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John McClane
01-09-2005, 07:33 PM
U.S. Air Force Takes a Look at Teleportation (http://space.com/businesstechnology/technovel_teleport_041103.html)

It seems that mere stealth technology is not enough; the United States Air Force wants to get from here to there without even traversing the space in between. Are they looking for a Star Trek(TM) transporter? Or maybe even a farcaster from science fiction writer Dan Simmons' awesome novel Hyperion, which lets you step from one planet to the next? Not quite: but, lest you think that our friends at DARPA are the only ones interested in science-fictional possibilities, the USAF recently took delivery of a new study regarding the military potential of teleportation.

The Teleportation Physics Study was done by Eric Davis of Warp Drive Metrics. Its purpose - "This study was tasked with the purpose of collecting information describing the teleportation of material objects, providing a description of teleportation as it occurs in physics, its theoretical and experimental status, and a projection of potential applications. The study also consisted of a search for teleportation phenomena occurring naturally or under laboratory conditions that can be assembled into a model describing the conditions required to accomplish the transfer of objects." The author broke down the various possibilities in this way: Teleportation – SciFi: the disembodied transport of persons or inanimate objects across space by advanced (futuristic) technological means (adapted from Vaidman, 2001). We will call this sf- Teleportation, which will not be considered further in this study. Teleportation – psychic: the conveyance of persons or inanimate objects by psychic means. We will call this p-Teleportation. Teleportation – engineering the vacuum or spacetime metric: the conveyance of persons or inanimate objects across space by altering the properties of the spacetime vacuum, or by altering the spacetime metric (geometry). We will call this vm-Teleportation. Teleportation – quantum entanglement: the disembodied transport of the quantum state of a system and its correlations across space to another system, where system refers to any single or collective particles of matter or energy such as baryons (protons, neutrons, etc.), leptons (electrons, etc.), photons, atoms, ions, etc. We will call this q-Teleportation. Teleportation – exotic: the conveyance of persons or inanimate objects by transport through extra space dimensions or parallel universes. We will call this e-Teleportation.

Even though I was disappointed with the outright dismissal of Star Trek-style teleportation (sheesh!), I was briefly encouraged by the fact that he offered solutions that meet the definition of vm-teleportation: "The first solution can be found from the class of traversable wormholes giving rise to what I call a true “stargate.” A stargate is essentially a wormhole with a flat-face shape for the throat as opposed to the spherical-shaped throat of the Morris and Thorne traversable wormhole, which was derived from a spherically symmetric Lorentzian spacetime metric that prescribes the wormhole geometry." Unfortunately, despite a lot of very impressive math, he seems to settle on p-teleportation as the most likely recommendation for further study, saying "P-Teleportation, if verified, would represent a phenomenon that could offer potential high-payoff military, intelligence and commercial applications. This phenomenon could generate a dramatic revolution in technology, which would result from a dramatic paradigm shift in science. Anomalies are the key to all paradigm shifts!" I know what you're thinking; more wasted government money. However, a quick look at the distribution list thoughtfully included at the end of the report shows that a copy was sent to Gregory Benford, physicist and highly respected sf author. Maybe we'll get a good story out of it.

Indydan13
01-09-2005, 09:30 PM
Sure it would be nice but what if something happened like the fly.

monkey
01-10-2005, 12:46 AM
Beam me up Scotty!!

For real though...........could anyone have envisioned the 'internet' in like 1957????

technology is advancing so rapidly. What is absurd today is reality tommorrow. Where there is scientific possibility, there is potential.

DaFedora
02-04-2006, 04:58 PM
See, I liked the entire Stargate SG1 series idea - a great fiction incorporating both ancient Egypt elements and high-tech civilisation gadgets... The Horus or Anubis armours were actually quite believable... I'm actually waiting for JoWood to release the game (it's now postponed indefinately because they weren't happy about graphics)...

I thought the 1994 film was really good, although the ending could've been even more spectacular because for a faint moment it seemed like they were stretching the endfurther than necessary and the Goa'uld powers were far under-exploited in comparison to what the Systemlords are capable of in the series...

It's weird how they seem to escape writer's block and run out of stories: they travel, do humanitarian missions, solve diplomatic problems, avoid war or close in alliances, but the massive scale, long-duration, cross-episode campaigns ŕ la Star Wars' Clone Wars seem to cost to much for such a succesfull series... so they had to come up with another find: a second stargate and that's how the spinoff, Stargate: Atlantis took off... nice beginning, yet I'm waiting for them long, suspencefull incursions,... I mean I see it in a bit of a larger scale at times... without becoming a 3rd 'Starship troopers' - it would still need Daniel-esque solutions and obstacle-solving time-splitting moments.

I'm sorry, this wasn't about the series at all, I know but it's funny that the JoWood game producers on the Stargate game have been supported officially with USAF advice on procedural accuraties, data protocols and soforth to get more realism, and now seeing the USAF meddling with the idea of teleportation itself...

San Holo
02-04-2006, 07:35 PM
I'm not going first;)

Canyon
02-05-2006, 12:47 PM
I think the whole idea of teleportation is neat!

I could see my friends in the States all the time. :D

KDuncan
02-05-2006, 12:51 PM
Of course, if a teleportation device was made, perfected and was available to the general public, there would be a fee, I'm sure, you might need a license, plus everyone would have to pay a teleportation tax... :rolleyes: