Originally posted by Tom Kalbfus:
But branes have an advantage, unlike other stars, they are not light years away. Branes are separated by a tiny distance along a fifth dimension, not time but another dimension where you can stack parallel 3-d spaces like pages in a book.
I thought your goal here was to reduce the rubber science required for your Traveller Universe. As it stands now, branes are rubber science, and as I have said earlier, I see them as really nothing more than sweeping problems under the rug.
You have to assume branes exist, in the first place. You then have to assume that this 5th dimensional separation is in fact "short" and not long. For all you know, that distance could be as far as it is to the nearest galaxy. Then, on top of that, you have to assume that such distance, what ever it is, is tranversible by wormholes.
And again, if you got wormholes, you got warp drive, so the whole concept of branes is not needed, not required, and superfluous.
Then, in additions to all the other assumptions you have made so far, you have to posit the ability to construct technology that will operate in two different universes, under two different sets of natural laws. You are adding to the rubber science, rather than attempting to diminish it.
Since gravity leaks across the branes, there is a likelihood that matter or antimatter will accumulate in these gravitational depressions if there is indeed matter/antimatter in these other branes.
Again, more assumptions, more positing of entities that increase your rubber science.
I think a matter spaceship can survive in the vacuum of an antimatter brane for a time. Stray anti-hydrogen atoms will collide with the hull, but so long as not too many of them are encountered and the shielding is adequate, the ship should survive. I guess the question to ask is would an antimatter spaceship survive in our universe? Is antimatter, once created, stable so long as it doesn't come in contact with matter?
Research indicates that it is almost as stable as matter. But the interstellar medium is not a perfect vacuum. The density is like 10 atoms per cubic centimeter. Not a lot, but think a minute. If you do any travelling at all, you are going to run into far more, which will erode your ship, (or the antimatter ship in this universe) a lot quicker.
but what dos that say about the continued existance of antimatter in our universe once created?
There ain't none here. When matter and antimatter get together, there is a bright flash, some gamma and thats it. If it touches anything whatsoever, its gone in a flash.
The CP violation experiments, if I am understanding this right, shows a very very slight bias in the decay of B and K mesons toward matter. Not a lot, something like 1 part in a billion. What this means is that out of say, 2 billion and 1 decays of these particles, 1 billion will be antimatter, another billion plus 1 will be antimatter. The matter and antimatter will pair up, anniliate each other, leaving the lone gal at the ball without a date left to form everything we see in the universe.
Perhaps there is a predisposition for matter to form on one side of a brane and antimatter on the other.
Intriguing speculation, but again, that is all it is.
Admittedly brane universes make things convienient for a Traveller Universe;
I am NOT seeing this at all. It sounds like added complexity, above and beyond, and far worse than any objections I have about the reality of jump drive. Far from being convienient, this looks more complex, and more "rubber scienty" than what we already have.
Instead of having one map, you have to create two now. Or one for each and every brane. And no, there is not going to be any transbrane colonies, there can't be because your colonists are made of matter. In an antimatter universe, this is a problem. And renders the entire brane far to dangerous to live in.