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I am just curious to know if such technology ever existed, would we even be able to travel at the speed of light? If not, how would we ever visit other inhabitable planets that are 100's or 1000's of LY away?
Jerromy":1hl5xoe2 said:Keep in mind that even at close to the speed of light a trip to a planet 100 light years away would take more than 100 years and with the expansion of space as one would travel the destination would become further away. I don't have the patience right now to calculate a rough estimate of the Hubble constant of expansion but even a message sent to an alien race 100 light years away at a constant rate of c would take over 100 years to get to them.
SpeedFreek":2agx9tuv said:And at speeds close to c, we have time-dilation to consider. On a spaceship at 99% of the speed of light, time would be passing 7 times slower than it is back on Earth. From our point of view back home, a 100 ly journey would take a little over 100 years, but it would take only a little over 14 years for the occupants of the spaceship.
Solifugae":jxrhn8z7 said:That said, accelerating up to such speeds at a tolerable 1G will take a LONG time. Best have a generation ship/longer lifespans before this is attempted.
[/quote]SpeedFreek":2ib5r9td said:Here are some of the times you will age when journeying to a few well known space marks, arriving at low speed:
4.3 ly________nearest star__________3.6 years
27 ly_________Vega_______________6.6 years
30,000 ly_____Center of our galaxy___20 years
2,000,000 ly__Andromeda galaxy_____28 years
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/R ... ocket.html
Jerromy":3d40wkx9 said:Excellent link, Speedfreek. Crazily complex to factor in the resistance one would encounter travelling near c...
Solifugae":utqopm9k said:Jerromy":utqopm9k said:Excellent link, Speedfreek. Crazily complex to factor in the resistance one would encounter travelling near c...
That's the worst part about relativity. If I understand this correctly, if you were traveling at many .9 decimal places ahead of 99%c, and the outside time is faster in relation to you. Then as you take a year to cross the galaxy, besides from photons and cosmic rays, you will hit atoms every now and then. If you hit 1000 Hydrogen atoms per year (in reality it would be a lot more I'd think), but as your year passes, thousands do for the frames of the atoms, then don't you actually up the rate at which you are getting hit, even more than just caused by the speed increase itself? You are being hit by millions of atoms instead of 1000s. Never mind all those horrible subatomic particles.
Besides the energy needed to power it, the craft would need to be made out of some impossible material which passes through everything like a ghost, but that's a story for the unexplained.
Seems like we'll be stuck to taking 10s of thousands of years to colonize the local stars.
XairstrikeXD":3anflztk said:i dont understand. how is it possible for time to pass differently on earth. if the universe is expanding at a constant rate i can see how the trip would take a little less than 100 light if it is expanding towards you but i still dont understand how time flows differently?
XairstrikeXD":3rqnaibz said:i understand better now but wouldnt that make it to were every piece of matter has its own seperate time flow?