Good work? Man, I hardly understand what I wrote down myself!!
To revive an old topic...
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Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.
There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -Hemingway -
isn't time measured acording to the sun... a year, a day, an hour, etc... so there are diferent solar systems in our galaxy. they all should have theyre own time frame acording to their sun.. so if we went there with our timeframe and theirs was behind/ ahead , did we just travel in time?Comment
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^^ thats majorly obscure..... Time is constant i.e. 1 second = 1 second so the amount of time that those planetary systems take for their own revolutionary movements is just different....doesnt mean just cause they are moving at different speeds makes up travel throuhg a time dimension
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Jib says:
he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shittingOriginally posted by ace_dlGuys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for meComment
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No, in that case a day could have more hours ore less, depending if the planet you're standing on completes it's orbit faster or slower.Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.
There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -HemingwayComment
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Originally posted by EncryptionTime is constant i.e. 1 second = 1 second
-Psynce-Comment
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second (s): In the International System of Units (SI), the time interval equal to 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the cesium-133 atom.
This will always true whatever your inertial frame of reference. If time slowed down you wouldn't be able to tell as you always percieve time at the same rate.
Antimatter is only unstabe near matter as they annihilate and become energy. Things would work if all the matter was exchanged for antimatter.
And if you were moving at the speed of light and turned on a torch, the light from the torch will be moving at the spped of light to all observers, in all frames of reference. That is the whole point of relativity.
Or something, you guys type too much and I get lostComment
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Re: To revive an old topic...
Originally posted by Encryptiondo you think we will see even the remotest possibility (in this lifetime) of
A) Finding out there is life elsewhere (other than earth)
B) CERN will finally announce they have discovered the prospects of successfully performing an "expriment" related to time travel
C) Space travel will actually become an affordable public affair
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B) I dont think we will be that lucky
C) Dont think so but Sky Car is a good possibilityComment
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Originally posted by YaoLet me add something to this...if our universe came into being 13.5 billion years ago, and came out of anti-matter, would it be possible that the big bang was the crossroads of a sandclock-figure (you know, the glass sand holding clocks in which the sand runs down throuth a 'waist' in the glass...damn, I can't remember the word in english!)?
So, maybe there was an opposite universe, and now time has crossed that point and our universe was ceated? Just a thought..
I know anti-matter has already been created, but it existed only nanoseconds each time. It's potential for creating energy bursts is phenomenal, if only we could capture it and make it stable to use it at the time we wish...I also believe there has to be anti-matter in order for matter to exist, just like you.
Originally posted by YaoVariables in the speed of time would not easily be detected if the area they covered would be big enough. And that's very easy in this universe. We can still see only a small part of it, who knows what the future will bring. And imagine: if time does go faster, wouldn't we be going with it it, and thus not noticing it? Funny idea...time goes faster, we live faster and everything seems normal. I really don't know...
Originally posted by YaoCan light travel slower than at light speed? If so...it can also travel faster. And maybe that could provide some anwers. Everybody's always talking about faster, never about slower. If you could slow down the speed of light...could you slow down time? I somehow believe they are connected, but that doesn't mean it is neccesarily so.
Originally posted by YaoIndividual: me, experiencing time. Sometimes it seems to be going really fast, sometimes something can take forever.
Originally posted by YaoBut my perception of time is not connected to that of the collective: time in an absolute sense knows no relativity, and always has the same pace. The clock doesn't go faster or slower when it seems so in my mind.
24 hrs is 24 hrs, even though it may feel like 1 hour to me.
get it?
-e-www.mjwebhosting.com
Jib says:
he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shittingOriginally posted by ace_dlGuys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for meComment
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Originally posted by demonAfroAntimatter is only unstabe near matter as they annihilate and become energy. Things would work if all the matter was exchanged for antimatter.
-e-www.mjwebhosting.com
Jib says:
he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shittingOriginally posted by ace_dlGuys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for meComment
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DemonAfro may be right, I remember reading something about that. And it also axplains the potential energy that comes out. Keep it safe form matter, no problem. Let it come into contact with matter = energy burst.
They're already thinking about anti-matter propelled rockets and stuff as a possibility to reach near light speed velocities. Maybe I can find something about it..Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.
There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -HemingwayComment
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^^ I know what you're refering to regarding the anti-matter propelled craft to hit near light speeds. But tons and tons of issues with it, the main being, how do you NOT blow up the craft in the process because essentially, its a nuclear reaction (detonation) so its adios muchachos if you dont know how to shield the craft from it.
-e-www.mjwebhosting.com
Jib says:
he isnt worth the water that splashes up into your asshole while you're shittingOriginally posted by ace_dlGuys and Gals, I have to hurry/leaving for short-term vacations.
I won't be back until next Tuesday, so if Get Carter is the correct answer, I would appreciate of someone else posts a new cap for meComment
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Heheheh, nicely put! But yes, that was the main issue...controlling nuclear bursts.Blowkick visual & graphic design - No Civilization. Now With Broadband.
There are but three true sports -- bullfighting, mountain climbing, and motor-racing. The rest are merely games. -HemingwayComment
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I think we are quite a way from antimatter propulsion at the moment, storage shouldn't be a problem, so long as you have some failsafe magnetic system or something then no worries. No problems with waste and efficiency since it is all annihilated and converted to energy and a few kilos will get you a long way. It is just that the total amount ever produced is miniscule and there is no efficient source for it, yet.Comment
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Originally posted by remohhave you guys read about the space elevator? ...supodsedly it could be done within 25 years
http://www.space.com/businesstechnol..._020327-1.html
Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke famously predicted that we'd see space elevators 50 years after people stopped laughing at the idea. Jerome Pearson has been thinking about space elevators since the early 1970s, and he's been watching the growing enthusiasm (and fading chuckles) with great interest. But he knows there are significant challenges in engineering and materials that still need to be overcome, so he's suggesting NASA build an elevator on the Moon first. And the agency is taking the idea seriously."They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security." -Benjamin FranklinComment
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