No, not really. Your aspect looks at all time as breaking with relativity as you travel FTL. FTL still takes time its just perceptive time.. if you actually did go FTL, time would still transverse between the places. Relativistic speeds take place until you hit the barrier of FTL, but after that, it should become transitive.
So, if the flight took 3 hours there, three hours back, the time you spent on Mars still progresses, and you arrive back still 3 hours relative to your initial starting point after you leave ;) So, no time travel :) ------------------------------------------------------------------------- FIGHT BACK AGAINST SPAM! Download Spam Inspector, the Award Winning Anti-Spam Filter http://mail.giantcompany.com ________________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of G.Waleed Kavalec Sent: Friday, January 06, 2006 2:08 PM To: The Hardware List Subject: Re: [H] is this OT enough for Friday? On 1/6/06, Thane Sherrington (S) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: At 03:48 PM 06/01/2006, CW wrote: >I have no problems with "blue sky" research, the idea of following up even >the wildest of theoretical ideas to see if they have any viability. Even >if totally wrong, the work that would be done would provide research; >reminds me of something a physicist once told me: even if you fall on >your face, you're six feet closer to where you want to go. I like that. Thomas Edison failed hundreds of times to create a light bulb and when asked if the failures discouraged him, he said something like "They aren't failures. I have succeeded in proving that those methods don't work." I hope they go for it. I'd love to spend a week on Mars or go for a cruise around Jupiter. Of course if the FTL component works, things will get weird. Returning from a trip to find you didn't leave due to rescheduling. Returning from a longer trip to find the last election turned out different than you remember (no I don't have tickets). Even longer trip, come back to a North America that never left Britain...
