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Well Especially if you can Slow the Speed of Light as its been Done and Possible

and Proven
[ex] HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES
Physicists Slow Speed of Light By William J. Cromie Gazette Staff February 1
8, 1999
Lene Hau has shed new light on a new form of matter. Photo by MaryAnn Nilsson.
Light, which normally travels the 240,000 miles from the Moon to Earth in less
than two seconds, has been slowed to the speed of a minivan in rush-hour traffic
-- 38 miles an hour. An entirely new state of matter, first observed four year
s ago, has made this possible. When atoms become packed super-closely together a
t super-low temperatures and super-high vacuum, they lose their identity as indi
vidual particles and act like a single super- atom with characteristics similar
to a laser. Such an exotic medium can be engineered to slow a light beam 20 mil
lion-fold from 186,282 miles a second to a pokey 38 miles an hour. [/ex]
if This can be Done SO is there a way possible of the Opposite Effect!
Then We Have A Possible Working Warp Drive that NASA is Doing a Little Stud
y on
Faster Than the Speed of Light?
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/23/science/faster-than-the-speed-of-light.html?_r
=0
[ex] Einstein famously postulated that, as Dr. White put it, thou shalt not exce
ed the speed of light, essentially setting a galactic speed limit. But in 1994, a
Mexican physicist, Miguel Alcubierre, theorized that faster-than-light speeds w
ere possible in a way that did not contradict Einstein, though Dr. Alcubierre di
d not suggest anyone could actually construct the engine that could accomplish t
hat. His theory involved harnessing the expansion and contraction of space itse
lf. Under Dr. Alcubierres hypothesis, a ship still couldnt exceed light speed in a
local region of space. But a theoretical propulsion system he sketched out mani
pulated space-time by generating a so-called warp bubble that would expand space o
n one side of a spacecraft and contract it on another. In this way, the spaceshi
p will be pushed away from the Earth and pulled towards a distant star by space-
time itself, Dr. Alcubierre wrote. Dr. White has likened it to stepping onto a mo
ving walkway at an airport. [/ex]
Alcubierre drive
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alcubierre_drive
[ex] Warp Drive, When?
Have you ever wondered when we will be able to travel to distant stars as easil
y as in science fiction stories? NASA Glenn's Marc Millis, who has taken a break
from Project Management for NASA's Breakthrough Propulsion Physics (BPP) Projec
t to return to conducting research, offers this assessment of the prospects for
achieving the propulsion breakthroughs that would enable such far-future visions
of interstellar travel.[/ex]
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/glenn/technology/warp/warp.html
Warp drives may come with a killer downside
Mar 01, 2012 by Jason Major, Universe Today
http://phys.org/news/2012-03-warp-killer-downside.html
(( Well there's a Comical Side ))
[ex] Planning a little space travel to see some friends on Kepler 22b? Thinking
of trying out your newly-installed FTL3000 Alcubierre Warp Drive to get you the
re in no time? Better not make it a surprise visit your arrival may end up disin
tegrating anyone there when you show up. Warp technology and faster-than-light (F
TL) space travel has been a staple of science fiction for decades. The distances
in space are just so vast and planetary systems even within a single galaxy are
spaced so far apart, such a concept is needed to make casual human exploration
feasible (and fit within the comforts of peoples imagination as well nobody wants
to think about Kirk and Spock bravely going to some alien planet while everyone
theyve ever known dies of old age!)[/ex]

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