Originally posted by: Calin
They use highly accelerated particles to hit immobile targets. Protons near light speed (well, not really near light speed, but at a significant fraction of it), they have several times their mass at 0 speed.
What do they get? Usually very heavy elements (much after Uranium), very energic other particles and very low level particles (those so called "quarks", which are components of protons, electrons, neutrons)
Originally posted by: Vegitto
When two black holes collide? I think they consume each other, and the fabric of time with it. Like a dragon, eating its own tail. When it's done, there's nothing left.
Originally posted by: icarus4586
The mass of an object moving at speeds close to the speed of light is defined by:
(mass at speed near c) = (rest mass) / sqrt(1- (v^2)/(c^2))
With this equation, the speed of light acts as an asymptote, as velocity approaches c, mass approaches infinity. Graph showing this: http://www.rit.edu/~ntp0166/graph.jpg
Based on some calculations and information Google found me, you'd need a density of 6.49e18 kg/m^3 to become a "black hole."
If we assign both ships an arbitrary volume of 750 cubic meters, the combined mass would need to be 9.74e21 kg. My calculator isn't precise enough to calculate how close the required velocity would be.
So to answer your question, since it's impossible for anything with mass to achieve the speed of light, two somewhat large, somewhat massive objects travelling at the limit as x approaches zero of the speed of light minus x... would each create a black hole. IDK what happens when 2 black holes collide. Really big black hole?
"Ouch! The concept of `relativistic mass' is subject to
misunderstanding. That's why we don't use it. First, it applies the
name mass--belonging to the magnitude of a four-vector--to a very
different concept, the time component of a four-vector. Second, it
makes increase of energy of an object with velocity or momentum appear
to be connected with some change in internal structure of the object.
In reality, the increase of energy with velocity originates not in the
object but in the geometric properties of space-time itself."
"It is not good to introduce the concept of the mass M =
m/(1-v2/c2)^1/2 of a body for which no clear definition can be given.
It is better to introduce no other mass than `the rest mass' m.
Instead of introducing M, it is better to mention the expression for
the momentum and energy of a body in motion."
Originally posted by: Vegitto
When two black holes collide? I think they consume each other, and the fabric of time with it. Like a dragon, eating its own tail. When it's done, there's nothing left.
Touche. I guess that's what I get for not having taken modern physics yet and relying pretty much entirely on Google.Mass does not increase with velocity. Relativistic mass is not the same as mass. Objects do not collapse into black holes by accelerating near the speed of light.
If something's a black hole, it's a black hole in any reference frame. However, in your example, the object is a black hole in one reference frame, but in other reference frames it's not. In its own reference frame, its velocity is zero, so there's no additional relativistic mass to cause it to collapse into a black hole; however, in its reference frame, you are moving near the speed of light and hence should be a black hole by your argument.
Originally posted by: cquark
Originally posted by: Vegitto
When two black holes collide? I think they consume each other, and the fabric of time with it. Like a dragon, eating its own tail. When it's done, there's nothing left.
You get a single black hole, whose mass is equal to that of the two colliding black holes minus any lost during the collision.
Originally posted by: MetalStorm
I'm sick of these stupid threads. So to all those people with no grasp of physics and want to ask a stupid question; go to school.
Someone should have just answered "NO" and closed the thread.
Originally posted by: cecallred
Originally posted by: MetalStorm
I'm sick of these stupid threads. So to all those people with no grasp of physics and want to ask a stupid question; go to school.
Someone should have just answered "NO" and closed the thread.
Arrogance doesn't look good on you. These threads are here for this and if you don't enjoy them, why not simply Not read them?
Your attitude was insulting to the person who asked the question, and to those who chose to answer and debate. I see no where that you contributed to this at all. If you have the correct answer, you could have chosen to teach instead of insult.
As the lead in to this thread says: "leave your egos at the door."
Originally posted by: Joepublic2
You'd observe a strong gravitational wave as well, wouldn't you? I think these guys would notice what happened once it reached the earth.
http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/
Hello, I found this thread because I was thinking about this last night. Now, i have 0 physics background. But I like to think about it.
Now if you were to observe two copies of the same object, be it led for example. and the purpose of this illustration they would be bullets traveling at just under the speed of light, what would the collision look like.
Now, if the speed of light could 100% not be surpassed by our hypothetical collision, then you would be able to measure the energy of the collision and it would have to be equal to the mass of both bullets.
If it is not equal, one must logically think. Where did the other mass go?
Well, I was thinking- if the energy of the collision is not equal to the mass of the bullets right before the collision, does this mean the mass dissapeared - or simply could not be observed.
If as a result of the collison, the particles released as a result of the collision, exceeded the speed of light, as the though experiment suggests, is it possible the energy or particles were released before the collision?
If this is true- does this mean, the particles as a result of the collision infact were lost before the collision, and can thusly be classified as time travel. Of course only if you could find the energy or particles before and after they are lost.
Now I was thinking about a way to experiment with this.
If photons, both pass through eachother, and also interact with eachother- why can't we then set up two clone copies of lasers pointed perfectly at eachother in a way to make the light colide. Now if we let this experiment run for 10,000 years what would we find?
If the hypothesis was true, we could observe at the point were the two lasers colide would occasionally be dimmer, or occasionally be brighter than it should be.
If the thought experiment fails then the the amount of light producted at the collision of the two laser beams would be exactly constant for 10,000 years.
As mentioned this was something I was just thinking about in bed as I was falling asleep, and I have absolutely 0 background in physics or calculus. But I would really enjoy reading what you have to say.
Thank you
-Zach Logan
BY just below i mean the closest possible speed to the speed of light.
ie C - (1/x) as x approaches infinity.
Would it collapse the universe? Two nearly infinite (whatever that means) masses collliding?
If two objects traveling just below the speed of light collide, what happens?
I think if two ships travelling near the speed of light collide, they will ricochet off eachother and keep flying because the ships will be made of adamantium. And nothing can break adamantium.
the original comics revealed adamantium was penetrable by bullets made of the same alloy.