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alexbib
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out of curiosity, who thinks we'll ever be able to travel faster than light (either directly or through higher dimensional shortcuts) ?
I'd say it would be impossible to stuff my size 8 foot into a size 5 shoe (without modifying one of them).Smurf said:Nothing is Impossible.
tribdog said:or tried to explain what's so interesting about a Physics Forum to an idiot girlfriend
Chronos said:'Whoever said 'nothings impossible' never tried to nail jell-o to a tree'
Lisa Bryant
Not if your foot were traveing at ... Oh wait, did you need to wear that shoe for a long period of time?Evo said:I'd say it would be impossible to stuff my size 8 foot into a size 5 shoe (without modifying one of them).
Chronos said:'Whoever said 'nothings impossible' never tried to nail jell-o to a tree'
Lisa Bryant
You can just wait 150 yrs it will will fit in an envelope. You are not actually modifying you foot by that is it?Evo said:I'd say it would be impossible to stuff my size 8 foot into a size 5 shoe (without modifying one of them).
No, according to Einstein's theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum, which is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second.
Travelling faster than light would require an infinite amount of energy, which is not possible according to the laws of physics. Additionally, as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass increases infinitely, making it impossible to accelerate to the speed of light.
The concept of travelling faster than light in a different dimension is purely theoretical and has not been proven. In many theories, the speed of light is considered to be the maximum speed in any dimension.
Wormholes, also known as Einstein-Rosen bridges, are hypothetical tunnels through space-time that could potentially allow for faster-than-light travel. However, their existence has not been confirmed and the technology to create and navigate them does not currently exist.
No, all known particles, including neutrinos, which were once thought to travel faster than light, are bound by the speed limit of light. Any faster-than-light travel would require a fundamental change in our understanding of physics.