Can information travel faster than light?

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of information traveling faster than the speed of light. It is mentioned that while it may seem instantaneous, information actually travels at the speed of light through photons. The idea that microwaves are 100% blocked by the door of a microwave, even though it is partially open, is also brought up as an example. It is ultimately concluded that according to the equations of relativity, it is impossible for anything to travel faster than the speed of light.
  • #1
Mafarazzo
2
0
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.
 
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  • #2
The rate of information about the pull or lack of it usually propagtes at the speed of sound in the medium involved. Think of the stick as being a very dense slinky.

I seem to recall some sort of instant "communication" between pairs of electrons, such that some obverved effect on one of the electrons causes an immediate repsonse by the other (maybe it was the spin)? This couldn't be used to transfer information, but it was a "faster than light speed" response between two particles, although I don't remember the details. Perhaps someone could respond with a correct explanation?
 
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  • #3
And you must remember that at small distances the speed of sound might as well be the speed of light when compared to the sensitivity of human perception. I.e. synaptic operations peak around 120 m/s.
 
  • #4
absolute rigidity

Mafarazzo said:
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.
I have seen the same problem in the context of absolute rigidity of the stick a concept not in accordance with SR
 
  • #5
Hello Mafarazzo.

Quote:-

----Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.----

I think this may not be true but my knowledge is insufficient to say for certain. It needs some consideration.

Matheinste
 
  • #6
Mafarazzo said:
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.

It only seems to be instant to human perception. If you think of a spring instead of a stick it's quite easy to see the information about the 'release' travels at the speed of a wave in the spring. With a stick the information travels at approximately the speed of sound (sound wave) in the stick. It's far, far slower than c.
 
  • #7
Mafarazzo said:
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.

Consider what a stick is made of. Several atoms pushing and pulling against each other. When person B let's go, A does NOT observe it instantly. Rather, he observes it in the time it takes for the "information" to travel across all of the atoms. While this might seem instantaneous, it actually happens at the speed of light, via photons.

Of course, one could rewrite the problem to be with say, an electron, and to that I don't have an actual answer. It might be, simply, that motion travels through a completely rigid body at the speed of light.
 
  • #8
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so if light moving through spacetime can be compared to a sound wave moving through matter then maybe c is not the speed at which information itself moves.

have you ever thought about why it is that microwaves are 100% blocked by the door of the microwave even though it is 90% open (you can see through it)?
 
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  • #9
granpa said:
so if light moving through spacetime can be compared to a sound wave moving through matter then maybe c is not the speed at which information itself moves.
No (to both parts!). I have no idea what would lead you to think such a thing.
have you ever thought about why it is that microwaves are 100% blocked by the door of the microwave even though it is 90% open (you can see through it)?
I'm not sure why you would think that either. The wavelength of "light" used by a microwave oven is on the order of 12 cm. The effect of the screen across the door is quite similar to trying to kick a soccer ball through a chain link fence.
 
  • #10
Mafarazzo said:
Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it. I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.

Quote from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light#Faster-than-light_observations_and_experiments:
"It is generally considered that it is impossible for any information or matter to travel faster than c. The equations of relativity show that, for an object traveling faster than c, some physical quantities would be not represented by real numbers."

Flexo said:
It might be, simply, that motion travels through a completely rigid body at the speed of light.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there is such a thing as a completely rigid object. The wave would propagate through the stick at the speed of sound of that medium, not at c.

Jeff Reid said:
I seem to recall some sort of instant "communication" between pairs of electrons, such that some obverved effect on one of the electrons causes an immediate repsonse by the other (maybe it was the spin)? This couldn't be used to transfer information, but it was a "faster than light speed" response between two particles, although I don't remember the details.

I think this is quantum entanglement. See this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement
 
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  • #11
Jeff Reid said:
I seem to recall some sort of instant "communication" between pairs of electrons, such that some obverved effect on one of the electrons causes an immediate repsonse by the other (maybe it was the spin)? This couldn't be used to transfer information, but it was a "faster than light speed" response between two particles, although I don't remember the details. Perhaps someone could respond with a correct explanation?

If two entangled particles will change when the other does and we have the instruments to detect this change then it is information. Think of the particles two states as on and off 1 and 0. there is no reason that information could not be transferred like this.. Also if we detect the change then that is information in itself because we now know the state of its entangled partner has been changed
 
  • #12
neh4pres said:
If two entangled particles will change when the other does and we have the instruments to detect this change then it is information. Think of the particles two states as on and off 1 and 0. there is no reason that information could not be transferred like this.. Also if we detect the change then that is information in itself because we now know the state of its entangled partner has been changed

GRB, are fundamental particles not completely rigid? If they aren't, how so?

Neh, entanglement cannot be used to transfer information. Say Alice and Bob share a pair of entangled photons. If Alice makes a measurement on her photon, that means that Bob will always find a certain thing when he measures his. However, he cannot tell without communication with Alice whether or not she did anything.
 
  • #13
Is this not similar to:

- Telling Alice and Bob that they will each receive a sealed box, with one containing a blue ball and one containing a red ball. After walking 1000 paces away from each other, they are allowed to open their box and determine their ball's colour. Alice opens her box and sees that it's red, and so Bob's ball must be blue. That's not instantaneous information transfer over 2000 paces worth of space, but plain old mutual exclusivity. The owner's ball colour was determined at the event of entanglement, not at the event where the box was opened. My assumption here lies in the fact that quantum states cannot be shared due to the Pauli exclusion principle, hence mutual exclusivity by default.

My understanding of quantum mechanics is pretty primitive, so I must repeat that this is a question, not a statement.
 
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  • #14
No, it's definitely not like that shalyaka. If we assume that it is, we can use that assumption to prove mathematical relationships called Bell inequalities. Experiments have been performed to test them, and the results are consistent with quantum mechanics and contradict the Bell inequalities.
 
  • #15
Flexo said:
GRB, are fundamental particles not completely rigid? If they aren't, how so?
There are no "completely rigid" objects of non-zero size in SR. It's fairly easy to see this by trying to figure out how such an object would look in two different inertial frames before and after a boost.

A classical point particle would be rigid (because its size is exactly zero in every frame), but the interactions between them can still only propagate at maximum speed c.
 
  • #16
Fredrik said:
There are no "completely rigid" objects of non-zero size in SR. It's fairly easy to see this by trying to figure out how such an object would look in two different inertial frames before and after a boost.

A classical point particle would be rigid (because its size is exactly zero in every frame), but the interactions between them can still only propagate at maximum speed c.

So particles being rigid is only permissible in SR because they have zero size?
 
  • #17
I'd rather say that the concept of "rigid" doesn't make sense for objects of zero size.

Also, note that I was talking about classical point particles. The concept of "size" is tricky when we're talking about quantum particles. The closest thing to a "size" they can have is the width of a certain function, and the shape of that function can't be rigid. (The argument is the same as for any object).
 
  • #18
Nothing Moves Faster than "C"

Jeff Reid said:
I seem to recall some sort of instant "communication" between pairs of electrons, such that some observed effect on one of the electrons causes an immediate repsonse by the other (maybe it was the spin)? This couldn't be used to transfer information, but it was a "faster than light speed" response between two particles, although I don't remember the details. Perhaps someone could respond with a correct explanation?


Wrong this transfer of information was at the speed of light, not faster than it. It happens whens photons (and possibly electrons) are ejected from the same atom and are sent across (in this case it was done at 6.2 miles apart) and yet they feel each other's energy states.

However this wasn't done faster than "c". Believe, it would have made tremendous headlines had it did.
 
  • #19
Although information can not be trasmitted faster then the speed of light I believe it can be recived from distances further then 300,000,000 m in less then 1 second. (You can not break the laws of physics, but you can work around them.)
 
  • #20
Mafarazzo said:
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.
I recall a paper by Einstein on this subject. The idea is that there are no rigid bodies in existence. In your description above it appears that you're thinking of the rod as a rigid body.

Regarding information traveling faster than light (ftl). There have been some articles in the physics literature about superluminal signals which is accomplished through the use of entagled states (a quantum phenomena). I can find some references to these articles if you'd like?

Pete
 
  • #21
Quantum Phenomena

Regarding Quantum Phenomena - I read that a physicist named John Bell came up with experimental ideas back in the 1960's trying to test a photon phenomena knows as the " Phenomena of Non-Locality". "Non-locality" basically says that some observed effect on one of the photons causes an immediate response by the other (no matter how far the photons are separated away from each other).

In the early 1980's, scientists were able to create experiments testing this phenomena. Scientists were able to induce an atom to emit two photons simultaneously in opposite directions. The common origin of these photons meant that, according to quantum physics equations, the photons were correlated with one another and remained in essence "entangled" - even when they were far apart.

The results of the experiments showed that measuring the properties of one of the photons affected the measuring of the other photon across the lab room instantaneously. This was also done with an experiment where two photons were separated 6.2 miles apart with the same result.

The two photons acted like one particle even though there were more than six miles apart.
 
  • #22
Not Faster Than Speed of Light

NYSportsguy said:
In the early 1980's, scientists were able to create experiments testing this phenomena. Scientists were able to induce an atom to emit two photons simultaneously in opposite directions. The common origin of these photons meant that, according to quantum physics equations, the photons were correlated with one another and remained in essence "entangled" - even when they were far apart.

The results of the experiments showed that measuring the properties of one of the photons affected the measuring of the other photon across the lab room instantaneously. This was also done with an experiment where two photons were separated 6.2 miles apart with the same result.

The two photons acted like one particle even though there were more than six miles apart.


However realize, even though some influences link the two photons together instantaneously, no useful information travels between them faster than the speed of light. A physicist by the name of Charles Bennett pointed out in a research paper of his in 1993, that what was happening was a secret message was being sent in principle, from photon A to photon B and vice-versa. This message was sent in two parts, none of which made sense on its own, but one which involves quantum entanglement. The whole message traveled no faster than the speed of light because both halves were needed, yet the quantum entanglement could not be separated without changing the message.
 
  • #23
NYSportsguy said:
However realize, even though some influences link the two photons together instantaneously, no useful information travels between them faster than the speed of light.
That is not neccesarily true. See the articles I listed in the following post
https://www.physicsforums.com/showpost.php?p=1770588&postcount=16

Pete
 
  • #24
it does seem instentanious. but all of your brains sensors relay info to you by electic signals. electricity is slower then light. there for, you would not sense the stick breaking faster then it would take light to tell you this if your brain could directly prosses light rather then from light into your eyes into electrical signals or even slower sound into electric signals.
 
  • #25
Mafarazzo said:
Let's say there's a stick, and two persons are holding the extremities:

Person A ----------stick---------- Person B

Both are pulling the stick with equal forces. At a certain moment, Person B releases it and instantly Person A knows it becase he can now pull the stick to himself.

Why can't I say that information in this case traveled faster than light? It seems to me that there is no delay between Person B releasing and Person A being able to notice it.

I know this can't be true, but I fail to find the answer.
Thanks in advance.

Relativistically, no - information transmission is bound by the speed of light and meaningful superluminal signals and action-at-a-distance are prohibited by the postulates of the Albert Einstein. Quantum Mechanically, possibly - if the interaction on end B is entangled with a detector on end A, then probably, by the postulates of John S. Bell (note that this is just a slight statistical bias and not deliberate communication). However, because sticks interact and so are measured electromagnetically, whether by charge-force equalizations (vibration, rigidity, displacement) or directly by the transmission of light, they require light to communicate transitions. A signal (such as an electron) that interacts with and describes electromagnetic phenomena (the movement of the stick) needs light quanta to scatter and transfer momentum to it (or be absorbed by it) to accelerate, and this will not occur unless the light can catch up with and also push the signal. However there are still more loopholes...general relativity may permit wormholes which also allow instantaneous teleportation across vast distances (this would require a pretty rigid stick :tongue:)...

granpa said:
have you ever thought about why it is that microwaves are 100% blocked by the door of the microwave even though it is 90% open (you can see through it)?

It is a Faraday cage: conduction electrons absorb incident radiation like a polarizer grating.

Flexo said:
Say Alice and Bob share a pair of entangled photons. If Alice makes a measurement on her photon, that means that Bob will always find a certain thing when he measures his. However, he cannot tell without communication with Alice whether or not she did anything.

:yuck:
 
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  • #26
GRB 080319B said:
Quote from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_of_light#Faster-than-light_observations_and_experiments:
"It is generally considered that it is impossible for any information or matter to travel faster than c. The equations of relativity show that, for an object traveling faster than c, some physical quantities would be not represented by real numbers."



Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there is such a thing as a completely rigid object. The wave would propagate through the stick at the speed of sound of that medium, not at c.



I think this is quantum entanglement. See this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_entanglement


i think matter becomes rigid at absolute zero as there is no motion. (the matter behaves both as matter and as wave when approaching 0k), however absolute zero has yet to be achieved, but we can get to within a few billionths of a degree. but would this transfer the information instantly?

another way to picture information traveling is an evenly set of scales that is say 189,000miles wide. when removing the weight off one side there should be a pause of about half a second (the time it takes the information to travel up the arm to the centre) before any movement is seen. this should be the case if the information travels at the speed of light. if it travels at the speed of sound the scales should stayed balanced long after the weight is removed from 1 side.
 
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  • #27
Consider this : Let's say we have two identical boxes , in one we have a cat & in other we have a dog but we don't know which box houses the dog or cat .Both boxes are separated by a distance which is greater than the speed of light . So as soon as we open one box we get a cat & instantly the other box will have the dog in it . Information traveled faster than light but i think information already had traveled when the dog & cat were put in the boxes .
 
  • #28
The question is unably put. What need to be reviewed is that both the receptors(persons) have the information(stick) hence actually both are sharing it. so when one releases it, the information never get to travel. IT JUST BECOMES SINGLE-OWNERED.
 
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  • #29
mkbh_10 said:
Consider this : Let's say we have two identical boxes , in one we have a cat & in other we have a dog but we don't know which box houses the dog or cat .Both boxes are separated by a distance which is greater than the speed of light . So as soon as we open one box we get a cat & instantly the other box will have the dog in it . Information traveled faster than light but
False.
mkbh_10 said:
i think information already had traveled when the dog & cat were put in the boxes .
True.

No information has traveled faster than c.
 
  • #30
azzkika said:
i think matter becomes rigid at absolute zero as there is no motion. (the matter behaves both as matter and as wave when approaching 0k), however absolute zero has yet to be achieved, but we can get to within a few billionths of a degree. but would this transfer the information instantly?

I don't know what you mean, but information can't be transmitted at the speed of light.

[EDIT]This should read "information can't be transferred instantly.", not "information can't be transmitted at the speed of light."[/EDIT]

azzkika said:
another way to picture information traveling is an evenly set of scales that is say 189,000miles wide. when removing the weight off one side there should be a pause of about half a second (the time it takes the information to travel up the arm to the centre) before any movement is seen. this should be the case if the information travels at the speed of light.

Which, in this case, it doesn't.

azzkika said:
if it travels at the speed of sound the scales should stayed balanced long after the weight is removed from 1 side.

Yes, in this case, information travels at something like the speed of sound. Relativity forbids completely rigid bodies, and the speed of sound in a body is always less than c. If you poke one end of a rod, information about the poke travels down the rod as a compression wave, so someone at the other end of the rod won't know about the poke until the compression wave reaches that end.

mkbh_10 said:
Consider this : Let's say we have two identical boxes , in one we have a cat & in other we have a dog but we don't know which box houses the dog or cat .Both boxes are separated by a distance which is greater than the speed of light . So as soon as we open one box we get a cat & instantly the other box will have the dog in it . Information traveled faster than light but i think information already had traveled when the dog & cat were put in the boxes .

Here's what I think you're trying to say.

Two boxes are side-by-side. Put a cat in one of the boxes and a dog in the other. Separate the boxes by some distance. Two people, Ted and Bob, the boxes open the boxes simultaneously (in some inertial frame). If Ted finds a dog in his box, then he knows instantaneously that Bob found a cat in his box. Ted knows this before there is enough time for Bob to send a signal to Ted, if signals propagate more slowly than the speed of light.

But, in order to know Bob's result, Ted already had information before he opened the box. He knew that one box contained a cat and the other a dog. No information traveled faster than the speed of light.
 
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  • #31
George Jones said:
I don't know what you mean, but information can't be transmitted at the speed of light.
I beg to differ. If you look into a laser I can assure you that information is transferred at the speed of light.
 
  • #32
MeJennifer said:
I beg to differ. If you look into a laser I can assure you that information is transferred at the speed of light.

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:

I meant to echo what the poster had written; i.e., I meant to write "transferred instantly," but my fingers typed "transmitted at the speed of light."
 
  • #33
I figured that something like that was happening :)
 
  • #34
light is susceptible to gravity. is gravity constant, irrespective of distance??
if gravity increases the closer it's mass is, then as light approaches mass, it should in theory speed up, but i don't know enough about gravity to make this assertion.for light to travel at a constant speed it would need any influencing forces to be constant, so if gravity differs then light speed would differ also?? if gravity is variable and increases with nearness of mass then surely as light closes in on huge gravity it's speed increases beyond it's normal speed.
now as light is a medium of information if the above thought(nothing more - I'm no scientist and know little of physics) is correct, if light was used as a medium and sent to a black hole for example, as it nears the black hole the information would speed up faster than normal light speed. this is an amateuers assumption. so if this was the case information would be traveling faster than the speed of light where the information originated. however, if gravity is variable, then what is the true speed of light if it is subject to these variances??
 
  • #35
information can travel faster than light. but it is never useful information.
 

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