• Welcome to the new COTI server. We've moved the Citizens to a new server. Please let us know in the COTI Website issue forum if you find any problems.
  • We, the systems administration staff, apologize for this unexpected outage of the boards. We have resolved the root cause of the problem and there should be no further disruptions.

A real reactionless drive?

If it is using the recoil from microwaves it is a low temperature photon drive. It is not reactionless, although it will have a remarkably high Isp. Power requirements will be monstrous, orders of magnitude higher than with MHD or Ion drive.
 
No, it is reactionless (or exhaustless, anyway) - the microwaves never leave the bottle. AIUI power requirements are quite low.
 
Very cool. Are there any guesses on if this could be used to boost payloads into space? Ooooo what about replacing commercial jet engines with this nifty drive?

Mmmmmmm reactionless drive . . .
 
It's not powerful enough to reach orbit, but once you're there it'll move you around. Early versions are expected to be about as powerful as ion drives.

Replacing jet engines has been suggested for more advanced versions.

If it actually works, obviously...
 
Having read a more detailed description, it's nonsense, based on arguments about phase velocity vs group velocity which make no sense.

First of all, group velocity is mostly a function of passing through a transparent medium.

Secondly, hitting a medium which results in a group velocity which is not c will result in transfer of momentum to that medium, and thus the total momentum is still conserved.

I suspect this device works by some form of measurement error. If properly set up and isolated in a vacuum, it is unlikely to do anything at all, like most such devices.
 
It's good to see people thinking about this.

IMTU humans do not have reactionless drives, instead using a high efficiency ion system. Having maximum acceleration at .6 gee eliminates problems associated with lack of artificial gravity.

Haven't really had time to read the references thoroughly, but does it sound like 'phlogiston physics' to anyone else out there?
 
“I get worried when a physics article gives the unit of weight in kg...”

How right you are! Real scientists measure thrust in kilodrams per hogshead or at least in scruples per furlong.
 
file_21.gif
 
Dr. Cramer's article was written for a popular audience. But he is one of the Names in gravity. A cut behind Hawking, but close.

This stuff might not work, but some of it might. Most of it makes more sense than HePLAR. My own guess is that if the Mach's Principle drive works it will require a lot more energy than seems reasonable.
 
He's getting two grams of force per 15 KG of total apparatus, using some 1200+ watts of input. shielding included, according to the eureka article.

Not terribly efficient, unless a true nuclear reactor is in use. (as opposed to RTG's) He's about one order of magnitude less efficient on thrust than current in-use RTG powered Ion Drives for DS1.

It sounds psuedo-science to me; grams of force as opposed to newtons is, well, unusual. Not inappropriate, especially in the context given where he's measuring the "effective mass" in to different orientations and deriving a net 4g different measurement of weight.

I'm leery, though, since the mass is not evenly distributed, if his scale is being effected by the possible change in Center of gravity.
 
Originally posted by Parmasson:
Even if it does not pan out it is worth a try. You never know what might they might learn.
Depends on how much it costs to try. However, setting up the experiment with proper measurement systems probably doesn't cost very much (and will probably result in any apparent thrust vanishing).
 
Back
Top