Friday, September 14, 2018

Musha Jump Drive

Musha Jump Drive
Musha Jump Drive A special shout out to Mrcheekymonkey1996, for supporting us on Patreon. Chelyabinsk, Tunguska, Chicxulub… Impacts such as these are often touted as why we must inhabit more than one delicate world. But there is a far greater threat looming that is practically never brought up: Resources Specifically, habitable living space. Beyond Earth, we have to manufacture living space, Mars has terraforming potential, but that’s just one more world, and will take time. If we could fly to other stars we could find more, already habitable or easily terraformable living space. But there’s a problem, of all the systems we can reach, even with thousand-year lifetimes, almost none of them have the promise of a habitable world. So we turn to faster than light travel, of the possibilities, the Alcubierre drive seems the most promising, but it does have issues, and it’s actually too slow—to fly faster would require utterly impractical amounts of energy. But what if there was another way? What if, we had a drive that could instantaneously jump hundreds or thousands of light years for only relatively modest amounts of energy… - AsteronX - Jump drives are perhaps the first form of faster-than-light propulsion ever thought up. The first to suggest a jump drive was Isaac Asimov in his Foundation series, beginning in 1942. Next was Robert Heinlein’s Starman Jones—1953—where a “Horst Transition” was used to instantaneously travel between regions of flat spacetime, that is, space without or with only minimal gravity. Even Dune utilized jump drives to traverse around its fictional universe. And more recently the modern remake of Battlestar Galactica utilized jump drives as well. Jump drives are nice from a story-telling perspective, as they allow the characters to dart to-and-fro without any loss of time. Instantaneously teleporting starships without needing a technobabble explanation of what happens during a jump, is also nice for writers wishing to keep their stories as realistic as possible. But enough about why jump drives are nice for fiction writers, how plausible are they in reality? Has any research ever been carried out on the real-life feasibility of a jump drive? As it turns out, yes. In 2016 a Japanese physicist, and author of several books, Dr. Takaaki Musha, wrote a paper entitled, “The Possibility of FTL Space Travel by using the Quantum Tunnelling Effect through the Light Barrier.” In it he introduced of a method for tunnelling through the lightspeed barrier and into a new superluminal state, via—as Dr. Musha puts it—violent acceleration. Dr. Musha discovered this by treating the speed of light as a potential barrier—a wall—something that increases the energy required to transition between two states, basically, anything that resists change. [...] The immensely powerful and energetic strong nuclear force tubes that bind quarks together within protons, neutrons, and other hadrons, are fluxes—flows—of the strong nuclear force zero-point field. Therefore, going by Puthoff’s theory, this fact, that the tubes are fluxes in the strong-force zero-point field, is in and of itself the mass-energy of the proton, and all hadrons. […] Keywords: Dr. Takaaki Musha, galaxy, black hole, spacecraft, speed of light, lightspeed barrier, Dr. Puthoff, E=mc^2, mass-energy, negative energy, positive energy, Casimir effect, squeezed light, photon shield, Dr. Froning, faster-than-light travel, technology, 4-dimensional, rematerialization, Andromeda Galaxy, fusion reactor, superluminal, subluminal, lasers, FTL, hyperspace, jump drive, Chicxulub, zero-point energy, string theory, tachyon Scientific papers: Takaaki Musha: Advanced Science-Technology Research Organization: https://ift.tt/2xdi5Cl The Possibility of FTL Space Travel by using the Quantum Tunneling Effect through the Light Barrier: https://ift.tt/2MtvSct Harold E. Puthoff: Scientific papers: https://ift.tt/2xcydE2 Music: Light Years Away (YouTube) March to Victory (YouTube) Digital Memories (YouTube) Myst on the Moor (Kevin MacLeod of incompetech.com) Desert Caravan (YouTube)
via YouTube https://youtu.be/ShIJSpV3BII

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