American Journal of Physics
multicolored wave spectrumblack and yellow corner piece


Previous Article
Announcement: Robert H. Romer, New Editor of American Journal of Physics
Next Article
Henry Cavendish, Johann von Soldner, and the deflection of light
The gravitational deflection of light based on Newtonian theory and the corpuscular model of light was calculated, but never published, around 1784 by Henry Cavendish, almost 20 years earlier than the...

You are not logged in to this journal. Log in

Wormholes in spacetime and their use for interstellar travel: A tool for teaching general relativity

American Journal of Physics -- May 1988 -- Volume 56, Issue 5, pp. 395-412

Issue Date: May 1988
Buy This PDF   (US$28)
Download PDF (1886 kB) View Cart

KEYWORDS and PACS

Keywords
PACS
  • 04.20.Jb
    Relativity and gravitation General relativity Solutions to equations
  • 97.60.Lf
    Stars Late stages of stellar evolution (including black holes) Black holes
  • YEAR: 1988

PUBLICATION DATA

ISSN:
0002-9505 (print)  
Publisher:
AIP is a member of CrossRef AAPT
Michael S. Morris and Kip S. Thorne
Theoretical Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125
Rapid interstellar travel by means of spacetime wormholes is described in a way that is useful for teaching elementary general relativity. The description touches base with Carl Sagan's novel Contact, which, unlike most science fiction novels, treats such travel in a manner that accords with the best 1986 knowledge of the laws of physics. Many objections are given against the use of black holes or Schwarzschild wormholes for rapid interstellar travel. A new class of solutions of the Einstein field equations is presented, which describe wormholes that, in principle, could be traversed by human beings. It is essential in these solutions that the wormhole possess a throat at which there is no horizon; and this property, together with the Einstein field equations, places an extreme constraint on the material that generates the wormhole's spacetime curvature: In the wormhole's throat that material must possess a radial tension tau0 with the enormous magnitude tau0~ (pressure at the center of the most massive of neutron stars)×(20 km)2/(circumference of throat)2. Moreover, this tension must exceed the material's density of mass-energy, rho0c2. No known material has this tau0>rho0c2 property, and such material would violate all the ``energy conditions'' that underlie some deeply cherished theorems in general relativity. However, it is not possible today to rule out firmly the existence of such material; and quantum field theory gives tantalizing hints that such material might, in fact, be possible.

©1988 American Association of Physics Teachers
History: Received 16 March 1987; accepted 17 July 1987
Permalink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1119/1.15620

There are no references.

CITING ARTICLES

For access to citing articles, you need to log in.
For access to citing articles, you need to Log in.