Research Hub/Papers/The Meyler-Fuchs Hybrid Warp Drive
PreprintOpen Access2026

The Meyler-Fuchs Hybrid Warp Drive

Nicholas Meyler

Summary

A March 2026 preprint proposing a hybrid warp drive theoretical framework drawing on Alcubierre and Fuchs-Jacobson approaches. Very recent and not peer-reviewed; speculative by nature. Listed as a theoretical physics contribution to the exotic propulsion thread relevant to UAP research contexts, pending independent review.

Abstract

The Meyler-Fuchs Hybrid Warp Drive (MFHD) and its extensions - H-MFHD and the Recursive Double Mobius Warp Drive (RDMWD) - introduce a non-orientable Mobius-parity ansatz into toroidal positive-energy warp metrics, producing a topological torsion-lowering mechanism that fundamentally changes the energy scaling of spacetime engineering. Combined with hyperbolic shift reformulation and orthogonal transport splitting, this yields quadratic (or better) reductions in field energy requirements compared to every prior positive-energy warp proposal. Whereas Fuchs et al., Lentz, and Bobrick and Martire require planetary-to-stellar mass-energy equivalents for meaningful warp velocities, MFHD satisfies all classical energy conditions (NEC, WEC, DEC, SEC), eliminates horizons and closed timelike curves by construction, and brings required field energies down to approximately 10^8-10^11 J for v = 0.5c. The two-axis orthogonal shift splitting is identified as the decisive innovation: for curvature exponents p >= 4, energy is halved relative to all single-axis designs. The paper also examines the persistent cultural motif of spinning and rim-rotating disc-shaped craft across seven decades of UAP reports, argues that institutional skepticism toward these reports suppressed a legitimate physics investigation for decades, and shows that the same topological principles now formalized in MFHD may explain the observed rotation signature. Neil deGrasse Tyson angular-momentum objection is addressed and shown to apply only to naive rigid-body rotation, not to the gauge-invariant topological torsion employed here.

Citation

Nicholas Meyler. (2026)

Access

View Source

Freely available - no paywall