I've read a lot about this and I don't understand the focus on this thing breaking the conservation of momentum law (apart from that being a great headline for popular science articles that want clicks, of course!). My understanding from the reading I've done is nobody really knows conclusively how this thing works (assuming for a moment that it does work - which we also don't know definitively).
If we don't know what's going on to cause the thrust, then how do we know it must be breaking a law of physics? I get that there are theories which suggest it might be, but they're just theories right? They could be completely wrong at such an early stage, yes?
Given that, it seems odd to discount the drive's credibility on the basis of it breaking a law. Better, in my mind, is to doubt its credibility on the basis that we've done only very limited testing to even verify it works. Once we have conclusive test results, then we should worry about the basic laws, in my mind. Anything else is premature, no?
The best analogy I can think of this, if you'll bear with me:
We've run an experiment with a device called a
Crookes radiometer, in a world where we have no knowledge of radiation (don't ask why, in this hypothetical world, they named it that!). Someone has "proved" that the vanes inside it move when you shine a light source on them, but they've done this by taking still photographs. The experiment is inconclusive because it doesn't show enough information to make a definitive call, and obviously before we get too excited, we need to re-test with better equipment (like a video camera) to confirm that the vanes move when you shine a torch on them, and that the thing actually works as described.
Before any such test is done though, there is naturally already some speculation about the possible causes in a working device. Some scientists are like "I got nothing, man. This is fucking voodoo". Other scientists, going with the most intuitive observation, and using the best knowledge they have at the time, suggest that it might be some kind of interaction with photons hitting the vanes that isn't yet fully understood: that when they bounce off the vanes it causes the rotation, since photons have momentum. There's an immediate problem to the theory though. It can be proven elsewhere that the pressure exerted by photons is far too small to move them. The pop-sci magazines of the day, who all love a good headline, leap all over this and announce that the vanes in Crookes' device must be moving by some phantom force that defies the laws of physics! Pop-sci magazines around the world sell out overnight, while skeptical scientists cry themselves to sleep. Morning editions of newspapers talk about how this new discovery might flip the scientific understanding of photons on its head, and how this could all usher in a new dawn of science as physics is reinvented from the ground up. Speculation explodes, and people's imaginations go wild talking about potential applications in spaceship designs that are powered by photons! \o/
Despite the story blowing up, and still before the tests are confirmed (i.e. before anyone films it happening and confirms the rotations definitively) scientists and scientifically-literate people maintain their skepticism that the vanes in the device are actually being rotated, because they know that photons cannot be doing it. They say that this would overturn all the previous years of observation and experimentation that demonstrates how photons behave. Going further, they say that since photons couldn't do this, the whole idea is nonsense, since the vanes would not be moving without any force being applied. It would break the laws of physics! The vanes can't be moving, and physical laws cannot be broken. I want to believe, they say, but please staph the madness.
Eventually a proper test is done, and they confirm that the vanes really do move. Looking further into this unexpected result, the real culprit is discovered to be radiation, a phenomenon that was previously unknown to science. It's shown that there is a very reasonable explanation for why the vanes in the device move the way they do, and it turns out to be perfectly compatible with the laws of physics. No laws are broken, and there is no phantom force after all. Suddenly our dreams are realized and we really can apply this new knowledge to making awesome space toys like solar sails. They're not powered by photons after all, as we initially thought, but no matter. We've just opened the door on possibilities for space travel that we never thought possible. One day we might be going to Mars on a radiation-powered mirror, with no on-board fuel required! \o/
The skeptics are like "Okay I was wrong about the thing with the laws and such, but screw it let's go to Mars" and the believers are like "It's cool we were wrong about that too, and the whole photon thing, but yeah, save me a seat!" And everyone lives happily ever after in a world that understands radiation.
Granted, that's all one hell of a hypothetical, and a simplification, and an imperfect analogy, and I am not at all familiar with the science behind all this ... but that's kind of how I see this right now.
We're debating photographic evidence when we need video footage to advance the dialogue. When we assume for the sake of argument that this thing works, we're reliant upon current scientific knowledge to explain it, which may not turn out to be sufficient in doing so. Stranger still (to me) we're discounting the notion that it could work based on current scientific knowledge because that same knowledge suggests it breaks the laws of physics.
Meanwhile it's still perfectly possible (unless I am hopelessly out of my depth here, which is likely) that this thing could work, that we might not yet understand what makes it work, and that it might not break any laws after all.
tl;dr - We are dumb monkeys with a bad track record for dogmatism, we often analyze unexpected results poorly, we sometimes fling our poo prematurely.