Is it possible to exceed the speed of light?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the question of whether it is possible to exceed the speed of light, particularly in the context of the Lorentz transformations and the concept of rapidity. Participants explore the implications of these theories and the assumptions underlying them, engaging with both theoretical and conceptual aspects.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants reference the Lorentz transformations and the assertion that nothing can exceed the speed of light due to the way speeds are added, specifically mentioning the use of tanh-1(speed/c).
  • There is a suggestion that the restriction on exceeding the speed of light is fundamentally due to the constancy of c in all frames, rather than solely due to mass increase.
  • One participant notes that rapidities provide a clever representation of the situation, making certain conclusions more apparent.
  • Another participant questions whether the article implies that the explanation of "mass increases" is outdated, suggesting that rapidity may be a more fundamental concept.
  • Several participants agree that there are multiple ways to derive the Lorentz transformations, and that the constancy of the speed of light is not necessarily more fundamental than other invariants, such as the norm of a four-vector.
  • One participant emphasizes that the traditional formulation of relativity is based on two postulates: the laws of physics being the same in all inertial frames and the speed of light being constant across frames.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a mix of agreement and differing interpretations regarding the implications of rapidity and the foundational principles of relativity. There is no clear consensus on the most fundamental reason for the speed limit imposed by the speed of light, as various perspectives are presented.

Contextual Notes

Some participants highlight the importance of distinguishing between different derivations of the Lorentz transformations and the assumptions involved, indicating that the discussion may be limited by varying interpretations of these concepts.

Paul77
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Have been reading the "Impossibility of exceeding c" notes in the Lorentz Transformation
physics forum page:

www.physicsforums.com/library.php?do=view_item&itemid=19

Where it states:

"It is often said that nothing can be accelerated to the speed of light because its mass increases as it gets faster.

However, the fundamental reason is simply that "adding" speeds only adds tanh-1(speed/c), and so no amount of adding can make (speed/c) equal to (or greater than) 1."

Is this right - I understood that one of the posits of the Lorentz Transformations was that:

Both frames, the transforms are applied to, agree on the speed that a light beam is traveling at, and this is c, as this is required by special relativity.

This restriction was introduced after the results of the Michaelson Moorley interferometer experiment. So when the transforms are derived for frames observing a light beam we have already restricted the transforms to this!

Is'nt the use of rapidities just a re-representation to make it easier to use the transforms?
 
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What difference does it make? You can, if you will, take the simple addition of rapidities as your fundamental principle, don't you think?
 
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I agree with dauto, I am not sure what you are asking Paul77. In general there are a lot of different ways that you can write the same thing, and some ways make it easier to see something than others. He is just pointing out a clever way of writing things that makes the conclusion pretty obvious.
 
I wonder if the article is obliquely referencing the broad consensus that "mass increases" is a deprecated explanation for anything. And rapidity is certainly one of the first things you encounter from a differential geometry/general relativity preserve-the-norm-of-the-four-vector appoach. That at least arguably makes it more fundamental than more-or-less anything else.
 
Rapidities are a clever way of representing this but when I first came across this article I made the assumption
that c could not be exceeded because of how the maths works but then I watched a derivation of the lorentz transforms and realized that the 'fundemental' reason is that c is assumed to be the same in all frames - as a novice it was worth separating these two things out.
 
Paul77 said:
Rapidities are a clever way of representing this but when I first came across this article I made the assumption
that c could not be exceeded because of how the maths works but then I watched a derivation of the lorentz transforms and realized that the 'fundemental' reason is that c is assumed to be the same in all frames - as a novice it was worth separating these two things out.

There is more than one way to derive the Lorentz transformations. It may be derived from the requirement that the norm of a four vector is an invariant of the transformations. From that point of view, the constancy of the speed of light is not any more fundamental than the fact that the length of an object doesn't change when you look at if from a different point of view.
 
Paul77 said:
the 'fundemental' reason is that c is assumed to be the same in all frames
That is true. In the traditional formulation, all relativistic effects are based on two postulates, or assumptions:
1) the laws of physics are the same in all inertial frames
2) the speed, c, is the same in all frames

From those assumptions you get the Lorentz transforms and from the Lorentz transforms you get rapidity and rapidity shows that c is the speed limit in an obvious way.

We could simply answer every question with the two postulates, but then the conversation would be boring :smile:
 

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