| Which of those gives you observables like a very nearly isotropic 2.725 K (and slowly cooling) blackbody spectrum, for example ? The universe gives virtually everything in it some observables it seems silly to ignore: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scale_factor_(cosmology) just because the vast majority of observers aren't strictly Eulerian and thus there are lots of little details, like a dipole anisotropy in the CMB, or small deviations from a perfect blackbody spectrum. For A and B separated by non-cosmological distances, there are plenty of other local clocks available; around here one might use the orbital period of the Hulse-Taylor binary, for instance. Of course the Alcubierre metric doesn't use the scale factor, since it is an everywhere-flat spacetime (i.e., not expanding) except in the compact region of the warp bubble's walls, and the metric does not admit a varying scale factor, and it is a vacuum solution so there are no CMB photons, binary pulsars, or any other matter -- not even a spaceship. Making the Alcubierre metric even slightly more realistic exposes problems [1] which don't vanish when you make a reasonable (or any) choice of frame of reference. - -- [1] Lobo & Visser (2004) https://doi.org/10.1088/0264-9381/21/24/011 https://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0406083 (note that the problems do not depend on superluminality) |