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Featured researches published by Michael S. Morris.


American Journal of Physics | 1988

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

Michael S. Morris; Kip S. Thorne

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 τ0 with the enormous magnitude τ0∼ (pressure at the center of the most massive of ne...


Physical Review D | 1995

Natural wormholes as gravitational lenses

J. G. Cramer; Robert L. Forward; Michael S. Morris; Matt Visser; Gregory Benford; Geoffrey A. Landis

Once quantum mechanical effects are included, the hypotheses underlying the positive mass theorem of classical general relativity fail. As an example of the peculiarities attendant upon this observation, a wormhole mouth embedded in a region of high mass density might accrete mass, giving the other mouth a net [ital negative] mass of unusual gravitational properties. The lensing of such a gravitationally negative anomalous compact halo object (GNACHO) will enhance background stars with a time profile that is observable and qualitatively different from that recently observed for massive compact halo objects (MACHOs) of positive mass. While the analysis is discussed in terms of wormholes, the observational test proposed is more generally a search for compact negative mass objects of any origin. We recommend that MACHO search data be analyzed for GNACHOs.


Physical Review Letters | 1988

Wormholes, Time Machines, and the Weak Energy Condition

Michael S. Morris; Kip S. Thorne; Ulvi Yurtsever


Physical Review D | 1986

The R2 cosmology: Inflation without a phase transition.

Milan Mijić; Michael S. Morris; Wai-Mo Suen


Physical Review D | 1990

Cauchy problem in spacetimes with closed timelike curves.

John L. Friedman; Michael S. Morris; I. Novikov; Fernando Echeverria; Gunnar Klinkhammer; Kip S. Thorne; Ulvi Yurtsever


Physical Review Letters | 1991

The Cauchy problem for the scalar wave equation is well defined on a class of spacetimes with closed timelike curves.

John L. Friedman; Michael S. Morris


Physical Review D | 1989

Initial conditions for R+εR^2 cosmology

Milan B. Mijic; Michael S. Morris; Wai Mo Suen


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1991

The Cauchy Problem on Spacetimes with Closed Timelike Curvesa

John L. Friedman; Michael S. Morris


Physical Review D | 1989

Initial conditions for perturbations in R+εR^2 cosmology

Michael S. Morris


Archive | 1989

Traversible Wormholes, Closed Timelike Curves, and the Averaged Weak Energy Condition

Michael S. Morris; Kip S. Thorne; Ulvi Yurtsever

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John L. Friedman

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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Kip S. Thorne

California Institute of Technology

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Ulvi Yurtsever

California Institute of Technology

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Milan B. Mijic

University of British Columbia

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Fernando Echeverria

California Institute of Technology

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Gunnar Klinkhammer

California Institute of Technology

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J. G. Cramer

University of Washington

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Milan Mijić

California Institute of Technology

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