• Hosted by Branzone
  • PayPal Donate

Warp drive is real

Submitted by: Goshin @ 11:57 AM | Tuesday, August 30, 2016 | (url: http://www.dailym...)

Once again, vindication for Goshin
I was right about the NASA Rocket, I was right about being cool, and I was right about the warp drive

you guys were all wrong!!!

The idea for an EmDrive was proposed in 2000 by a researcher named Roger Shawyer.

Since then four independent labs, including one at Nasa, have recreated the drive.

But the mysterious engine had baffled scientists because it appeared to violate the law of conservation of momentum, which states for every action there has to be an equal and opposite reaction.



This means the rocket can only accelerate forward if a force of equal magnitude is sent in the other direction - the rocket's exhaust.

Nasa's Eagleworks team is now ready to reveal its findings, it has been claimed - sending the physic world into a tizzy.

'It is my understanding that Eaglework's new paper has been today accepted for publication in a peer-review journal, where it will be published,' claims one user on the Nasa Spaceflight forum.

Earlier this year, an employee confirmed the team was working on the paper.

'The Eagleworks Lab is NOT dead and we continue down the path set by our NASA management.

'Past that I can't say more other than to listen to Dr Rodal on this topic, and please have patience about when our next EW paper is going to be published. Peer reviews are glacially slow,' Eagleworks engineer Paul March wrote on the same forum.



Earlier this year, a paper published in AIP Advances suggests the EmDrive produces an exhaust like every other rocket.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3764112/Is-mystery-impossible-fuel-free-EmDrive-thruster-solved-Claims-secretive-Nasa-lab-publish-paper-warp-drive-humans-Mars-10-weeks.html#ixzz4IprmtAUT
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook


I'd post this in my space thread but I don't think anyone actually reads that thread anymore (regretfully)

Category: Technology | 90 Comments
Tags: space