| > I apologize for being a bit impatient before, these issues are subtle. No worries, and thanks again :) > But if I can make two warp bubbles in two different frames, I can make a round trip that arrives before it starts. Even for the metric as Alcubierre describes? Or for one that's modified per Everett? Now that I'm rereading the Everett paper, I'm not really sure where he's getting his "Lorentz boost"; if there's technically no actual "motion" (because everything's locally at rest and the warp bubble is outright expanding/contracting space around it), then I'm having a hard time figuring out what there would be to "boost", since the relevant Lorentz transformations should be no-ops if everything's locally at rest. Is Everett moving the ship itself at relativistic speeds within the bubble? Is an observer moving at relativistic speeds outside the bubble? > So you need to violate special relativity in a global way to avoid these issues. Which the universe kinda already does, no? The mechanism here (from what I understand) is the same as the one driving universal expansion (the difference being that there's no corresponding contraction in the universal case - right?). If that expansion were to be reversed somehow, would that, too, result in causality violations? And further, doesn't special relativity already only hold in cases with low gravitational potential - so i.e. not in a gravitational field? Sorry if these are kinda dumb questions. |
Now, if special relativity holds in the large then there is no reason why they can't also construct a warp bubble. Relative to you and your bubble that bubble is in motion. Since this is allowed, we can construct a closed timelike curve with two judiciously chosen bubbles.
> Which the universe kinda already does, no?
The expansion of the universe does violate special relativity but not in a way that protects warp geometry from creating paradoxes. The kind of violation you would need would distinguish between frames of reference that SR says are equivalent.
> And further, doesn't special relativity already only hold in cases with low gravitational potential - so i.e. not in a gravitational field?
Special relativity holds well enough in most situations that the same argument applies even if you accounted for general relativity except near extreme situations like black holes
Warp drives are not permitted by any deviation from special relativity. You need specific contrived geometries of the entire universe that don't match up with what we know about it.