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warp drive 

In science fiction it's one of the ways for starships to move faster than light. The thing works by not actually moving you, but rather by contracting/deleting space in front of you and expanding/creating space behind you, while you remain in a bubble of non-deformed space. This way it seems to not violate Einstein's special relativity. First time the word was used in Star Trek back in the 1960's, and since then became popular as a go-to faster than light travel engine for sci-fi writers.
In real life, the idea of an Alcubierre drive was proposed, which is essentially a warp drive and theoretically can break the light barrier, but it requires a lot of negative-mass exotic matter, the existence of which is doubted.
Shields down, captain! Warp drive is inoperational!
I want to believe that one day NASA actually builds a working warp drive prototype.
warp drive by Vovacat17 July 27, 2018
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Relativity‑Spacetime Warp Drive

A derivation of the relativity exception warp drive that uses active, dynamic manipulation of spacetime geometry—not just a static warp bubble—to enable FTL travel. This concept involves continuously reshaping the metric around the spacecraft, “pushing” against spacetime’s structure in real time. The drive would require precise control over gravitational fields, possibly through ultra‑dense matter or advanced field generators, to create a moving distortion that carries the ship along. Unlike passive warp bubbles, this active approach might allow for more flexible trajectories and could be started and stopped without exotic matter, though it demands a level of gravitational engineering far beyond current physics.
Example: “In the novel, the relativityspacetime warp drive literally kneaded spacetime like dough, creating a moving dimple that the ship surfed across the galaxy.”

Relativity Warp Drive

A generic term for any FTL propulsion concept that exploits principles from Einstein’s theory of general relativity—typically by warping or contracting spacetime ahead of a vessel and expanding it behind—to achieve apparent superluminal travel without violating local light‑speed limits. The term encompasses Alcubierre‑style drives, bubble drives, and other metric‑engineering proposals. Unlike science‑fiction “hyperdrives,” relativity warp drives remain speculative but mathematically consistent within general relativity, albeit usually requiring exotic matter or negative energy. They represent the most serious and well‑studied class of FTL concepts in theoretical physics.
Example: “Most FTL discussions begin with the relativity warp drive, even if it requires negative energy—it’s the closest thing to a physics‑approved loophole for breaking the light barrier.”

Spacetime Warp Drive

A generic term synonymous with relativity warp drive, emphasizing the manipulation of spacetime’s geometry rather than any particular mechanism. A spacetime warp drive creates a distortion field—a warp bubble—within which a spacecraft resides. The bubble itself moves faster than light relative to the external universe, while inside the bubble normal relativistic physics apply. The term is often used when the focus is on the geometric transformation of the metric rather than on relativistic principles specifically. It can include proposals that use quantum effects, higher dimensions, or unknown physics, as long as the core idea is warping spacetime.
Example: “The engineer’s whiteboard was covered with tensor equations for a spacetime warp drive—she was trying to smooth out the bubble’s edge to avoid crushing anything that touched it.”

Relativity Exception Warp Drive

A hypothetical faster‑than‑light (FTL) propulsion concept, derived from the Alcubierre drive, that seeks to exploit a loophole in general relativity itself—rather than relying on exotic matter or the Casimir effect—to achieve superluminal travel. The idea is to create a localized “exception” to the relativistic speed limit by manipulating the geometric structure of spacetime such that the ship never locally exceeds light speed while globally covering distances faster than light. Unlike traditional Alcubierre drives that require negative energy density, the relativity exception variant attempts to use the flexibility of Einstein’s field equations to produce a warp bubble using only positive energy, potentially sidestepping some of the most severe physical objections.
Example: “The physicist proposed a relativity exception warp drive that wouldn’t need hypothetical exotic matter—just a clever reshaping of spacetime’s geometry, bending the rules without breaking them.”

Relativity Bubble Warp Drive

A derivation of the relativity exception warp drive that specifically uses “relativistic bubbles”—localized regions of spacetime that are causally disconnected from the exterior—to achieve FTL travel. In this model, the bubble itself moves at superluminal speeds relative to the background, while inside the bubble, observers experience normal relativistic physics. The key is that the bubble’s boundary is engineered to exploit relativity’s time‑dilation and length‑contraction effects to make the bubble’s motion appear subluminal from within, even as it moves FTL from an outside perspective. This approach emphasizes using relativity’s own counterintuitive properties as the engine rather than fighting them.
Example: “Their relativity bubble warp drive simulation showed a bubble moving at ten times light speed, yet the astronauts inside felt only gentle acceleration—relativity’s own tricks making the impossible feel mundane.”

wardriver 

One who partakes in the activity of wardriving, which is directly related to warchalking.
Because I drove around in my car checking for bandwidth to leech, I was known as a wardriver.
wardriver by newSaint August 2, 2004