Link: https://www.reddit.com/r/Physics/comments/5ewj86/so_nasas_em...
This is a fascinating study about the politics and social aspect of science -- i.e., how it's actually done.
I'm just a layman, but so far it looks like this is experimental error. I never knew there were so many ways to screw something like this up!
Having said that, this is a win either way. It teaches all of us about rigorous science, it allows far-fetched ideas to be taken somewhat seriously as long as there is some sort of experimental evidence, and it provides a forum for practicing scientists and interested laymen to cross-pollinate. It's a really good thing. (Only probably no warp drive involved)
If you're curious, you can find an easy to understand theory about why breaking the conservation of momentum lets you build a perpetual-motion machine, creating infinite energy.
Then, you can find a paper from the inventor of the EM drive explaining why it won't allow that to happen. His explanation spectacularly violates special relatively in a way we could easily detect.
Why are half the comments here saying 'They must be wrong' - seemingly based on nothing more than a strong belief that NASA must be wrong.
The internet is full of amateurs and they are very very confident about their abilities.
Maybe the paper's conclusion is accurate! Maybe this physical "can't happen" actually can, and the model needs extending to account for that. It wouldn't be the first time. But it also wouldn't be the first time that a "can't happen" really can't happen, and the result suggesting otherwise is an artifact of the way an experiment was run, rather than an accurate description of a previously unsuspected physical phenomenon. Going by past examples, the latter is much more likely than the former. So there's nothing unreasonable, even for people like myself who aren't knowledgeable enough to evaluate the paper on its own merits, in reserving credulity until the result is shown by other experimenters to be reproducible.
The internet is full of amateurs and they are very very eager to point out when they are not fully grasping something, in one way or another.
AFAIK it is research from their fringe science labs.
Nothing more than a strong believe?
Extraordinary claims need extraordinary proof and the paper doesn't have too much quality regarding the data.
I'm sure even NASA has there fair share of cranks.
Chances are that this is just experimental error. But part of me really wants this to be true. That it's possible some crack pot shoved some microwaves in a tin can and created a device that may reveal a new phenomenon.
On one hand it's great that this is being reviewed and tested. The other hand, that it's not getting properly tested in space where it really can make a difference is somewhat saddening. Can anyone point to a committed space trial?
http://www.sciencealert.com/the-impossible-em-drive-is-about...
I'm not sure I understand the reasoning.
While I don't really believe it, I am intrigued by the possibility. It has been a long time since we learned anything truly new in physics. The recent breakthroughs (Higgs boson, gravitational waves, for example) were satisfying, but not surprising. I would desperately like to be surprised.
2. we know that can't be possible
I think most people are excited about this not because they think we just proved 2 to be wrong, but instead because we know 2 must be true, so what the hell is going on with 1???
Most likely we will find out that we are NOT violating the known laws of the universe, but we're "not violating" them in a very interesting way.
1. studies consistently are showing that this seems to produce thrust without expelling any matter
but this is in fact the first peer reviewed study, so we really only have a sample size of one (not to say other experiments are invalid, just that we have no reason to trust them). Even assuming it is down to subtle experimental error, we may still learn something interesting, of course.
Far less likely is that this is actually producing useful thrust, and regardless of how it is doing it, that would be extremely interesting, and in all probability, new physics. Even if true, I don't expect it to completely overturn our understanding of physics, but it would be very exciting.
Nope, others have been unable to reproduce their results. As for Eagle Works ... their data is crap. The paper consists of 18 data points and large amounts of variance. The largest thrust measurement comes from the middle power setting.
Furthermore, they are measuring (at most!) 120 micro-newtons of thrust. Someone correct me if I am wrong, but that's ~1/100 the weight of a penny[0]. Even if they can produce these tiny amounts of of thrust reliably, they still need to eliminate other sources of error.
Other false-positive results of similar devices have either generated thrust in the null condition or were later retracted after correcting for measurement error.
>I think most people are excited about this not because they think we just proved 2 to be wrong, but instead because we know 2 must be true, so what the hell is going on with 1???
The EM drive literally entails perpetual motion. We know that's impossible, yet someone always manages to sell a new version of it every few years.
>Most likely we will find out that we are NOT violating the known laws of the universe, but we're "not violating" them in a very interesting way.
There is a reason this is in a journal dedicated to publishing experimental results from aerospace engineers and not a physics journal. Peer review isn't magic, it just means two out of three people signed off on a paper being published.
[0]: Seems crazy small, math may be wacky off due to lack of sleep.
Most likely is still some sort of experimental error. I'd like it to be real but there is still tonnes of room for skepticism.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/313580454_Low-accel...
The "theory behind the EM drive" [1] is completely based on classical electrodynamics and therefore it's flawed. Classical electrodynamics conserves momentum and energy. It doesn't mean that the EM drive can't work though, it just means that this theory can't work.
[1] I only found this: http://www.emdrive.com/theorypaper9-4.pdf
Is this what you refer as the "theory behind the EM Drive"?
Is there a consensus on this interpretation v. "just adding more dark matter"?