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Navigating Known Space (con't)
To tie this in to hyperspace, we'll look
at string theory. It says (at least in one version) that there
may be ten dimensions in all, with the extra seven curled
up tight at the quantum level. Imagine that instead of being
curled up tight, these dimensions were extended, like the
three we're used to dealing with in every day life, but that
they were curved where our "normal" ones are flat, and vice
versa. These dimensions effectively form a strange shadow
universe which we call hyperspace, one where our mysterious
Force A can be explained in terms of spacial curvature, just
as gravity can be. Beyond it, but much more tightly bound
to hyperspace than our universe is, is another space where
Force B operation. Both A and B may in fact be gravity in
another guise, which is plausible since they both act on mass.
The Force A shadow universe (hyperspace A) isn't normally
accessable to us, being on the other side of a very high energy
barrier, but the hyperdrive manages to somehow "pump" a ship
across this barrier in a quantum mechanical sense. In the
shadow universe the reverse curvature of Force A makes ships
"fall" from star to star and tightly bound Force B reacts
against Force A. The speed of light remains the speed of light
even there, which will make Einstein happy, but because the
extra dimensions make hyperspace more closely connected there
than our space. Once you drop back into normal space it seems
that you broke the universal speed limit, but you didn't,
you just took a shortcut. Given this understanding, we can
guess how the hyperdrive might work. Macroscopic objects like
ships don't behave like single quantum particles, something
which is required for us to imagine pumping our ship from
one quantum state to another. However it's possible to make
many particles effectively act like one, in what's called
a Bose-Einstein condensate. Creating a Bose-Einstein condensate
is technically challenging, you have to cool the particles
to less than fifty billionths of a degree above absolute zero.
It's only been done to batches of a few million atoms at once,
and then only for a very short time. Cooling a starship like
this is impossible, so the hyperdrive will have to use some
other method of making the ship behave as a single quantum
particle, a method that so far nobody in Known Space actually
understands. Once that's done it just needs to be pumped across
the energy barrier between universes, and launched on it's
way. Well, almost.
Anything which is pumped to a higher energy
state will inevitably want to return to it's lowest state,
just as a dropped stone falls until it hits the ground. The
trick here is to recognize the lowest state, which is not
our universe but hyperspace B Our universe is a metastable
state, hyperspace A is an unstable state and hyperspace B
is the stable state. Once the energy barrier between our universe
and hyperspace A is overcome the ship will tend to go all
the way to hyperspace B. It takes energy to hold the ship
out hyperspace B, and more energy to pump it back into normal
space. Because the spaces are differently curved by mass the
states get farther apart as you approach one. Get too close
to a mass and your engine won't have the power to hold you
out of hyperspace B. Force B will take over completely and
you'll be zipped elsewhere in a big hurry, return not required.
If the curvature is sharp enough just your engine will go,
leaving you stranded, perhaps giving you enough energy in
reaction to get you back to normal space. Curvature a little
less sharp will make the engine take a messy chunk of your
ship with it - not a good thing.
And what about the Quantum II hyperdrive?
It lets you drop all the way to hyperspace B, where force
B acts unopposed. You go hellaciously fast, but it's hard
to get from hyperspace B back to A back to normal space and
it takes a lot more gear. If you want to know more about how
that works, you'll have to ask a Puppeteer, or better yet,
an Outsider.
So what about the mass reader that needs
an aware mind to watch it, and the blind spot that does strange
things to your brain? To explain this we'll invoke the concept
of observer collapse of quantum wave functions, albiet we're
stretching the science a lot farther than any physicist would.
Very simply put, at the quantum level discrete events which
might go one way or the other don't seem to be determined
until they actually happen. If we through a baseball at a
window (one of the old fashioned ones with nine or twelve
individual panes of glass) we can, if we know it's speed and
launch angle, reliably predict which pane it will break. Doing
the same thing at the quantum level (with an electron as the
ball), we can only know the probability that a given pane
will be hit. What's more, the probability profile acts like
a wave in water, and it can, like a wave, be split, recombined,
cancel and reinforce itself and in general behave in a way
that a single solid object like a baseball cannot. Nevertheless,
once the target is hit the electron arrives at one and only
one place, very like a baseball and not at all like a wave
breaking on a beach. This is called the wave/particle duality
and you have to be as clever as Richard Feynman just to realize
that you can't possibly understand how that works. The transition
from wavelike to particlelike behaviour, the instant when
all the various smoothly varying probabilities coallesce into
a single discrete actuallity is called waveform collapse,
and it occurs whenever you try to observe the electron. Shroedinger's
famous "cat in a box" thought experiment was designed to show
that this view would lead to an implausibly tangled reality,
where a cat could be neither alive nor dead until someone
looked at it, and that in fact looking at it would just tangle
the observer up in the strange twilight zone the cat had been
thrust into. However theory and experiment both bear out the
fact that, however strange, the universe really does work
this way. Some researchers (fewer now than before, but including
such brilliant minds as Roger Penrose, of Penrose tile fame)
have speculated that there is something special about an observing
mind which causes the quantum state to collapse, or perhaps
that minds themselves are built on quantum effects and that
this is where free will comes from. We can take that and run
with it, and say that a mass reader requires a mind to collapse
the ship's quantum wave state to a single position in hyperspace
A before it runs to far away from where you thought it would
be. That also explains why it's even necessary to have a mass
reader. In normal space the average star-to-star voyage will
not come anywhere near enough to an intermediate star to pose
the risk of running into its gravity well. In radically curved
hyperspace A, everything is closer together, and we, quantum
superparticle that we are, are not necessarily where we expect
to be, so we need to collapse the wave state once in a while
to be sure. We can go further and say that Blind Spot is so
very weird because our minds are not equipped to deal with
collapsing the act wave state in hyperspace A. And given that
minds are doing strange quantum things in hyperspace, we have
a methodology that will explain Known Space telepathy and
Teela Brown luckiness and a few other psi talents, as long
as we don't look too closely.
But this is science fiction. What is important
is not what is true in our universe but what might be true
in Known Space, and that you enjoy the story. I hope you do.
Paul
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