I think you understand it just fine.Doum wrote:Now i am not sure i understand it. :shock: :? should it be said instead "it is the effects of this distort spacetime we call gravity" . ? Wich happen to affect the mass. Ohhh need to rethink it now. :shock:
Speed of light
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Re: Speed of light
Chris
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Re: Speed of light
Chris, your quote, "There is certainly no doubt that light travels slower than c in any medium."
From what is theorized about space, that it is not empty, but contains vast amounts of Dark Matter and Dark Energy, would you call it a medium? And can you see a possibility that if space is a medium, light will perhaps travel faster than c in voids, where DM and DE might not exist to make up the normal medium of space?
From what is theorized about space, that it is not empty, but contains vast amounts of Dark Matter and Dark Energy, would you call it a medium? And can you see a possibility that if space is a medium, light will perhaps travel faster than c in voids, where DM and DE might not exist to make up the normal medium of space?
Duty done .. the rain will stop as promised with the rainbow.
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Re: Speed of light
I can not see it traveling faster than C but would in fact travel @ C (fastest possible) through the voids and some slight % slower (like .9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999
999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999...%)through the intergalactic meduim of space.
999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999...%)through the intergalactic meduim of space.
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Re: Speed of light
Space is not a medium. Dark energy is not a medium. Dark matter is, but it doesn't interact with electromagnetic radiation, so it probably doesn't affect the speed of light- but since dark matter is not well understood, nobody knows for sure.aristarchusinexile wrote:Chris, your quote, "There is certainly no doubt that light travels slower than c in any medium."
From what is theorized about space, that it is not empty, but contains vast amounts of Dark Matter and Dark Energy, would you call it a medium? And can you see a possibility that if space is a medium, light will perhaps travel faster than c in voids, where DM and DE might not exist to make up the normal medium of space?
I don't believe there is anyplace in the Universe that is completely free of matter, just regions where it is quite sparse. I know of nothing to suggest that "voids" as you describe them even exist, and there is nothing to be found in any well supported theory to suggest that light can ever travel faster than c, and there is no good reason to think that c isn't a constant. As much as I'm sure of anything, I'm sure that light never travels faster than c, anywhere in the Universe.
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Re: Speed of light
From those quote i also sayChris Peterson wrote:I think so, too. I just think Qev expressed it in a better way.bystander wrote:I think what Doum is trying to say is mass distorts spacetime and the greater the mass, the greater the distortion.
I just think Chris expressed it in a better way then i do. And all that time he let me babling something. Thank for the right answer.
Re: Speed of light
Uhhh wich happen to be :
It seem so easy to write. But it is how i see it. I just cant find the right word. Well said.Chris Peterson wrote:Space is not a medium. Dark energy is not a medium. Dark matter is, but it doesn't interact with electromagnetic radiation, so it probably doesn't affect the speed of light- but since dark matter is not well understood, nobody knows for sure.aristarchusinexile wrote:Chris, your quote, "There is certainly no doubt that light travels slower than c in any medium."
From what is theorized about space, that it is not empty, but contains vast amounts of Dark Matter and Dark Energy, would you call it a medium? And can you see a possibility that if space is a medium, light will perhaps travel faster than c in voids, where DM and DE might not exist to make up the normal medium of space?
I don't believe there is anyplace in the Universe that is completely free of matter, just regions where it is quite sparse. I know of nothing to suggest that "voids" as you describe them even exist, and there is nothing to be found in any well supported theory to suggest that light can ever travel faster than c, and there is no good reason to think that c isn't a constant. As much as I'm sure of anything, I'm sure that light never travels faster than c, anywhere in the Universe.
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Re: Speed of light
Voids .. From what I've read the universe is contains many voids, like Swiss Cheese according to one description. I will search for more .. but here is what I found quickly.
Title:
Voids and filaments
Authors:
Icke, V.
Affiliation:
AA(Minnesota, University, Minneapolis, MN)
Publication:
Royal Astronomical Society, Monthly Notices (ISSN 0035-8711), vol. 206, Jan. 1, 1984, p. 1P-3P. (MNRAS Homepage)
Publication Date:
01/1984
Category:
Astrophysics
Origin:
STI
NASA/STI Keywords:
COSMOLOGY, GALACTIC EVOLUTION, GRAVITATIONAL COLLAPSE, ASTRONOMICAL MODELS, CLOUDS, FILAMENTS, VOIDS
Bibliographic Code:
1984MNRAS.206P...1I
Abstract
Results of numerical calculations of the gravitational collapse of pregalactic matter have been reported by various investigators. Centrella and Melott (1983) have shown that the typical result of such a collapse is a filamentary structure surrounding sphere-like voids. The present investigation is concerned with the reasons for the roughly spherical form of voids between condensations. It is reaffirmed that the condensations are more likely to be filaments than pancakes. Attention is given to the shape of high- and low-density regions, and hyperboloidal filaments.
Second find - (I have not read the book) Bubbles, Voids and Bumps in Time: The New Cosmology (Paperback) by James Cornell (Editor)
Third find .. The Bootes Void .. I hope this passes copyright guidelines.
The Bootes Void Saturday, Apr 22 2006 http://www.acceleratingfuture.com/micha ... otes-void/
space Michael Anissimov 3:37 pm
illustration missing
The Boötes void, named after the constellation where it can be found, is the largest known region of empty space in the observable universe. Because it is so large, it is sometimes referred to as a supervoid. The void is roughly spherical and has a diameter of approximately 75 megaparsecs, or 250 million light-years, which is about 2% the diameter of the entire observable universe(!)
For comparison, our Milky Way Galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and the largest known galaxy is about 250,000 light years across, a thousandth the width of the void. Within this vast emptiness, only about 53 luminous galaxies have been detected, which extend in a rough tube-shape through the middle of the void. Other galaxies surely exist within the void, including structures of dark matter, but these galaxies are smaller and less massive than the 53 primaries. These 53 galaxies have an average brightness about 25% more intense than the universal average, a phenomenon that needs explaining.
illustration missing
Greg Aldering, an astronomer who now works at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, once said, “If the Milky Way had been in the center of the Boötes void, we wouldn’t have known there were other galaxies until the 1960s.” Imagine that kind of a discovery!
The void was discovered in 1981 by Robert Kirshner, Augustus Oemler Jr, Paul Schechter and Stephen Shectman in a survey of galactic redshifts. Their results were published in the paper, “A million cubic megaparsec void in Bootes” in Astrophysics Journal 248. Further studies throughout the early 80s confirmed the existence of the void, which was one of the first large voids to be detected, and is hence the most famous.
Wow .. according to the article 98 % of the universe is composed of intergalactic voids.
Title:
Voids and filaments
Authors:
Icke, V.
Affiliation:
AA(Minnesota, University, Minneapolis, MN)
Publication:
Royal Astronomical Society, Monthly Notices (ISSN 0035-8711), vol. 206, Jan. 1, 1984, p. 1P-3P. (MNRAS Homepage)
Publication Date:
01/1984
Category:
Astrophysics
Origin:
STI
NASA/STI Keywords:
COSMOLOGY, GALACTIC EVOLUTION, GRAVITATIONAL COLLAPSE, ASTRONOMICAL MODELS, CLOUDS, FILAMENTS, VOIDS
Bibliographic Code:
1984MNRAS.206P...1I
Abstract
Results of numerical calculations of the gravitational collapse of pregalactic matter have been reported by various investigators. Centrella and Melott (1983) have shown that the typical result of such a collapse is a filamentary structure surrounding sphere-like voids. The present investigation is concerned with the reasons for the roughly spherical form of voids between condensations. It is reaffirmed that the condensations are more likely to be filaments than pancakes. Attention is given to the shape of high- and low-density regions, and hyperboloidal filaments.
Second find - (I have not read the book) Bubbles, Voids and Bumps in Time: The New Cosmology (Paperback) by James Cornell (Editor)
Third find .. The Bootes Void .. I hope this passes copyright guidelines.
The Bootes Void Saturday, Apr 22 2006 http://www.acceleratingfuture.com/micha ... otes-void/
space Michael Anissimov 3:37 pm
illustration missing
The Boötes void, named after the constellation where it can be found, is the largest known region of empty space in the observable universe. Because it is so large, it is sometimes referred to as a supervoid. The void is roughly spherical and has a diameter of approximately 75 megaparsecs, or 250 million light-years, which is about 2% the diameter of the entire observable universe(!)
For comparison, our Milky Way Galaxy has a diameter of about 100,000 light-years, and the largest known galaxy is about 250,000 light years across, a thousandth the width of the void. Within this vast emptiness, only about 53 luminous galaxies have been detected, which extend in a rough tube-shape through the middle of the void. Other galaxies surely exist within the void, including structures of dark matter, but these galaxies are smaller and less massive than the 53 primaries. These 53 galaxies have an average brightness about 25% more intense than the universal average, a phenomenon that needs explaining.
illustration missing
Greg Aldering, an astronomer who now works at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, once said, “If the Milky Way had been in the center of the Boötes void, we wouldn’t have known there were other galaxies until the 1960s.” Imagine that kind of a discovery!
The void was discovered in 1981 by Robert Kirshner, Augustus Oemler Jr, Paul Schechter and Stephen Shectman in a survey of galactic redshifts. Their results were published in the paper, “A million cubic megaparsec void in Bootes” in Astrophysics Journal 248. Further studies throughout the early 80s confirmed the existence of the void, which was one of the first large voids to be detected, and is hence the most famous.
Wow .. according to the article 98 % of the universe is composed of intergalactic voids.
Duty done .. the rain will stop as promised with the rainbow.
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Re: Time
"Boötes void may one day be seen as the ultimate time capsule - fire off a pattern of photons, only for the pattern to be rediscovered hundreds of millions of years later when it reaches the other side."
So many edits trying to get the link to work
http://www.acceleratingfuture.com/micha ... otes-void/
If the pattern of photons doesn't change after hundreds of millions of years, has the pattern experienced 'Time'? Further - If there is no gravity in a void to slow time .. does time speed to infinite?
From the Bootes Void discussion:
"Great post on a fascinating topic, but I do have a minor correction. You say “Particles of matter, having much more mass than both photons and neutrinos, would of course get pulled towards the walls of the void.” In fact, a particle inside a hollow spherical shell, with all mass evenly distributed at the exterior of the shell, experiences no net gravitational force.
It’s non-intuitive at first, but have a seat inside the shell (away from the center) and let’s take a look around. If you consider a 1-degree arc in the direction of the closer wall of the shell, it will define a circle on that wall, with a radius related linearly to the distance to the wall. A 1-degree arc in the opposite direction defines a much larger circle, and the amount of gravity-inducing mass inside that circle grows with the square of the radius. So the mass increasing with the square of radius and the gravity decreasing with the square of distance cancel each other out, leaving zero net gravitational force."
So many edits trying to get the link to work
http://www.acceleratingfuture.com/micha ... otes-void/
If the pattern of photons doesn't change after hundreds of millions of years, has the pattern experienced 'Time'? Further - If there is no gravity in a void to slow time .. does time speed to infinite?
From the Bootes Void discussion:
"Great post on a fascinating topic, but I do have a minor correction. You say “Particles of matter, having much more mass than both photons and neutrinos, would of course get pulled towards the walls of the void.” In fact, a particle inside a hollow spherical shell, with all mass evenly distributed at the exterior of the shell, experiences no net gravitational force.
It’s non-intuitive at first, but have a seat inside the shell (away from the center) and let’s take a look around. If you consider a 1-degree arc in the direction of the closer wall of the shell, it will define a circle on that wall, with a radius related linearly to the distance to the wall. A 1-degree arc in the opposite direction defines a much larger circle, and the amount of gravity-inducing mass inside that circle grows with the square of the radius. So the mass increasing with the square of radius and the gravity decreasing with the square of distance cancel each other out, leaving zero net gravitational force."
Duty done .. the rain will stop as promised with the rainbow.
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Re: Speed of light
No one doubts the Universe is filled with voids. But I don't think you understand what this means. Voids are regions that contain very little luminous matter (the jury is still out with respect to dark matter, but they may well be lacking much of that as well). Voids are not completely free of matter, nor are they free of gravitational fields, nor to they have any exotic properties. They (as well as regions that are matter rich) are simply the fossil pattern of processes that occurred early in the evolution of the Universe. There's no reason to think that physics isn't exactly the same whether you are in a void or in a filament.aristarchusinexile wrote:Voids .. From what I've read the universe is contains many voids, like Swiss Cheese according to one description. I will search for more .. but here is what I found quickly...
Chris
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Re: Speed of light
From the Bootes Void discussion:Chris Peterson wrote:No one doubts the Universe is filled with voids. But I don't think you understand what this means. Voids are regions that contain very little luminous matter (the jury is still out with respect to dark matter, but they may well be lacking much of that as well). Voids are not completely free of matter, nor are they free of gravitational fields, nor to they have any exotic properties. They (as well as regions that are matter rich) are simply the fossil pattern of processes that occurred early in the evolution of the Universe. There's no reason to think that physics isn't exactly the same whether you are in a void or in a filament.aristarchusinexile wrote:Voids .. From what I've read the universe is contains many voids, like Swiss Cheese according to one description. I will search for more .. but here is what I found quickly...
"Great post on a fascinating topic, but I do have a minor correction. You say “Particles of matter, having much more mass than both photons and neutrinos, would of course get pulled towards the walls of the void.” In fact, a particle inside a hollow spherical shell, with all mass evenly distributed at the exterior of the shell, experiences no net gravitational force.
It’s non-intuitive at first, but have a seat inside the shell (away from the center) and let’s take a look around. If you consider a 1-degree arc in the direction of the closer wall of the shell, it will define a circle on that wall, with a radius related linearly to the distance to the wall. A 1-degree arc in the opposite direction defines a much larger circle, and the amount of gravity-inducing mass inside that circle grows with the square of the radius. So the mass increasing with the square of radius and the gravity decreasing with the square of distance cancel each other out, leaving zero net gravitational force."
Duty done .. the rain will stop as promised with the rainbow.
"Abandon the Consensus for Individual Thought"
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Re: Speed of light
I didn't say that, although your quoting makes it appear so. Of course, it's true, but I don't see the relevance. This only applies to the interior of a perfect spherical shell, where the shell walls are of uniform density, and- very important- there are no external gravity fields. That doesn't remotely describe any place in the Universe. Even if you found a single spherical void surrounded by a shell wall, the fields from the rest of the Universe wouldn't be magically canceled. It would only be the material in the wall itself that contributes no net gravitational force on an interior object.aristarchusinexile wrote:From the Bootes Void discussion:
"Great post on a fascinating topic, but I do have a minor correction. You say “Particles of matter, having much more mass than both photons and neutrinos, would of course get pulled towards the walls of the void.” In fact, a particle inside a hollow spherical shell, with all mass evenly distributed at the exterior of the shell, experiences no net gravitational force.
Chris
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Re: Speed of light
G'day from the land of ozz
A vacuum with or without magnetic fields?
A vacuum with or without magnetic fields?
Harry : Smile and live another day.
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Re: Speed of light
Surely there is no place in the Universe without gravitational, magnetic, and electric fields. Equally sure, in most of the Universe all of those fields are very weak- especially electric and magnetic. But not zero.harry wrote:A vacuum with or without magnetic fields?
Chris
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Re: Speed of light
I am glad to see these recent posts on my original question, which was "why is the speed of light 300K m/s" and not some higher or lower value, or put another way, does the fact that light travels at a certain speed reveal anything about the relationship between mass and energy?
So, given the recent posts, does anyone have anything else to add that relates directly to this original question?
So, given the recent posts, does anyone have anything else to add that relates directly to this original question?
Re: Speed of light
c is a physical constant defined to be exactly 299,792,458 metres per second (m/s). In a vacuum, the speed of not just light, but any electromagnetic radiation or anything having a rest mass of zero, is said to be equal to c. In any other medium, the speed is measurably slower.tballou wrote:I am glad to see these recent posts on my original question, which was "why is the speed of light 300K m/s" and not some higher or lower value, or put another way, does the fact that light travels at a certain speed reveal anything about the relationship between mass and energy?
So, given the recent posts, does anyone have anything else to add that relates directly to this original question?
Re: Time
I don't think photons, travelling at c, experience time at all, do they?aristarchusinexile wrote:If the pattern of photons doesn't change after hundreds of millions of years, has the pattern experienced 'Time'? Further - If there is no gravity in a void to slow time .. does time speed to infinite?
Bear in mind that this only applies in conditions of (near-)perfect symmetry. A void in intergalactic space is unlikely to have all matter in its visible universe in a spherically symmetric distribution surrounding it. (This peculiar effect also occurs between two parallel infinite planes of equal thickness, but that's even less likely than spherical distribution )From the Bootes Void discussion:
"Great post on a fascinating topic, but I do have a minor correction. You say “Particles of matter, having much more mass than both photons and neutrinos, would of course get pulled towards the walls of the void.” In fact, a particle inside a hollow spherical shell, with all mass evenly distributed at the exterior of the shell, experiences no net gravitational force.
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Re: Speed of light
Our friend Heisenberg pretty much forbids 'perfect' vacuum, yeah.Chris Peterson wrote:Surely there is no place in the Universe without gravitational, magnetic, and electric fields. Equally sure, in most of the Universe all of those fields are very weak- especially electric and magnetic. But not zero.harry wrote:A vacuum with or without magnetic fields?
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Re: Time
Hello Qev,
No,I don't think so. Nor do I think that c is a necessarily a criterium for the statement to be correct. I am under the understanding that this fact would hold true for any other massless particle as well.Qev wrote: I don't think photons, travelling at c, experience time at all, do they?
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Re: Time
Hello All,
I believe that in order for time to speed to infinite everything including c must be in a state of suspension, in other words, stopped-including time itself- because, in this particular four dimensional reality, space and time are indivisibly linked. On that note, WRT light experiencing time- a person in motion sees objects close by moving past very quickly and more distant objects appearing to move slower. It would seem that light would "see" objects nearby move past at lightspeed and far distant objects moving slower in like fashion. However I still don't think light "experiences" time any more than we do. Only evidence of it.aristarchusinexile wrote:If the pattern of photons doesn't change after hundreds of millions of years, has the pattern experienced 'Time'? Further - If there is no gravity in a void to slow time .. does time speed to infinite?
"Everything matters.....So may the facts be with you"-astrolabe
Re: Time
I'm pretty certain that all zero rest mass particles are required to travel at c.astrolabe wrote:Hello Qev,
No,I don't think so. Nor do I think that c is a necessarily a criterium for the statement to be correct. I am under the understanding that this fact would hold true for any other massless particle as well.Qev wrote: I don't think photons, travelling at c, experience time at all, do they?
Don't just stand there, get that other dog!
Re: Time
well, in theory, it takes photons exactly 0 seconds to cover any finite distance, and so, they dont have time to experience it between their emission and absorbtion. but, situation changes if photon is never absorbed - now the length of its path is infinite and so its "own" clock might have some time to tick. this would be interesting to see the world from such photon's perspective - everything we see now would be gone in under an instant, but next few nano/whatever seconds of its "life" would earn the most exciting (and useless at the same time) knowledge ever.Qev wrote:I don't think photons, travelling at c, experience time at all, do they?
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Re: Time
Hello Qev,
I reread my post and feel that I should clarify that a zero mass particle traveling through a medium is moving at less than c even though generally c is the accepted representative of particle speed. That's why I misstated that c wasn't a necessary gauge for light/time.
I reread my post and feel that I should clarify that a zero mass particle traveling through a medium is moving at less than c even though generally c is the accepted representative of particle speed. That's why I misstated that c wasn't a necessary gauge for light/time.
"Everything matters.....So may the facts be with you"-astrolabe
Re: Time
Gotcha, I see what you mean, now.astrolabe wrote:Hello Qev,
I reread my post and feel that I should clarify that a zero mass particle traveling through a medium is moving at less than c even though generally c is the accepted representative of particle speed. That's why I misstated that c wasn't a necessary gauge for light/time.
I've read it written (I guess that would be the proper text-medium analogue to "I've heard it said"? ) that light doesn't have a frame of reference, such that trying to imagine things from a photon's point of view is more-or-less meaningless. I mean... at c, time dilation becomes infinite, length contraction becomes infinite... you wouldn't have any time at all to see that everything has become nothing at all.makc wrote:well, in theory, it takes photons exactly 0 seconds to cover any finite distance, and so, they dont have time to experience it between their emission and absorbtion. but, situation changes if photon is never absorbed - now the length of its path is infinite and so its "own" clock might have some time to tick. this would be interesting to see the world from such photon's perspective - everything we see now would be gone in under an instant, but next few nano/whatever seconds of its "life" would earn the most exciting (and useless at the same time) knowledge ever.
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Re: Time
leave these lame excuses for the weak inverse of these infinite quantities is 0 - pretty much finite number - so you can still operate with numbers to certain extent.Qev wrote:I mean... at c, time dilation becomes infinite, length contraction becomes infinite.
Introducing Human Species
Hi All,
I came up with this thought or u can call it an idea, Its known that there is a satellite thats in space travelling into deep space displaying Human image and voice of the human species that we're peaceful.., it may take hundreds of years or more to reach any alien world but IF these aliens are far superior and have Sophisticated Technology for instance they might have developed Time Travelling machine like we think we will also be able to do that, and why wouldnt they use it to come back to this Time if they're well known that the people may not exist since it has been so long it had reached to them.
Regards,
I came up with this thought or u can call it an idea, Its known that there is a satellite thats in space travelling into deep space displaying Human image and voice of the human species that we're peaceful.., it may take hundreds of years or more to reach any alien world but IF these aliens are far superior and have Sophisticated Technology for instance they might have developed Time Travelling machine like we think we will also be able to do that, and why wouldnt they use it to come back to this Time if they're well known that the people may not exist since it has been so long it had reached to them.
Regards,