IsaacAsimov Posted November 25, 2013 Posted November 25, 2013 Teleportation is transporting an object from place to place without traveling through normal space. So if you transport an object through a brick wall to the other side, that's teleportation. Since it doesn't travel through normal space, it should take 0 time. If you attach a teleport device to a spaceship, you should be able to jump from place to place in the universe, and it should take 0 time, just like in Isaac Asimov's book, 'The Stars, Like Dust'.
swansont Posted November 25, 2013 Posted November 25, 2013 Following rules is kind of arbitrary for things that defy physical law.
John Cuthber Posted November 25, 2013 Posted November 25, 2013 "just like in Isaac Asimov's book, " In particular, like that book, this is made up stuff. 1
IsaacAsimov Posted November 28, 2013 Author Posted November 28, 2013 I've been reading and thinking about teleportation. Instead of using supercomputers and quantum entanglement to scan all 10^28 atoms in the human body, which would take a very long time, what if there were a 4th spacial dimension, let's call it hyperspace, that we had access to. Then all we would have to do is enter hyperspace with a spaceship, fly to an exit point, then enter a certain place in 3-d space. The process would take almost 0 time, and we could still call it jump drive. The difficult part is gaining access to hyperspace.
Endy0816 Posted November 28, 2013 Posted November 28, 2013 (edited) It would need proof of existence before we can talk about gaining access to it. Just to clarify this is normally talked about as a 5th dimension. The 3 space and 1 time dimensions, being the ones we are aware of at present. I do like Asimov but his science fiction was just that. No positronic brain Roombas running around. Edited November 28, 2013 by Endy0816
IsaacAsimov Posted November 29, 2013 Author Posted November 29, 2013 Mathematically writing about hyperspace: Locating an object in 3-space requires 3 coordinates: (x,y,z). Locating an object in 4-space requires 4 coordinates: (x,y,z,t), where t stands for time. Locating an object in 5-space requires 5 coordinates: (x,y,z,t,h), where h stands for hyperspace. This doesn't tell us if hyperspace exists or not, and it doesn't tell us how to gain access to it. Since it is a jump drive that uses hyperspace, I think we should call it hyperdrive.
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