lol @ sig
In physics we learned about another experiment
The Hafele-Keating Experiment
Basically they took 4 atomic clocks on plane rides, and found that they would gain/lose time as the flight went on.
The Hafele-Keating Experiment
Basically they took 4 atomic clocks on plane rides, and found that they would gain/lose time as the flight went on.
Cocaine rat FTW!
Time doesn't slow down, your interpretation of it does. It's just a state of mind.
Yeah, my English isn't perfect, forgive me for not speaking my third language well enough.haffeysucks wrote:
PBAsydney wrote:
time [slows] down if you are travelling fast enough
I thought that it was like this for FFPBAsydney wrote:
Didn't Einstein theorize that time slowed down if you are travelling fast enough? (Near light-speed fast)
Interesting vid though.
If you could some how Catch up to a light particle, time would appear to go fast
Because someone said that the SPEED OF LIGHT is static, if your moving a speed of y, and speed of light is c, then the speed of light (from your perception) would be c+y
Therefore, your perception of light is just like it is now, things dont slow down or speed up from your point of view...
However to an observer you are going close to or faster than their perception of light
making you "travel through time" in a sense, basically on a recap, light and things from your POV stay the same, while an observer sees you go REALLY FAST, two different perceptions of time - - - time travel
I think.
Kinda, yeah.GodFather wrote:
I thought that it was like this for FFPBAsydney wrote:
Didn't Einstein theorize that time slowed down if you are travelling fast enough? (Near light-speed fast)
Interesting vid though.
If you could some how Catch up to a light particle, time would appear to go fast
Because someone said that the SPEED OF LIGHT is static, if your moving a speed of y, and speed of light is c, then the speed of light (from your perception) would be c+y
Therefore, your perception of light is just like it is now, things dont slow down or speed up from your point of view...
However to an observer you are going close to or faster than their perception of light
making you "travel through time" in a sense, basically on a recap, light and things from your POV stay the same, while an observer sees you go REALLY FAST, two different perceptions of time - - - time travel
I think.