at no point did we talk about matter will behave like light when it gets close to the speed of light. We aren't making analogies ether I am giving conditions and saying what would actually be happening.
Yes you did.
By saying that a physical object cannot be perceived as traveling faster than the speed of light when it really isn't, you were saying matter behaved like light.
You are screwing up my analogy.
Ship 1 and 2 are traveling away from each other at 0.5c
Ship 1 is at -0.5ls
Ship 2 is at 0.5ls
Ship sends a beam (1) to ship 2
At 1 second:
Ship 1 is at -1.0ls
Ship 2 is at 1.0ls
Beam 1 is at 0.5ls (Started at -0.5, traveled +1 second)
Ship 1 sends out beam 2
2 seconds:
Ship 1 is at -1.5ls
Ship 2 is at +1.5ls
Beam 1 is at 1.5ls (-0.5+2) Ship 2 receives beam.
Beam 2 is at 0ls
3 seconds:
S1 = -2ls
S2 = +2ls
B2 = 1ls
4 seconds:
S1 = -2.5ls
S2 = +2.5ls
B2 = +2ls
5 seconds
S2 = 3ls
B2 = 3ls - S2 receives beam.
(My fault for not including the extra second in travel on the original calc)
So, in one second the amount of time it takes light to go from one ship to another has increased from 2 seconds to 4 seconds.
Back calculating, you get, obviously, 2 and 4 ls as the distances at those times (double the starting distances). You would need to be seperating at 1.0c in order to have that happen.
If one ship were standing still, the time taken would have been 2 seconds for the first and 3 seconds for the second.
The key here is simple. Something can be coming toward you or away seemingly faster than light if both are moving:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light
There are situations in which it may seem that matter, energy, or information travels at speeds greater than c, but they do not. For example, if a laser beam is swept quickly across a distant object, the spot of light can move faster than c, although the initial movement of the spot will be delayed because of the time it takes light to get to the distant object at the speed c. However, the only physical entities that are moving are the laser and its emitted light, which travels at the speed c from the laser to the various positions of the spot. Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object can be made to move faster than c, after a delay in time.[35] In neither case does any matter, energy, or information travel faster than light.
This, however, is seriously cool (I heard of this)
Certain quantum effects are transmitted instantaneously and therefore faster than c, as in the EPR paradox. An example involves the quantum states of two particles that can be entangled. Until either of the particles is observed, they exist in a superposition of two quantum states. If the particles are separated and one particle's quantum state is observed, the other particle's quantum state is determined instantaneously (i.e., faster than light could travel from one particle to the other). However, it is impossible to control which quantum state the first particle will take on when it is observed, so information cannot be transmitted in this manner.[36][37]
It implies that there IS some trans-dimensional thing that allows a seperated atomic particles quantum state to change simultaneously over a distance instantaneously. Question is, are they connected, or are they just exact copies/change at the same time (like really good watches)?
The bottom line is, objects CAN appear to be travelling faster than the speed of light, so long as nothing actually IS travelling faster than it. And appear is a bit of a misnomer as well, since light is what we generally use to observe things. The closer we get to c, the harder it would be to compensate not only for the lag, but for the observational time dialation......
Anyway, you can keep saying whatever you want, or do a quick 10 minute Google and see that you are just a bit off in your reasoning.
>shrug<