> >
> > Warren Ockrassa wrote:
> > > IIRC current models for spacetime hold that the maximum velocity
you
> > > can have is lightspeed. As you accelerate along the space
dimension,
> > > your motion in time slows; if you're fully at rest, your motion
> through
> > > time is at lightspeed.
> > >
> > > Yikes.
> >
> > Yikes squared! ;-) But I'm a bit mystified here, how can time have a
> > speed?
> > Isn't it as relative as momentum? I'm not sure how you can measure
the
> > passage of time somewhere else, except by comparing it to your own
> > reference
> > frame.
> >
> > Kevin Street
> 
> Ah, now there is the rub.. See, when people fly away from earth say,
and
> go fast, time slows down relative to us. And we are moving relative to
> other places in the universe, so time is presumably going faster or
> slower in said places. I was wondering if there are places where time
is
> going, relatively, slower than it is here, and this made me wonder, is
> their like a maximum or minimum speed of time, and where would it
occur.
> The question of having zero momentum reminded me of thinking about
this.
> 
> Andrew

Light having a constant speed.. no matter how and where you are going,
but time seems not too. A thought experiment. I guess it would help if I
had some idea of what I was talking about.

Where is Erik when you need him?

Andrew


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