this post was submitted on 30 Jun 2023
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I have heard this mentioned several times with this exact wording, that faster than light travel would break/violate causality and I do not exactly understand why and how it would do that. Could someone more well-versed in physics explain to me why that would be the case? Or is it not the case? (Yes, I am fully aware, that faster than light speeds are impossible in real life, but I am more curios about how it would hypothetically affect physics, were it possible). I am somewhat familiar with physics and more so with mathematics (engineering student), if that helps anyone to explain it at an appropriate level.

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[–] WantsToPetYourKitty@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

iirc the only method of faster than light travel that doesn't violate laws of physics involves warping spacetime. We can now detect ripples in spacetime, and scientists postulate that in the far future it might be possible to manipulate spacetime by warping it with technology not currently in existence.

Of course you could argue this method isn't really faster than light travel, since you're actually bending the distance between you and the destination.