A ship jumps ... how does another ship know where it went to?
Well, first of all, since every jump takes the same time regardless of distance, you should get a moment-of-jump doppler effect that enables an observer to calculate the length of the jump by the amount of red-shift.
But is this all that can be achieved (often sufficient to tell you where it's gone ...) or is there any way of ascertaining direction as well? And if there is, does it require more than a single point of observation?
Well, first of all, since every jump takes the same time regardless of distance, you should get a moment-of-jump doppler effect that enables an observer to calculate the length of the jump by the amount of red-shift.
But is this all that can be achieved (often sufficient to tell you where it's gone ...) or is there any way of ascertaining direction as well? And if there is, does it require more than a single point of observation?