Yes I missed the paper rpenner linked. However, it is referenced by some respected scientists, as a progress report and as a paper presented at a conference in Cleveland. Not a published or even pre-publish research paper. The PAPER is no better than the abstract or press reactions.
By definition, "not published"
is pre-published. But hairsplitting definitions aside, the paper is 10x as much information as the abstract. It is disingenuous of you to claim that it isn't and/or shouldn't be better than the abstract and press reactions.
Two things from the above. First, you associate Shawyer's theory as the basis for the current NASA funded test. The way the NASA paper reads it was the not the theory but the Chinese experiment that instigated testing the mechanism. [snip]. Second they showed test results for both the Cannae drive and a tapered thruster design.
Again, I'm sorry, but the issue here is that you haven't read-up on the subject enough. The "tapered thruster design"
is Shawyer's EMdrive and while the NASA paper doesn't say it, the Chinese paper that they reference does.
NASA tested Shawyer's EMDrive.
There was no claim other than a reference to an interaction with a virtual plasma, suggesting any underlying theory of operation.
Agreed. And it was wrong of them to do that.
As I have said before, you don't have to accept the earlier presented theory, to decide to test a design...
I didn't say you did. I said it is reasonable for reviewers to evaluate it based on that theory (and mainstream/accepted theory) whether the testers specifically cite it or not.
If I suggest to you a car that operates by the driver pushing on the steering wheel and don't offer you a theory of operation, I submit that you will reject it based on evaluating it in the context of existing theory.
Again! The paper was a handout at a conference...
I see no evidence of that. Please cite your source.
And the NASA documents are available to the public barring some classified status. It was not released or published as a experimental or theoretical paper.
Again, I see no evidence of that. I know of no mechanism by which the public can view in-progress work. Is there a server you can point me to where I can download the raw data from work done today?
The fact of the matter is that it was written and released and it is an experimental paper. If the data wasn't ready to be scrutinized by the scientific community, the paper should not have even been written. If I write a paper that I intend to show to my peers in any forum, I make damn sure that it is worthy of showing to them!
Any time any respected scientist evaluates research or experimental documentation.., assuming an unstated theoretical basis, they are making assumptions.
Um....duh? Of course! And any respectable writer knows what assumptions should reasonably be made!
Deciding that the design or claimed results, of this experiment, no matter how poorly it was done, violates conservation laws, by attaching Shawyer's theory to it, is not.
False. Conservation of momentum is the prevailing theory/law and the NASA researchers should know that their device will be evaluated based on that existing theory/law. Science is done by "standing on the shoulders of giants". All research builds on previous research and it is not reasonable to expect any research to generate the entirety of the science it is based on from scratch. There is hundreds of years of science and math reflected in the paper. It is just as unreasonable of you to demand that the NASA researchers reproduce all of it as it is for you to demand that reviewers not utilize any of it in their review.
Confirmed means that two other previous experiments claimed results that showed thrust was developed. Two earlier experiments CONFIRMED thrust. That is all.
That is
nothing. "Confirmed thrust" means nothing if the "confirmed thrust" isn't
the same thrust. If I make a prediction of 10 N of thrust, you measure 100 N of thrust (+/-10) and someone else measures 1000 N (+/-100),
nothing has been confirmed because none of the tests or theoretical predictions agree with each other!
My point! Any transfer of momentum between vacuum energy or virtual particles and matter does not violate conservation of momentum.
I notice you deleted the rest of that part of my post in your quote of it. Your point(!) is completely meaningless because "momentum between vacuum energy or virtual particles and matter" is, as far as we know, just as much a fantasy as my invisible purple butterfly. I'm not sure you grasped this when said before:
the words used in the paper appear thrown together like technobabble. They don't belong in the same phrase together. The writers of the paper haven't given much to go on, but what they have given appears to be gibberish and without merit. You, however, want to assume it is true. That just plain isn't scientific.
Just who is calling it a scientific paper?
A paper written by scientists should be scientific. It's not a comic book, even if it reads like one.
...but all we wound up with is a conference handout...
Again: you're the first I see claiming that.
Sometimes Russ you are absolutely right, and sometimes experiments return unexpected results that leads to new theory.
Agreed. And until there is really, really, really, really, really good reason to conclude the latter, the former is the default conclusion. And when the scientists making that claim behave badly, square that.
In any case, "sometimes" isn't really accurate. You don't need to believe it, but my BS detector has a pretty good track record. I wish I had a mechanism for placing bets on such things.
What this will all end up as, who knows? Maybe it will lead to a better understanding of the quantum vacuum, maybe it will lead to a thruster for satellite station keeping and deep space probes, and maybe it will turn out to be nothing. But even if it turns out to be nothing in the end, at this point you can't just dismiss it as violating laws of physics.
It's a free country and the scientific community is free to dismiss it if it wants. One of the typical whines of crackpots is that they don't like being ignored. [shrug] Nobody (who matters) is obligated to pay attention to them.
And there are a number of reputable labs that believe the same.
Who?