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I just came up with a thought experiment that will break the speed of light!

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What was to happen if you made a flashlight out of photons, turned it on, then shot that flash light out of another flash light?
 
What if you turned on the flashlight and put it on a moving treadmill?

Oh shit......:sneaky:

And the flashlight is facing forward while treadmill is spinning at the speed of light. Will the light ever make it out of the flashlight? Or will it actually come out faster? The hard hitting questions. 😀
 
What if you take a fiber optic cable and roll it up in a tight coil? The light traveling on the outside of the coil travels a longer pathway than the light in the center so takes longer to get to the other end. Extrapointerprolating the shift to ever tighter coils, taking the limit as the radius goes to zero, and the g-forces go to infinity, we should be able to travel faster than light speed as we track the circumference of an infinitesimally small coil at the center.
 
What if you take a fiber optic cable and roll it up in a tight coil? The light traveling on the outside of the coil travels a longer pathway than the light in the center so takes longer to get to the other end. Extrapointerprolating the shift to ever tighter coils, taking the limit as the radius goes to zero, and the g-forces go to infinity, we should be able to travel faster than light speed as we track the circumference of an infinitesimally small coil at the center.

Actually this is why if you notice there are often loops of coiled fibre in the poles. This is typically near the customer prem and is called a service loop. It makes the internet faster. When you call to get a faster service they just go up the pole and coil it up with smaller but more loops. Only thing is it slightly increase the latency, but for much more speed. For gaming you are actually better off getting the lower tier fibre service for the lower latency. I totally just made all of that up.
 
Actually this is why if you notice there are often loops of coiled fibre in the poles. This is typically near the customer prem and is called a service loop. It makes the internet faster. When you call to get a faster service they just go up the pole and coil it up with smaller but more loops. Only thing is it slightly increase the latency, but for much more speed. For gaming you are actually better off getting the lower tier fibre service for the lower latency. I totally just made all of that up.

I would certainly hope everyone would know you made that up, but I guess you never know anymore.
 
Actually you can slow light down. You just can't go any faster than c.

But what do I know? You're the science expert.
Some guy named Einstein said that energy equals mass times the speed of light squared. So if Einstein is correct, you can square the speed of light [C], hence that constant speed can be surpassed! It's called Warp Speed... Ahead Mr. Sulu, Warp 5!
 
Imagine a flashlight. It is turned on. So, naturally, the light is coming out to the flashlight at the speed of light.

Now, imagine that flashlight attached to a car going 100mph. The light coming out of the flashlight is still coming out of the flashlight at the speed of light RELATIVE TO THE CAR, but remember the car is going 100mph, so relative to anything other than the car the light is now moving at the speed of light + 100 mph. Speed of light thus broken.

Have no scientists realized this?

No the speed is the same, just at different frequencies, RED/SHIFT, BLUE/SHIFT.
 
Scientists are handicapped by understanding special relativity better than you do.
:thumbsup:




If you go fast enough the light will even change colour because of the dopler effect. That's why those assholes that always drive too fast and dangerously have blue head lights as the wave length shifted.

On serious note I always kind of wondered about that myself, everything is relative, so technically something that is producing light and moving, that light should be relative to that thing. But light is a bit odd and I think it actually ends up breaking that rule.

You can probably use a laser to make casino chips, as well. That is the important thing right there.
Velocity is a function of distance versus time. Normally the "time" part of that equation is assumed to be constant.
Go faster, and the time part starts changing too. Light coming out of your headlights on your high-speed spacecraft looks like it's moving at normal light speed only because time's moving slower for you. It's going at its usual meters per second, but your "second" got a lot bigger, so it doesn't have to cover as many meters relative to your spacecraft in order to have the same apparent velocity.


Lasers can make casino chips too, but only until you try to measure how many chips you have. Then it gets a bit hazy.
 
:thumbsup:




Velocity is a function of distance versus time. Normally the "time" part of that equation is assumed to be constant.
Go faster, and the time part starts changing too. Light coming out of your headlights on your high-speed spacecraft looks like it's moving at normal light speed only because time's moving slower for you. It's going at its usual meters per second, but your "second" got a lot bigger, so it doesn't have to cover as many meters relative to your spacecraft in order to have the same apparent velocity.


Lasers can make casino chips too, but only until you try to measure how many chips you have. Then it gets a bit hazy.

Distance isn't constant either.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Length_contraction
 
What if you turned on the flashlight and put it on a moving treadmill?

Oh shit......:sneaky:

I made a fool out of myself one that one the first time I saw it, till I stopped and thought about it a minute.

Sans the flashlight, I mean.
 
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What if I could break apart and map every atom in an object and send it to the far ends of the universe? It would be like a self-extracting archive.

And poker chips? Those have RFID in them...
 
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