Lean'n'mean
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 4,087
- Location
- Cloud-cuckoo-land
or some Time....
Or somewhere in time but not in space, like a thought.
or some Time....
two things, not in motion, retracting at a uniform velocity from each other, would not be able to detect motion... Something like this... I have to look it up. Its been a while.
I am sure there are many individuals that study sincerely regarding physics and the possibilities of endless results regarding things such as this "twin paradox" problem. But one part of common sense always comes to mind for me, when looking at such a problem. Until it is actually made a fact, we will not know for sure what the outcome will be. I merely say this as looking back when aviation had not yet made it through the sound barrier, there was a great concern that a aircraft going faster than the sound barrier would simply blow up, that maybe passing through that barrier would not be possible. Of the many people helpful to solving both the mathematics but also the physical part of what the design of the aircraft to be able to pass through the air molecules was, Howard Hughes. His design of having the rivets on the wings and body of the aircraft being flush/recessed smooth to help aid less drag on the aircraft surfaces, helped make it possible for an aircraft to pass through the sound barrier. Of course to have a craft pass through the speed of light is a much greater problem but, we also now have a greater ability of finding resolves to problems due to our own technical advances as humans and scientist as well. It may well be that when we do pass through the "light barrier" we discover something we had no clue even factually existed...another dimension where all the spooky things reside?!?
How can two things 'retract' from each other ?.... & if they were 'retracting' from each other at a uniform velocity, wouldn't that mean that they were in motion ?
Well no, 'cause when I get back I wouldn't have eaten it yet..
I recall a while back, someone in school using the doppler shift factor with the principle of relativity to solve the twin paradox. If I recall correctly, two things, not in motion, retracting at a uniform velocity from each other, would not be able to detect motion... Something like this... I have to look it up. Its been a while.
Oh, believe me, I would.
There are some possible indications we have had advanced aliens already here on our planet. The topic does come up once in awhile in our home. My Husband points out how his own Great Grandfather lived from the time period of the Civil War here then to see the Landing on the Moon....think of how much advancements had taken place in the amount of time of just one person's lifespan! Perhaps even thinking of the television show, Star Trek. Recall the use of what we could say, "cell phones" for them to communicate with. Many things have advanced just since the 1960's. Touch screen computers and even ones you do not even have to do anything more than to talk into. It may well be that soon, someone will break through in science and math to a level we had no clue about today? The same as breaking through the sound barrier...that being able to figure out how to go faster than light speed and then how to figure out controlling navigation at such a speed. Navigation currently depends on light for distance speed and travel. Beyond the light speed, for us now, we have no way to calculate distance or travel or accurate time for the journey.
Perhaps some science fiction will become science fact and we will see the answers to many questions and mysteries we ponder today? Who would really want to take off in a space ship and find out what light travel is all about? From what we do know, in theory, a person out and about on a space journey would return to an earth where everyone would be older or long dead and gone, if light speed came into the mix!
In one of the Star Trek movies, I forget which, they travel back to "present day", where Scotty is asked to show the "primitive" engineers some advanced technology or another. When McCoy reminds him of the Prime Directive, Scotty responds "how do we know he isn't the one who invented it?"
No. If one travels to a point in the future, does something & then returns to the time they left from, anything they did in the future has not yet happened.But would you be full????
No. If one travels to a point in the future, does something & then returns to the time they left from, anything they did in the future has not yet happened.
No. If one travels to a point in the future, does something & then returns to the time they left from, anything they did in the future has not yet happened.
Well no, 'cause when I get back I wouldn't have eaten it yet..
What if we are having this conversation because we have already had it?
Which raises another question: could a time traveler bring objects from the past or future back to their present?
Prehaps, bringing objects from the past shouldn't pose a problem if they would have survived until the present, however, returning objects from the futur, to a time in which they do not yet exist may be impossible, unless the same laws of physics that prevent the traveler from aging, also protect the object he is bringing back.
But is the "you" who returned from the future to the present, presumably just after you left the present, the same "you" you would have been if you hadn't timetraveled? Did you lose all your memories of being in the future
Ah.... Perhaps not across time, but across dimensions (different points in space with relative time), it could be.....