Nando wrote:Websta wrote:enormous profit. The profit margin on selling energy from a fusion source which is cheaper to harvest would be much larger.
That only works if the end product keeps the same price as oil, which is highly unlikely.
If you basically have "free energy" from this new "alien" source it means it will probably be cheaper then tap water.
Ah but whoever controls the technology could undercut oil companies significantly and still make a profit. The technology would most definitely not be widely disseminated so that prices could be kept high enough to keep a profit. Or of course, the US gov could make it dirt cheap and still get increased tax revenue from the explosion of productivity that would follow. They really couldn't go wrong with it, so there would be no reason to not adopt the technology as quickly as possible (that I can see).
Nando wrote:Websta wrote:And if an alien space craft crashed in Roswell then they would have this technology.
That´s a mere guess. We can only speculate what the propulsion system is being used in a saucer.
For all we know these saucers could be droids. If we are to believe the speeds reported by these things it would turn a human into scrambled eggs.
Unless you somehow can negate the G-force inside the saucer itself.
Much like trying to create gravity in a space ship so we can live in it.
You are so focused on finding fusion reactors in the saucers
For all we know they could be powered with pure energy, dark matter or some other form of energy because if you are trying to create FTL speeds you need an enormous amount of energy because you are essentially warping space time itself.
It´s one thing creating a fusion reactor that will run for 10 years, it´s another having it produce X amount of energy for 10 years.
I was just using the fusion reactor as an example (truth be told, I do have a bit of a hard-on for it as I am in awe of the possibilities of fusion technology and the current experiments in this field!). Whatever energy source they had on board, I would expect there to have been some sort of development in that area.
Then there is the question of why it took until the 1990's for a Mexican physicist with no affiliation with the Roswell crash to propose a theory to explain FTL travel. Surely a NASA physicist could have proposed a very strong theory by examining the space craft design in the 50 years preceding the proposal of the "Alcubierre drive". Of course, the space craft could have been damaged beyond recognition, but I would not jump to that explanation so quickly...
You are correct that antimatter is the most likely energy source for FTL travel as it has such an enormous energy density. Antimatter and its relatives (e.g. exotic matter) are pretty much the only viable fuel sources unless the energy requirements of FTL travel were reduced tremendously. It is likely that if a saucer did actually crash in Roswell that it did use antimatter as its fuel source. If the crash were so energetic that it destroyed the structural design of the FTL tech, then there is a good chance of a containment failure of the antimatter occurring. Whatever fuel was on board for the return journey would have turned our American friends into star dust. If the fuel tanks were designed properly and withstood the impact, then the Government has one hell of a powder keg stored somewhere. I wonder if they had the sensibility to no open it back in the 50s.
Of course, these are not bulletproof counter arguments (well aside from the point I made about a lack of FTL travel theories which I think is pretty damning) as they rely on quite a few assumptions and could be explained by some conditions (unlikely conditions, but possible nonetheless). I shared these ideas just as food for thought really and I enjoyed the discussion.
The following is probably a bit harder to ignore though. We supposedly got fibre optics and microchips etc from a Roswell crash, as the legend goes - wait, they still use integrated circuits and not quantum computers or whatever in this advanced civilisation? Unlikely. And surely they had some very impressive materials technology (nanotechnology and high-tech composites etc.) - we still haven't been able to reproduce that either? I doubt the spaceship was made from carbon-fibre.