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  4. Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
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Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?

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Offline paul cotter (OP)

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Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« on: 21/04/2022 17:10:56 »
the ivo thruster claims to produce reactionless thrust, thereby contradicting the CoM. some suggestion that this will also allow the CoE to be circumvented has also been made. what say you?
« Last Edit: 21/04/2022 17:31:11 by Kryptid »
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Offline Kryptid

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #1 on: 21/04/2022 17:30:18 »
I'd say I've never heard of it. Can you provide a link?
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Offline chiralSPO

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #2 on: 21/04/2022 17:43:12 »
A brief google search brings these up:
https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2022/03/24/2409190/0/en/IVO-Ltd-Introduces-the-World-s-First-Pure-Electric-Thruster-for-Satellites.html
https://www.ahedc.com/newsroom/ivo-ltd/

It looks like a scam or a mistake to me!

Either a "part-time Baptist pastor/part time electronics hobbyist" has completely revolutionized physics, or he hasn't and is just claiming to have done so...

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Offline alancalverd

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #3 on: 21/04/2022 17:48:18 »
Quote
The IVO Quantum Drive achieved 45mN of thrust consuming only a single watt and zero fuel.
So where did they get that "single watt" of power from?
« Last Edit: 21/04/2022 21:27:56 by alancalverd »
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Online Halc

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #4 on: 21/04/2022 18:21:51 »
Quote from: chiralSPO on 21/04/2022 17:43:12
A brief google search brings these up:
Mine got me here
https://www.forbes.com/sites/briankoberlein/2017/02/15/quantized-inertia-dark-matter-the-emdrive-and-how-to-do-science-wrong/?sh=19902960675f
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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #5 on: 21/04/2022 19:03:54 »
Quote from: paul cotter on 21/04/2022 17:10:56
what say you?
I say that the conservation laws are unusual in science.
Not only have they stood the experimental tests, but they are mathematically proven to be true.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noether%27s_theorem

So we know that anything which seems to break them is wrong.
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Offline paul cotter (OP)

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #6 on: 21/04/2022 21:01:24 »
bored chemist, i'm in full agreement with you.
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Offline alancalverd

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #7 on: 21/04/2022 21:27:27 »
So where did that watt come from?
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Offline Eternal Student

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #8 on: 22/04/2022 01:49:29 »
Hi.

     I'm not going to spend too much time digging up info for this.   From what's written here already, it's not worth the time.

Quote from: alancalverd on 21/04/2022 21:27:27
So where did that watt come from?
    One article said it was a pure electric drive.   Presumably the author(s) knew that electricity is measured in Watts but fuel is sold by the gallon, so they made a distinction between the two.
   The assorted quotes and comments imply that electricity is just free stuff that is out there in space for the taking - perhaps by solar panels.  So the spacecraft don't need to carry any fuel.

Best Wishes. 
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Offline wolfekeeper

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #9 on: 23/04/2022 04:32:20 »
There are classes of propulsion that don't require fuel, for example, interacting with the Earth's magnetic field. But I don't know what this is supposed to be, many of these things are bullshit.
« Last Edit: 23/04/2022 04:37:19 by wolfekeeper »
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Offline Deecart

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #10 on: 19/06/2022 13:09:49 »
Quote from: alancalverd
So where did that watt come from?

It came from some electrical source.
But perhaps you asked : Where dit that thrust come from ?

Nobody know exactly if there is really some thrust, but the latest experiences done in Germany stated that the thrust (very small) observed with the previous model of the EmDrive by the NASA is due to experimental errors.
They were able (they say) to "kill the thrust"  when they corrected those errors around year 2020.

Quote from: Popular Mechanics
Using a new measuring scale and different suspension points of the same engine, the TU Dresden scientists “were able to reproduce apparent thrust forces similar to those measured by the NASA team, but also to make them disappear by means of a point suspension,” researcher Martin Tajmar told the German site GreWi.
https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/a35991457/emdrive-thruster-fails-tests/



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Offline Bored chemist

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #11 on: 19/06/2022 13:14:51 »
Quote from: alancalverd on 21/04/2022 17:48:18
achieved 45mN of thrust
I can do better than that by dropping a coin.
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Offline Deecart

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #12 on: 19/06/2022 23:06:41 »
Quote from: Bored Chemist
I can do better than that by dropping a coin.

Sure.
But for that you have to throw your coin away forever.
This is how the actual rockets do : They throw some mass out of the rocket.
And they have to accelerate the mass they have for further propulsion.
This is a big loss in efficiency.
And when you dont have any mass on board... you are stucked in space.
But if you can retrieve electrical energy (from the sun or from nuclear reaction (low mass loss with big energy gain)), you can always recharge your battery.

Inertial propulsion is the "graal" everyone try to discover because it can be achieved without any loss of mass.
Furthermore the propulsor can be protected into the spaceship without any interaction with the outside.
It is very secure.
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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #13 on: 19/06/2022 23:54:22 »
Quote from: Deecart on 19/06/2022 23:06:41
Inertial propulsion is the "graal" everyone try to discover because it can be achieved without any loss of mass.
This is a claim of reactionless thrust, not 'inertial propulsion'. And the word is 'grail', not 'graal'.

Quote
But if you can retrieve electrical energy (from the sun or from nuclear reaction...), you can always recharge your battery.
Indeed. If I had reactionless thrust, I could use it to generate more electricity than it costs, so no sunlight or nuclear reactor needed. The world energy problem would be solved. Isn't magic great?

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #14 on: 20/06/2022 10:18:07 »
The experimental result, assuming it was accurately reported, was not obtained in an infinite  perfect vacuum. An electrostatic accelerator can use residual gas molecules to generate thrust, and an imperfectly shielded electrostatic system will experience a force from induced charge on the surface of the vacuum chamber.   
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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #15 on: 20/06/2022 11:23:29 »
Quote from: Halc
Indeed. If I had reactionless thrust, I could use it to generate more electricity than it costs, so no sunlight or nuclear reactor needed. The world energy problem would be solved. Isn't magic great?

Theoritically, you dont need to have less reaction (or no reaction at all) to produce a thrust (more or less must be understand as the norm of the vector).
You "only" need to make the counter reaction not collinear to the reaction.
In this case there is no energy loss or energy gain and the great question is ... what transform into what ? (transformation of energy is theoritically permited)


 
« Last Edit: 20/06/2022 11:29:51 by Deecart »
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Offline alancalverd

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #16 on: 20/06/2022 12:05:00 »
So Newton was wrong? Experimental evidence?
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Offline Deecart

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #17 on: 20/06/2022 16:04:03 »
Quote from: alancalverd
So Newton was wrong?

Se already know that Newton was wrong concerning a lot of things.
First he used instant action of forces (concerning this point he was aware that it was probably wrong).
Second, he worked in flat spacetime.

To explain the principia without any complicated formula, you can understand the spacetime to be composed of space and time.
So your vector, in a 4D space unlike Newtons 3D space, is composed of "spacetime".
If you gain space, you loose time.
Therefore curving the counter reaction vector is achieved by creating a field where time passes at lower speed, relativ to the environment outside the field.
To say it simple : If you get by mistake into the field under such a powerfull "thrusting machine" you will experience a missing time.

Quote
Experimental evidence?

I said : "Theoritically" 2 times.

But... i can remember some experiment (i dident found it again) that showed some strange lifting force that occured almost randomly (so nobody really wanted to waste their time to understand why because of the randomness and the weak effect).
This was a very very fast spining disk and it is obvious that if it was lifting sometime it is only because of the very sligh vibrations and of the difference between the action and the reaction of theses vibrations that are in some random directions.

And concerning the theory it should be something like that :
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/K-Kassner/publication/51937163_Spatial_geometry_of_the_rotating_disk_and_its_non-rotating_counterpart/links/00b7d520a3faf46415000000/Spatial-geometry-of-the-rotating-disk-and-its-non-rotating-counterpart.pdf?origin=publication_detail
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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #18 on: 20/06/2022 16:43:49 »
Quote from: Deecart on 20/06/2022 16:04:03
Se already know that Newton was wrong concerning a lot of things
So are you saying that Newtons 3rd law of motion is wrong?
Quote from: Deecart on 20/06/2022 16:04:03
I said : "Theoritically" 2 times.
What theory says an action can occur with no reaction?
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Offline paul cotter (OP)

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Re: Does the IVO thruster violate Newton's third law?
« Reply #19 on: 20/06/2022 17:08:52 »
The only way to "influence" the passage of time is either to travel at relativistic speed or to set up the experiment in strong gravity well(eg black hole). In the first case one would not need any further thrust as one would already be travelling at alarming speed. In the second case whatever thrust developed might not save one from spaghettification.
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