from the site : Life's Little Mysteries
 
 
 
 
What Would It Be Like to Travel Faster than the Speed of Light? 

 
 
By _Natalie  Wolchover_ (mailto:[email protected]) , Life's Little 
Mysteries Staff Writer 
23  September 2011



 
Physicists at the European Organization for  Nuclear Research (CERN) have 
made a mind-bending — and rule-bending — discovery:  They've measured 
strange subatomic particles called neutrinos traveling faster  than the speed 
of 
light. "Superluminal travel" may be a common trope in science  fiction, but 
Einstein's theory of special relativity strictly forbids it in the  real 
world, as beating photons in a footrace would seem to require infinite _energy_ 
(http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/neutrinos-faster-speed-light-2044/#) . 
So either the new data is wrong, or  Einstein topples — along with almost 
every tenet of modern physics. 
 
Imagine the latter scenario. What would a  lawless universe, in which 
particles have free reign to zip around heedless of  the _light-speed  limit_ 
(http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/can-matter-travel-at-light-speed-0328/) , 
be like? How would your surroundings look and feel if you were  that 
particle? 
According to Michael Ibison, a senior  research physicist at the Institute 
for Advanced Studies in Austin, Texas, such  a world would be "spooky." 
First off, it's unclear how you  would see light if you were zooming past 
it. "Thinking about what the world  would look like automatically makes you 
wonder what happens to_ your ability to see  light_ 
(http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/why-do-we-see-in-3-d-0772/) , period," 
Ibison, who has studied 
the possibility of  superluminal particles, told Life's Little Mysteries. 
"You'd be running into  [light] that is usually running away from you. I 
suspect that in order to absorb  light, you would have to emit it yourself." 
The concepts of cause and effect — of time  flowing in one direction — 
also shatter in a superluminal world. Imagine riding  on a spacecraft made of 
faster-than-light neutrinos rocketing away from Earth.  TV broadcasts playing 
the day's news are also emanating into space, and those  are traveling at 
light speed. "If you got on a neutrino spacecraft and travelled  out to space 
at neutrino speed, you'd catch up with the TV broadcasts and  overtake 
them, and you would start to see the video of the news running  backwards," 
Ibison said. As the stream of transmissions receded behind you, they  would run 
backward at whatever your excess speed is over and above their speed —  the 
speed of light. 
What if you were standing still in a  speed-limitless universe? What would 
you see then? 
According to Ibison, the situation is  analogous to standing on the ground 
as a supersonic jet passes overhead. Because  these jets travel faster than 
the speed of sound, you see them before you hear  them. When the sound does 
finally hit you, it's in the form of a _sonic boom_ 
(http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/what-is-a-sonic-boom-can-i-see-one-0525/)  
— a  shock wave that 
builds up as sound from the aircraft gets bunched together  behind it. 
Similarly, he said, "If something were  traveling faster than the speed of 
light, such as an airplane made of neutrinos,  you wouldn't see it until 
after it had gone past you. Any light it emitted would  be trailing behind in 
its wake. You would not see the neutrino plane until after  it has gone past —
 and then only if it contained something that reflected or  emitted light. 
And just as a plane passing through the sound barrier emits a  sonic boom, a 
superluminal craft passing through light speed would emit a flash  of 
light." 
Again, no one is saying for certain that  these scenarios are real. 
According to Hugh Gallagher, a particle physicist at  Tufts University who 
works on 
the MINOS neutrino experiment, the CERN result  will have to be replicated 
many times over before he and his colleagues abandon  the _tenets of special 
 relativity_ (http://www.lifeslittlemysteries.com/what-is-relativity-0368/) 
. "But if the results are true, then a lot of the things we  don't think of 
as possible suddenly become open to discussion again," Gallagher  said.

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to