What Did Einstein Mean by "Everything Travels at the Speed of Light"?

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In summary, according to Greene, Einstein once said that EVERYTHING in the universe is traveling at the speed of light. This idea is supported by the fact that observers have a 4-velocity with magnitude c and light has a 4-velocity with magnitude zero.
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RAD4921
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In Brian Greene’s book, “The Elegant Universe” Greene says (but not quotes) that Einstein once said that EVERYTHING in the universe is traveling at the speed of light. Greene didn’t elaborate on this and I have yet to find anything else on this supposed statement of Einstein’s. Can anyone fill me in on how Einstein viewed that ‘everything’ in the universe is traveling at the speed of light?

In case you are reading this and, like me, are ignorant as to what Einstein meant please don’t give any theories of your own or just plain BS. I want to hear from people who know what this is really about. Thanks
 
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He menat that the magnitude of the 4-vector velocity for any object is always c.
 
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Jcsd

You seem to know what you are talking about because at that point in the book Greene was talking about vectors and this lost me. It has been a while since I read the book and I understood most of the concepts he was trying to project. I remember him trying to use compass headings as a way to explain this.

I am ignorant in even simple geometry. In a nutshell, is everything in the universe truly moving at c or is this just a mathematical abstraction? Your answer will influence my next reply because if I have to take a JC college course in basic geometry I will. I really want to understand this and I greatly appreciate everyones help. Bob
 
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JS: I appreciate your reply. I read up on vectors and the concepts seem rather simple. If need be I will at least understand this mathematically but I still want to conceptulize that everything in the universe is traveling at the speed of light. Question as opposed to what is the frame of reference or is it in directions adjacent to each other? Your answer looks good on paper but still cannot visualize this. Can anyone help?
 
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RAD4921 said:
Can anyone fill me in on how Einstein viewed that ‘everything’ in the universe is traveling at the speed of light?

Greene elaborates on this considerably in another of his books, "Fabric of the Cosmos: Space, Time, and the Texture of Reality". Basically, he means that every object is moving through spaceTIME at the speed of light. Since space and time are unified under the theory of relativity, movement through one affects movement through the other. In the special theory of relativity, you can calculate that from that from any observer's perspective (since the speed of light is constant) that time is standing still for the photons of light. It's traveling through space at a rate of 299,792,458 m/s, and it's traveling through time at a rate of 0 m/s. The theory predicts that your velocity through space AND time together is always the same, so it logically follows that from my perspective, an object at rest to me is traveling through space at 0 m/s and is traveling through time at 299,792,458 m/s. As you increase your spatial velocity relative to me (since only relative velocities matter), then I would obseve your velocity through time to decrease, in order for me to observe your total velocity as being c. This is the basis of relative time, and is another way of explaining why as you increase your speed, an outside observer sees time appear to slow down for you. That's what Greene meant. You can divert your velocity through time, relative to another observer, by increasing your spatial velocity, relative to that observer, but your net velocity is always c, never faster, never slower.

Hope that helps!
 
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We should be careful here.

Observers (particles with non-zero mass) have a [unit] 4-velocity with magnitude c [defined by the square-root of (c^2-times-the-squared-temporal-part minus the squared-spatial-part)].

However, their 3-velocities in any reference frame [defined by the ratio of the spatial part and temporal part] is always less than c.

Light (particles with zero mass) have a 4-velocity with magnitude zero
[defined by the square-root of the sum of the c^2-times-the-squared-temporal-part minus the squared-spatial-part].

However, their 3-velocities in any reference frame [defined by the ratio of the spatial part and temporal part] is always c.
 
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Its a very useful concept that has been advanced by a number of authors - Hawking, Green, Epstein and others. In fact, it obviates the need for Einstein's isotropic light hypothesis since one can directly obtain the Lorentz transformations for the spacetime intervals directly from this idea. Every isotropic light frame has a velocity c along the time axis - and when an object moves with respect to that frame, the composite velocity is still c, but one component of the interval is composed of a (vt)^2 term. Epstein makes the following observation: "The reason you cannot go faster than the speed of light is that you can't go slower - everything travels at c... clocks moving through space are perceived to run slower ... because a clock properly runs through time, not through space...if you compel it to run through space, it is able to due so only be diverting (his words) some of the speed ..."
 
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Thanks

Lastone I want to thank you for referring me to other Greene Books. I will check them out. I checked out a math book yesterday and and had to look up vectors (its been a while since school). With the help of your replies, I am starting to get an idea of what this is all about. I know what time distortion is and I am beginning to see that this part of relativity ties in very closely with time distortion. Thank guys!
 
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Light (particles with zero mass) have a 4-velocity with magnitude zero
[defined by the square-root of the sum of the c^2-times-the-squared-temporal-part minus the squared-spatial-part].

That's not quite right; 4-velocity is simply ill-defined for light. Recall that 4-velocity is the derivative of 4-position with respect to proper time; since proper time is zero along any lightlike path, the derivative does not exist.

If you observe an object approaching the speed of light, you will see the components of 4-velocity diverge towards infinity.
 
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Hurkyl said:
That's not quite right; 4-velocity is simply ill-defined for light. Recall that 4-velocity is the derivative of 4-position with respect to proper time; since proper time is zero along any lightlike path, the derivative does not exist.

If you observe an object approaching the speed of light, you will see the components of 4-velocity diverge towards infinity.

Thanks.
I should have said that "a light ray has a tangent vector which is null (i.e., has zero norm)". Being null, that vector can't be normalized into a unit-vector. (4-velocities are the unit-timelike tangent 4-vectors of massive particles.)
 

FAQ: What Did Einstein Mean by "Everything Travels at the Speed of Light"?

What did Einstein mean by "Everything travels at the speed of light"?

Einstein's theory of relativity states that the speed of light in a vacuum is the same for all observers, regardless of their relative motion. This means that even if an object is moving at a different speed, the speed of light remains constant. Therefore, everything, including light, travels at the speed of light.

Is everything in the universe actually moving at the speed of light?

In a sense, yes. According to Einstein's theory, even objects that appear to be stationary are still moving through space-time at the speed of light. This is because time and space are interconnected, and any movement in space also affects the passage of time.

How does this concept relate to the theory of relativity?

The idea that everything travels at the speed of light is a fundamental principle of the theory of relativity. It helps to explain how the laws of physics are the same for all observers, regardless of their relative motion, and how time and space are intertwined.

Does this mean that nothing can travel faster than the speed of light?

According to Einstein's theory, yes. The speed of light is the maximum speed at which anything can travel in the universe. This has been supported by numerous experiments and observations, and is a key component of our understanding of the laws of physics.

Can we ever reach the speed of light?

In theory, no. As an object's speed increases, its mass also increases, making it more difficult to accelerate further. At the speed of light, an object's mass would be infinite, meaning it would require an infinite amount of energy to reach that speed. However, it is possible for particles such as photons to travel at the speed of light, as they have no mass.

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