Warp Drives

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Revision as of 18:56, 28 February 2026 by Lwcamp (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Science fiction often features spacecraft that can seemingly move across space and getting between the place of departure and the destination much faster than light could have done. This appears to contradict the theory of relativity, which predicts unequivocally that nothing can move through space faster than light. Because relativity has been incredibly successful at describing nature, with its many other predictions regularly being confirmed to extraordinary accurac...")
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Science fiction often features spacecraft that can seemingly move across space and getting between the place of departure and the destination much faster than light could have done. This appears to contradict the theory of relativity, which predicts unequivocally that nothing can move through space faster than light. Because relativity has been incredibly successful at describing nature, with its many other predictions regularly being confirmed to extraordinary accuracy and within the bounds of uncertainty of all the experiments that tested them, it gives confidence that relativity is a correct description of reality. Which seems to rather throw a wet towel on our hopes for rapid travel between stars.

However, while relativity does not allow things to move through space faster than light, it places no such restrictions on how fast space-time itself can expand, contract, or move around. This leads to the idea of a warp drive – the spacecraft remains stationary within a region of highly curved space-time, and that region moves at super-luminal speeds rather than the spacecraft.