NASA starts building faster-than-light warp engine

Researchers at NASA’s Texas-based Johnson Space Center are trying to prove that it is possible to travel faster than the speed of light, and hope to one day build an engine that resembles the fictional Starship Enterprise.

NASA physicist and engineer Dr. Harold G. White, 43, believes it
is possible to bend the rules of time and space that Albert
Einstein constructed when he postulated that it is impossible to
exceed the speed of light.

White’s research is based on the theories of Mexican physicist
Miguel Alcubierre, who in 1994 theorized that exceeding
Einstein’s galactic speed limit was possible if scientists
discovered a way to harness the expansion and contraction of
space. And Harold and his team are trying to do just that.

Mexican physicist Dr. Miguel Alcubierre (Image from flickr.com user@campuspartymexico)

By creating a “warp bubble” that expands space on one side of a
spaceship and contracts it on the other, “the spaceship will
be pushed away from the Earth and pulled towards a distant star
by space-time itself,”
Dr. Alcubierre wrote in his
hypothesis.

Dr. White is trying to warp the trajectory of a photon to see if
he can propel its travel at faster-than-light speeds. His
laboratory floats above a system of underground pneumatic piers
and was constructed in a way that it would be free from seismic
disturbances, since his team’s measuring devices can pick up the
smallest vibrations — even those created from people who are
walking nearby.

Dr. White told the New York Times that since nature can travel at
warp speeds, there is a chance that humans can figure out how to
do it too.

“Space has been expanding since the Big Bang 13.7 billion
years ago,”
Dr. White told the Times. “And we know that
when you look at some of the cosmology models, there were early
periods of the universe where there was explosive inflation,
where two points would’ve went receding away from each other at
very rapid speeds.”

Albert Einstein (AFP Photo)

Although Dr. White believes the potential construction of a
spaceship like the USS Enterprise lies in the distant future,
such a project could open doors for far-reaching space travel.
Developing a warp drive would allow NASA to drastically reduce
travel times to other star systems from tens of thousands of
years to weeks or months. With such technology, astronauts could
take quick trips to explore other solar systems.

Edwin F. Taylor, a former editor of The American Journal of
Physics and senior research scientist at MIT, told the Times that
“the idea is crazy for now.”

“[But] check with me in a hundred years,” he added,
thereby noting that constructing such a spacecraft might lie in
the realm of possibilities.

Richard Obousy, a physicist and president of Icarus Interstellar,
said the idea “is not air-fairy, pie in the sky.”

“We tend to overestimate what we can do on short time scales,
but I think we massively underestimate what we can do on longer
time scales,”
he said of Dr. White’s work.

But Dr. Alcubierre, who has never met Dr. White, said that a
major hurdle is the fact that a warp bubble “cannot be reached
by any signal from within the ship”
and can’t be turned on or
off in the first place.

Despite the odds, Dr. White and his team are continuing their
research, and believe that they can bring warp speed into the
real of the possible.

Republished with permission from: RT