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Bob Fry
January 25th 06, 01:50 AM
http://tinyurl.com/dayj8

NewScientist.com

Take a leap into hyperspace

* 05 January 2006
* From New Scientist Print Edition
* Haiko Lietz

EVERY year, the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
awards prizes for the best papers presented at its annual
conference. Last year's winner in the nuclear and future flight
category went to a paper calling for experimental tests of an
astonishing new type of engine. According to the paper, this
hyperdrive motor would propel a craft through another dimension at
enormous speeds. It could leave Earth at lunchtime and get to the moon
in time for dinner. There's just one catch: the idea relies on an
obscure and largely unrecognised kind of physics. Can they possibly be
serious?
.. . .
But can the hyperdrive really get off the ground?

The answer to that question hinges on the work of a little-known
German physicist. Burkhard Heim began to explore the hyperdrive
propulsion concept in the 1950s as a spin-off from his attempts to
heal the biggest divide in physics: the rift between quantum mechanics
and Einstein's general theory of relativity.
.. . .

Morgans
January 25th 06, 02:29 AM
"Bob Fry" > wrote

> According to the paper, this
> hyperdrive motor would propel a craft through another dimension at
> enormous speeds. It could leave Earth at lunchtime and get to the moon
> in time for dinner. There's just one catch: the idea relies on an
> obscure and largely unrecognised kind of physics. Can they possibly be
> serious?
> . . .
> But can the hyperdrive really get off the ground?
>
> The answer to that question hinges on the work of a little-known
> German physicist. Burkhard Heim began to explore the hyperdrive
> propulsion concept in the 1950s as a spin-off from his attempts to
> heal the biggest divide in physics: the rift between quantum mechanics
> and Einstein's general theory of relativity.
> . . .

If you believe in visitors from other planets, you have to believe that
there is some type of hyperdrive, or something like that out there.
Otherwise, the whole alien thing is not doable.

Are we on the edge of having that technology revealed? On that, I would
have doubts.

On the other hand, if not now, when?
--
Jim in NC

Blanche
January 26th 06, 04:58 PM
To quote Stephen Hawking when he was shown the warp drive on the
Star Trek TNG set (he was in for the premiere of his film at
CalTech, distributed by Paramount), "yes, I'm working on that".

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