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I’ve created a fairly fleshed out, detailed FTL concept. Basically, you have a circular starship, with a ring of tungsten encircling that, held in place by an antigravity ring beneath it. The rim of the starship consists of a plasma window - basically superheated plasma held in place by a magnetic field. This plasma is made from a material that, when, strongly heated, emits radiation. This radiation converts ordinary matter into Negative Matter (so, matter with a negative mass). Once enough of the tungsten ring has converted into Negative Matter (and the amount needed is pretty small) an Alcubierre-style warp bubble is created around the ship, taking it to its destination at a speed faster than light. For story reasons, I’d like it to be the case that these ships can only work in space - so a ship has to first leave the atmosphere of whatever planet or body it is on before it can fire its warp drive. Considering its mode of operation, is there any plausible reason why this could be?

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  • $\begingroup$ Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat. $\endgroup$
    – L.Dutch
    Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 13:37
  • $\begingroup$ so a ship has to first leave the atmosphere Just to test where you want to take this, would the FTL drive work in a sufficiently sized vacuum space on the planet's surface? In other words, it is the atmosphere that's the blocking issue? $\endgroup$
    – Flater
    Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 14:49
  • $\begingroup$ This radiation converts ordinary matter into Negative Matter (so, matter with a negative mass). — maybe you wouldn't use while in atmosphere because it could turn air into anti-air, and make it fly into the space (prob. with FTL speed)? $\endgroup$
    – user28434
    Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 15:35
  • $\begingroup$ @user28434 Antimatter is not the same thing that is in fact just run of the mill positive mass but with the charges of the particles reversed. In fact should the theorised negative matter actually be proven to exist it should have equivalent counterparts to both normal matter and antimatter but all with negative mass-energy. $\endgroup$
    – MttJocy
    Commented Jun 12, 2019 at 0:06

13 Answers 13

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The traditional answer to this question is "FTL drives don't work within gravity wells", which is sometimes justified by saying that they require a region of "flat" spacetime to operate reliably. If you're within a gravity well (i.e., spacetime is significantly perturbed), then they become dangerously unreliable and can self-destruct, shoot you off in random directions at random (superluminal) speeds, etc.

If you're specifically looking for a reason why your drive would only operate in vacuum rather than banning it from gravity wells (so, e.g., it would be just fine within the gravity well of an airless world), then a very likely explanation would be that the plasma generated by the drive (and quite possibly also the negative matter, depending on its characteristics) would interact with any atmosphere (or other matter) it came into contact with, cooling it or otherwise interfering with the drive's operation, thus it must be used in a (near) vacuum to prevent such interference. In this case, trying to use it in atmosphere would simply prevent the drive from successfully "igniting". Or, if you decide that your negative matter is actually antimatter or something similar, it could lead to a catastrophic explosion if the startup process proceeds far enough to generate significant negative matter before shutting down.

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    $\begingroup$ You know if you disable the safeties on the hyperdive you can ruin all of Star Wars canon, right? $\endgroup$
    – Mazura
    Commented Jun 9, 2019 at 23:20
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    $\begingroup$ Actually, negative matter (assuming we use the math we have now, rather than the mere existance of negative matter necessitating entirely new equations) is far worse than antimatter. For example, it would be accelerated in the opposite direction from the rest of your ship in a gravitational field - which would make it rather impractical to use, even if you somehow managed to contain it in a magnetic field (which in itself would be kind of impossible :D). There's a reason why we think negative matter is impossible or would require corrections to e.g. equations of motion. $\endgroup$
    – Luaan
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:05
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    $\begingroup$ @Mazura I presume you are talking about that infamous suicide jump in The Last Jedi? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 16:37
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    $\begingroup$ @JohnDvorak - actually I was thinking of the jump Han does into an atmosphere. That one's only slightly less worse; at least it was actual suicide, not just suicidal. $\endgroup$
    – Mazura
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 23:36
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    $\begingroup$ Super-heating plasma inside of an atmosphere sounds really, really, really bad for anything that relies on the atmosphere for existence. I'd be less concerned about the ship and much, much, much more concerned with everything outside of the ship. $\endgroup$
    – Ellesedil
    Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 18:34
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SHORT ANSWER:

There are several obvious reasons why using a warp drive near a planet might be a bad idea in your story.

LONG ANSWER:

And here are some of the reasons:

The concept of the Kzinti Lesson first appeared in Larry Niven's novel Ringworld (1970) and refers to his story "The Warriors" in If magazine in 1966. It is phrased as:

A reaction drive is a weapon effective in proportion to it's efficiency.

Anyone who watches the takeoff of a large rocket from a safe distance should be able to appreciate why getting much closer to the takeoff would not be a good idea.

Long ago I read an article where a scientist dismissed the possibility of even slower than light interstellar travel. He chose what seemed like a reasonable size for a starship and calculated how powerful the rocket engines would have to be to have enough thrust to accelerate the ship's mass enough to build up a decent speed for interstellar travel, and then calculated if the ship was launched from Earth with rocket engines at full power it would exterminate all live on Earth with the blast.

Naturally he didn't think that maybe the starship would take off from Earth with the rockets working on enough power to lift the ship from Earth but much less than full power, or that the starship could have been built in outer space far enough from a planet that it wouldn't damage the planet.

But what about a slower than light or faster than light space drive which doesn't use a reaction motor?

My answer to this question discusses why a faster than light starship would be dangerous even if not equipped with missiles or ray guns:

You may have heard of the theoretical Alcubierre warp drive. I have read that a ship using that warp drive would accumulate matter and energy as it travelled, and when it turned off the warp drive that matter and energy would be discharged in a blast that would devastate any planet it hit.

If so, a starship using that warp drive would have to stop to discharge energy in interstellar space and restart several times during an interstellar voyage in order to preserve the destination. But a warship headed to another planet to destroy it would leave the Alcubierre drive on for the entire trip to built up energy for a blast to destroy the target planet at the end of the voyage.

And here is another thing to think about. Suppose that a starship uses its faster than light drive to actually enter the atmosphere and land on a destination planet. Suppose that the starship is travelling "only" ten times the speed of light, or only about 3,000,000,000 kilometers per second.

In order to shut off the stardrive within 1 kilometer of the desired position, within 1 kilometer of the surface of the destination planet, It would have to be shut off within one three millionth of a second. That is rather precision work. Can the star drive even shut off that fast?

Would precision of even 1 kilometer be enough? If the starship cuts off power 1 kilometer above the surface, it might fall 1,000 meters to the surface and crash and kill everyone aboard and damage the surface. If it cuts off power 100 meters above the surface, it might crash and kill everyone aboard. If it cuts off power 10 meters above the surface, the fall might kill some people and will probably injure many. If it cuts off power even 1 meter above the surface, there may be injuries and the passengers should complain to the management.

Suppose, on the other hand, that the starship shuts off the interstellar faster than light drive 1 kilometer farther than the desired position, and thus 1 kilometer below the surface. Or 100 meters, 10 meters, or 1 meter below the surface. What will happen?

Nobody can calculate what would happen since there is no theory for a fictional faster than light drive that is sufficiently plausible for calculating the details. It seems natural to predict an explosion. But what percentage of the destination planet's population would survive seems impossible to guess.

Suppose on the other hand that a starship uses its faster than light drive to take off from an inhabited planet. An inhabited planet would usually have an atmosphere about as dense as that of Earth's.

Why does the air glow red hot in front of space vehicles reentering Earth's atmosphere? because at first those vehicles are traveling many times faster than the air molecules possibly could. The air molecules can't get out of the way so they are slammed together and compressed against the air molecules beyond them. When a gas is compressed it heats up, so the space vehicles slamming into the atmosphere create super hot zones of gas ahead of them.

And if the heat shields of those space vehicles fail, as that of the Columbia failed, the vehicles are destroyed and everyone aboard dies.

Orbital speed in low Earth orbit is about 7.8 kilometers per second, about 0.000026 times the speed of light, and reentering vehicles would be travelling slower than that relative to the air.

A vehicle taking off from Earth at ten times low Earth orbital speed or 78 kilometers per second, or 0.00026 times the sped of light, would have much hotter zone of gas ahead of it, and once the vehicle entered outer space it would take some time for that gas to disperse.

A vehicle taking off at 100 times orbital velocity would be travelling at 780 kilometers per second or 0.0026 times the speed of light.

A vehicle taking off at 1,000 times orbital velocity would be travelling at 7,800 kilometers per second or 0.026 times the speed of light.

A vehicle taking off at 1 percent of the speed of light, or about 2,997.92 kilometers per second, would be travelling at 384.34 times orbital velocity.

A vehicle taking off at 10 percent of the speed of light, or about 29,979.2 kilometers per second, would be travelling at 3,843.4 times orbital velocity.

A vehicle taking off at the speed of light, or about 299,792.458 kilometers per second, would be travelling at 38,434.929 times orbital velocity.

A vehicle taking off at 10 times the speed of light, or about 2,997,924.58 kilometers per second, would be travelling at 384,349.29 times orbital velocity.

Clearly a space ship taking off using a faster than light drive would have to use only a tiny fraction of its speed while within the atmosphere in order to avoid smashing itself against the equivalent of a brick wall made out of super hot plasma. A spaceship capable of travelling through the atmosphere at even a few percent of the speed of light without destroying itself shouldn't have to worry much about enemy ray guns or atomic missiles.

In Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986), Kirk, aboard a captured Klingon ship in Earth's atmosphere, detects a whaling ship headed for their whales, and orders:

KIRK: Full power descent, Mister Sulu.

SULU: Aye sir. Full power descent.

And later, while still in Earth's atmosphere:

[Bird-of-Prey bridge]

KIRK: Well done, Mister Scott. How soon can we be ready for warp speed?

[Bird-of-Prey cargo bay]

SCOTT: Full power now, sir.

[Bird-of-Prey bridge]

KIRK: If you will, Mister Sulu.

SULU: Aye sir, warp speed!

And naturally there has been some criticism of those scenes because of what travelling at impulse or warp drive within Earth's atmosphere would do to the Klingon ship and to Earth's atmosphere.

I remember a story where a jet fight pilot travels back in time to World War One. His plane's missiles can't find any other jet planes to track and hit, so they are useless. But when his friend is shot down by the Mauve Margrave or Pink Prince or other version of the Red Baron, he finds a way to strike back. He swoops down low over the airfield of the Crimson Count or Dark Duke or whatever at high speed and the air turbulence he causes is like a tornado, wrecking buildings and tossing around fragile planes and men.

So if a starship should travel horizontally in the atmosphere at ten times or a hundred times the speed of a jet fighter, let alone at what would be a high speed for the starship, it would likely cause a lot of damage.

And also consider that a star drive would likely create a bubble around the starship where conditions are changed and faster than light travel is possible. Even a slower than light anti gravity engine would probably create an anti gravity bubble around a slower than light space ship. Any such bubble around a ship would affect all of the matter within the bubble, not just the ship.

So if that bubble around the stars ship is a few times the dimensions of the starship, the starship would take some earth and rock and air with it every time it turned on its engines and took off from the ground of an inhabited planet. And it would take that earth, rock and air with it and deposit it on the landing field of the habitable planet it landed on.

So what if the bubble around the starship has a radius of 100 kilometers, or 1,000 kilometers, or 10,000 kilometers, or 100,000 kilometers, or 1,000,000 kilometers, etc., etc.?

If the starship turns on its faster than light engines while in the vacuum of interstellar space, or even the slightly more dense interplanetary space, it won't matter how large the bubble around the starship is. It will only carry a small amount of matter and energy caught inside the bubble when it is turned on. Unless, of course, like an Alcubierre warp drive, the bubble picks up all the matter and energy it encounters in interstellar space.

But if the starship turns on its faster than light engines while sitting on the ground of a habitable planet, its bubble of altered space/time is likely to take away a chunk of rock and a volume of air with it. If the starship's bubble takes away a large enough volume of air, the air rushing into the new vacuum could have hurricane force or tornado force or many times greater force.

If the starship's warp bubble takes away a large enough volume of rock, the planet will be too deformed to maintain that altered shape with a big chunk taken out, and it will reform into a new and somewhat smaller spherical shape. That will involve extreme geological events like super earthquakes and super volcanoes erupting.

And if the starship's bubble is large enough to enclose the entire planet, the starship will drag the entire planet with it into the destination solar system.

Therefore, it seems to me quite easy to imagine an imaginary interstellar drive that would be quite dangerous to a planet. So planets with knowledge of that interstellar drive would require that all starships turn off that interstellar drive and use some other type of space drive to land or take off. Or maybe require the passengers and cargo to transfer to interplanetary ships operated by the local government while still far from the planet.

And the local planetary defense force would probably be prepared to instantly destroy any approaching starship which violated their rules.

Also see this question, and this question.

Added June 11 2019.

DreadedEntity's answer points out that a starship using some type of warp drive wouldn't actually be travelling faster than light within the warp bubble. But the warp bubble would be traveling faster than light compared to the space outside the warp bubble.

So if the warp drive was used inside a planetary atmosphere the air molecules would be traveling at normal low speeds outside the warp bubble and inside the warp bubble but would enter the warp bubble at a very high rate, probably much faster than they could exit the air bubble.

So I think that the density of the atmosphere would build up inside the warp bubble and thus the air inside the warp bubble would rapidly heat up, possibly damaging, melting, or vaporizing the starship & its contents.

And the starship would probably remove a cylinder of air from the planet's atmosphere, and neighboring air would rush into the vacuum at high speeds. The greater the diameter of the warp bubble, the greater the damage caused by those winds.

One may also wonder about possible gravitational and electromagnetic interactions between matter and energy inside the warp bubble and matter and energy outside the warp bubble. If the warp bubble is only turned on while in the vacuum of space, such potentially troublesome interactions would be reduced to a minimum.

And does the warp bubble have a sharp edge, so that the warp effect is at one hundred percent strength everywhere within the bubble, and at zero percent strength everywhere outside the bubble, or those the strength of the warp effect decline with increasing distance from the warp field generator?

In the second case possible interactions between matter and energy with different warp field strengths could be much more important and potentially troublesome than in the first case.

If the strength of the warp effect declines with distance, that would be another reason to only turn on the warp engine while in the vacuum of outer space.

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    $\begingroup$ I like your answer, but frankly, I'm giving you +1 just for creating a throwing-weight document. $\endgroup$
    – JBH
    Commented Jun 9, 2019 at 17:53
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    $\begingroup$ See also What would happen if you tried to hit a baseball pitched at 90% the speed of light? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 0:20
  • $\begingroup$ I’ve considered the ‘how would it stop?’ part and created a pretty detailed model for that, but that’s not super relevant here. Thank you! $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:47
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    $\begingroup$ @PaŭloEbermann The final line of that analysis will probably never fail to get a hearty chuckle from me $\endgroup$
    – Scoots
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 12:13
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    $\begingroup$ The planetary govt. might employ the equivalent of "harbor pilots", who would be sent out on small craft (that presumably are safer to operate because they have smaller bubbles) to rendezvous with the interstellar craft, go to the bridge thereof, and direct all movement in accordance with local rules. If decent fly-by-wire tech and FTL comms are available, rather than a human pilot, the ship's AI could be provided the operational parameters constraining its movements. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 15:33
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"basically superheated plasma held in place by a magnetic field"

That's your reason right there. Do that in an atmosphere, and the plasma ring will be massively disrupted, leading to a uneven matter conversion. This, in turn, will ensure that the warp bubble is itself warped, the consequences of which can go from the inner volume being flooded in hard radiation from the asymmetric Alcubierre boundary (perhaps survivable, though, so in an emergency you might just go for it), to the warp bubble actually pulling apart whatever is inside - you do go FTL, but your feet go just a teensy bit faster or slower, resulting in you being messily ripped in shreds. The warp bubble continues resonating like a bell, pulverizing everything inside and reemerging at destination with a cargo of broken tech and bleeding corpses, promptly decompressing explosively since the ship's structural integrity has been compromised.

So, you don't go FTL while in an atmosphere.

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  • $\begingroup$ Why would being in an atmosphere disrupt the plasma ring? Wouldn’t the pressure on the plasma actually be greater if there was a vacuum outside? $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:48
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    $\begingroup$ @Locaq - 3 reasons. Air contains contaminants. Air contains electrically neutral and cold particles which won't respond to, and may place strain or.disrupt, the containing plasma (unlike vacuum). Air can vary locally (gusts, barometric pressure etc) placing uneven, varying, or.unpredictabke external effect on the engine and its fields. $\endgroup$
    – Stilez
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 8:37
  • $\begingroup$ Ah, I see. That makes sense. $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 12:26
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    $\begingroup$ @Stilez Don't forget "air conducts heat" - activating (or attempting to activate) the drive in atmosphere will take far more energy, as the heat gets sapped from the plasma into the surrounding air. Then you go FTL, and leave a large vacuum in the atmosphere. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 13:08
  • $\begingroup$ @Chronocidal - those as well :) $\endgroup$
    – Stilez
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 18:25
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Let's talk about fence posts

Have you ever driven a fence post into the ground? You betcha! You get one of those cool tubes with handles and bang! pound that sucker right in.

Now, I want you to keep that in mind as we talk about magnets. (Heh, you're going to love this. Trust me.)

A big-ol' magnet is resting against a block of iron. The magnet is the Earth and you want to separate the iron (your rocket) from the magnet. The pulling force of your arm is similar to the pushing force of the rocket exhaust. Why is this important?

Because you said your FTL drive creates negative mass!

Not much, but it's there!

You have that magnet and block of iron far enough apart that, at rest, the magnet doesn't pull on the iron (ship in orbit), but you just changed that block of iron into another magnet with the opposite pole pointing toward Earth!

Bang!

Your fence post (space ship) was just pounded a couple of feet (with an appropriate crater) into the ground.

Yeah... fence posts...

No one in their right mind would activate a negative-mass-inducing engine within the gravity well of a planet. You might have trouble activating it within the orbit of Mercury. Bang! It might cause a cool solar flare.


BTW, I recognize that I'm treating negative mass like the opposite pole of a magnet. Technically, two positive masses attract and two negative masses would attract. Opposing masses should repel (the opposite of a magnet). That's not as cool as my fence post metaphor, but it's worth noting. The repulsion would cost your your navigation completely. It's the same bang! but it's more like a bullet from a blunderbuss than two magnets.

But I wasn't willing to walk away from my fence post metaphor. Sorry.

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This is a very short answer, which basically boils down to this essay:

https://what-if.xkcd.com/1/

Anything traveling at high speeds has to deal with air resistance. The faster you go, the more energy has to go into pushing air out of the way. In that article, Randall talks about the case of a baseball at sub FTL speeds. Imagine if it was an entire spaceship, moving at FTL speeds and going all the way to orbit. It is likely that there won't be an inhabitable planet left afterwards.

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  • $\begingroup$ And even if you didn't care about the planet, the ship itself would likely not survive it. Maybe it has shields strong enough to withstand a few particles colliding with it in space (such a shield would be a must, because otherwise colliding with a single hydrogen atom in outer space would be catastrophic), but not strong enough to withstand gazillions of air molecules slamming into it at once. $\endgroup$
    – vsz
    Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 6:11
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Plasma is pulled by gravitational tidal forces. These tidal forces on a ship at rest are negligible, but if the warp field is stretching the frame of the ship, then from the planet's frame, the ship is no longer a hundred meters long, but it is stretched across 100s of thousands of kilometers making these tidal forces of gravity more extreme the faster you go. So, if you fly too close to a planet, the plasma will be pulled inside of it's field to have a disproportionate amount of plasma facing the gravity source. This could cause a variety of effects depending on how you envision your ship working such as causing your ship to be pushed toward or away from the planet, or causing it to go into an uncontrollable spin that rips it apart.

If you want ships to be able to get closer than the outer limits of the gravity well, consider that moving through an atmosphere at more than a few thousand kph can incinerate pretty much anything. Trying to fly through an atmosphere at warp speeds will experience the relativistic baseball affect as per the most commonly cited meem here on world builder: https://what-if.xkcd.com/1/

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  • $\begingroup$ Plasma is pulled by gravity, but so is the rest of the ship, by the same amount. So the plasma won’t move relative to the ship. Unless the ship is accelerating under its own power, it’s in free fall, and if it is accelerating it doesn’t make any difference how close to the planet it is. Tidal forces caused by a planet on something the size of a spaceship are negligible. $\endgroup$
    – Mike Scott
    Commented Jun 9, 2019 at 15:38
  • $\begingroup$ Depends on the exact effect he expects his Alcubierre drive to have on the ship. If the ship spaghettifies it could become effectively big enough to be affected by tidal forces. $\endgroup$
    – Nosajimiki
    Commented Jun 9, 2019 at 15:50
  • $\begingroup$ a) the ships stop at ‘beacons’ just outside planets which essentially ‘catch’ the explosive landing of the ship and prevent it from damaging anything b) if you construct the warp bubble correctly, the tidal forces in the centre (i.e where the ship is) should be pretty much negligible, so no spaghettification. $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:50
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You can't cheat physics. When the space ship moves upward in a gravity well it is gaining potential energy and that has to come from somewhere or else you've broken physics.

The minimum energy required to lift a 100,000kg space ship from the Earth's surface to outside Earth's gravity is 62,720,000,000 joules of energy, the equivalent of 15 tons of TNT. The space shuttle gets that energy from burning fuel of course, but it burns the fuel over time...

If you go to light speed on Earth's surface, you exit the gravity well pretty much instantaneously. Which means in that instant you kick your ship into lightspeed at the surface, you'd have to dump 62 trillion joules of energy into your lightspeed drive pretty much instantaneously. That's a problem. Your lightspeed drive needs as much energy as 15 tons of TNT going off instantaneously, but without blowing up. You'd need such a huge bank of capacitors that your ship would be like at least 90% capacitor by weight. And the cables that transmit the energy to the drive would have to be superconductors, and even then I'm not sure they could handle it. The energy release would likely cause very strong electromagnetic fields in that instant, which could wreak havoc, especially since your warp drive uses magnetic forces.

So ships would need to get at least to orbit before they are far enough out of the gravity well to try lightspeed. Ships with very large capacitor banks could jump to lightspeed from low orbit, at a high energy cost. Ships with smaller capacitors relative to their overall weight would need to use their normal engines to get to a high orbit before going to lightspeed.

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  • $\begingroup$ When the ship is inside the warp bubble it becomes casually disconnected from almost everything outside - the gravity of the planet it is on barely affects it. $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:51
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    $\begingroup$ @Locaq Did you mean "causally"? $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 15:35
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    $\begingroup$ Nope. The drive is ghosting the Earth. If you try it when the Earth can still see you right there, it gets super awkward. That's why you have to do it from space. $\endgroup$
    – interfect
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 20:23
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The edges of the warp bubble.

The Alcubierre drive works by deforming space in different ways. The area the ship is in is completely "flat", and thus unaffected. But anything a little further out, at the edges of the "warp bubble"…less so.

I'm not sure it's possible to give a hard-science answer to what exactly happens to that matter, given that the whole concept relies on hypothetical negative energy densities that we've never actually observed. But for the sake of your story, it's not hard to imagine things going horribly, horribly wrong.

For one wild guess, matter in that area might be pushed into states where it ends up fusing as soon as space flattens out again. This is a wonderful breakthrough in clean energy! But it's a bit less appreciated when it happens to a full cubic mile around your launchpad.

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  • $\begingroup$ Yeah I know you’d get enormous tidal forces in that area, so I’m assuming it would look something like the edge of a black hole, but as a spherical surface surrounding the ship. $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:52
  • $\begingroup$ We've observed negative mass before. It's based on hard-science ideas. Check out the wikipedia page for it $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 18:50
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I am new to this community so I'm not able to respond to other answers. You specifically mention that the FTL drive works by using an "Alcubierre-style warp bubble" and people seem to not be knowledgeable on what that entails and apparently unwilling to spend a few seconds on google to find out.

This drive works by expanding space behind the craft and shrinking space in front of the craft to propel it forward, propelling the craft at FTL speeds. This is almost a perfect analogy to how atmospheric pressure differences cause liquid to rise up a straw, propelling liquid into your mouth.

The craft, if moving at all, would only be using it's main engines enough to thrust into the next zone of shrunken space, it would actually be traveling at a rather low speed, enabling it stop almost on a dime, as it were. This is one of the methods theorists believe "observed" "alien" craft travel, allowing them to make immediate turns, and velocity changes without any delay. The G-forces of some of these "observed" craft would be enough to kill a human outright.

This rules out air resistance. The craft is barely moving, it at all.

This engine also does not work using Newton's third law of motion, as it is not an exhaustive engine; Modern rocket engines work by pushing particles out of the bottom, this does not. Thus, this also rules out saying things like "By engaging your warp drive, you just detonated 500 billion trillion nuclear bombs on the surface of Earth". Although you do require that much energy to achieve your result, the energy is not expelled from your craft.

From my perspective you really only have 2 options here

  • The space distortion is so large that it engulfs the planet you are in because of science reasons. Expanding or contracting the space that a living create exists in probably kills it. It also would destroy the planet itself probably. I'm no physicist, but probably.
  • The second and probably one you'd want to go with since this builds off of an idea that you came up with yourself, negative matter. You could again go 2 different ways with this.
    • Negative matter is a colloquial equivalent of antimatter. Creating a ton of negative matter in atmosphere is a pretty good way of ensuring that a ton of it interacts with the atmosphere. Congratulations, by firing your warp drive you have just detonated 500 billion trillion nuclear bombs on the surface of Earth, killing yourself and the entire planet.
    • Negative matter is not a colloquial equivalent of antimatter, but more like the mathematical concept of negative. Using the very simple equation 1 + (-1) = 0, every bit of negative matter you create collides with the atmosphere and blinks out of existence and your drive fails to function.

Edit in response to M. A. Golding's edit

I still don't really agree with the conclusions you've drawn. I used an analogy about sucking liquid through a straw, but with more thought I think a better analogy is surfing. The alcubierre drive creates a "wave" so to speak and the ship simply rides it. Less abstract, if you shrunk the space in front of you from 100 meters to 1 meter, by moving 1 meter and expanding space behind you back to it's normal "width", you've actually moved 100 meters.

  • Regarding air molecules, that is not what would happen. The drive only compresses or expands space itself, it does not directly interfere or interact with the atoms and molecules within. However, a possible consequence of this that I didn't think about before is that compressing space with atmosphere in it would create a very real "wall" of air, which actually exponentially brings air resistance back into this equation and the challenges that presents. The ship could burn up and be destroyed before actually escaping the atmosphere

  • Atmosphere is entering and exiting the warp horizon at exactly more or less the same speed and furthermore, are not accelerated in any way, except for the atoms that the ship pushes out of the way

  • I'm not sure why a cylinder of atmosphere would be removed, I assume that's due to the conclusion that the inside of the warp would collect atmosphere faster than it can exit as it travels but that wouldn't happen

  • "gravitational and electromagnetic interactions between matter and energy inside the warp bubble and matter and energy outside the warp bubble" You may be onto something here as being inside a gravity well strong enough, such as a planet, could introduce variations in the "compression-ratio" significant enough to rip the ship apart when the drive engages. Even if that wouldn't happen, I think it definitely sounds SCIENCEY! enough to be plausible.

Further regarding compressing matter, Film Theory did a video on Ant-Man before and he said that compressing a human to the size of an ant would cause the molecules to get so close together that you would collapse into the singularity of a black hole and consume the entire planet. This causes another issue because if, during compression, you create a black hole even the size of a pinhead, that would probably cause the destruction of whatever planet you were at

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  • $\begingroup$ I have modified my answer in partial response to your answer. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 16:48
  • $\begingroup$ @M. A. Golding I have also edited my comment in response to your response $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 11, 2019 at 20:23
  • $\begingroup$ I think the air resistance/friction arguments still make sense. Although the velocities inside the warp bubble are small, the relative velocities at the boundary are immense. If the bubble is large enough that the boundary is blurry and the velocities are small, then you will deform the Earth when you engage it. $\endgroup$ Commented Jun 12, 2019 at 2:57
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I think lots of people here are thinking about catastrophic consequences if the device is used near planets but I think simply making it extremely difficult or annoying to use the device near planets might work out better. For example to be able to use the device in atmosphere you could just say it takes a thousand times longer to turn power up and stabilize the plasma because how the atmosphere interacts seemingly randomly with the plasma field. This makes it just very impractical to use it near planets.

You could also invent a direct power usage increase when using the device near gravity wells. For example using the surface gravity of the planet as a multiplier M = (1+gravity) you could have a simple power usage multiplier for different cases. On earth that multiplier would be 1+9.82(m/s^2) which is power multiplier of 10.82. So you'd need almost 11x as much power to make a jump from earth. On pluto that equation would be 1+0.62 = 1.62 power which means 62% more power. Still a big increase. In space with just star's gravity you'd have in our solar system something like 1+0.0006 which is just 0.06% increase. Of course that grows the nearer you go to a gravity well. It does not necessarily need to be a power limit as you could say the plasma simply becomes too unstable at higher energy densities so near gravity wells the energy required is simply too much for the magnetic field to control the plasma.

If you make your ftl drive energy hungry you make it practically impossible to go around these power and time limitations. The energy requirements are too big and it takes too long. This solution also allows you to have different tech level ships to turn on their drives sooner or later when moving away from planets as one ship can handle slightly higher gravity fields than another.

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You are trying to make a negative mass area by converting a tungsten ring. Having so much air inbetween the ship and the ring you are converting has consequences on this process.

This would mean that on planets without atmosphere your ships could travel.

Alternatively or additionally, gravity could risk the field being pulled out from the front of the ship as the negative matter cannot be carried by antigrav. This means you need a stable orbit or outer space where the negative matter will fly along with the ship to function, preventing use too close to a planet's atmosphere.

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  • $\begingroup$ Yeah I did think about that, but if anything wouldn’t the air just slow the process down? Also yeah, that puts a maximum speed on the engine. Once enough negative matter accumulates, the antigrav fails, the ring drops, and the bubble collapses and kills everything inside. $\endgroup$
    – Locaq
    Commented Jun 10, 2019 at 7:54
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In your scenario I would say the magnetic field generators holding up the plasma windows are gravitationally sensitive and no amount of calibration would make them function correctly enough close to the gravity generated by large astral bodies.

This could have the side effect of explaining how to disable an enemy ship's FTL drive. By directing a very weak tractor beam (which is in essence beam-shaped, targeted gravity) towards their magnetic field generator/s it would cease to function.

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I was thinking that to achieve the FTL you have to be moving at a high rate of speed before going to warp... you can't go from Zero to Warp 9 on a button press. The necessary speed would be such that any sufficient atmosphere would burn up the due to friction (think about what happens to a space ship on free fall reentry)? This was how things worked int the indy game I played called Evercron, where warp could only happen at max sub-light... and that would cause enough atmospheric friction to that the shields would quickly fail... Though there was a great way to weaponize this where if you timed it just right, you would still warp in atmosphere without shield damage, but pursuig hostiles would accelerate to top speed in atmosphere... and burn because they didn't catch on that you weren't trying to shake them... but trying to get out of the solar system entirely.

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