Travis Woodward
Maker of plans
I have a story I'd like to tell which requires both relativistic space travel and some form of FTL travel, but I want to avoid the possibility of someone creating a paradox, and want to minimise the number of arbitrary restrictions I need to employ.
Wormholes are the obvious answer, but I'd like to use something a bit more flexible, and a bit different. I have come up with a tentative idea, but I'd like a 2nd (or 3rd, or 4th) opinion on whether it could still lead to a paradox.
I'm thinking of having a series of objects (let's call them gateways for now) which allow instantaneous travel to any point within a field surrounding that gateway, and that field is of a fixed radius (e.g. 1 lightyear) relative to that gateway's frame of reference. The only restrictions are that (a) the fields of the gateways interfere with each other, such that any point in space can only ever be in range of one gateway at once, and (b) any change to the field (e.g. if a gateway is switched off) propagates at the speed of light.
I think (a) + (b) prevent paradoxes. If the system is static, then (a) means that information from a traveler's arrival can never reach the traveler's point of origin before the traveler left - at best it could arrive at simultaneously with their departure. The traveler's arrival and departure would happen out of order for someone travelling at relativistic speeds, but once they'd observed the arrival it would be too late for them to affect the departure.
I've added (b) to prevent two of the gateways being used sequentially to get around restriction (a), while still allowing for the network to be reconfigured periodically.
Thoughts/ criticisms/ alternatives? And does anyone know of examples in sci-fi where something similar has already been done well?
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