HACKER Q&A
📣 slmjkdbtl

Is there any fiction that's based on a world with different physics?


E.g. a world where momentum is not conserved, perpetual motion is possible, decreasing entropy etc


  👤 amoruso Accepted Answer ✓
Greg Egan wrote a few of those.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthogonal_(series)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaspora_(novel)

Diaspora starts in this universe but ends up somewhere else.


👤 kilna
I am surprised nobody has mentioned Flatland

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flatland


👤 ainzzorl
Not exactly this, but "Dragon's Egg" by Robert Forward takes place on a neutron star with a surface gravity billions times that on Earth.

👤 aherz
The Gods Themselves by Isaac Asimov explores this very idea of what would happen if two parallel universes were to interact but had different laws of physics.

👤 rakejake
Some of Greg Egan's novels are based on very novel Physics I believe. His more "accessible" novel Permutation City is a HN favorite.

👤 yetihehe
"The Void Trilogy" by Peter F. Hamilton has a "constructed" subuniverse where you can alter matter with thoughts and it has different temporal flow.

👤 webmaven
Bob Shaw wrote a duology "The Ragged Astronauts" & "The Wooden Spaceships" in which the ratio of a circles circumference to it's diameter is 3. As far as I can tell, the only reason this factoid is included is to defuse any arguments about the plausibility of other elements of the setting (a binary planet with a shared atmosphere such that it is possible for a feudal society to stage an invasion from one to the other using balloons).

Celestial Matters by Richard Garfinkle has Ptolemaic cosmology and Aristotelian physics.

The Planiverse: Computer Contact with a Two-Dimensional World by A.K. Dewdney is sort of a modern take on the classic Flatland by Edwin Abbot, and manages to improve upon it considerably.

The Long Earth series by Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter posits an infinite set of parallel Earths that can be reached with a trivial but unorthodox electronic device. You have to travel to them incrementally, one sideways step


👤 ww520
Nightfall by Isaac Asimov, while not exactly different physics but it's in a totally physical "universe."

👤 ahazred8ta
The science-fantasy novel Celestial Matters is based on ancient Greek physics. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celestial_Matters

👤 kadoban
Raft by Stephen Baxter comes to mind. It's his first book, so it's far from perfect, but it's quite interesting.

Some of his other books the physics are the same as ours but the locations are so exotic that they might as well qualify.


👤 washadjeffmad
That's the basis of a story currently being written by a Dutch physics teacher:

https://www.royalroad.com/fiction/21844/i-am-going-to-die-in...

There are no advanced concepts or deep hard scifi explorations, but the various worlds each have unique physics systems that are macro-consistent.


👤 hcs
This is subtly present in Neal Stephenson's Anathem, late in the book it's a plot device that comes up a few times.

👤 MrWiffles
Can't say I've heard of anything like this _explicitly_, but Star Trek _kinda_ skates around the edges of that with the whole "warp drive" thing to some degree. Not an expert in ST lore by any means, but that whole franchise's physics world would have to be different than ours for the idea of a "warp field" to exist.

👤 AnimalMuppet
Redshift Rendezvous (I forget who wrote it) has alternate physics you can step into where the speed of light is 30 m/s. You can get relativistic effects while jogging. (I mean, I guess that's just the same physics with one of the parameters changed, but it changes quite a bit...)

👤 x0xrx
“The Inverted World” by Christopher Priest involves a world that appears to be based on hyperbolic geometry I believe.

👤 mikewarot
In this series, most modern technology stops working, due to aliens tweaking the laws of physics on earth

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emberverse_series


👤 drakonka
Check out The Machineries of Empire series by Yoon Ha Lee. The first instalment (Ninefox Gambit) is one of my favorite books. The physics of the world is based on an interesting "calendrical" system which relies on the population's faith in the calendar to persist.

👤 DarrenDev
The Emberverse series by SM Sterling. The laws of physics change such that technology no longer works and is no longer capable of working. Ex: water couldn't boil enough to power a steam engine.

The first book is the best - subsequent books are almost pure fantasy.


👤 randomNumber7
Every fantasy with magic goes against the three laws of thermodynamics.


👤 charliesolomon
The Practice Effect, David Brin

👤 insomniacity
On, by Adam Roberts.