Communication with a Million-Mile Pole: A Relativity Puzzle?

In summary, Bob and Alice are trying to find a way to communicate without the five-second delay of radio waves. They decide to use a million-mile-long pole to poke each other in Morse code. However, this method is not without delay as the signal will still have to travel down the pole at the speed of sound, which is slower than the speed of light. This is a well-known relativity-style puzzle that has a solution related to the fact that there are no rigid bodies in relativity. The speed of sound in a material is far less than the speed of light, making this method impractical for communication.
  • #1
PBRMEASAP
191
2
Here's a scenario I thought of a few days ago. I know there must be an easy explanation, but it hasn't come to me ...

Bob and Alice (no Eve this time) are separated from each other by about a million miles, and they would like to communicate with each other without the five second delay of radio waves. Fortunately, there lies between them a million-mile-long pole. After talking back and forth over radio, they agree to communicate by poking each other in Morse code with the long pole. Are they communicating with no five-second delay? Is this a problem?

I wouldn't be surprised if this is a well-known relativity-style "puzzle". If someone could explain what's wrong with the reasoning, I'd appreciate it.

thanks,
JP :biggrin:
 
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  • #2
The signal will travel down the bar at the speed of sound in the material, which will be far less than the speed of light.

It's a standard puzzle, the resolution is that there are no rigid bodies in relativity, a rigid body would have an infinite speed of sound, while the actual speed of sound is less than 'c'.
 
  • #3
That makes sense. Thank you!

JP
 

1. What is information transmission?

Information transmission is the process of sending and receiving data or messages from one location or device to another. It involves encoding the information into a format that can be transmitted, sending it through a medium (such as radio waves or cables), and decoding it at the receiving end.

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