Rohan Sahuji
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What makes light travel so fast?
The discussion revolves around the factors that affect the speed of light, exploring its fundamental nature, the reasons behind its specific value, and the implications of light's speed in various contexts. Participants delve into theoretical, conceptual, and philosophical inquiries regarding the speed of light, its relationship with mass, and the nature of light itself.
Participants express a range of views on the nature and implications of the speed of light, with no consensus reached on the reasons for its specific value or the possibility of faster-than-light phenomena. The discussion remains unresolved with multiple competing perspectives present.
Some discussions hinge on definitions and assumptions regarding physical constants and the nature of massless particles. The relationship between light speed and other universal constants is also debated, highlighting the complexity of the topic.
RocketSci5KN said:A more interesting question is why light travels at the speed it does, and not faster or slower? Why does zero mass give us exactly 'c' in vacuum?
Dr Lots-o'watts said:Why don't you reverse that question? i.e.:
Q: Why did the Universe evolve such that all massive bodies around us have the velocities we measure?
A: Because the speed of light is finite.
Radrook said:Why does light travel at all and what keeps it going? I fail to see any propulsion system.
Dr Lots-o'watts said:Why don't you reverse that question? i.e.:
Q: Why did the Universe evolve such that all massive bodies around us have the velocities we measure?
A: Because the speed of light is finite.
The 'c' value is a fundamental property of our Universe. Maybe another universes with different values of c, h and G exist.RocketSci5KN said:My question is why light has the velocity we measure, 'c', and not a higher or lower value...
RocketSci5KN said:My question is why light has the velocity we measure, 'c', and not a higher or lower value...
Are you troll? By defenition [tex]\mu_0 = 4\pi \cdot 10^{-7} Gn\cdot m,\ \epsilon = c^2/\mu_0[/tex] and not universal constants.RocketSci5KN said:'c' can be expressed as c = 1/√ε0μ0, (two other universal constants)
RocketSci5KN said:I understand that 'c' is exactly 299,792,458 metres per second or can be expressed as c = 1/√ε0μ0, (two other universal constants), but I was hoping for a more satisfying answer other than 'its the way it is'. The proton mass was a constant, and just the way it is, until QED showed a way to calculate the value. Anything similar for 'calculating' what c should be for a massless particle yet without using circular logic?
bobalazs said:whats really interesting concept to me, is what i read in wikipedia under keyword faster-than-light.
according to this-...In other words, any travel that is faster-than-light will be seen as traveling backwards in time in some other...
I connected the imagery with something similar to the workings of the mind.
When we remember something, we often see images of the thought.
Since our brains work with electrics and light, is it possible that those thoughts are faster than light, or is this just incomprehensible nonsense?