miguel Alcubierre used Einsteins theory of General Relativity to develop a framework that would allow faster-than-light travel within the confines of the laws of physics. The key that makes it possible is that, technically, the ship itself doesnt travel faster than light.

What warp drive is doing is basically saying that there is no law of physics that says space-time itself cant go faster than the speed of light, says Dr Erin Macdonald, astrophysicist and science consultant for Star Trek.

And so the concept of warp drive is to say, all right, lets take our ship, lets build a bubble of space-time around it, and then well have that propel us faster than the speed of light, she says. Its similar to the idea of a racecar driving onboard a train: someone standing by the tracks would see the car travelling much faster than its top speed.

According to General Relativity, the Universe is a flat sheet of space-time which is warped by any object with mass. We think of the bowling ball on the trampoline and that bowling ball dips the trampoline down, says Macdonald, and thats what mass does to space-time. This distortion of space-time is what we experience as gravity.

The Alcubierre drive uses the same concept. The bubble surrounding the ship is an area of space-time that is compressed in front of the ship and expanded behind it. As with gravity, you could create this distortion using a large amount of mass. Alternatively, thanks to Einsteins E = mc2(energy is equal to mass, times the speed of light squared), you could equally use a huge amount of energy.

Inside the bubble, space-time is completely flat, meaning the space travellers wouldnt notice any strange, relativistic effects. The result is that the bubble of space-time is hurled across the Universe, with the travellers sitting comfortably inside their ship, speedometer still reading the same number.

Unfortunately, actually creating a warp drive is even harder than it sounds. You have to have a very, very large amount of energy, says Jos Natrio, Associate Professor in mathematics at the Instituto Superior Tcnico in the University of Lisbon.

To have the deformation that you need for this kind of thing to work, youd need much, much more energy than the Sun or the Galaxy, he says. But also, its negative energy.

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Negative energy is not something that we can currently create certainly not in the quantities needed to power a warp drive. How could energy be negative at all?

One way to think about it is to consider a particle with negative mass. These particles would react to gravity in the exact opposite way to particles of positive mass. Instead of being pulled towards a planet or star, they would be thrown away.

If we had some sort of component like that where we had a negative mass, whatever is keeping that mass together would be that negative energy, says Macdonald.

This isnt a problem that will go away with refining the idea, either: Natrio proved mathematically that any form of warp drive will require negative energy.

Joseph Agnew is a graduate student at the University of Alabama in Huntsville whose undergraduate work on warp drive was published in the AIAA journal. He thinks that more research into the fundamentals of physics is the way forward for warp drive.

Further experimental study of naturally occurring gravitational waves and perhaps a study on trying to generate artificial gravitational waves would really advance the understanding of gravity, and therefore spacetime and all the connected science, Agnew says.

Star Treks USS Enterprise, the iconic warp-capable ship Alamy

Natrio believes theres an even greater problem with the concept of the Alcubierre drive. Imagine a supersonic aircraft travelling faster than the speed of sound. You dont hear the aircraft until it has already gone past, because the sound waves cant keep up. The warp drive experiences the same effect with light waves, meaning there is no way to send a message ahead of you.

I call it the you need one to make one problem, says Natrio. How do you create the warped space-time geometry around your ship? First, you would need to send a signal ahead of you to tell space-time to warp, Natrio says. To make it go faster than light, you need something that would be going faster than light to begin with so that youd be able to communicate outside the horizon.

These two problems combined with the slight issue that the travelers would be bombarded with incredibly high-energy radiation are the downfall of warp drive, Ntario believes. The bottom line is, in my opinion, its completely impossible, he says.

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Agnew is more optimistic. Many of these theoretical space transportation concepts rely extensively on a thorough understanding of gravity and spacetime, which just isnt the case currently, he says.

I dont yet see any way we can say, with absolute certainty, that it will never happen in a million years. When in doubt, history dictates its better to err on the side of cautious, scientific optimism.

Macdonald, too, is hopeful. Im an eternal optimist with this because I want to join Starfleet, she says. The way I think about it is its like we never know whats going to come down the pipe with sort of these weird, exotic, fun thought experiments.

I agree at this stage, right now, its a fun thought experiment. But thats not to preclude some massive discovery that may happen that we cant predict.

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Faster-than-light travel: Is warp drive really possible? - BBC Focus Magazine

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