Gravity has been measured to propagate at the speed of light. (just saying
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Do you mean that the water will move frictionlessly against the sides of the container (or whatever), so that relative to something outside your rotating object, the water is stationary?
Gravity has been measured to propagate at the speed of light. (just saying)
5.39124e-44 s. [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_time"]Planck time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]For starters, you tell me what the shortest length of time is. Whether it be micro-seconds or atto-seconds.. Just tell me..
thats in an atmosphere. centrifugal force does move things outward, but it first needs another force to make things stay on whatever is generating centrifugal force.
5.39124e-44 s. Planck time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
:shrug: It doesn't matter, you won't be able to observe it, ergo it won't have any greater physical effect than if it slowed gradually down over 1 tp. Contrast to the proverbial "tree falls in a forest" scenario, where the effects can be observed if not the event.A particle may be moving one moment, and the next moment it may be stopped, the time difference that occurs between starting and stopping would be far far smaller than PlanckTime. Thousands of magnitudes smaller.
Let's say you have a tube with a bead in it, and the bead is nudged towards the outer surface.The whole water thing was just a very basic analogy. You could replace it with beads. By simply spinning the tube in space, do the beads stay on the inner surface of the tube? Friction wouldn't help much, as it cannot keep something "down." Even with air friction, just means the air is spinning. That does not generate the sensation of actual gravity.
The whole water thing was just a very basic analogy. You could replace it with beads. By simply spinning the tube in space, do the beads stay on the inner surface of the tube? Friction wouldn't help much, as it cannot keep something "down." Even with air friction, just means the air is spinning. That does not generate the sensation of actual gravity.
Let's say you have a tube with a bead in it, and the bead is nudged towards the outer surface.
At some moment it would touch it, and would be sent flying spinwards.
Try to imagine what would it like seeing from the top - a bead going in straight line cutting across the tube.
The fact is, it would imminently touch the tube again, speeding up spinwards even more, and again, and again.
Eventually, it will come to rest relative to the tube, lying on the outer surface.
Then it's just like the water in the bucket you spin over your head and down.
For starters, you tell me what the shortest length of time is. Whether it be micro-seconds or atto-seconds.. Just tell me..
Even considering quantum entanglement? I understand that sometimes particles are split apart at the event horizon of a black hole.
From our point of view, Light takes 8 minutes to come from the Sun, 4.2 yrs from Proxima Centauri and so on. By the Lorentz transformation, at the very speed of light the time dilation becomes 0, so, from the point of view of a photon, any trip to whatever distance takes time=0?
Yes.
You could also say: From the point of view of the photon, we don't exist until it collides with us. The universe looks pretty dull at the speed of light. All you can see is an infinitesimal thin ray in front of you.
:hmm: So, light seems to be a kind of barrier that prevents that anything could happen at the same time...
This is only apparent FTL. Just like how on Earth, the stars appear to be moving at many times the speed of light, while it is actually Earth rotating far slower than c and the stars are far away.
Only light travel faster than itself,light fired from one star and light from another star when their light path cross,I think speed encounter is double of speed of light. :blink: