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Science

Scientists Just Killed the EmDrive (popularmechanics.com) 137

In major international tests, the physics-defying EmDrive has failed to produce the amount of thrust proponents were expecting. In fact, in one test at Germany's Dresden University, it didn't produce any thrust at all. Is this the end of the line for EmDrive? Popular Mechanics: The crux of the EmDrive is if you bounce microwaves around inside the tube, they exert more force in one direction than the other, creating a net thrust without the need for any propellant. And when NASA and a team at Xi'an in China tried this, they actually got a small-but-distinct net force. Now, however, physicists at the Dresden University of Technology (TU Dresden) are saying those promising results showing thrust were all false positives that are explained by outside forces. The scientists recently presented their findings in three papers at Space Propulsion Conference 2020 +1, with titles like "High-Accuracy Thrust Measurements of the EmDrive and Elimination of False-Positive Effects." (Other two studies here and here)

Using a new measuring scale and different suspension points of the same engine, the TU Dresden scientists "were able to reproduce apparent thrust forces similar to those measured by the NASA team, but also to make them disappear by means of a point suspension," researcher Martin Tajmar told the German site GreWi. The verdict: "When power flows into the EmDrive, the engine warms up. This also causes the fastening elements on the scale to warp, causing the scale to move to a new zero point. We were able to prevent that in an improved structure. Our measurements refute all EmDrive claims by at least 3 orders of magnitude."

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Scientists Just Killed the EmDrive

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  • FTW!!!

  • by clawsoon ( 748629 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:10PM (#61229066)
    ...that I heard from an experimental physicist: At some point you realize that every measurement device is also a thermometer.
  • by Tanman ( 90298 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:15PM (#61229094)

    Now we can all move forward.

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:23PM (#61229134)

    A negative result is a result. Just as worthy of praise as positive result. Granted it is kinda of a bummer that the emdrive probably cannot happen. But it could save engineers decades of time and resources trying to build one that can be used in production.

  • by careysub ( 976506 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:25PM (#61229142)

    It is a drive that generates propulsive force through the skillful (clumsy?) deployment of experimental error. This drive has the advantage that precision, and extreme care in building it and testing it are counterproductive. A more powerful drive is obtained the sloppier and less careful the experimenter is!

  • by drillbug ( 126567 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:27PM (#61229148)

    This was always the expected outcome, since any positive result required some very unlikely new mechanisms, but you always look because the effort itself often yields something new.

    From TFA -- "Unfortunately, we werenâ(TM)t able to verify any of the drive concepts, but we were able to greatly improve our measurement technology as a result, so that we can of course continue researching in this science area and perhaps discover something new."

  • "Mike McCulloch, a lecturer in geomatics at the University of Plymouth, U.K., and leader behind DARPA's EmDrive project..."

    Geomatics is not a new branch of physics; it's informatics about geographical data. There's a very good reason why no tenured particle physicist was interested in leading this group.

    • > There's a very good reason why no tenured particle physicist was interested in leading this group.

      Yup, it's bad for tenure. Fucking around with math for the past 40 years, or whenever the cancellation problem was solved, has been good for physicists' tenure and bad for everybody else.

      At least the experimentalists are moving society forward.

      Exploring the bounds of the possible is how we've made most real advances. Falsifying a hypothesis is a wonderful result but most University PR departments won't e

      • this, of course, would be more convincing if the emdrive had worked...

        at any rate, it wasn't an "experiment," it was a crackpot invention from start to ignoble finish.

      • also, this would not be "bad for tenure". sure it's crackpottery but it's for NASA/DARPA so whatever; it could even count as service. the only things really bad for tenure once you have it are: being vocal against the cause du jour, straight-up just not doing anything at all for years, and fucking a student.

        it would be bad for his career in other ways, but it wouldn't be a threat to his tenure on its own.

      • Yup, it's bad for tenure.

        "Tenured" means that they already have tenure otherwise it is tenure-track. However, the concept of tenure largely no longer exists in the UK where lecturers are hired on 5-year renewable contracts.

        So I am completely unsure what the OP's argument was supposed to be. Someone with tenure would be protected from being fired over something like this and yet the person who did the study lacked tenure and could technically be fired and so were taking more of a risk.

      • Exploring the bounds of the possible is how we've made most real advances. Falsifying a hypothesis is a wonderful result but most University PR departments won't even bother writing a release.

        What if the "hypothesis" is that perpetual motion machines exist? Do you really want universities falsifying that again and again and again? The thing is the EM drive is equivalent to a perpetual motion machine: you just need to add a couple of components.

        So all they've done is yet again prove some inventor's crazy per

  • Should probably read Science Killed the EmDrive.

    The way it reads, I was expecting to at least find a meme TikTok with a bunch of soot-faced lab-coat wearing stooges standing over an incinerated EmDrive, wearing shit-eating grins.

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:33PM (#61229170)

    The claimed amounts of thrust were entirely within the bounds of the expected amount of radiation pressure/antenna thrust from the claimed amount of emitted RF power.

    The formula for antenna thrust or radiation pressure is P/c for a perfectly directional antenna. 100W/3e8 = .33 uN in a vacuum. If you're radiating into a metal test chamber wall, you may build up a higher power density in some spots and get more "thrust" if you keep the cavity from moving.

    In short, this whole thing was an example of "something I didn't understand happened" + "quantum" therefore ghosts and aliens.

    • So if I read your comment correctly, if they blackened one side and made the other shiny, when it heats up it will actually work!?!
    • The claimed amounts of thrust were entirely within the bounds of the expected amount of radiation pressure/antenna thrust from the claimed amount of emitted RF power.

      Yep. But it didn't emit radiation. The microwaves were all inside the cavity; they didn't radiate out.

      That was the very first thing they checked for, whether it was producing thrust from energy leaking out.

      • 1. That's not possible. Every RF circuit leaks energy somewhere, and if you're pumping 100W in, it's going to get out somehow.

        2. Let's assume that it was a perfectly sealed RF sink. What that would mean is that you've got a metal cavity with ever more power being put into it and ever larger electromagnetic fields bouncing around inside it. Since the cavity is not a superconductor, those fields will cause eddy currents inside the inner surface of the cavity, causing it to heat up.

        Metal conducts heat. And eve

    • You are exaggerating.
      The math behind it is pretty solid. Hence several Universities and other research labs tried it out.
      Or do you really think a German University and his professor in that topic has nothin better to do than "proving an idiot wrong"?
      If it would have been obvious, that it can not work: no University had tried it. Waste of time and resources.

      • Look I hate to agree with Mr. rightwingnutjob because I generally think he's a prat, but he is absolutely, unequivocally 100% right on the money with his assessment.

        The math behind it is pretty solid.

        They "derived" the result using relativity initially. Unfortunately relativity is proven to be momentum conservative. So either maths is inconsistent or there was an error in their working. funnily enough it turned out the be the latter. Then they switched over to "uhhhh virtual particles", invoking quantum woo

  • Very illustrative of how many people cannot distinguish between wishful thinking and actual reality.

    • by fazig ( 2909523 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @03:36PM (#61229456)
      Due diligence.
      With the knowledge we gained here we're better at faster and efficiently debunking more nonsense in the future.
      • We won't unfortunately.

        People who believe in bunk will keep believing it out of wishful thinking. The next level of bunk will claim to have smaller effects juusstt at the edge of what is practical to measure (just like this one) and will take just as much effort to measure.

        Even showing people how to turn one into a perpetual motion machine didn't help. All that resulted was anger and downmods.

        • by fazig ( 2909523 )
          Stupid people will be stupid, I suppose.

          The Michelson-Morley experiment is also still repeated with ever higher precision, but again and again, all that it proves is that there's no prove for a luminiferous aether.
    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by flyingfsck ( 986395 )
      Bear in mind that 47% of Americans are Church/Mosque/Temple members. So it is a land full of wishful thinkers. Free thinkers are really a scarce commodity.
      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Indeed. But it is an universal problem and wishful thinking on the form of religion is just one indicator.

      • Bear in mind that 47% of Americans are Church/Mosque/Temple members. So it is a land full of wishful thinkers. Free thinkers are really a scarce commodity.

        That you posted this comment is rather astounding evidence that you yourself are no more "free-thinking" than those you decry.

        Conviction that something does not exist is logically indistinguishable from conviction that it does.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          And fail. Nobody tried to prove that God does not exist. It was just pointed out that believing God does exist without extraordinary proof is an immature thing and a belief in a fantasy. And that way your complete pseudo-"argument" goes out the window.

    • There are still people around who believe in a flat Earth despite the ancient Greeks showing it was spherical several millennia ago. I doubt this will ever go away. It will just get added to the list of stupid things some people believe like cold fusion, faking the moon landings, WiFi sensitivity etc.
  • Thanks (Score:5, Funny)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @02:36PM (#61229192)

    if you bounce microwaves around inside the tube, they exert more force in one direction than the other

    This must be why my microwave oven keeps sliding around on the counter. Not me slamming the door, as my wife claims.

  • it would have been really useful in helping us get to the stars. It broke the rules as I understood them so I am not surprised that it did not check out. However I still have a twinge of sadness.

  • by xanthos ( 73578 ) <xanthos.toke@com> on Friday April 02, 2021 @03:16PM (#61229366)
    that wreaks the design for my brilliant perpetual motion machine
  • by DontBeAMoran ( 4843879 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @03:18PM (#61229374)

    Did they really? Did they do any research at all that proves it was alive in the first place?

  • ...the original scientists simply retorted "You're holding it wrong."
  • They ruin everything. Next you know they'll try and take over Europe.
  • so you can predict what will happen before you start on a decades long waste of time.

  • If anyone's interested, the inventor of the EMDrive (Roger Shawyer) is presenting at the online APEC conference tomorrow (April 3rd): https://www.altpropulsion.com/events/apec-4-3-the-emdrive-quantum-gravity-control/ [altpropulsion.com]
  • This was the expected outcome of this idea. The original claim was extremely unlikely to be true since it violated some our foundational understanding of how light and matter interact. See earlier /. discussions for details. But it is good to check carefully and verify how and if our current understanding applies in a new case that shows something odd.

    There is a lesson here that many would benefit from. People really want there to be breakdowns in existing physics theories that will make amazing new t

  • It was kind of exciting wondering if something that we know to be impossible could, maybe somehow, actually be possible. Disappointing if unsurprising.

  • I guess the spherical cows have come home to roost.

    At some point, you just have to actually take into account the whole system, warps and all, and not just take the maths for granted.
  • by guygo ( 894298 ) on Friday April 02, 2021 @07:46PM (#61230548)

    Never a good sign when they attach "physics-defying" to your project.

  • I'm pretty sure the emdrive can produce plenty of thrust if only from the expending of immense religious fervor.

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