Hurkyl said:
But it's good enough for science entertainment, and what it sounds like the article is proposing.
Well, the Alcubierre metric is real physics published by a real physicist in a peer-reviewed journal, and later widely discussed in the field. It's not just science entertainment.
But you raise a good point about the scientific issues surrounding FTL in science fiction. The way I've often phrased it is that based on the fundamental structure of relativity, any scheme for FTL is also a method for time travel, and therefore any SF universe in which there is routine FTL but no routine time travel (e.g., Star Trek and Star Wars) is scientifically wrong. (Not that Trek and Star Wars fans really care about the fact that this stuff isn't hard SF. After all, they have starships flying by and going whoosh.) Your example shows that my way of phrasing it is kind of loose, and allows for counterexamples depending on how you interpret it. I would be interested in getting a better understanding of how to deal with this more rigorously.
Here are two examples of arguments that FTL implies causality violation.
Example #1: Suppose you're in a region of flat spacetime, with the standard topology, and you're not going to modify that spacetime at all. Then any technology for FTL allows A to precede B in one frame, while B precedes A in another.
Example #2 (given in ch. 14 of Thorne's Black Holes and Time Warps): Suppose you have a wormhole that allows you to travel from one of its mouths to the other, emerging at a time that is simultaneous as judged by an observer in the two mouths' common rest frame. Since the wormhole is gravitational in nature, the mouths can be acted on by gravitational fields. That means that you can take one mouth and tow it far away at relativistic speeds, then tow it back so it's in its original position and again at rest relative to the other mouth. As in the twin paradox, this implies that the two mouths are now temporally out of sync, so you've constructed a time machine.
I would like to have a better understanding of how an example like 2 differs from examples like these:
Example #3: Spacetime is flat everywhere, but has the spatial topology of a cylinder.
Example #4: In gravitational lensing, you can win a race against a beam of light.
Thorne's towing-and-twin-paradox argument certainly fails in examples 3 and 4. One distinction to make is the distinction between universes with CTCs and those without -- but this only seems to succeed in distinguishing 2 from 1, 3, and 4, whereas we really want something to distinguish 1 and 2 from 3 and 4.
I would also like to have a good, clear understanding of why nothing like #4 is likely to permit SF-style FTL. My initial impression is that if you wanted to set up something like #4 to allow you to get to Alpha Centauri in a week, the expenditure of mass-energy to create the gravitational fields involved would be many orders of magnitude greater than the expenditure of energy needed to simply move Alpha Centauri closer to Earth.