How does Curvature Speed works? Doesn’t it break what we thought was a law of physic?

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So there was a huge article months ago where some crazy scientists proved theoretically that a spaceship can reach curvature speed (travel Faster than light)

There was a post here days ago that said that speed is relative and you can’t go further than light because it is the only non relative speed (the example was if you stay on a train that goes 9.8c and shoot a bullet that goes 9.8c you can’t exceed C ). So why would their curvature speed work?

Also, side question, wouldn’t they have to worry about asteroids getting in the way when traveling faster than what they can see?

Also, another question, Would travel faster than light make them go back in time? Since If i remember correctly time depends on light or something, wouldn’t go faster than it transform you in The Flash and make you go back in time, Technically letting you arrive before you started traveling?

In: Physics

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Anonymous 0 Comments

FTL travel through space is not possible. Full stop, no “but maybe”s, no “that’s just closed minded” no other nonsense like that.

Nobody proved anything. ~~I’ve seen the paper, it’s about as theoretically accurate as the starship Enterprise.~~ it turns out this is a different paper. It still doesn’t prove anything, but there is a possible theoretical framework for the warp drives suggested if you make some unverified assumptions.

There is no telling what would happen if something did go faster than light, because it breaks our universe. It’s like asking “Okay, but if 3>4, what would happen?” I don’t know, it’s impossible to tell.

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