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My answer to the question Is there a scientifically sound faster-than-light travel system for a spaceship? involved an Alcubierre-drive starship.
However, that then got me thinking. What would an external observer see when passed by such a ship? When not operating, an observer would see just a stationary ship, but what about when it was operating and travelling faster than light? Would there be any redshift or blueshift? Would there be any distortion of the image, and if so, how? Would the drive field be visible? Would it look like it was going forward, or since it is moving faster than light relative to the observer, would it look like it was going backwards? Can you describe what you'd see from the moment it became visible to the moment it vanished into the distance, and how that would relate to its actual direction of travel?
Ignore the fact that a human observer probably wouldn't have time to see anything as it would pass too quickly to see, assume a theoretically perfect observer.

Just a WAG therefore not an answer: Just like a laser pointer dot on the Moon appears to move FTL a ship in FTL warp would be a long streak of light. – Zan Lynx – 2014-12-05T01:15:25.407
@celtschk, you should make your comment an answer. – Monty Wild – 2014-12-07T23:31:08.260
whatafuckisthatomg !
thats what a obserserver would say. – Jorge Aldo – 2015-03-23T16:57:34.153
Something like a tartan pattern I guess?
– kikirex – 2019-05-08T19:09:01.470According to my understanding, in order for the Alcubierre drive to function normally the ship still needs to actually move through the compressed space. It's just that the drive warps space around it to create a bubble of of space that's shorter than the rest of space. – Wesley Obenshain – 2014-09-24T03:03:08.917
2Actually, no, an Alcubierre drive, once activated, effectively moves the volume of space containing the ship. There is no need for the ship to apply any other sort of thrust. – Monty Wild – 2014-09-24T05:01:08.940
That... doesn't make a whole lot of sense. But I don't feel like grokking the math so eh. – Wesley Obenshain – 2014-09-24T06:27:09.157
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There's a lot of material about this at http://www.vis.uni-stuttgart.de/~muelleta/Warp/
– celtschk – 2014-09-26T09:18:05.777