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Possibly the most well-known consequence of Einstein's theory of special relativity is that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, c. According to the mass-energy equivalence formula E = mc2, an object traveling at c would have infinite mass and would require an infinite amount of energy to reach c. Over the past 100 years, numerous experimental tests of special relativity have confirmed its validity.
As the physicists explain in their paper, the Lorentz transformation is traditionally used in special relativity to reconcile different observations made by different observers in different inertial reference frames, and it applies to relative velocities less than the speed of light.
Here the scientists have proposed two new transformations that complement the Lorentz transformation to explain different observations, and both new transformations apply to relative velocities greater than the speed of light. The physicists aren't sure which of the two new transformations is the correct one, and they don't ignore the possibility that both transformations may be equally plausible if for some reason Einstein's theory bifurcates at c into two variations. The two new transformations apply for relative velocities between c and infinity (not including either). Like Einstein's special relativity with the Lorentz transformation, the proposed extensions break down at exactly c, resulting in a singularity. Passing through the speed of light is not defined. As a result, the singularity forms a kind of boundary so that all inertial reference frames fall into one of two sets relative to some rest frame: those with a relative velocity less than c, and those with a relative velocity greater than c.
The physicists explain that there is no objective way to identify whether a particular reference frame is in the subluminal or in the superluminal set of frames other than by reference to some arbitrary rest frame. Although the theories cannot answer what happens at c, the scientists suspect that an object crossing the "light barrier" may have some very interesting consequences. They compare our current understanding of this boundary to that of an object crossing the sound barrier for the first time, an event that was highly disputed before it was achieved in 1947.
Originally posted by Spit_Fire
Looks interesting, i believe its only a matter of time before Einsteins theory of relativity is proved wrong. Or at least that the rules can be bent. I don't like theory that has to deal in infinites, that to me just says we cannot work out or understand what happens at the speed of light. I understand the maths adds up for E=mc2 but the great thing is current science and maths arent always correct.
Good find.
Originally posted by Spit_Fire
I appreciate your point, and im the first to admit science aint my strong suit i was simply makin the point that without gettin technical its a positive thing that scientists are not jus accepting Einstiens theorys as a given and that we are looking at everything more objectivly.
When i was at college all those years ago you were told it was wrong to question it and that was that.
But i appreciate your point.
Originally posted by Ericthedoubter
I'm not very clever,I only take an interest in such things....Surely light,travelling at the speed of light must also have infinite mass.As a particle.Not a wave.
I was curious because my bicycle lamp doesn't instantly crush the earth and cause a black hole when I switch it on.
Which is fortunate because it makes getting to work really difficult.
Originally posted by john_bmth
reply to post by Ericthedoubter
Light doesn't need to accelerate to the speed of light as it is always travelling at the speed of... well, light.
Originally posted by ubeenhad
Like Einstein's special relativity with the Lorentz transformation, the proposed extensions break down at exactly c, resulting in a singularity. Passing through the speed of light is not defined. As a result, the singularity forms a kind of boundary so that all inertial reference frames fall into one of two sets relative to some rest frame: those with a relative velocity less than c, and those with a relative velocity greater than c.
Originally posted by ubeenhad
Am I the only one stoked or what?
A photon has a rest mass of zero. If you divide that zero by zero, you don't get infinity, so I have no idea why you're talking about light having infinite mass.
Originally posted by Ericthedoubter
I'm not very clever,I only take an interest in such things....Surely light,travelling at the speed of light must also have infinite mass.As a particle.Not a wave.
I was curious because my bicycle lamp doesn't instantly crush the earth and cause a black hole when I switch it on.
What would happen if you fired a gun on a train moving as fast as a bullet?
Imagine you are on a perfectly smooth speeding train, moving at a uniform speed (not accelerating or turning), in a car with no windows. You would have no way of knowing how fast you are going (or if you were moving at all). If you throw a ball straight up in the air, it will come straight back down whether the train is sitting still or going 1,000 mph. Since you and the ball are already moving at the same speed as the train, the only forces acting on the ball are your hand and gravity. So the ball behaves exactly as it would if you were standing on the ground and not moving.
So what does this mean for our gun? If the gun shoots bullets at 1,000 mph, then the bullet will always move away from the gun at 1,000 mph. If you go to the front of a train that is moving at 1,000 mph and shoot the gun forward, the bullet will move away from you and the train at 1,000 mph, just as it would if the train were stopped. But, relative to the ground, the bullet will travel at 2,000 mph, the speed of the bullet plus the speed of the train. So if the bullet hits something on the ground, it will hit it going 2,000 mph.
What's true for bullets, however, is not true of some other things that you might "shoot" from the front of the train. A great example is sound waves. If you turn on the stereo in your living room, sound waves "shoot out" of the speaker at the speed of sound -- something like 700 mph. The waves propogate through the air at that fixed speed, and they can go no faster. So if you put a speaker at the front of the 1,000 mph train, the sound waves will not depart the train at 1,700 mph. They cannot go faster than the speed of sound. This is the reason why planes traveling faster than the speed of sound create sonic boom
It's the nature of the type of observation or experiment you make that determines whether you observe wave or particle properties. You don't get to pick one, you pick the type of observation you want to do, and see which properties of light can be observed in that observation.
Originally posted by JohnPhoenix
But photons can act as both a wave and a particle can they not? How do you determine which applies in this case?
Originally posted by Aliensun
Scrap Einstein's equations entirely in discussions of hyperspeed space flight. All that required is an independent technology applied which can among a bunch of attributes allowing faster than light motion. That technology is evident in the UFOs and has been displayed about every time one is witnessed. They have the means to cancel mass--not the same as anti-gravity. Without the restrictice aspects of Einstein's mass, the centerpoint of his argument, there is no inherent limit to an upper velocity for a massless object.