Crazy Tosser
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Seriosly, waves have different frequencies, and light is somewhere in the middle of the EM spectrum, then maybe the right or left side could travel faster than c
Phlogistonian said:All massless waves (and all massless particles) travel at the speed of light.
The phase velocity of a wave is a product of the frequency and wavelength:Crazy Tosser said:Seriosly, waves have different frequencies, and light is somewhere in the middle of the EM spectrum, then maybe the right or left side could travel faster than c
Danger said:That includes gravity, by the way.
I think that in one regard, you can say that not all waves travel at c in vacuum, but I'm not sure if my reasoning applies. It seems to me that the matter waves associated with a particle can't do so, since the particle itself can't.
_Mayday_ said:If by speed of light you mean around 3\times10^8 then I can't see how that is correct.
Phlogistonian said:The original question was about waves in a vacuum.
_Mayday_ said:That doesn't make what you said correct.
Crazy Tosser said:Well, how about traveling slower than the speed of light? If you are in a car that's goin at 100mph and you light a flashlight backwards, does the light travel at c-(100mph)?
bassplayer142 said:Has it been experimentally proven that gravity waves travel at the speed of light.
Crazy Tosser said:Well, how about traveling slower than the speed of light? If you are in a car that's goin at 100mph and you light a flashlight backwards, does the light travel at c-(100mph)?