Talk:Energy Conservation

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The following discussion regarding Kinetic Energy was moved from http://emdrive.echothis.com/index.php?title=Talk:Theory:

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That's not a debunking theory, it is an energy and acceleration consideration. It fails to take into consideration the 2nd law of thermodynamics, it makes an unwarranted assumption that the acceleration of the device (and hence the force F= m *a) should be constant under constant power (the power required for constant acceleration is not explicitly discussed), and it fails to consider that in many processes like for example a collision against a wall momentum is conserved but kinetic energy is not.

 This is a back-of-the-envelope look at the claim.  It is not meant to be exhaustive, it does not require efficiencies, nor does it deny the existence of new physics, it is simply to show that they are *required* if no sources of experimental error are identified. 

This same "debunking theory" could be applied to any flying vehicle: rockets are not possible because, to start from an initial condition at rest, it means that they must accelerate, but constant acceleration means an energy puzzle, therefore there cannot be any rocket.

 No, a rocket loses mass.  It converts some form of energy (usually chemical) to kinetic energy and throws mass out the back.  There is no 'energy puzzle' with a rocket.   Let us for the purpose of our back-of-the-envelope discussion assume the existence of rockets.

(It fails on the same philosophical grounds as Zeno's paradox https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno%27s_paradoxes#Paradoxes_of_motion that motion is not possible.

 It has nothing to do with Zeno's paradox.   

This time by making the unwarranted assumption that the EM Drive will have constant acceleration at constant power.)

 It is true that that is my assumption.  But is it really unwarranted?  It was quoted in the early NASA paper as a thrust to power ratio of 5.3 micro-Newtons per watt.  However, if this is somehow frame dependent in contravention to general relativity, which I have also assumed, then they would have seen a variance as the device was pointed in different directions given the absolute movement of the galaxy, sun and the earth. No such variance was seen as far as I am aware and thus tends to discredit your hypothesis.  Nevertheless, if general relativity were to fall I think that would still constitute new physics.

The issue of energy conservation has its own section in this wiki, and it has been better addressed by @frobnicat.

Perhaps the writer was unaware of the section titled "http://emdrive.echothis.com/Generic_EM_Drive_Information", and that section should be better titled "Energy Conservation"

 I was unaware of that section and will happily contribute there if there is anything I can feel I can add.  Thank you.  I am not sure of the best way to format a rebuttal of a rebuttal so I have interleaved and indented as above.  

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