Submitted by Tuna_Sushi t3_108ydmq in news
JoeBethersonton50504 t1_j3v4y54 wrote
100 light years away.
So if we were on that planet and looking at earth with a super powerful telescope, we’d be looking at the roaring 20s. I think. Science is hard.
MrDangerMan t1_j3v7xcg wrote
And if we then got on a spaceship that travels at the speed of light and set out to go check out Earth, we wouldn’t show up until 200 years after the events witnessed through the telescope.
d0ctorzaius t1_j3vevis wrote
But when we arrive we wouldn't have significantly aged at all.
isthatmyex t1_j3welaz wrote
If you rode a spaceship a light speed for 100 years. Wouldn't you age 100 years?
E: If you were then to look back at earth. It would appear as if nothing had changed at all.
Arcanorum t1_j3wffr5 wrote
The faster you travel, the more time dilates. At the speed of light, time does not move at all.
From an outside observers perspective it would take 100 years. For anyone on the ship it would be instantaneous, if you assume no acceleration or deceleration period.
[deleted] t1_j3xnuvb wrote
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Optimal-Grass-8989 t1_j3x2s0d wrote
So… how would you pilot the ship or address any issues that come up, like repairs?
Arcanorum t1_j3x44eh wrote
In this scenario the ship is moving at the speed of light so it is not experiencing time, just like the people inside it.
It cannot breakdown while moving at lightspeed, because no time can pass to allow failures to occur.
But matter can't actually go the speed of light, only energy can, so this is all just a fun thought exercise.
RonBourbondi t1_j3xfz95 wrote
So at 90% of the speed of light how does one do repairs?
Arcanorum t1_j3xgw1b wrote
In theory, exactly the same as any other spaceship.
Anyone attempting repairs is operating in the same inertial reference as the ship, so from their perspective it's no different from repairing a ship at any other speed.
RonBourbondi t1_j3xh9ad wrote
But by the time they make the repair couldn't they have arrived?
Arcanorum t1_j3xhstn wrote
Yes. Depending on the strength of the time dilation, a repair may not be possible to complete before the journey is over.
But anyone capable of getting a ship near lightspeed would also have the physics and math knowledge necessary to calculate their level of time dilation, so they could make logical decisions regarding necessary repairs.
[deleted] t1_j3yq3b5 wrote
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Chronic_In_somnia t1_j3zm4rc wrote
The hard part comes when you want to stop lol
Pineapple--Depressed t1_j406org wrote
My grandpa used to always say, "it ain't the fall that kills you, it's that sudden stop at the end that gets you..." Imagine how long it would take to safely decelerate from near lightspeed.
[deleted] t1_j40x0i9 wrote
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Optimal-Grass-8989 t1_j3x78ph wrote
That’s a long to say you’re speculating 😂
Edit: yes, I’m specifically referring to your speculating on matter going the speed of light, and yes I’m still laughing.
Arcanorum t1_j3x8v2i wrote
Time dilation as you approach the speed of light is not speculation, it's fact. Time slows down heavily the closer you approach lightspeed and does not pass at all for anything that can actually reach it.
Any discussion of matter going the speed of light is speculation, because it is impossible in our current understanding of physics.
[deleted] t1_j3x6i3s wrote
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jschubart t1_j3xffn6 wrote
If you traveled at the speed of light, you would need to not have any mass. If you were to travel near the speed of light (e.g. 99.9% the speed of light), to you about 4.5 years would have passed. To everyone else, 100 years would have passed.
Here is a nice calculator:
d0ctorzaius t1_j3wf17p wrote
At or near light speed, time dilation becomes a factor, so it would take 100 years to an observer but to the people in the ship, it would seem like a lot less time.
isthatmyex t1_j3wfm1f wrote
But if you were on the ship, it would still be 100 years is my point.
SomeInternetRando t1_j3winvj wrote
No, to you on the ship, you'd just teleport instantly. Or at slightly below the speed of light, it'd still be a lot quicker than 100 years.
>it would still be 100 years is my point
To an observer on earth. But not to you on the ship. If you had a telescope on a ship travelling towards earth near the speed of light, it may feel like a day to you (depending on speed), and if you looked at Earth through the telescope, it would look like Earth was going in fast-forward so fast that 100 years only takes one day.
dagbiker t1_j3wvzng wrote
No, from your point of view it would be instant.
[deleted] t1_j3x620w wrote
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[deleted] t1_j3vcay5 wrote
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[deleted] t1_j3vlnm0 wrote
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damnthistrafficjam t1_j3vd2ji wrote
Let’s send some 6 year olds with guns to really confuse them.
shichiaikan t1_j3y2oyg wrote
*U. S. Has entered the chat... *
black_flag_4ever t1_j3vtrvv wrote
So in about 25 years, if this planet studies earth, it might start observing nuclear explosions on our planet.
TuesdayShuffle t1_j3w6nsr wrote
fuck.......you think we can delete the images before they open them?
Hopeful_Hamster21 t1_j3wj8uu wrote
But before that, they'll see The Olympic Games in Berlin, hosted by Hitler.
SandersSol t1_j3weayd wrote
Basically light is a time machine in a way, or maybe a time capsule.
/r/showerthoughts
isinedupcuzofrslash t1_j3w4m5r wrote
What if we use a high power telescope to look at this other earth and see what their roaring 20’s are like?
[deleted] t1_j3vg1yz wrote
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[deleted] t1_j3vpmks wrote
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Flesh-Tower t1_j3xnu4c wrote
And if in 20 years or so they keep looking they will see flashes from all the nukes being used lol
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