[MD] constant
Horse
horse at darkstar.uk.net
Fri Sep 3 01:28:12 PDT 2010
Hi Marsha
If you google Petr Horava and read about his hypothesis (it's about
gravity but this affects C and Time as you'll find) you'll see what's
going on. It's to do with uncoupling Time from Space-Time and Lorentz
Symmetry.
Also, try this link:
http://eclectic.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=637233
it's a bit cheesy but an interesting introduction.
There are also articles about this in both New Scientist and Scientific
American.
Horse
On 03/09/2010 07:09, MarshaV wrote:
> Horse,
>
> This sounds great! I love a sea-change!
>
>
> Marsha
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sep 2, 2010, at 3:56 PM, Horse wrote:
>
>> Hi Guys
>>
>> From what my friend was saying, this new ( and I believe it is very new ) idea about C has completely screwed the old ideas about relativity, special or otherwise and has, effectively, turned physics on it's head. It looks like it's as big a change from what we have thought until recently as the change from Newtonian physics to Quantum physics.
>> I've emailed him to see if he has any references that I can point you in the direction of!
>> I know about most of what's already been mentioned, slowing light down in different mediums, space stretching but remaining constant locally, gravitational variance etc. but, if I understood him correctly and he's normally pretty reliable on this sort of stuff, what he's talking about could mean that large chunks of physics is just about to be completely re-written!
>> I'll await his reply and let you know.
>>
>> Cheers
>>
>>
>> Horse
>>
>>
>> On 02/09/2010 19:58, Magnus Berg wrote:
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> On 2010-09-02 12:45, Horse wrote:
>>>> Hi Marsha
>>>> It probably depends on what you mean by a vacuum but I was having an
>>>> interesting conversation with a friend of mine yesterday about C.
>>>> Apparently, from what I gather he was talking about, C is no longer a
>>>> constant but is dependent upon the curvature of space - i.e. if there is
>>>> a gravitational difference in one area of the universe compared to
>>>> another area (E.g. a singularity) then there will be a difference in the
>>>> value of C!
>>> Actually, c will still be constant because even if space is stretched out, light will still travel so and so many km per second. It's just that a km gets longer if space is stretched out. So, *locally* (inside the stretched space), light travels at c, but from a point outside the stretched space, the light will have travelled faster than c.
>>>
>>> Magnus
>>>
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>> --
>>
>> "Without music to decorate it, time is just a bunch of boring production deadlines or dates by which bills must be paid."
>> — Frank Zappa
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