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#1
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The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
Remember you read it on CD first.
People have been kicking around the idea for several years that the constants in physics (the speed of light, the charge of an electron....) may have been changing as the Universe expands. Now there is more evidence. If this new theory is correct it would be a milestone in our understanding of physics http://www.msnbc.msn.com/ID/13816702 |
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#2
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
Now I have no idea what the speed limit is...
I thought my flashlight was slowing down... and I was just going to replace the batteries. Seriously, that is a huge thought to contemplate. Sometimes I'm glad that I only deal with newtonian physics, even though it's not PERFECT. Thanks for the linky. |
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#3
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
Constants that aren't constant?!? The very foundations of my existance are crumbling! Is nothing sacred anymore?
BTW, it looks like now would be a good time to go into the field of physics, if any of you are interested in that area... a total re-write of the laws of physics could take years! ![]() |
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#4
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
Crazy.
Leave it to Ken to post this ![]() Thanks for the link; I really enjoyed the slide show!!! ![]() |
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#5
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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#6
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
Thanks.. This is just another excuse for me to not like physics.
Not physics per say as in how things (should) work, but as in trying to figure out how they work (math). Not that I have ever needed to use the knowledge of the speed of light for anything as of yet anyways. Someone better notify Google to update their calculator. http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=speed+of+light I think a random number generator in place of a calculator would work nicely. ![]() |
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#7
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
been thinking about this - if the speed of light continues to slow down as the universe expands
and E=MC^2 remains in effect - then that means the nuclear power available from fission and fusion reactions will keep decreasing. As the universe expands the amount of energy that stars (and our sun) is able to produce keeps dropping. The power from nuclear reactors would keep dropping. Seems like there would be a point where fusion and fission reactions would no longer be self sustaining, and we would have an intergalactic blackout? Last edited by KenWittlief : 12-07-2006 at 16:55. |
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#8
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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//Edit: Which would make the nuclear power plants more plentiful and efficient as more energy would be released in the breaking or joining of the particles. Last edited by henryBsick : 12-07-2006 at 19:20. |
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#9
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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one of the things that has always blown my mind is that Einsteins equation has no K factor - no constant to balance it. Think about that for a while. The units of energy, mass, and distance and time (defining the speed of light) had all been defined before Einstein came up with his famous equation BUT the units came out perfect - there is no correction (fudge) factor E = MC^2 so what happens to it now?! |
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#10
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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For that matter any math involved in this. If it is true, school is going to get hairy. May the Flying Spaghetti Monster help us all (I know He is the one up to this )-Henry |
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#11
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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And incidentally, if we're just talking about fundamental dimensions*, then of course it works—you wouldn't have much of a physical law, if the sides of the equation were dimensionally different. So, basically, the equation doesn't change dimensions. Energy is defined fundamentally as [M][L]2[T]-2, and mass is [M]. And if the speed of light (in a vacuum, to be precise) changed, then any quantities derived from it would also change proportionally—but the fundamental unit [L][T]-1 would remain the same. So the equation would still hold, with a different c, which changes with time (and more than likely spawns a horde of differential equations describing some other previously-static quantities changing proportionally with time). *Fundamental dimensions are units such as [L], [M] and [T] (length, mass and time, respectively), which form the basis for dimensional analysis. |
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#12
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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the established SI units had no relationship to the energy stored in the bonds between protons and neutron but it was not necessary to balance Einsteins equation - as you said, K = 1 how did the speed of light just happen to fit the equation perfectly, so it was not E= 1.2783729832987 * MC^2 ? or some other correction constant? Thats the part that blows my mind! The established SI units were more or less arbitrary. A second is proportioal to the rotation of the earth on its axis - a meter is about the distance from someones nose to their fingertip, a kilogram is about one cubic centimeter of something or other.... so how did those arbitrary units come out perfect for nuclear energy? Last edited by KenWittlief : 13-07-2006 at 08:19. |
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#13
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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Last edited by Doug G : 16-07-2006 at 15:50. |
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#14
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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I think I just found a defense for my next speeding ticket... -dave |
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#15
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Re: The speed of light is NOT a constant?! A milestone in Physics?
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