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| | #48 (permalink) |
| Banned Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 818
| Photons? Neutrinos? Tachyons? [/quote]Since mass increases indefinitely as you approach the speed of light, it would take an infinite amount of energy to accelerate an object of even infinitesimal resting mass to the speed of light.[/quote] As you accelerates towards yes. Doesn't count for particles already traveling at that speed. |
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| | #49 (permalink) | |||
| Kneel before Zod! Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,317
+2 Internets | Quote:
Quote:
Photon - What is a photon? Quote:
Special Relativity - an overview of Einstein's theory of special relativity Speed of Light No object with mass can accelerate to precisely the speed of light. A massless object, like a photon, can move at the speed of light. (A photon doesn't actually accelerate, though, since it always moves exactly at the speed of light.) But for a physical object, the speed of light is a limit. The kinetic energy at the speed of light goes to infinity, so it can never be reached by acceleration. Some have pointed out that an object could in theory move at greater than the speed of light, so long as it did not accelerate to reach that speed. So far no physical entities have ever displayed that property, however. Much smarter people than us have discussed this stuff. I still recommend the book The Elegant Universe, by the way. Last edited by Burf : 06-16-2008 at 11:21 PM. | |||
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| | #50 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,630
+6 Internets | Photons, OK. Neutrinos seem to have mass and do not seem to travel at the speed of light, and nobody has ever seen a tachyon. Disclaimer: I'm not a physics major, but I have read all the same pop science books and have some physics major friends who enjoy spending a long time explaining things to me. |
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| | #51 (permalink) | |
| Safety Dance Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: West Lafayette
Posts: 5,522
| Quote:
I don't understand your point. | |
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| | #52 (permalink) | |
| Banned Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 818
| Quote:
Neutrinos travel at the speed of light (or very very close) but also have some infinitesimal amount of mass. | |
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| | #53 (permalink) | ||
| Safety Dance Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: West Lafayette
Posts: 5,522
| Quote:
You originally questioned the impossibility of traveling at the speed of light -- this doesn't really change that. Quote:
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| | #54 (permalink) | |
| Banned Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 818
| Quote:
I dont really have the knowledge to explain how they oscillate between states and alter their mass as they travel. My original question was rhetorical its obvious some things travel at the speed of light. | |
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| | #55 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 1,630
+6 Internets | It's sure a long way from obvious. As far as I'm concerned, anything that travels at the speed of light - besides light, as you accurately pointed out - is stretching the definition of a "thing" because it certainly doesn't act much like the normal sort of things you understand and deal with daily. |
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| | #56 (permalink) |
| the Ninjarr Join Date: Apr 2007 Location: CA
Posts: 1,268
| The upper bound on velocities is misnamed as the Speed of Light, it is more adequately described as the Speed of Information. Light can be described as a particle or as a wave. When referred to as a particle we call it a photon; light (and photons) travel at this speed, but have no mass. Gluons fall into the same category. It is impossible (according to most modern physicists) to send information faster than this speed. By the conventional definition of a particle, however, it is safe to say that particles can travel at this speed. Still, it is impossible for any particle with mass to achieve such a speed because it would require an infinite amount of energy to accelerate it to the proper speed. This is a result of the relativistic mass idea which Einstein (and others) proposed. Specifically, it states that as mass-carrying particle accelerates its mass increases in such a way that if you take the limit as the mass goes to infinity, you approach c; or more accurately that if you take the limit as the speed goes to c, the mass (energy) requirement diverges. Just to offer another bit of information: Tachyons are theoretical particles which have imaginary mass. This isn't some strange physical idea so much as a mathematical one. When plugging an imaginary number in for the mass of a particle, the equations which govern that particle, which were brewed to work for real numbers, do silly things. For some reason, some physicists consider this to be interesting; most don't, as it is just the misuse of a formula which we created to work in a specific way with respect to specific variable types. Edit: As far as I know there is no known, or rather commonly accepted, physical explanation for neutrino oscillations. The probability distributions of a neutrino suggest that its flavor changes, yet it is merely the probability which changes. Saying anything about it beyond that is a bit difficult at this point; really there isn't a lot known about neutrino oscillations. Edit Edit: LHC Countdown, for those interested/excited. Higggggss!! Last edited by Ninajrr : 06-17-2008 at 01:21 AM. |
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| | #57 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,879
| traveling fast could extend your life, actually. i dunno if someone mentioned this already, but since the rest of the planet would be progressing through time faster by comparison, it means their technology advances would continue. you could hop on your rocket for awhile then just come back to earth when it's the year 4 or 5,000. i assume by then they will have conquered aging. so you get to live forever, install a bionic penis, and whatever else it is they have by then. the downside being that humans wipe out one another and you end up being the last one in the universe. aside from the ones aliens have abducted. |
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| | #58 (permalink) |
| Kneel before Zod! Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 1,317
+2 Internets | Allllllllright. Let's try this again (even though I laughed at most of your post...good funnies). Someone on earth lives 80 years. They can do 80 years worth of stuff. In that time, let's say that they can read 500 books. Someone traveling near the speed of light will (to them) still live 80 years and will still only be able to read 500 books. However, since time (for the person going near the speed of light) is going "slower," when they return from their trip in their rocket ship, the earth will have progressed more than 80 years (as you humorously pointed out, Kolle). |
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| | #59 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Sep 2002
Posts: 4,879
| traveling fast indirectly increases their life span by giving them access to miracle anti-aging drug. if i had the ability to put myself in the future or some alternate time line that would be the first thing i'd do. immunity to death and ailments. and you know there's gonna be sexual upgrades. vibrating, hallucinogenic secretions, etc... Last edited by Kolle : 06-17-2008 at 03:58 AM. |
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| | #60 (permalink) | ||
| You mean I can change this? Neat! Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 9,746
+27 Internets | Quote:
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That said, it's entirely possible we'll realize in the future that there's ways around this speed limit with deeper understanding of how the laws of physics actually work, but for the time being it's actually pretty "obvious" that no, "things" (as people typically understand them) don't travel at the speed of light. | ||
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