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Will we develop anything faster than Radio Waves?

Coldkilla

Diamond Member
Oct 7, 2004
3,944
0
71
Future long range space travel, radio messages (to for example: mars) could take up to 40 minutes to travel in one direction.

Is it possible to send a audible signal with different means? I'm just wondering. (Just watched "The Universe" and was inspired).

Edited out part with EM waves and wavelength. (4-21, 3:13am cst)
 

BradAtWork

Senior member
Sep 5, 2005
320
0
0
Originally posted by: Coldkilla
I know through the electromagnetic spectrum radio waves have the highest wavelength, but for future long range space travel, radio messages (to for example: mars) could take up to 40 minutes to travel in one direction.

Is it possible to send a audible signal with different means? I'm just wondering. (Just watched "The Universe" and was inspired).

Wavelength has nothing to do with velocity if that's what you're saying. All electomagnetic waves have the same speed in the same mediam. The fastest being a vacuum.

Nothing can travel faster that an electromatic wave in a vacuum.

So like people said, wormhole or compress space and move through that at sub light speeds. (Warp Drive for the trek fans out there).
 

ed21x

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2001
5,411
8
81
in the future, we'd probably still use radio waves to communicate with satellites, which will then use lasers to transmit to other satellites in synchronised orbit, which will transmit to radio waves again at some other destination, remember, you heard it here first :p
 

PottedMeat

Lifer
Apr 17, 2002
12,363
475
126
We're pretty low on the tech tree right now. We still need to develop:

Space Scanners -> Fusion Beams -> Tachyon Communication

We'll be able to communicate with ships within 3 parsecs!

It will be a while before we get hyperspace communications ( along with that sweet sweet mauler device ).

 

Coldkilla

Diamond Member
Oct 7, 2004
3,944
0
71
Forget I said anything.. UPS Ground, HA I shoulda seen that one coming.

Any serious projects being theorized right now? (Links?)

So essentially the "worm hole" thing is all we have to go on? If so then I have no real hope for that in the near future (50-100 years).

What about transmitting data through light? That not possible? I thought I heard about computer chips in the future using multiple mirrors inside of processors using lasers to transmit data.
 

BradAtWork

Senior member
Sep 5, 2005
320
0
0
Originally posted by: ed21x
in the future, we'd probably still use radio waves to communicate with satellites, which will then use lasers to transmit to other satellites in synchronised orbit, which will transmit to radio waves again at some other destination, remember, you heard it here first :p

That doesnt make any sence. radio waves and lasers travel at the same speed.
 

MagnusTheBrewer

IN MEMORIAM
Jun 19, 2004
24,122
1,594
126
Originally posted by: BradAtWork
Originally posted by: Coldkilla
I know through the electromagnetic spectrum radio waves have the highest wavelength, but for future long range space travel, radio messages (to for example: mars) could take up to 40 minutes to travel in one direction.

Is it possible to send a audible signal with different means? I'm just wondering. (Just watched "The Universe" and was inspired).

Wavelength has nothing to do with velocity if that's what you're saying. All electomagnetic waves have the same speed in the same mediam. The fastest being a vacuum.

Nothing can travel faster that an electromatic wave in a vacuum.

So like people said, wormhole or compress space and move through that at sub light speeds. (Warp Drive for the trek fans out there).

Is that anything like an electromagnetic wave? :laugh:
 

Coldkilla

Diamond Member
Oct 7, 2004
3,944
0
71
So theres no way to transmit data through light then ey? Damn... Wellp, Warp Drives are just as likely as teleporters.
 

BradAtWork

Senior member
Sep 5, 2005
320
0
0
Originally posted by: MagnusTheBrewer
Originally posted by: BradAtWork
Originally posted by: Coldkilla
I know through the electromagnetic spectrum radio waves have the highest wavelength, but for future long range space travel, radio messages (to for example: mars) could take up to 40 minutes to travel in one direction.

Is it possible to send a audible signal with different means? I'm just wondering. (Just watched "The Universe" and was inspired).

Wavelength has nothing to do with velocity if that's what you're saying. All electomagnetic waves have the same speed in the same mediam. The fastest being a vacuum.

Nothing can travel faster that an electromatic wave in a vacuum.

So like people said, wormhole or compress space and move through that at sub light speeds. (Warp Drive for the trek fans out there).

Is that anything like an electromagnetic wave? :laugh:

Kinda. :p
 

ed21x

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 2001
5,411
8
81
Originally posted by: BradAtWork
Originally posted by: ed21x
in the future, we'd probably still use radio waves to communicate with satellites, which will then use lasers to transmit to other satellites in synchronised orbit, which will transmit to radio waves again at some other destination, remember, you heard it here first :p

That doesnt make any sence. radio waves and lasers travel at the same speed.

they do??? :Q
 

frostedflakes

Diamond Member
Mar 1, 2005
7,925
1
81
Originally posted by: Coldkilla
So theres no way to transmit data through light then ey? Damn... Wellp, Warp Drives are just as likely as teleporters.
OP, you might want to read up on electromagnetic waves on Wikipedia. Light, microwaves, radiowaves, are all electromagnetic waves of different wavelength. And all electromagnetic waves travel at the speed of light in a vacuum.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,387
19,687
146
Communicate in gossip and use women as the medium. Nothing travels faster.
 

BradAtWork

Senior member
Sep 5, 2005
320
0
0
Originally posted by: ed21x
Originally posted by: BradAtWork
Originally posted by: ed21x
in the future, we'd probably still use radio waves to communicate with satellites, which will then use lasers to transmit to other satellites in synchronised orbit, which will transmit to radio waves again at some other destination, remember, you heard it here first :p

That doesnt make any sence. radio waves and lasers travel at the same speed.

they do??? :Q

Yeah, they're the same thing. Light is just a higher frequency.
 

Colt45

Lifer
Apr 18, 2001
19,720
1
0
RF can't go faster than light. Because they're both electromagnetic radiation. So if it takes 40 minutes for your light to get from A-B, (assuming there's no loss and it actually gets there) it takes just as long to send RF at 100kHz, or 1GHz, or.. whatever.