No. Even with short sticks the response is delayed as the shear force propagates up the stick. The stick deflects while the force is applied and propagates.
What is the speed of the force propogating? How do we calculate this?No. Even with short sticks the response is delayed as the shear force propagates up the stick. The stick deflects while the force is applied and propagates.
It is material dependent, based on the molecular structure of the material, the nature of inter-molecular bonding, and any macroscopic structure in the material.What is the speed of the force propogating? How do we calculate this?
What is the speed of the force propogating? How do we calculate this?
But the speed is less than the speed of sound in the material. Here's a way to estimate the speed at which the wave propagates to the end of the stick:It is material dependent, based on the molecular structure of the material, the nature of inter-molecular bonding, and any macroscopic structure in the material.
en.wikipedia.org
The light that is hitting the spot one light year away when you decide to move the laser left your laser a year ago. Those photons wil be absorbed or reflected. As you move the laser, photons leaving the laser are set on their courses fanning out perdendicular to the arc of your movement. When you stop moving the laser, those photons leaving the laser will eventually hit a new spot a year from now (assuming there is something out there to hit).What if it's a laser? As you change the angle of the laser, does the point-of-light on the object the laser lands on move faster than the speed of light?
(I believe the answer is yes it does, because the movement of that bright spot itself does not involve the movement of information..it's only useable information that can't exceed the speed of light, as I understand/remember it...something that doesn't contain accessible information can in fact exceed that speed.)
The light that is hitting the spot one light year away when you decide to move the laser left your laser a year ago. Those photons wil be absorbed or reflected. As you move the laser, photons leaving the laser are set on their courses fanning out perdendicular to the arc of your movement. When you stop moving the laser, those photons leaving the laser will eventually hit a new spot a year from now (assuming there is something out there to hit).
Edit: If you are seeing a bright spot where your laser hit an object out there, that reflected light is now two light years old. If you move the laser, you will have to wait two years to see the movement of the bright spot.
Laser is easy, it's speed of light.What if it's a laser? As you change the angle of the laser, does the point-of-light on the object the laser lands on move faster than the speed of light?
(I believe the answer is yes it does, because the movement of that bright spot itself does not involve the movement of information..it's only useable information that can't exceed the speed of light, as I understand/remember it...something that doesn't contain accessible information can in fact exceed that speed.)
I might be wrong...maybe it works the same as the stick?
What about the point where two non-parallel sticks intersect? As you tilt one of them does that point (which is not itself a physical object) move faster than light?
Even if you have a laser beam that's one light year long that hits somewhere in the universe contentiously, even if you starts to move the laser beam at an angle, it will take one year for the photon to arrive at that spot, all the photons that already left the laser device earlier will continue to hit the same spot.
The one standing on that spot will not see any difference for a full one year.
en.wikipedia.org
I don't think that's the point though. Those standing on the spot will experience the spot moving at a speed higher than 'c'. I think. I find it more confusing the more I think about it.
The video you mentioned earlier
Basically magic.For a brief moment I was curious why the laser pointer example worked differently to the stick, and whether it in fact worked differently or not....but really it's not that surprising, I realise, as the light beam is not an object the way the stick is. (Though how do star-wars light-sabres work then, eh? A magnetic bottle of plasma? So a light-year long light sabre would behave like a stick not a laser beam, I guess?)
The dot will appear to move that fast across the surface of the sun but none of the reflected light making up the dot is moving any faster than c.What this guy's who owns minutephysics channel says is that when you flip you wrist in your backyard, it takes only 0.0005 seconds to across the moon's surface so the speed is 20 times of speed of light.
Sun's diameter is 400 times of the moon. So if I flip my wrist with a laser beam across sun's surface, it will be 8000 times of speed of light?
I would ask a NASA scientist before trusting a youtuber.
A better way to explain this: The dot doesn't move at all. The chunk of moon the laser hit at the beginning stops glowing when the laser moves off it. The chunk next to it glows instead as the laser moves across it, then the next chunk, and the next. The change in location of the dot is not limited by the speed of light as the dot isn't a thing that moves.What this guy's who owns minutephysics channel says is that when you flip you wrist in your backyard, it takes only 0.0005 seconds to across the moon's surface so the speed is 20 times of speed of light.
Sun's diameter is 400 times of the moon, but the same size as moon in human's eyes.
So if I flip my wrist with a laser beam across sun's surface, it will be 8000 times of speed of light?
I would ask a NASA scientist before trusting a youtuber.
Thanks! That really explains it. The video saying it's breaking speed of light is completely misleading.A better way to explain this: The dot doesn't move at all. The chunk of moon the laser hit at the beginning stops glowing when the laser moves off it. The chunk next to it glows instead as the laser moves across it, then the next chunk, and the next. The change in location of the dot is not limited by the speed of light as the dot isn't a thing that moves.