Ninja Dude
Senior Don Juan
Fascinating news for anyone who's into science/physics. I am excited to see where this goes http://www.popsci.com/science/artic...ults-show-neutrinos-moving-faster-speed-light
Creationists know nothing about science. If you gave them unlimited funding, unlimited equipment and a goal... like build a lightbulb from scratch, they would not be able to do a damn thing.Vice said:Creationists have been saying that
Either way, the stuff they write can be good mental masturbation material for us nerdsAlle_Gory said:Creationists know nothing about science. If you gave them unlimited funding, unlimited equipment and a goal... like build a lightbulb from scratch, they would not be able to do a damn thing.
My own theory is that if you go faster than light, than you just go faster than light.joverby said:Also, it's theorized that once something goes faster than the speed of light, it goes backwards in time. Which makes sense because the faster you go the slower time goes. See the atomic clock and plane experiment for that one. I would be interested in having people try that again using the new DARPA "plane" that goes MACH 11.
Interesting program, is it like erasmus and socrates programs for visiting alien universities? Can I have a stage on zeta reticuli as well if I keep my mouth shut?Drdeee said:As if they didn't know about time waves. CIA had experience with it during zeta reticuli exchange program http://www.serpo.org/
I didn't know people had thought there could be a potential harm in breaking the sound barrier.Vice said:My own theory is that if you go faster than light, than you just go faster than light.
Kind of like all the speculation on the sound barrier; people thought all kinds of things would happen.
I figure that exceeding the speed of light would be just like exceeding the sound barrier; the actual "spacecraft" will be somewhere else with a "light echo thing" following it at the speed of light, and when the spacecraft eventually slows down, it will appear as if there are two spacecraft for a moment.
But all the above is just speculation, I don't know anything about physics. Just my intuition. Be nice
I always thought if something went faster than the speed of light, it simply becomes heavier (larger mass). E=MC squared.joverby said:Also, it's theorized that once something goes faster than the speed of light, it goes backwards in time. Which makes sense because the faster you go the slower time goes. See the atomic clock and plane experiment for that one. I would be interested in having people try that again using the new DARPA "plane" that goes MACH 11.
Read Dr. Gerald L. Schroeder. I'm not here to preach, only to assert that there are actually people who believe in creation who also have an intelligent reason why. You don't have to agree with him, but he does provide empirical models that corroborate our current understanding of the physical world with the creation account in the book of Genesis.Alle_Gory said:Creationists know nothing about science. If you gave them unlimited funding, unlimited equipment and a goal... like build a lightbulb from scratch, they would not be able to do a damn thing.
That made no sense whatsoever.Drdeee said:This ghetto piece of earth in space is once again making advanced discoveries, time for WW3.
Real mature.Alle_Gory said:Creationists know nothing about science. If you gave them unlimited funding, unlimited equipment and a goal... like build a lightbulb from scratch, they would not be able to do a damn thing.
Not sure about that one but electrons from spent fuel rods submerged in water definitely went quicker.Gaucho said:I always thought if something went faster than the speed of light, it simply becomes heavier (larger mass). E=MC squared.
You are correct. I don't know if a particle that reaches light speed actually becomes light, that would violate a lot of chemical laws (namely, the law of definite proportions and the conservation of mass [photons have no mass]). I explained the answers to your questions in my reply a few blocks up. But you're right on the money about the relative time difference between those 2 clocks. It's a really fascinating idea.joverby said:Not sure about that one but electrons from spent fuel rods submerged in water definitely went quicker.
Also, neutrinos have almost NO MASS.
I have heard of a theory that if something goes the speed of light, it becomes light. Doesn't really make a whole lot of sense but kind of cool.
But perhaps this effect is similar to the whole going faster = slower perception of time.
In the experiment I was talking about earlier, they had an atomic clock taken up in a plane and one left on the ground, both synched. After a flight(not sure the details) the planes clock was SLIGHTLY behind the one left on the ground(that was stationary).
Or maybe it is just how it interacts with matter like how the electrons submerged in water went quicker? Or if they shot it through the core(did they? not sure?) maybe something to do with the magnetic field could speed it up? Just throwing things out there.
More exotic possibilities as "Graininess in spacetime from quantum gravity might affect the propagation of nearly-massless particles; extra dimensions might provide a shortcut through space," are a "long shot at this time." Never forget the logician's maxim: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.It’s enormously interesting if it’s right. It’s probably not right. By the latter point I don’t mean to impugn the abilities or honesty of the experimenters, who are by all accounts top-notch people trying to do something very difficult. It’s just a very difficult experiment, and given that the result is so completely contrary to our expectations, it’s much easier at this point to believe there is a hidden glitch than to take it at face value. All that would instantly change, of course, if it were independently verified by another experiment; at that point the gleeful jumping up and down will justifiably commence.
This isn’t one of those annoying “three-sigma” results that sits at the tantalizing boundary of statistical significance. The OPERA folks are claiming a six-sigma deviation from the speed of light. But that doesn’t mean it’s overwhelmingly likely that the result is real; it just means it’s overwhelmingly unlikely that the result is simply a statistical fluctuation. There is another looming source of possible error: a “systematic effect,” i.e. some unknown miscalibration somewhere in the experiment or analysis pipeline. (If you are measuring something incorrectly, it doesn’t matter that you measure it very carefully.) In particular, the mismatch between the expected and observed timing amounts to tens of nanoseconds; but any individual “event” takes the form of a pulse that is spread out over thousands of nanoseconds. Extracting the signal is a matter of using statistics over many such events — a tricky business.
...If this result is true (which is always a possibility), it is much more surprising than the acceleration of the universe, but it’s not as if we don’t already have ways to explain it. The most straightforward idea is to violate Lorentz invariance, a strategy of which I’m quite personally fond (although I’ve never applied the idea to neutrino physics). Lorentz invariance says that everyone measures the speed of light to be the same; if you violate it, it’s easy enough to imagine that someone (like, say, a neutrino) measures something different. Once you buy into that idea, neutrinos are an interesting place to apply the idea, since our constraints on their properties are relatively weak.
http://mblogs.discovermagazine.com/cosmicvariance/2011/09/23/faster-than-light-neutrinos/
Sure, what do you recommend that I read by Dr. Gerald L. Shroeder?Rubato said:Read Dr. Gerald L. Schroeder. I'm not here to preach, only to assert that there are actually people who believe in creation who also have an intelligent reason why.
This coming from a kid who most recently posted crap like this;SamTheHobit said:Real mature.
When a guy was asking for help, in "Think I have an STD..."SamTheHobit said:hahahahahaha