Explorer
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2003
- Messages
- 1,516
lamme, you said:
"Einstrein, or no Einstein...it seems hard to fathom that if you were blindfolded on earth (so the speed of light factor doesn't influence what you are seeing), and then put in a space ship and sent deep into space exceeding the speed of light, and returned at this speed (still blindfolded), and you got out of the space ship and went home (still blindfolded) and you took off your blindfold....my guess is that you neither went forward or backwards in time to any big degree.
My reasoning is thus: Light travels at 186,000 mps. You traveled 372,000 miles round trip at twice the speed of light. I say that time went forward by 1 second. (If you went at the speed of light, it would have been 2 seconds. Now suppose your traveled distance was 1000 times greater. You would arrive home in 500 seconds (about 8 minutes), instead of the 16 minutes that you would have if you went at the speed of light."
Most of us alive today will never be able to travel at speeds approaching the speed of light. We have to be content with maybe at best, travelling at mach 2 in Concord. Astronauts may get up to faster speeds but nowhere near the 186,000 miles per second. Therefore physics as defined by Newton, have been quite adequate. However, when we get up to the speed of light, Newton's laws are no longer good enough. Relativity is all about relative speed to an observer. A stationary observer can view two trains heading towards each other at a combined speed of 100 mph. In fact they are each travelling clocking at fifty miles an hour on their own individual speedos inside the cabins.
In another scenario where two trains on separate tracks are travelling in the same direction in parallel. Both trains relative to each other are stationary, but to the observer watching from the side, both are moving away from him at fifty mph.
Now at speeds close to light speed, something wierd happens. For example, if a rocket was travelling at the speed of light and it fired a missile ahead of itself at the speed of light, relative to a stationary observer, the missile speed would still be at the speed of light and not double the speed of light as expected.
Einstein has calculated this and can express the effect mathematically. He also says that at speeds of light for a traveller relative to a stationary observer, time would slow down, although the traveller would not be aware of this. It is theoretically possible for a space traveller to set off on a light speed journey and have his young sons wave him goodbye, only to return two or three years later to meet his sons who are now older than him.
This time dilation effect has been proven scientifically by setting two very accurate quartz clocks to identical times and sending one off in a jet for several hours. On the return, the clock that flew was a few nano seconds slower than the clock that stayed behind. The degree of time slowing calculates out exactly to Einstein's formula.
The same effect would be created if you approached the event horizon of a black hole. Time would dilate in exactly the same and predictable way relative to an oberver not affected by extreme gravitational force. So time, gravity and space are all interelated in this way. In fact Einstein said that gravity is simply a deformation of space caused by mass. If you can imagine an elastic membrane steched out flat and you place a ball bearing on top of it, it would distort around the area of mass. A body approaching the deflected area would tend to move towards the ball bearing caught by the curvature surrounding it. Eventually after rotating around it a couple of times or more (i.e. orbiting) it fall in and touch it as if gravity had been the cause. Space distorts in the same way. If the ball bearing has exceptional mass the membrane would distort to such a degree that a deep hole would form, and this is the analogy to a black hole.
You must read the book as recommended above, for a much better and more facinating narrative.
"Einstrein, or no Einstein...it seems hard to fathom that if you were blindfolded on earth (so the speed of light factor doesn't influence what you are seeing), and then put in a space ship and sent deep into space exceeding the speed of light, and returned at this speed (still blindfolded), and you got out of the space ship and went home (still blindfolded) and you took off your blindfold....my guess is that you neither went forward or backwards in time to any big degree.
My reasoning is thus: Light travels at 186,000 mps. You traveled 372,000 miles round trip at twice the speed of light. I say that time went forward by 1 second. (If you went at the speed of light, it would have been 2 seconds. Now suppose your traveled distance was 1000 times greater. You would arrive home in 500 seconds (about 8 minutes), instead of the 16 minutes that you would have if you went at the speed of light."
Most of us alive today will never be able to travel at speeds approaching the speed of light. We have to be content with maybe at best, travelling at mach 2 in Concord. Astronauts may get up to faster speeds but nowhere near the 186,000 miles per second. Therefore physics as defined by Newton, have been quite adequate. However, when we get up to the speed of light, Newton's laws are no longer good enough. Relativity is all about relative speed to an observer. A stationary observer can view two trains heading towards each other at a combined speed of 100 mph. In fact they are each travelling clocking at fifty miles an hour on their own individual speedos inside the cabins.
In another scenario where two trains on separate tracks are travelling in the same direction in parallel. Both trains relative to each other are stationary, but to the observer watching from the side, both are moving away from him at fifty mph.
Now at speeds close to light speed, something wierd happens. For example, if a rocket was travelling at the speed of light and it fired a missile ahead of itself at the speed of light, relative to a stationary observer, the missile speed would still be at the speed of light and not double the speed of light as expected.
Einstein has calculated this and can express the effect mathematically. He also says that at speeds of light for a traveller relative to a stationary observer, time would slow down, although the traveller would not be aware of this. It is theoretically possible for a space traveller to set off on a light speed journey and have his young sons wave him goodbye, only to return two or three years later to meet his sons who are now older than him.
This time dilation effect has been proven scientifically by setting two very accurate quartz clocks to identical times and sending one off in a jet for several hours. On the return, the clock that flew was a few nano seconds slower than the clock that stayed behind. The degree of time slowing calculates out exactly to Einstein's formula.
The same effect would be created if you approached the event horizon of a black hole. Time would dilate in exactly the same and predictable way relative to an oberver not affected by extreme gravitational force. So time, gravity and space are all interelated in this way. In fact Einstein said that gravity is simply a deformation of space caused by mass. If you can imagine an elastic membrane steched out flat and you place a ball bearing on top of it, it would distort around the area of mass. A body approaching the deflected area would tend to move towards the ball bearing caught by the curvature surrounding it. Eventually after rotating around it a couple of times or more (i.e. orbiting) it fall in and touch it as if gravity had been the cause. Space distorts in the same way. If the ball bearing has exceptional mass the membrane would distort to such a degree that a deep hole would form, and this is the analogy to a black hole.
You must read the book as recommended above, for a much better and more facinating narrative.