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I mean weaponized holograms based off femtosecond lasers, but I understand.
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Maybe something less invasive would spread faster, like wearable neural interfaces translating thought into audiovisuals. As for quantum entangled cybertelepathy, I'd say we could do without any instant FTL effects. Lest we worry about the likes of predatory dyson swarms, and that'll quickly escalate into star-busting.
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While quantum mechanics provide decent options, I'd like to keep their scope limited. For example, graviton engines are nullified in steep gravity wells, wormholes are varied and volatile, and alternate yous are more likely to be in virtualities than realities.
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Glad to have your interest.
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I did a bit of research on this, and found this Veritasium video. From what I gathered, quantum entanglement does exist, but it can't be used to communicate. Do you have any sources beyond the wikipedia article?
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The idea was that wormholes aren't artificial, but entangled and primordial singularities that have survived since cosmic inflation.
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Given what I've read, they've yet to peer review the results, or rule out experimental errors. It might be the magnetic fields of the Earth and Sun messing with the results.
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The graviton engine is like an EM drive on steroids, but relies on forces like the casimir effect. The intention is to have a vacuum based energy source, so we can justify post scarcity and starships being semi-common. To balance things, the engine is very fragile, can't go FTL, and would need regular drives as backup. Its utility is also hindered by external gravity, so it's more popular in places like lagrange points and star system fringes.
EDIT: I see what you're saying about bending physics. What if graviton engines are the precursor to turning spacetime into matter/energy? It could create any force from virtual particles, and provide energy for everything. o.o
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1. Ah, I see what you mean now. An FTL morse code would be awesome, but I think entanglement ends when one side is altered. That would balance it, as particles need to be replenished and shipped. Fortunately, there are starships and wormholes.
2. Long story short, let's say the big bang made a bunch of wormhole pairs. They changed over time, and vary wildly. They could be kilometers to photons wide, with length contractions from 1k to 1 billion. They could be AU to light centuries apart, and heavily time dilated. I'd say most pairs are in the same system, as star motion would destroy or repel closing timelike curves.
To maintain sanity, let's say they're irreproducible. Otherwise, good luck against micro-wormholes fueled by sheared targets/interstellar particles, empire-time wars, and similar anomalies.
3. Then, it could be cosmic rays pushing against the scattering photon chamber, giving us a feasible reactionless drive.
4. For causality's sake, let's say FTL leads to alternate pasts. We could have warp ships, but the FTL cat will violently claw of out the metaphorical bag. I mean, a billion g gets you to near-light speed in seconds, and a million g nears c in minutes. This implies 1g drives are incredibly common, and would amplify space travel.
But, what about ships limping from future wars? Or relativistic ships skipping light minutes, as they align their waste for collisions?