EmDrive: NASA Engineer Says Physics-defying Engine Could Go 99% the Speed of Light

Must read

Imagine an engine that needs no propellant. It sounds impossible, and it most likely is.

Such a creation would allow us to travel the far reaches of space and would arguably be the most exciting technological advancement of the century.

EmDrive Ilustration

That’s not stopping one NASA engineer from testing theories around the EmDrive — a conceptual “helical” engine that could defy the laws of physics and create forward thrust without fuel.

What is the EmDrive?

Back in 2001, British scientist Roger Shawyer theorized that we could generate thrust by pumping microwaves into a conical chamber.

Shawyer suggested that the microwaves would, in theory, bounce exponentially off the chamber walls, creating enough propulsion to power a spacecraft without fuel.

Some researchers do claim to have generated thrust in EmDrive experiments. The amount was so low, though, that the detractors believe the thrust may have even been caused by outside influences. These could be seismic vibrations or the Earth’s magnetic field.

New research

Over the last few months, several engineers and scientists have come out with contradictory positions on the EmDrive.

Some have claimed it’s impossible, while others continue to work at what might be a futile task, justifying their work by saying the payoff would be enormous.

The most recent of these is NASA engineer David Burns, as New Scientist reports.

“The engine itself would be able to get to 99 percent the speed of light if you had enough time and power,” Burns told New Scientist.

However, it would need to be huge — 200 meters long and 12 meters in diameter — and powerful, needing 165 megawatts of power to generate just 1 newton of thrust. This is about the same force a person uses to type on a keyboard.

Therefore, the engine would only be able to reach high-velocity speeds in the frictionless conditions of space.

Einsteinian physics

As Futurism writes, the engineer proposes accelerating a loop of ions to almost light speed before changing their speeds — and therefore, their mass, as per Einstein’s law of relativity.

This, in theory, would cause exponential forward thrust without any need for fuel.

“I’m comfortable with throwing it out there,” Burns told New Scientist. “If someone says it doesn’t work, I’ll be the first to say. It was worth a shot.”

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest article