Speed of Light Inconstant? 592
DHR writes "Australian scientists have discovered that light isn't quite as fast as it used to be." We've done previous stories on these findings. Those of you with subscriptions to Nature can read the actual paper, the rest of us will just have to suffer.
ObTrek Reference (Score:5, Funny)
Warp Speed [was Re:ObTrek Reference] (Score:2, Interesting)
Even constantly improving the model [arxiv.org]!
Re:ObTrek Reference (Score:2)
Re:ObTrek Reference (Score:2)
Yeah. Empire Strikes Back is not real Star Wars, it wasn't written by George Lucas. Ignore the good story telling, character interaction, entertainment value, or anything else from Episodes 6, 1, and 2.
Re:ObTrek Reference (Score:2)
Why does she have to tell him?
I would like to see for once Paris (or equiv) say, "What, I didn't quite hear you with all those panic alarms in the background. Could you please repeat that order?"
I figure by then that they wouldn't need inter-human command. There should be a big red button that says, "Get The Hell Outta Here!" right on the captain's chair.
Pushing it would have the sensors quickly scan the skies (or buffered image), and aim the ship in the opposite direction of any activity or planet detected, and put petal to the metal.
Hmmm.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hmmm.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hmmm.. (Score:2)
I guess you'll have to work a bit slower, then, or risk exhausting the light waves you have left to work with. (-:
Linux seems to have solved problems for ILM, Pixar, DreamWorks, yadda yadda... but Disney, now there's an interesting contrast of priorities: they render on Linux with one hand, and legislate against it with the other. Maybe it's one of those light-side/dark-side things. Dr Linux and Mr RIAA, sort of.
But not quite slow enough... (Score:2, Funny)
Entropy and the collapsing universe theory. (Score:3, Interesting)
Or perhaps we're just setting aside another 'unbreakable' barrier.
-GiH
Suffering at the speed of light (Score:4, Funny)
And given our new knowledge about changes in the speed of light, you'll suffer a little more slowly then you are used to.
Australian scientists (Score:5, Funny)
Now that's a light.
Re:Australian scientists (Score:2, Informative)
I honestly thought, the first few times I read it, that it was referring to somebody's mate, like girlfriend or wife, as opposed to "hey there, mate, that's not a light
I think I've found proof using empirical research (Score:5, Funny)
Placing a coffee cup on top of my laptop and running Microsoft Outlook provides the exactly same effect. Where can I get my Nobel prize?
Re:I think I've found proof using empirical resear (Score:2)
How about the "No Bell" prize. That we can do.
Here is a
photo of the previous winner [geocities.com].
I don't get this whole thing...... (Score:2, Insightful)
In October, 1971, American physicists took four super-accurate atomic clocks, kept two on the ground and put two on commercial jets flying at 1000 kmh in opposite directions around Earth.
When the planes landed, the scientists found what they were hoping for: The clocks on the high-speed journeys were ticking a few billionths of a second behind their stationary friends.
Isn't the speed of a jet negligible compared to the speed of the Earth rotating, revolving around the sun, the sun revolving around the center of the galaxy and the galaxy spiralling in the expansion of the universe?
Please explain.
Re:I don't get this whole thing...... (Score:3, Insightful)
E=mc^2? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:E=mc^2? (Score:3, Interesting)
So if the speed of light is slowing down, could we convert matter to energy, wait millions of years for the speed of light to change, and then convert it back - violating the conservation of energy laws?
Good question, but I would think probably not. E=mc^2 doesn't really tell you about some remarkable physical process that lets you convert between two differen things "mass" and "energy". Mass is just another form of energy, and that equation tells you how much energy you have in (say) one kilogram of mass.
I'd have to think harder whether or not there is a problem with conservation of energy here. Here's the challenge: come up with a thought experiment that lets you get "something for nothing" from a changing speed of light. Just counting the energy in the universe isn't good enough (see below); what you need is some way of increasing (say) the stored energy in a localized object or particle *without* introducing any energy or work from outside. I can't think of a way to do it, but maybe somebody else might. (I haven't really posed my thought experiment well; can somebody suggest a better way to pose it?)
The reason that just talking about the total energy in the universe isn't good enough is that in fact General Relativity already does *not* have a global law of conservation of energy! There is a *local* conservation of energy, which is expressed in terms of derivatives of the stress-energy tensor. However, the fact that there is no single global inertial reference frame for the whole universe makes it difficult to say what is the "energy of the universe".
You can come up with things that look like they violate conservation of energy with plain vanilla GR and cosmology right now. For instance, the cosmological redshift. Start with a universe that has one photon in it. The universe expands, and the photon redshifts. Now the photon has less energy. What happened to conservation of energy? Similarly, if you have a cosmological constant (vacuum energy), and your universe gets bigger, you have more vacuum, thus more energy. What happened to the conservation of energy? With an infinite universe you can always say that you're pushing work out to further and further reaches of the universe, and since you never reach an "edge" you don't have to worry about somebody ever having to absorb all that work. (With a closed universe, I believe that formally some of the energy goes into the curvature.) But, really, conservation of energy is a local concept in a GR rather than a universe-wide concept.
-Rob
Re:E=mc^2? YIPPY SKIPPY! (Score:2)
But the mass increase wouldn't be there, becuase the space the matter occupies would change relative to it's speed, altering the mass's energy potenial to just what e=mc^2 says it should be. There is no time, no age, no limits to space. Just relative movement in space.
I haven't figured out if the black holes are gobbling things up. Or if we are slowing down and turning into dark matter. Or, if black holes turn quantum particles into dark matter by stopping them from vibrating. Probably all three.
Re:E=mc^2? (Score:2)
That would me for a moment, but its right,
if the force between to identical objects in
the same space increases over time, then there
energy increases, so it violates both the
first and seconds laws of thermodynamics.
However there is a let out here, if some process
is increasing the strength of the electric field,
then it might be balanced out by decreasing the
strength of one of the other forces. Secondly that
energy conversion may be violated on a cosmology
scale may in fact be allowable. The conversion
of energy used to be a law, but these days its
a derevation, Noether's theorm states if the
laws of physics are the same at all times, energy
must be conversed, so its only natural to get
a violation of the conversation of energy if
the laws of physics change over time.
We will have to suffer doubly (Score:4, Funny)
Re:We will have to suffer doubly (Score:2)
I deduce that the majority of replies will come from AC's and be composed of nonsense.
So, how does that make this any different from the usual Slashdot story? :)
Can't find the article mentioned on Nature's site (Score:2)
An old poke at physicists. (Score:5, Funny)
There were a group of people in a room of different professions, and a theorem was put forth onto the board that stated that all Odd Numbers Are Prime. Each person was supposed to disprove this.
The mathematician started off by looking at each number.
1, 3, 5, 7, 9.... 9 is not prime, the theorem is false.
The social worker turned in a long sheet of paper going "2 is prime, 4 is prime, 6 is prime..." etc.
The physicist turned in the following:
1... 3... 5... 7... 9 (Experimental Error), 11, 13.....
bad news (Score:2)
One and Primes (Score:2, Informative)
Now that that disclaimer is done with
You see, the Fundamental Theorem of Algebra says, briefly, that every number can be reduced to a unique, finite, multiplicative set of prime numbers.
Now, if one were prime, we would run into the terrible, horrible problem of this being false. And all mathematics would slowly fall with it. Because if one were prime, one would be equal to:
1 x 1
1 x 1 x 1
1 x 1 x 1 x 1
et all.
However, before the 1800's or so, one was in fact considered to be a prime number -- as math was not then a practical discipline. At all. And it was considered prime because, from a theoretical standpoint, it is, as it only has the factors of itself and one. Nowhere did it then say that those must be unique factors.
anyway, just thought I'd shed some light, given the posts on top of posts that are a bit off on what it is to be prime.
Another poke at physicists - from a chemist (Score:4, Funny)
A philosopher, a mathematician and a physicist are at one end of a very, very long room. An observer tells them that there's a bottle of fine whisky on a table at the other end of the room, and that they can take as many leaps as they like to get to the other side and claim the prize but that every step must cover half the remaining distance, no more, no less.
The philosopher stands still, and contemplates whether or not the table and the whisky are there at all.
The mathematician does some quick thinking, and works out that he can never really reach the table as there will always be a finite distance, no matter how small, left to cover. He too stands his ground.
The physicist sets off across the room. He makes one, two, three, four jumps until he's withing arm's length of the table, shouts "that's close enough!" and grabs the bottle for himself.
(And after all that, what did I go on to do at university? Yep, astrophysics. Part astronomy, part physics, part mathematics and, at least with the options I took, part philosophy. No wonder I'm not a scientist by profession any more.)
Re:An old poke at physicists. (Score:4, Funny)
Mathemetician...
"1 is prime, 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime. The result follows by induction."
Engineer...(kind of close to the physicist one)
"1 is prime, 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime. 9 is...prime enough for practical purposes, 11 is prime..."
And my favorite
Computer Scientist...
"1 is prime, 1 is prime, 1 is prime, 1 is prime, 1 is prime..."
I think all these better reflect on their professions (and I hate the variants where one of the professions "gets it right", usually told by a member of that profession.
1 is prime, 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime,
Re:An old poke at physicists. (Score:2)
Well, 9 is prime, of course it is. It just depends on what the definition of is is!
Re:An old poke at physicists. (Score:2, Informative)
two divisors : 1 and itself.
1 only has one divisor = 1
But you didn't say "exactly two unique divisors," so:
Re:An old poke at physicists. (Score:2)
I never said unique cars, so I'm clearly correct in saying I have 50, even though I'm referring to the single car I own each of 50 times.
Re:An old poke at physicists. (Score:2)
two divisors : 1 and itself.
The key phrase here is "exactly two." Exactly two does not mean one or two divisors. You cannot count a single divisor multiple times, this makes no more sense than counting your money multiple times when trying to figure out how much you have.
1 is not prime, by the mathematically accepted definition of prime.
Possibilities? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sometimes those particles become real, such as under a strong electric charge, Lineweaver says. If the vacuum of space is changing uniformly across the universe, just as the universe is expanding uniformly, it could affect the speed of light.
Well... this was the hypothesis that was given in the article... and from the looks of this, it seems that there is a possibility that light didn't slow down at all. Here he explains that it is the medium that light is travelling in that is slowing it down. So light's top speed in a vacuum may still be the same... c, but the medium, the universe, is changing. Who knows.
But if light is slowing down, then that faster than light travel maybe possible. However, how the hell do you see anything when your going faster than any signal? Well... maybe you can communicate with the spooky particles and get instant communication while travelling at faster than light speeds. Of course you'd best be sure your data arrived promptly, as you'll never see the planet you just rammed.
Not surprising (Score:3, Funny)
Nothing's like it used to be (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nothing's like it used to be (Score:2)
Re:Nothing's like it used to be (Score:2)
Re:Nothing's like it used to be (Score:2)
Instead of geeks wearing shirts that say "E=mc^2", back then their shirts said "E=mc^1.9999924384729".
Not quite as catchy. I'm glad it changed.
Re:Nothing's like it used to be (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, big freakin' deal if light's only going 75 mph by then.
Re:Absolutely right (Score:2)
Dr. Walt Brown agrees with the idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Dr. Walt Brown agrees with the idea (Score:2, Funny)
He's about as deserving of the Doctor title as Doctor Nick Riviera
Re:Dr. Walt Brown agrees with the idea (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Dr. Walt Brown agrees with the idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Take for example the BS theories of evolution that were passed around as fact until recently. You know, the ones that said that evolution happens at a very slow rate. Creationists argued against this for years because of the nature of how fossils are created. Evolutionists finally caught on and now almost all the recent theories talk about periods of very rapid evolution.
It's true that a lot of what they're saying is shit. But its also true that traditional scientists are full of it too. All I'm asking is that before you blast it out of the water as religious ranting, consider that they probably have a much more critical view of accepted science than you. Consider whether you what to be the one defending the status quo.
You should read Dr. Brown's 20 questions for evolutionists [creationscience.com]. No true scientist can read the traditional "irreducible complexities" (like the Bombardier Beetle) without questioning current theories of evolution.
Hold your horses.. (Score:3, Insightful)
The speed of light -is- always constant in one sense,
simply because the length of 1 meter is defined by the distance light travels in a set time.
Now, from a more physical standpoint: We need more evidence.
Quite a few measurements of c have been done, and a single measurement isn't about to upend all this.
Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, remember?
Now, nobody says that relativity is a complete and final theory. It probably isn't. But you still need lots
of evidence to replace it with another theory.
Otherwise, we won't even know if the theory we're replacing it with is better!
It's an interesting theory and experiment, but even so, I'd bet on this being a
freak result, for the simple reason that scientific breakthroughs don't come around that often.
Re:Hold your horses.. (Score:2)
The speed of light -is- always constant in one sense, simply because the length of 1 meter is defined by the distance light travels in a set time.
I believe you've actually hit a very subtle nail right on the head, here, related to string theory. This principle becomes even more important if you look back in time to the Big Bang:
Disclaimer: I am not a physicist
Basically, imagine that you're running time backwards, and watching the Big Bang in reverse. As you get closer to time 0, the universe "shrinks" in size towards a radius of the Planck length R. But as it does so, photons (actually, all particles) start behaving differently.
Radius R=1 is where the weirdness happens: photons in a universe of radius n*R (n>1) resemble completely different particles in a corresponding universe of radius 1/(n*R), but they look more and more like each other as the radius drops to exactly R, where (from the perspective of string theory's winding/vibrational energies), they are identical... and as the radius drops to below R, they change places. Each now has the characteristics of the other.
It gets weirder: a universe of radius n*R is indistinguishable from a universe of radius 1/(n*R), since "radius" is a length, and "length" measurements (e.g., "one light year") depend on what you define as the "photon".
What makes this cool is that, from one perspective, there can be no "Big Crunch" where the universe collapses to a point: the universe can never shrink "smaller" than radius R, because once it does, it "really" is getting larger again [as measured by the photon's twin particle]. I believe this is called the "Big Bounce" theory.
Ok, there were probably a lot of mistakes above, but I think that's the gist of it. So, I'm not surprised to hear that light might have behaved differently when the universe was a slightly-smaller size.
very bad reporting (Score:2)
I knew I was RIGHT! (Score:2)
I had an argument (well, flame war on his part) with an astronomer about the age of the universe. I told him it has no age becuase the speed of light IS NOT constant and the universe recycles itself. In fact, I told him that the momentum of the universe was slowing down. He told me I was an idiot. These aussies seem to have proved me right.
Read astronomer-ego flames here, [slashdot.org] as I craftily use my flame proof shield (made of dragon scales no less). I love denting the armor of 'Accepted Scientific Models'.
Re:I knew I was RIGHT! (Score:3, Funny)
Great. Now go see about denting a bra. Heh.
Re:I knew I was RIGHT! (Score:3, Insightful)
So you're saying your "belief," based upon nothing more than your ideal model of the universe and "proven" by precisely one set of data, should be taken seriously by a professional astronomer?
He didn't even flame you. Your idea is fine--as the basis for a religion--but there's nothing scientific about it. And if he's anything like other astronomers I've met, his tolerance for pseudo-sceintific bullshit is arbitrarily close to zero.
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
I can just see it in couple of centuries from now (Score:2, Funny)
Of course, this could be an invaluable application of Asimov's famous chemical which reacted before it was placed in the water. That way the light switch could sense that you wanted the light turned on in 10 mins. and flip the switch ahead of time for you...
Re:I can just see it in couple of centuries from n (Score:2)
Time To Upgrade The Universe (Score:2)
Currently, with LightXP, things are pretty rough. But still, at least they're better than they were under LightME where even the people running OpenSound projects were faster.
Fortunately, Intel are coming out with new five-dimensional universe technology this fall, so we should be able to upgrade.
Must've installed SP3 (Score:5, Funny)
Supplemental End User License Agreement("Supplemental EULA")
* God reserves the right to increase, decrease, remove or otherwise alter 'constants', including, but not limited to, pi, e, the speed of light, and the mean time between bowel movements in any biological organism.
* Disclaimer of Warranties. To the maximum extent permitted by universal ("a priori") law, God and His suppliers provide you with existence (and any support services, if any) as-is. God and His suppliers hereby disclaim, with respect to any adjustment of constants, perceived or real, all warranties and conditions, whether expressed or implied, and may not be held responsible for any damages, including but not limited to collapsed dimensions, squared circles, invalidated proofs, isolated extraplanetary colonies, and ruined romances, originary in such adjustments. Thank you, have a nice life.
In Scientific American, in the late fifties or (Score:4, Insightful)
Rigorous analysis says falling, but not straight (Score:3, Informative)
As to the `straight line' bit, I'm not sure that there's enough data yet to draw one, and I would expect it to trend more like a decaying exponential anyway.
There is more extensive discussion here [ldolphin.org] with many graphs including a curve I'm more comfortable with than a straight line. For various reasons I suspect that their curve has too early a start, but it's a good shot, clearly illustrates the principles, and the discussion around it is informative.
Oh, and you don't need to pay or even register in order to look at it.
Again? (Score:5, Insightful)
These guys are not DIRECTLY measureing the speed of light. The are measuring a second item and then using that to infer the speed of light has changed. There could be a great deal more going on, so any claims are VERY premature.
Well... (Score:2)
Making the facts fit your theories? (Score:2, Interesting)
On the one hand they say, about breaking the Second Law of Thermodynamics,
"That's illegal. It would be like a cup of coffee sitting on your desk getting hotter," Lineweaver says.
But on the other hand, the article says
"The discovery means faster-than-light travel, which is prohibited by the law of relativity, may one day be possible. It also changes our understanding of the beginnings of the universe. "
So why is it that breaking the Second Law of Thermodynamics is so illegal but faster-than-light travel is not? Maybe the Second Law of Thermodynamics is wrong.
They did get one thing right, though:
"On the other hand, science is made out of iconoclasm. If old theories never got overthrown, we'd all be out of work. So it's always nice to have something that challenges the basic paradigm and this does so with a vengeance."
Unfortunately, overthrowing theories is not an everyday occurrence. And I don't quite understand how experimentation is better at proving things than good old mathematics.
Re:Making the facts fit your theories? (Score:3, Insightful)
Unfortunately, overthrowing theories is not an everyday occurrence. And I don't quite understand how experimentation is better at proving things than good old mathematics.
From the point of view of the physicist, "good old mathematics" is just a tool. All you can prove with mathematics is mathematical theorems. You can't prove anything about the physical universe without some input that comes in the form of either a theory (i.e. base assumptions) about the univesre, or prior experiments and observations you are extrapolating.
When it comes to knowing something about the universe, experiment and observation are the only way to prove that youre theory is right. Given some observations and a theory you believe, you can use good old mathematics to "prove" other things, but if you perform an experiment that contradicts it, and you make sure the experiment is right (i.e. no errors, no systematic effects you haven't accounted for), then the "good old mathematics" is out the window. Well, not really. Really, the mathematics themselves are fine; it's the theory you started with before cranking the mathematics that is out the window.
-Rob
Re:Making the facts fit your theories? (Score:2)
You're missing a key to the usage of mathematics in physics, and that is the magical invocation of a "premise". First we begin with a set of premises. Special Relativity depends on the premise that the speed of light is constant for all observers. Everything derived in Special Relativity, including the imaginary mass for objects going faster than light, rests on the premises of Special Relativity. It would be difficult to challenge the mathematics used to derive Special Relativity, that has been checked and rechecked. If the results of the theory are going to be challenged, it essentially requires a challenge of the premises, showing that there is some exception to the premise that from what we can see, seems to usually be right.
If the speed of light were shown to be different under different observations, this would mean that Special Relativity would need modification, and thus might open up a theoretical window permitting faster than light travel.
With that said, hold your breath and wait for a more rigorous measurement method done by independent groups to confirm or refute these results and their interpretation.
Speed of light not decreasing (Score:2)
Speed of light and time (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't this kinda the idea of relativity? How does it change the speed of light?
They overlooked something (Score:2)
The vacuum energy density of the early universe was much higher. I suspect that this is the cause of their results...
Time to dust off my old quantum mechanics texts...
Why is entropy untouchable? (Score:2, Interesting)
The second law of thermodynamics is just a statistical consequence of more fundamental laws of physics. I don't see why breaking it is automatically "illegal", while messing with the speed of light is fair game. You get temporal paradoxes if the speed of light is not the same everywhere[1], and that bothers me far more than cups of coffee getting hotter.
[1] General relativity rules out the concept of "everywhere at the same time", so if the speed of light changes, it can't change uniformly, because there's no uniform.
questions (Score:2)
The discovery means faster-than-light travel, which is prohibited by the law of relativity, may one day be possible.
Why would this mean that faster than light travel will (or might) be possible in the future? Why not today? From what they are saying, the speed of light may have slowed down ever since the Big Bang. For me, that means that as soon as the speed of light has decreased, it should be possible with faster than light speed, right?
If the speed of light was close to infinity, immediately after the Big Bang, [...]
How close to infinity can one be? When are you far from infinite speed and when are you close? "Almost infinite"? What do they mean here?
The photons [...] interact with the electrons in the gas clouds, charged particles that orbit the nuclei of the metal atoms. This leaves a fingerprint on the light as it arrives on Earth, called the fine structure constant, Murphy explains.
How can this be a constant? Is it a universal constant or a constant different for each object? Still, how can this fingerprint be constant?
Thanks.
Re:questions (Score:3, Informative)
The discovery means faster-than-light travel, which is prohibited by the law of relativity, may one day be possible.
I think this is an error on the reporter's part. I don't see how this is at all related to the paper, unless the reporter thinks: "Speed of light changing therefore Einstein was wrong... Einstein was wrong, therefore we can travel faster than light."
If the speed of light was close to infinity, immediately after the Big Bang,
Again, a problem with the reporter here. "Close to infinity" means nothing. What this probably means is that the further back you travel in time, the bigger the speed of light was, and as you approach the Big Bang, the speed of light goes off to infinity. A physicist would say that the speed of light diverges, rather than saying it gets close to infinity.
The photons [...] interact with the electrons in the gas clouds, charged particles that orbit the nuclei of the metal atoms. This leaves a fingerprint on the light as it arrives on Earth, called the fine structure constant, Murphy explains.
This is actually close to correct, though it's misleading. The fine structure constant equals 2(pi)e^2/hc (if I recall correctly) where e is the charge of the electron, h is the Planck constant, and c is the speed of light. The value of that constant is related to the electromagnetic force, which, in turn, affects the spacing of the lines in an element's spectrum. Conversely, by looking at the spacing of the lines in elements' spectra, you can figure out the fine structure constant.
Re:questions (Score:2)
I actually read the paper... (Score:5, Informative)
As other people have pointed out, the fine-structure-constant-is-changing work came out a year ago. The fine structure constant is a function of the speed of light, c, and the charge of the electron, e.
This particular article argues that e can't change much over time without causing inconsistencies, so they conclude that c must have been changing. No new data, no new support for the constant-is-changing theory. (And the original study was pretty damn flawed. This paper isn't bad.)
let me know (Score:2)
In 10 billion years, take my DNA, clone me, and reconstruct my mind from a computer backup, and when the process is complete, let me know your final answers that you've hopefully really figured out by then:
Actual Speed of light, and whether it varies.
Actual color of the universe.
Actual age of the universe.
Actual origin of the Earth's moon.
Whether we're descended from apes.
What's the nature of human consciousness.
Whether God actually exists or not.
Whether cholesterol is good or bad for you.
Whether global warming is caused by humans.
Whether gun control increases crime rates.
Whether fair-use causes loss of revenue.
Whether flouride causes or cures tooth decay.
Whether there is an actual speed limit for the x86 architecture that isn't eventually overcome by some new hack.
Whether security through obscurity really works.
Whether phenomenology is bunk.
(etc. ad nauseum)
Noooo, we're just moving faster. (Score:2)
Speed of Light Inconstant? no not really we are just moving faster and faster and light is
Haven't you noticed the days get shorter as you get older?
Gotta be wrong (Score:2)
Speed of light, or charge of electrons? (Score:2, Insightful)
"Mathematically, there were two possible reasons for this - either the electric charge of the electrons had increased, or the speed of light had fallen.
Using Stephen Hawking's formula for black hole thermodynamics, Davies, Davis and Lineweaver ruled out the electric charge possibility. By adapting Hawking's formula, they determined that an increase in electric charge would break the second law of thermodynamics, which says energy can only flow from hot spots to cold spots.
"That's illegal. It would be like a cup of coffee sitting on your desk getting hotter," Lineweaver says.
Observation -- but didn't they just prove that something "illegal" -- that the constant speed of light is changing -- is actually happening? Perhaps they should examine their logic on this point, because it seems to me it could be either. Or perhaps I should read the original article, where they probably address this issue.
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2, Insightful)
I suspect what he meant was: as c approches infinity , the current thinking (equations) get all screwy. Or something technical like that.
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
relavity just becomes plan old newtons laws.
Unfornately i don't think General relavity
would work at all as the time parts of the
tensors would tend to infinity but not
the spacial parts.
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
Well, I've never actually tried on Infinity, but I did read the price tag once.
Games people play... (Score:2)
But not XBill. )-:
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
If the very early Universe, when all the matter and energy could be contained in a microdot, was such an exotic place that the speed of light approached infinity -- then what happened to the speed of sound?
Okay, maybe it is a dumb sounding question. But it is one I have been curious about.
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:5, Insightful)
If the very early Universe, when all the matter and energy could be contained in a microdot, was such an exotic place that the speed of light approached infinity -- then what happened to the speed of sound?
Two points. First, the idea that the whole mass of the "universe" was contained in a microdot just at the Big Bang isn't really right (depending on what you mean by "universe"). The whole mass of today's observable universe, yes. But if you take the cosmological models at face value, the universe is probably infinite in extent, and always was (at least as far back as you can go without worrying about unknown theories of quantum gravity). It's more accurate to say that the density of the universe approached an arbitrarily large value; then you don't have to worry about a "smaller infinity" or similar.
Now, to what you actually asked: the speed of sound is not a fundamental quantity the way the speed of light is. "Speed of light" generally means "speed of light in a vacuum", which according to standard theory is a fundamental contant. (In material other than vacuum, light tends to travel at speeds less than the "speed of light".) Sound doesn't travel in a vacuum, but needs a medium to travel through. It's speed is entirely dependent on that medium. What we call the "Speed of sound" (when, say, timing distance to lightning strikes based on the delay before we hear the thunderclap) is the speed of sound in air at a typical density and pressure found on the surface of the Earth. The speed of sound in water is a lot higher. In rock, higher still.
In the very early universe, I would expect the speed of sound to be very, very high, but it will always be less than the speed of light in a vacuum (whatever that value happens to be at any given moment).
-Rob
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
Re:Makes no sense. (Score:2)
At least Barry Setterfield will be happy (Score:2)
But of course, when an Atheist thinks the matter through instead of simply reporting what he finds, anything which tends to support CDK is quickly binned. CDK offers a neat, simple solution to speed-of-light objections to a recent six-day creation of the world on one hand, and hard limits to the age of the universe on the other.
`Close to infinity' describes the mental oscillations needed to remain an Atheist in the face of a mounting stack of observations indicating the impossibility of your position.
Re:Blame CO2 (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I argued this with an astronomer... (Score:2)
The reason Astronomers don't want to accept this is becuase it would change the nature of every cosmological theory they have. They've invested large amounts of time in old theories, why should they learn new ones? It's all about ego for them.
Re:I argued this with an astronomer... (Score:5, Insightful)
The reason Astronomers don't want to accept this is becuase it would change the nature of every cosmological theory they have. They've invested large amounts of time in old theories, why should they learn new ones? It's all about ego for them.
While there is a possible grain of truth in what you say, it's probably vastly overstated.
It would be better to say that extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. To almost everybody, the claim that the fine structure constant has been changing is pretty extraordinary, and as such requires pretty solid proof before any measurable fraction of people who care about these things will casually accept it.
There is a danger in the iconoclastic argument. Yes, if a new truth is revolutionary and will require everybody to throw out everything they know, everybody will resist accepting that truth. It does not follow that therefore every revolutionary idea which meets widespread resistance must be a new truth.
-Rob
Carl Sagan put it well (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I argued this with an astronomer... (Score:2)
Re:I argued this with an astronomer... (Score:2)
But, as the man says, extrordinary claims require extrordinary evidence. It took two totally groups conducting large long term projects, and some anciliary data that could be explained by it, for the reality of the Cosmological Constant to be seriously considered and incorporated into many standard models. And there are still problems with that results, both observationally and theoretically (we're in the process of publishing a paper on it in fact). It'll take a similar amount of effort and length of time for John Webb et al. to do the same with varying fine structure constant. The VLT data is a step, and publication of the paper in Nature meqans they're being taken seriously. Things will get interesting, though, when the VLT data becomes public (a year after observation) and other teams can go over it with independent analyses and try to confirm or refute the result.
Re:Independent analysis (Score:3, Interesting)
It's that same group saying the same thing again.
Well, you are the same guy posting the same thing again [slashdot.org], although I notice you have a different username than last time. Please tell me you didn't honestly go back to the previous story, pick a random message that got modded up to +5, and repost it here... that would be the ultimate in karma whoring.
-a
It's not the same group. (Score:2)
Re:Independent analysis (Score:2)
Re:Independent analysis (Score:2)
Incorrect; you're putting a lot more into peer review than is actually there. In reviewing an article, the reviewers are expected to read it and note any flaws in the article. Those flaws may be methodological flaws in the experiments, futher experiments needed to eliminate alternate explanations for the data, and all sorts of trivial problems like bad grammar, missed references, etc. But there's a limit to how much a reviewer can do to find flaws in a paper. He can't actually see the experimental equipment and note any problems with it, for instance, which might produce unnoticed systematic errors. It's also very important to note that the recommendations of reviewers are just that; a journal editor can publish a paper in spite of bad reviews if he thinks that there's justification for doing so.
Reviewers are also not expected to try replicating experiments themselves. In fact, doing experiments based on what you've seen in papers under review is considered to be at least bad form and may be unethical depending on what exactly you do. In some competitive fields, people have been known to accuse reviewers of trying to copy their experiments while stalling the original paper to get publication priority, and this is viewed as seriously unethical.
Please don't do this... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:*brr* (Score:2)