Fickle Physics
- SicTimMitchell
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Embar,
Thanks for the points to ponder. I had never considered time being converted to energy nor matter. It does seem intuitively silly.
I started from two points: Zeno, who I feel was summarily dismissed a bit too quickly, and whose paradoxes I've been fascinated by since I was a kid (My dad fucked with me using them), and the fact that both light and gravity travel at C, which seems extraordinarily coincidental unless Einstein got that one right.
But Einstein never really explained why C was the "universal speed limit," and a bunch of folks have (unsuccessfully) tried to devise theoretical scenarios where something (usually information) exceeds C. (Example: You have a pair of scissors that are nearly shut, with the handle end at Earth and the pointy end any theoretical distance away. To give a signal, you snap the handle end shut.)
Also, if expansion theory is right, C was a variable relatively near the beginning of the big bang, and I can't account for that. (Then again, no one else can really account for expansion theory. So there.)
Thanks for the points to ponder. I had never considered time being converted to energy nor matter. It does seem intuitively silly.
I started from two points: Zeno, who I feel was summarily dismissed a bit too quickly, and whose paradoxes I've been fascinated by since I was a kid (My dad fucked with me using them), and the fact that both light and gravity travel at C, which seems extraordinarily coincidental unless Einstein got that one right.
But Einstein never really explained why C was the "universal speed limit," and a bunch of folks have (unsuccessfully) tried to devise theoretical scenarios where something (usually information) exceeds C. (Example: You have a pair of scissors that are nearly shut, with the handle end at Earth and the pointy end any theoretical distance away. To give a signal, you snap the handle end shut.)
Also, if expansion theory is right, C was a variable relatively near the beginning of the big bang, and I can't account for that. (Then again, no one else can really account for expansion theory. So there.)
Bangzoom
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- SicTimMitchell
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I think you'll find the explanation for that in quantum theory. Simply put, the nearer to a singularity you are, the less constants behave like constants. The BIg Bang was a singularity, so near the beginning of space-time, "C" would behave more like a variable and less like a constant.SicTimMitchell wrote: Also, if expansion theory is right, C was a variable relatively near the beginning of the big bang, and I can't account for that. (Then again, no one else can really account for expansion theory. So there.)
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
Embar
Alarius
Embar
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Sure he did. It comes from special relativity where to put it simply, the required energy to accelerate an object to c is infinite. If you're talking about information flow, then it's not explicitly stated that nothing can go faster than c, but it is stated that nothing involving gravitation or EM forces can. Relativity doesn't cover the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear force has been unified with EM, so relativity does cover it.Einstein never really explained why C was the "universal speed limit,"
The scissors paradox isn't really a paradox at all. You are assuming that matter can transmit information faster than c, which is false. When you start closing the scissors at earth, a shock wave will travel down the scissors at sub-light speeds closing them. The tips will not start closing until well after the theoretical minimum time information can travel from one place to the other.
A far more interesting paradox involves length contraction between moving objects and what happens if you can toss a plank that's twice as long as a barn through the barn fast enough that it appears to fit in your frame of reference, then close the doors. To spoil it for you, the answer is the obvious one.
Dd
- SicTimMitchell
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Ddrak,
My understanding is that Einstein wasn't too keen on nuclear forces in general, since they totally fucked up his attempts at a unified theory. But anyway.
I know the scissors "paradox" is wrong, I used it as an example. Although my understanding is that at some point the blades themselves would reach C and be transformed into energy. (Again with the simplest solution.) A tougher one involves a super-laser on Earth pointed at one star and then flicked to another equidistant star -- but again it collapses if you really think about it for a moment. (Hint: how old is the light we see fom stars?)
Unless I'm way behind, Einsteinian physics still says there's NO way to communicate information faster than C, regardless of the method used. (I admit that the last full-length book I read on the subject was one of Rucker's, so I could be behind. But I've been trying to keep up with articles and such.)
Embar,
Yeah, I know. That's why I referenced it obliquely in my first post and explicitly later. It's interesting as hell, but it still sucks.
My understanding is that Einstein wasn't too keen on nuclear forces in general, since they totally fucked up his attempts at a unified theory. But anyway.
I know the scissors "paradox" is wrong, I used it as an example. Although my understanding is that at some point the blades themselves would reach C and be transformed into energy. (Again with the simplest solution.) A tougher one involves a super-laser on Earth pointed at one star and then flicked to another equidistant star -- but again it collapses if you really think about it for a moment. (Hint: how old is the light we see fom stars?)
Unless I'm way behind, Einsteinian physics still says there's NO way to communicate information faster than C, regardless of the method used. (I admit that the last full-length book I read on the subject was one of Rucker's, so I could be behind. But I've been trying to keep up with articles and such.)
Embar,
Yeah, I know. That's why I referenced it obliquely in my first post and explicitly later. It's interesting as hell, but it still sucks.

Bangzoom
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- SicTimMitchell
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Oh yeah.
"It was the time space continuum! There was shrinkage! Everyone knows the barn shrinks when you dive into the continuum!!"
The George Costanza answer?To spoil it for you, the answer is the obvious one.
"It was the time space continuum! There was shrinkage! Everyone knows the barn shrinks when you dive into the continuum!!"
Bangzoom
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As far as I'm aware that's still the case. I only included the qualification because there may yet be undiscovered stuff outside of Einsteinian physics. Hell, as far as I'm aware we don't even know if gravity is quantized yet.Einsteinian physics still says there's NO way to communicate information faster than C, regardless of the method used
And Einstein didn't like a lot of stuff - quantum theory, nuclear forces, all sorts of stuff. I believe his quote is "God does not play dice".
Dd
- SicTimMitchell
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All this just reminded me of my favorite silly "faster than the speed of light" conundrum, because there are no theoretical elements required to pose it:
When you're in your car doing 60 mph, and you flick on your headlights, don't the beams travel at C+60mph?
When you're in your car doing 60 mph, and you flick on your headlights, don't the beams travel at C+60mph?
Bangzoom
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Translation - I don't agree with you, therefore you must be stupid.Translation - I'm too stupid to understand this shit, so I'll make inane comments instead.
Get real dude. One dosen't have to simultaneously agree with the theory as they comprehend it.
Excuse me for preferring a more solid foundation before I buy into something. My mistake.
I like posting.
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Ok genius...
Explain string theory to us. Make sure you tell us, in layman's terms, why open and closed string theory have different type's of manifestations, and why closed string theory is so important to prediciting the existance of the gravitron.
While you're at it, please explain to me why bosonic string theory limits the dimensions of space-time to 26... and no fair telling me its because the equations won't support the required number of unphysical states. That, I aleady know.
I'd also like to know why you are having troulbe with the most fundamental aspect of string theory.. that the mass of quantum particles is dependent on the spin of the string.
And finally, can you please explain why the T duality and S duality interact with one another, and please touch on why type I superstring theory is S-dual to heterotic SO(32) superstring theory.
You see, the point I'm trying to make is that no one on this board, understands string theory. You saying that you know enough about it to actually have an informed comment is as ludicrous as Beeker getting Harlowe to suck his schlong (or schlort... but that's another type of string theory).
Explain string theory to us. Make sure you tell us, in layman's terms, why open and closed string theory have different type's of manifestations, and why closed string theory is so important to prediciting the existance of the gravitron.
While you're at it, please explain to me why bosonic string theory limits the dimensions of space-time to 26... and no fair telling me its because the equations won't support the required number of unphysical states. That, I aleady know.
I'd also like to know why you are having troulbe with the most fundamental aspect of string theory.. that the mass of quantum particles is dependent on the spin of the string.
And finally, can you please explain why the T duality and S duality interact with one another, and please touch on why type I superstring theory is S-dual to heterotic SO(32) superstring theory.
You see, the point I'm trying to make is that no one on this board, understands string theory. You saying that you know enough about it to actually have an informed comment is as ludicrous as Beeker getting Harlowe to suck his schlong (or schlort... but that's another type of string theory).
Correction Mr. President, I DID build this, and please give Lurker a hug, we wouldn't want to damage his self-esteem.
Embar
Alarius
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Not sure if you are wanting me to take you seriously or not, because I'm sure you know the answer.When you're in your car doing 60 mph, and you flick on your headlights, don't the beams travel at C+60mph?
No. The beams travel at C. As measured from *both* the car and the earth. And that's the basis of special relativity. :)
I pride myself for knowing a decent amount of physics (about 3rd year university level - and not as much as Arathena) but string theory I leave to my PhD friends back in Australia. That's hellishly complex stuff.
Dd
- SicTimMitchell
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P.S.,
I highly recommend Nova's "The Elegant Universe" to anyone who's interested in theoretical physics. I think I raved about this show here when it first aired.
It explains stuff from Newtonian physics to string theory in two easy-to-swallow, layman-friendly hours that got my kid interested in hyperspheres and multiple universes to the point where we were sharing Sci-Am articles on them and she already had the basic knowledge to understand what they were writing about.
(It was so cool when my daughter was trying to figure out how a solid hypersphere could rotate along the surface of its axis and equator at the same time on her own, and Sci-Am came out with the er, multiple-torus topology for the multiverse and a light bulb appeared over her head when she realized a hypersphere was torus-like.)
It's obviously not going to give you a complete understanding, but it's an incredibly easy-to-swallow and solid foundation to explore more from.
Anyone remember that cartoon from grade school that explained Einsteinian physics with the two spacemen? Or Donald Duck in Mathmagic land? Like that, only a bit more in-depth.
I highly recommend Nova's "The Elegant Universe" to anyone who's interested in theoretical physics. I think I raved about this show here when it first aired.
It explains stuff from Newtonian physics to string theory in two easy-to-swallow, layman-friendly hours that got my kid interested in hyperspheres and multiple universes to the point where we were sharing Sci-Am articles on them and she already had the basic knowledge to understand what they were writing about.
(It was so cool when my daughter was trying to figure out how a solid hypersphere could rotate along the surface of its axis and equator at the same time on her own, and Sci-Am came out with the er, multiple-torus topology for the multiverse and a light bulb appeared over her head when she realized a hypersphere was torus-like.)
It's obviously not going to give you a complete understanding, but it's an incredibly easy-to-swallow and solid foundation to explore more from.
Anyone remember that cartoon from grade school that explained Einsteinian physics with the two spacemen? Or Donald Duck in Mathmagic land? Like that, only a bit more in-depth.
Bangzoom
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- Arathena
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Don't expect any words of wisdom from me on this one - It's out of my specialty, and I know enough to know how much I /don't/ know. That said, this could be a potentially interesting development. Knowing that the major constants are influenced by semi-local conditions means a search for the conditions that control those contants. Knowledge of the conditions means engineerability, which means localized control over "universal" constants.Ddrak wrote: I pride myself for knowing a decent amount of physics (about 3rd year university level - and not as much as Arathena) but string theory I leave to my PhD friends back in Australia. That's hellishly complex stuff.
BTW, I believe both nuclear forces have been mathematically resolved to unify with the EM force, and, iirc, the expected carrier particle has been detected under the correct conditions in a particle acclerator. It's also calculated that the energy of the Big Bang was such that the strong force decoupled from the electro-weak force at roughly 10^-26 seconds after the start.
As another interesting note, while c(0), the propagation speed of an electro-magnetic wave in the absence of the influence of anything else is a traditional constant(Your familiar 2.998 x 10^6 m/s), c itself is a localized material of transmission dependant variable. It's how things like lenses work. Who else wants a lens for focusing gravity?
Archfiend Arathena Sa`Riik
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- Arathena
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Besides Klast's fantasy for green chicks, you see on that instrument panel an absolutely ferocious storm of high energy photons that you're blazing through much like the sonic boom cone of a supersonic aeroplane - You shed energy, and momentum by twanging the accumulated EM field of the local medium, until such time as your velocity is beneath local c. This 'luminal boom' is called Cerenkov radiation, and it's the source of the pretty blue-green glow in a reactor pile. Electrons are ejected from the pile at extreme fractions of c(0), much higher than c, and shed energy down to c through radiation.Ddrak wrote:I know strictly speaking this is from absorption and retransmission of photons but it always made me wonder what you would see if you were in a submarine travelling at something beyond the speed of light in water...c itself is a localized material of transmission dependant variable
Dd
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The whole time I was reading this post, I felt like Charlie Brown listening to one of his teachers talking.Embar Angylwrath wrote:Ok genius...
Explain string theory to us. Make sure you tell us, in layman's terms, why open and closed string theory have different type's of manifestations, and why closed string theory is so important to prediciting the existance of the gravitron.
While you're at it, please explain to me why bosonic string theory limits the dimensions of space-time to 26... and no fair telling me its because the equations won't support the required number of unphysical states. That, I aleady know.
I'd also like to know why you are having troulbe with the most fundamental aspect of string theory.. that the mass of quantum particles is dependent on the spin of the string.
And finally, can you please explain why the T duality and S duality interact with one another, and please touch on why type I superstring theory is S-dual to heterotic SO(32) superstring theory.
You see, the point I'm trying to make is that no one on this board, understands string theory. You saying that you know enough about it to actually have an informed comment is as ludicrous as Beeker getting Harlowe to suck his schlong (or schlort... but that's another type of string theory).
Zyllen Swiitch
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