No, this is exactly what NASA does. They look into odd phenomena that might be useful for space travel.
This isn't even that out there.
I understand that NASA has a mandate to look for exotic propulsion ideas. That's not what my complaint is about. My complaint is about NASA doing spectacularly bad science while researching a stupid idea. Putting those in bullet points:
1. The idea itself is really, really bad.
2. NASA's investigation of the idea was very poorly done.
These are separate problems, but often go together when dealing with crackpots. That's what's so scary about this: these NASA scientists are acting like crackpots.
Consider space elevators or launch loops. Now, space elevators are currently physically impossible; there is no known manufacturing process that can produce a cable strong enough. But I am glad they are doing the work so we can see how close we are.
Similar to Kittamaru, you aren't recognizing the difference between theoretically impossible and technologically impossible.
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Theoretically impossible means that as far as we know, an idea violates the laws of the universe and can't ever work.
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Technologically impossible means that an idea is known to be
possible, but for reasons of money, time, [non-theoretical] efficiency, etc. we are unable to do it
currently.
Fusion power, for example, is researched heavily because it is known to be theoretically
possible. Cold fusion is not [seriously] researched because it is currently understood to be theoretically
impossible. Between them might be a third category:
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Theoretically uknown. Obviously: something we don't know if is possible or not.
I'm not certain if NASA has a well-defined mandate for this and the line between theoretically impossible and unknown can be grey, but IMO NASA should not be trying to research things that are fairly confidently known to be theoretically impossible.
This idea falls into the realm of the theoretically impossible. It isn't inventing new science, it is just a basic and obvious - stupid even - misunderstanding of existing science. It is so bad that I have a hard time believing it isn't a hoax/scam.
The original idea is the "EM Drive":
EM Drive said:
...the technology is firmly anchored in the basic laws of physics...
The principle of operation is based on the well-known phenomenon of radiation pressure...
If the same EM wave is travelling at a fraction of the speed of light, the rate of change of momentum, and hence force, is reduced by that fraction. The propagation velocity of an EM wave, and the resulting force it exerts, can be varied depending on the geometry of a waveguide within which it travels.
http://emdrive.com/principle.html
Setting the side the poorly stated (and also wrong) variable speed of light angle, the principle is the same misunderstanding of geometry that schoolchildren have when dealing with hydrostatic pressure being independent of the shape of a container. I've even had kids ask me why a cone-shaped object placed underwater doesn't shoot-off in the direction of the pointy-end due to the pressure on the flat end. That is
exactly what the originator of the EM Drive is suggesting happens. From a kid, the question is naive. From an adult who claims to know physics, the idea is stupid. For NASA to investigate the stupid idea is mind-boggling.
The newer incarnation proposes a mechanism based on interaction with "quantum vacuum virtual plasma", a phenomena that they apparently made-up, with a name that looks suspiciously like technobabble gibberish (the word "plasma" doesn't appear to belong there). It smells like a hoax.
Agreed - and there is a lot known about this device, and one very large unknown.
Disagree. I think the device is quite well understood. The science behind what is happening is not complicated.
What you are probably considering a "very large unknown" about "this device" is almost certainly a fairly small uknown about the test bench (how the test bench caused the measurement error).
Most likely we will just discover a new principle of magnetrons that might lead to more efficient/smaller/more powerful magnetrons.
Near certainly, nothing will be discovered but the source of the experimental error.
There is a small chance that we will discover an entirely new principle of microwave propagation. And there is an even smaller chance that this will turn out to be a useful drive for spacecraft.
In science, since no theory is ever 100% proven, no wrong idea can ever be 100% ruled-out, so I would have to agree. But:
Those odds are well worth the small amount of money spent so far.
Given that we don't even know the odds of either of those, I don't see how you can suggest that other than by full-fledged wishful thinking. Any economist will tell you that playing the lottery is a bad idea, but at least with the lottery you know someone is going to win. Here, we can be reasonably certain from the start that what is being searched for is an error, not a phenomena.
Science does not advance by doing the same experiments over and over. It advances via new experiments, and the most promising statement a scientist can utter during such an experiment is "huh, that's odd - that doesn't make sense."
Of course. But in this case, it
does already make sense.
Circling back to the original two points:
1. (Stupid idea) NASA has finite research dollars, not to mention brain power and time. There should be a process by which they decide what to research based on how promising it appears. There probably is. There is likely a problem with it, either in that:
A. They aren't doing it rigorously.
B. There just aren't any worthy fringe ideas out there, so they just pick the best of a bad bunch.
While I would hope for B (because it at least saves face for NASA), I'm seeing A, because:
2. The investigation of the idea was poorly done. When the research announcement has clear scientific process flaws that any Junior High student should be able to identify, it calls into question the capabilities of the people that are running that office.
I would be somewhat OK if my tax dollars were spent doing good investigation of bad ideas, but I am not OK with my tax dollars being spent doing bad investigation of anything.