You need a physics forum that allows speculations. A philosophy site isn't really going to have a lot of members that know their physics.I tried to run this by a physics forum but they aren't keen on hypotheticals and thought experiments. — TiredThinker
Same speed limit as one that carries its fuel with it, except a lot more efficiently.How close to light speed could this ship go? — TiredThinker
Happens to be that EM waves are light, but it doesn't necessarily follow from the evidence. Gravitational waves also travel locally at c, and yet they're not light.they found out that, this is where it gets interesting, c = the speed of electromagnetic waves. This led to the obvious conclusion that light was an electromagnetic wave! — Agent Smith
How close to light speed could this ship go? — TiredThinker
Or perhaps it would eventually convert into energy ceasing to be the ship in order to travel at light speed? — TiredThinker
How do we know that light can only travel at exactly 1 speed? — TiredThinker
It doesn't. It depends on the medium through which it travels. It can be made to creep very slowly indeed in the laboratory. — jgill
Happens to be that EM waves are light, but it doesn't necessarily follow from the evidence. Gravitational waves also travel locally at c, and yet they're not light.
How did Maxwell measure this speed? It's not like he could sync clocks on different continents. Sagnac effect says that in the frame of Earth's surface, westbound light is faster than eastbound light, such that light sent one way through a fiber optic cable around the world will arrive back at the source at a different time than light sent the other way. This doesn't violate relativity since a non-inertial frame was used to take the measurements. — noAxioms
c is a scalar, the so called speed of light, which, given the postulates of relativity, is constant regardless of inertial frame.Please tell me why it's speed of light and not velocity of light — Agent Smith
We don't know it. Theory of relativity lists that merely as an assumption (2nd premise of SR). All we know empirically is that the round trip speed of light will be measured to be c in any inertial frame. That doesn't mean it necessarily doesn't have a different speed in +x direction than it does in -x direction. Einstein's theory assumes this, but other theories don't. I know of no theory that doesn't that derived its own generalization of the theory.Ok. How do we know that light can only travel at exactly 1 speed? — TiredThinker
Light moves at the same speed regardless of energy. Energy of light is frame dependent just like its direction. Lower energy light will be of lower frequency and longer wavelength.Basically only light's lowest energy state represented here?
Strange thing that your physicists did not welcome your idea about "magical portals"! :grin:received its fuel through a magical portal — TiredThinker
I accepted it because the magic wasn't essential to the point asked by the OP.Strange thing that your physicists did not welcome your idea about "magical portals"! — Alkis Piskas
I never said that vectors could not be used to describe EM waves.Astronomical radio telescopes have to be pointed at a source which means radio waves have direction (vector, not scalar) and light belonging to the same family as radio waves should be vector too? — Agent Smith
Not in flat space, but space isn't flat, and JWST has some very nice pictures that very much show it seeing around corners.We can't see around corners.
I tried to run this by a physics forum but they aren't keen on hypotheticals and thought experiments.
What if we had a space ship that received its fuel through a magical portal that goes to a large tank on earth that is stationary. The portal on the ship moves with the ship and continues to fuel the engines. Neither the fuel or the tank on earth count as part of the ships' mass. Lets even say the fuel mass is many times greater than the ship it propels as it goes faster and faster. How close to light speed could this ship go? Or perhaps it would eventually convert into energy ceasing to be the ship in order to travel at light speed? — TiredThinker
Well, it isn't just the word "magic". It's its combination with the word "portal" that creates the whole effect. I don't know, maybe @TiredThinker should have presented the subject rather in a Sci-fi Convention. I believe it would have received a warm welcome! :grin:I accepted it because the magic wasn't essential to the point asked by the OP. — noAxioms
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