Futurisitic Understanding of Space Time: Escaping a Black Hole?

6thgrader
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Is there any way of man, in the distant future, bend space time in a way that it would propell something faster than the speed of light and escape a black hole?
 
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Short answer: NO.
 
dauto said:
Short answer: NO.

I heard in National Geographic that in the very distant future man could bend time space in ease...
 
6thgrader said:
I heard in National Geographic that in the very distant future man could bend time space in ease...

Can you give a reference? National Geographic is not necessarily the best source of information about physics.
 
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ASSUMPTIONS 1. Two identical clocks A and B in the same inertial frame are stationary relative to each other a fixed distance L apart. Time passes at the same rate for both. 2. Both clocks are able to send/receive light signals and to write/read the send/receive times into signals. 3. The speed of light is anisotropic. METHOD 1. At time t[A1] and time t[B1], clock A sends a light signal to clock B. The clock B time is unknown to A. 2. Clock B receives the signal from A at time t[B2] and...
So, to calculate a proper time of a worldline in SR using an inertial frame is quite easy. But I struggled a bit using a "rotating frame metric" and now I'm not sure whether I'll do it right. Couls someone point me in the right direction? "What have you tried?" Well, trying to help truly absolute layppl with some variation of a "Circular Twin Paradox" not using an inertial frame of reference for whatevere reason. I thought it would be a bit of a challenge so I made a derivation or...

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