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how timetravel could work
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<blockquote data-quote="Fringan" data-source="post: 10764" data-attributes="member: 110"><p><strong>how timetravel could work</strong></p><p></p><p><em></em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em>I have to go with iooqxpooi on that one. "Thought" is just a series of electrical impulses in your brain and I'm not sure how you would define the speed of it. Perhaps you could calculate the number of operations competed within a specific time or the speed of the impulses moving from one brain cell to another. It's not really interesting in this thought experiment anyway the way I see it.</em></p><p><em></em></p><p><em><!--QuoteBegin-timeisrelative</em>@Oct 2 2004, 06:56 AM</p><p><strong>#2 light travels away from earth at the speed of light, therefore light from say 1804 is 200 light years away from the earth of 1804. We want to go observe 1804. Thats it! Now you can obsere the past without disrupting any future events.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p></blockquote><p></p><p>You conclusion is ofcourse correct. If someone 200 lightyears from here pointed a huge super large telescope on earth they would see the light bounced of the stuff happening back at 1804 earth time. The problem isn't really seeing the light, the problem is getting from here to a place 200 light years away before the light from 200 years ago reaches there. If light travels from A to B in the speed of light you would never catch up with it. Since the upper speed limit is the speed of light, the best you could do would be to always be 200 light years behind it... Unless we found a way to travel faster than light of course. I don't think that discussion goes in this thread <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite38" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":)" /></p><p>[/QUOTE]</p>
[QUOTE="Fringan, post: 10764, member: 110"] [b]how timetravel could work[/b] [i] I have to go with iooqxpooi on that one. "Thought" is just a series of electrical impulses in your brain and I'm not sure how you would define the speed of it. Perhaps you could calculate the number of operations competed within a specific time or the speed of the impulses moving from one brain cell to another. It's not really interesting in this thought experiment anyway the way I see it. <!--QuoteBegin-timeisrelative[/i]@Oct 2 2004, 06:56 AM [b]#2 light travels away from earth at the speed of light, therefore light from say 1804 is 200 light years away from the earth of 1804. We want to go observe 1804. Thats it! Now you can obsere the past without disrupting any future events. [/b][/quote] You conclusion is ofcourse correct. If someone 200 lightyears from here pointed a huge super large telescope on earth they would see the light bounced of the stuff happening back at 1804 earth time. The problem isn't really seeing the light, the problem is getting from here to a place 200 light years away before the light from 200 years ago reaches there. If light travels from A to B in the speed of light you would never catch up with it. Since the upper speed limit is the speed of light, the best you could do would be to always be 200 light years behind it... Unless we found a way to travel faster than light of course. I don't think that discussion goes in this thread :) [/QUOTE]
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