Faster than Light: What Can Do It and What Can't with Dr. Robert Nemiroff

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 25 พ.ย. 2024

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  • @EventHorizonShow
    @EventHorizonShow  ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Faster than Light: How Your Shadow Can Do It but You Can't by Dr. Robert Nemiroff
    www.amazon.com/Faster-than-Light-Your-Shadow/dp/1662933843

    • @princeindrajitlawlaha7027
      @princeindrajitlawlaha7027 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Very interesting program, I like it, thank you very much!! 👍

    • @bobboo1319
      @bobboo1319 ปีที่แล้ว

      I don't know. Is the best answer. Respect sir.

    • @williamrunner6718
      @williamrunner6718 ปีที่แล้ว

      It's really interesting the shadow. It's a 2D projection of a 3D object. It doesn't exist in the way I scientifically define the word exist because it is dependent on other objects, (Light, target object, object face or screen) and it isn't a standalone object.

    • @rezadaneshi
      @rezadaneshi ปีที่แล้ว

      🧐🤔🤷‍♂️💥In a hot day, a seven inch expansion on a one mile railroad track grounded at 2 ends resulted in a curve high enough from the ground in the middle for a 2 story bus to go under it. My question is, what if distance varies in measurements based on the number of its local conditions that distort its path to appear longer to our static model of what it should be. Light takes longer passing through a gravitationally lensing path than where the object is in a direct line to us; and should we consider that as the distance if we as well will be distorted to take that path thinking we are going straight?

    • @fernandopereirafezinho3535
      @fernandopereirafezinho3535 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      UAPs can do it. Space/time is a fabric. They just make a hole in it so they can pass through.
      Forget about crossing the space traveling from mile to mile.

  • @kenm1167
    @kenm1167 ปีที่แล้ว +219

    Faster than light is definitely possible because that's how quickly I clicked on this video

    • @kalrandom7387
      @kalrandom7387 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yet, sadly clicked off it at about the same speed.

    • @destrobatman5640
      @destrobatman5640 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      🤣

    • @andyoates8392
      @andyoates8392 ปีที่แล้ว

      … first?

    • @PetraKann
      @PetraKann ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That would mean that you saw the video before you clicked on it.
      Forbidden by the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics I’m afraid.
      You must have clicked onto something else or were in a dream like state

    • @jensonhanna200
      @jensonhanna200 ปีที่แล้ว

      Made me smile, 👏 bravo

  • @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm
    @PlanetXMysteries-pj9nm ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I lost my dad two months ago to a motorcycle accident. We lived far apart but we’d constantly share podcasts and TH-cam videos about space exploration and sci fi together.
    Both of you have been a huge part of that. Thank you for the content you guys produce. It means more than you might realize. ❤

  • @BriarLeaf00
    @BriarLeaf00 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    This one really got the wheels turning in the old gray matter. You knocked this interview out of the park, John. Thanks as always.

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Just let him talk... your formula of asking the right questions works every time. Good show my man.

    • @JohnMichaelGodier
      @JohnMichaelGodier ปีที่แล้ว +4

      That's the key. Ask the question and let the professors teach.

    • @poughkeepsieblue
      @poughkeepsieblue ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@JohnMichaelGodier It keeps me coming back John. Thank you, and your team.

  • @williamrunner6718
    @williamrunner6718 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    I think you asked every question dealing with physics that I've been curious about and this guest is so good at explaining things in a way that a layperson like myself can understand. Thanks!

    • @FMDD168
      @FMDD168 ปีที่แล้ว

      Ask the more advanced, wiser Aliens. But Governments colluded to withhold that invaluable information from Science and Humanity for 80 years.

    • @davemarkey4684
      @davemarkey4684 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Frankly, I found his ability to properly explain answers quite terrible.

  • @brick6347
    @brick6347 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    The idea of seeing the ghostly image of whatever fell into a black hole forevermore is quite disturbing. It reminds me of that trope in old detective novels where they'd exam the victim's eye thinking it'd captured the last thing seen, and hopefully the killer.

    • @Bow-to-the-absurd
      @Bow-to-the-absurd ปีที่แล้ว

      Ha yes!
      I remember that old movie

    • @jefffinkbonner9551
      @jefffinkbonner9551 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Or it’s like an eternal, giant chalk outline in the sky 😂

  • @MrBrain4
    @MrBrain4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The Picard Maneuver takes advantage of relativistic image doubling.

  • @madmattdigs9518
    @madmattdigs9518 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I have to get that book. Because this episode was a lot of fun to listen to and think about.

  • @ArienMasterpiece
    @ArienMasterpiece ปีที่แล้ว +9

    Event Horizon is what Thursday/Early hours of Friday morning are all about. Fantastic episode and once again JMG has constructed another awe inspiring conversation. Event Horizon deserves to have millions of followers. ❤

  • @pepe6666
    @pepe6666 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is an absolutely hilarious interview. I love these crazy super luminal gimmicks. It's so fun to think about. This was really cool.

  • @dancingwiththedogsdj
    @dancingwiththedogsdj ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Fantastic discussion and I love answers with, "I don't know.", but still providing great information. The questions were wonderful and sensible! I've been wondering very similar things myself after watching videos like this every chance I can from the well known and respected people, scientists, or organizations that put out discussions or overall videos.... It just seems we're getting closer to understanding stuff we obviously can't imagine at the moment.... and to people who think stuff is impossible or now way we could figure it out, just makes me laugh and giggle. What have we learned over the past year? What about since a decade ago? What about a century ago? Yeah, watching Star Trek or something with advanced technology, I just look at my phone and realize they seemed restricted to using voice to communicate back and forth when a simple FaceTime or something would convey the information without having to describe it or anything like that. Come on people, let's get excited for working together and trying things to figure this stuff out! I promise it'll be a fun and exciting journey, just buckle up, it might be a fast (and occasionally bumpy ride), but the sky is no longer the limit and I don't know what is other than ourselves or politics and not being able to be kind to kind to each other. We are TINY! We are nothing, not even a pin prick compared to the scale of everything. Most people just don't even realize it yet nor are they open. Hell, my roommate is an idiot (violent meth head so you can't expect much) that thinks he's the center of the universe. Much love to you and your loved ones! Be safe out there y'all! 🍻🌎♥️🎶🕺🚀☄️🕳️🛰️📡🔭

  • @wk8219
    @wk8219 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Dark matter being is quantum mechanical affect of gravity that we do not yet understand, this just might be my new favorite theory for dark matter. I’ll root for this one for a while.

  • @Infinitymalayalam
    @Infinitymalayalam ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Amazing as usual. Always waiting for your new videos..

  • @johngloom9235
    @johngloom9235 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Now that there is how you teach, you keep the content engaging and entertaining. If the content makes an impact, you are far more likely to remember it

    • @archmage_of_the_aether
      @archmage_of_the_aether ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Counterpoint: we are diminished as a culture when we need any worthwhile endeavour to be entertaining. We are infantile.

  • @michaelpetersen3843
    @michaelpetersen3843 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    JMG is possibly the most underrated guy on TH-cam

  • @stevenpilling5318
    @stevenpilling5318 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    God grant that there's a way to beat the lightspeed barrier so that we can visit this incredible universe. On the other hand, my He also prevent reverse time travel. Things are complicated enough without that!

  • @dancingwiththedogsdj
    @dancingwiththedogsdj ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I couldn't agree more! He's always great, but this one just hit ALL the right boxes and fascinating! 🍻🌎♥️🎶🕺

  • @theoldman5896
    @theoldman5896 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    "...a redshift of 3... that galaxy will just sorta freeze... -and that image will never disappear..."
    Wouldn't the engery of the photon-packets (wavicles) eventually HAVE TO reach a zero-energy state? Otherwise that "image" burned into the universe's horizon would provide INFINITE ENERGY from the never-ending trickle of photon-wavicles into the expanding universe (Since these object could never go "dark." - also, this could be a real "silly & cute" explanation for dark energy btw)

  • @gabrielknight8988
    @gabrielknight8988 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Absolutely love the idea of watching super luminal motion in a room. I've literally had that thought popping up in my head, ever since I learned about the speed of light as a kid. Lol this was great episode xD

    • @davemarkey4684
      @davemarkey4684 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Super lamination, to me, seems akin to that of echo location🤔

  • @hollycook1419
    @hollycook1419 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Hi Dr. Nemiroff! I remember you from back when I attended Michigan Tech! I hope you're well!

  • @douglaswilkinson5700
    @douglaswilkinson5700 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Introductory Physics 7A at UCLA started with calculus. It was taught by the department chair and not humorous.

  • @NeonVisual
    @NeonVisual ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Slow down the passage of time and you can go as fast as you like

  • @DrumToTheBassWoop
    @DrumToTheBassWoop ปีที่แล้ว

    If enough people are determined to build it, its achievable. Suddenly our existence in this universe can be multiplied exponentially.

  • @jmtsurprise
    @jmtsurprise ปีที่แล้ว +3

    He says we will never not be able to see the redshift 3 galaxy- but eventually in the future it will be beyond the cosmic horizon and we will no longer see it, correct?

    • @7heHorror
      @7heHorror ปีที่แล้ว

      We will continue to see the galaxy only as it was when it passed our cosmic horizon. It will have continued evolving and emitting light beyond that, which is the part we won't see.

    • @jmtsurprise
      @jmtsurprise ปีที่แล้ว

      @@7heHorrorso the galaxies we already see won’t flicker out and eventually we will only be able to see the local group? I have heard that many times

    • @7heHorror
      @7heHorror ปีที่แล้ว

      @@jmtsurprise Yes because the space between galaxies is expanding, only those close enough for gravity to overcome the expansion will remain together. Eventually there will be so much expanding space between distant galaxies that not even light will overcome it. It's commonly understood that galaxies at that distance will fade from sight. Dr. Nemiroff is explaining that actually, a faded and static image of those galaxies will remain imprinted in our sky.

    • @superfamilyallosauridae6505
      @superfamilyallosauridae6505 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@7heHorrorIf light no longer overcomes it, where would the photons we are actually seeing come from to provide our infinite frozen image?

    • @7heHorror
      @7heHorror ปีที่แล้ว

      @@superfamilyallosauridae6505 From our perspective, a galaxy approaching the cosmic horizon will appear to slow down because each photon is taking longer to reach us than the last. The final bit of light it emits before crossing the horizon will take longer than the lifetime of the universe to reach us. My understanding is that eventually we may have to wait a million years to see the next photon, then a billion years to see the photon after that, then a trillion years, etc. We will have to wait longer than the lifetime of the universe to see the very last photon. So effectively it will always be there. It's the same phenomenon you would expect to see watching something fall into a black hole.

  • @jamespatrick5930
    @jamespatrick5930 ปีที่แล้ว

    I live at high altitude in Colorado with no light pollution.
    Several times on Moonless nights I have been sipping whisky up on my balcony in pitch black and a lightning storm maybe 500 miles to the East.
    I could see the progression of the flash across the the sky reflecting off of dust way up in the atmosphere.

    • @GZWA
      @GZWA ปีที่แล้ว

      Sounds epic.

  • @AnthonyGiallourakis
    @AnthonyGiallourakis ปีที่แล้ว +1

    By the title, this episode looks very cool. I can't wait to watch it!

  • @thmassen
    @thmassen ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Looking forward to this!

  • @stricknine6130
    @stricknine6130 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very interesting interview. You asked some great questions dealing with physics. Thanks for the episode!

  • @kevinwilson1228
    @kevinwilson1228 ปีที่แล้ว

    it takes a few hours to wind down from the day. That's when I come searching for Eryn's introduction!🤩😍😘

  • @DG_musician
    @DG_musician ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This video has mashed my brain. Really interesting!

    • @DonFatherTrump
      @DonFatherTrump ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Add butter and bacon bits. 😎

    • @whataday443
      @whataday443 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Mine didn't even show up.

    • @DG_musician
      @DG_musician ปีที่แล้ว

      @@DonFatherTrump 🤤

  • @iambiggus
    @iambiggus ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Sounds like a fun instructor.

  • @fydstar
    @fydstar ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I don’t understand how a galaxy to which we are unable to communicate with, could be visible for ever, if eventually no more photons can reach us from that galaxy? Surely unless the universe retains imprints, it will surely fade?

    • @superfamilyallosauridae6505
      @superfamilyallosauridae6505 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah, he didn't really present anything that would make that make any sense. It would first freeze and redshift further, but you should eventually not see anything at all

    • @daveadalian4116
      @daveadalian4116 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      All spacetime is expanding in all directions. When light travels, it crosses that expanding spacetime. If two objects are distant enough, then the collective expansion rate exceeds the speed of causality (which is same as the speed of light in vacuum. After that distance is exceeded, the two objects can no longer exchange light. But, the light that's already on its way, crossing those vast cosmic distances, is being stretched by the growth of spacetime. As the light is stretched longer and longer, it changes frequency, becoming further shifted into the red, leading to the term "red shift." Eventually, that light will change frequency so much its no longer light but some other electromagnetic signal, but not for a time greater than the life expectancy of our star. In the meantime, the light will keep coming, changing to longer and longer wavelengths as it ages, and we'll continue to see it well beyond the ability of light to cross the distance. Hawking has a great description of this in A Brief History of Time. He talks about this in terms of light cones and their intersection. Read the book. It's a good one.

    • @fydstar
      @fydstar ปีที่แล้ว

      @@daveadalian4116but not forever

    • @daveadalian4116
      @daveadalian4116 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@fydstar Not visible forever, but detectable.

  • @cabanford
    @cabanford ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Who's the woman who introduces each episode? Her voice is as hypnotic as yours 😎

  • @princeindrajitlawlaha7027
    @princeindrajitlawlaha7027 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Very interesting program, I like it, thank you very much!! 👍

  • @rabindranabraham2681
    @rabindranabraham2681 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thanks!

  • @EinsteinsHair
    @EinsteinsHair ปีที่แล้ว

    Responding to the question at 45:59 he had a thought experiment at 46:42 about sweeping a laser pointer across a wall. As a physicist he should think of things, and then do calculations. That would fix his confusion. Suppose the wall is one light second away, almost to the moon. Say the ends are one light year to the left and one light year to the right. The whole point of the book is that he sweeps the laser dot along the wall faster than the speed of light, say 2 seconds. The dot at the center of the wall returns two seconds after the pointer was aimed at it.
    The dot splits in two and goes left and right toward the ends of the wall. The light will come back from the left end 2 years after the laser was pointed at it (one year there and one year back.) It will also take two years for the light to return from the right end of the wall, but that light was sent two seconds after the light was sent to the left end, so 2 years and 2 seconds after the left end.
    The next paragraph is a lot of words, where a simple diagram would be much clearer.
    Imagine a spot to the left of center that is two light seconds from the laser pointer, so light returns in 4 seconds. The only way you see that point before the center point is to give it more time and wait over two seconds between aiming at the left point and at the center point. By Pythagoras the hypothenuse to the left point is 2 units away, the center point is 1 unit away, and the distance between them is square root of 3 units. This just means that the laser pointer has to sweep this distance in less than two seconds, so you see the center dot first. Center first, then 2 dots moving to the ends.
    Someone calculated in another comment that he was also wrong about the sun appearing to orbit the Earth faster than the speed of light. It would have to be over 3.8 light hours away to appear to do that.

  • @RogerWKnight
    @RogerWKnight ปีที่แล้ว

    I kept waiting for him to address spooky action at a distance.

  • @williamrunner6718
    @williamrunner6718 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Interesting.

  • @josephcamba9370
    @josephcamba9370 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    How about this for ftl communication. Instead of measuring the quality of entangled particles, why not measure the quantity? I.e. a morris code

  • @flavywavin
    @flavywavin ปีที่แล้ว +1

    At 22:30 he says if you stood on the equator, knew the distance to the sun, and didn't know the earth is rotating the sun would appear to move faster than light.
    This would certainly be true for the stars, as he says, but it seems wrong to me for the sun...
    Here's my rough calculation:
    Earth's orbit distance (miles) = 93,000,000
    Orbital diameter (miles) = 93,000,000 * 2 = 186,000,000
    Orbital circumference (miles) = 186,000,000 * 3.14 = 584,040,000
    The sun should appear to travel the entire orbital circumference in the time it takes earth to rotate once, so one day. (I realize I'm ignoring the fact that after 1 day earth will also progress further in its orbit, causing a little more rotation to be required for the sun to appear in the same location in the sky, but that would only make a minor difference, like a 1/365 sort of difference)
    So the sun would be traveling at an apparent speed of 584,040,000 miles per day.
    miles per hour = 584,040,000 / 24 = 24,335,000
    miles per second = 24,335,000 / 60 / 60 = 6,759.7
    So the sun would look like its traveling 6759.7 miles per second, which is way slower than the speed of light at 186,000 miles per second.
    Have I messed up the calculation somehow?

    • @EinsteinsHair
      @EinsteinsHair ปีที่แล้ว

      Seems correct. To put it another way, how far from Earth would something have to be to have the illusion that it orbits faster at the speed of light? It would sit on a circle 24 light hours long. The radius of that circle would be 24/2pi or 3.81972 light hours, much farther than the few light minutes to the sun. Everything beyond that distance would apparently be travelling around the Earth faster than the speed of light would allow.

  • @Kustan112
    @Kustan112 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I really like the notion of the Photon Sea, John.
    It feels to be so, sometimes.

  • @alexanderwhyte5316
    @alexanderwhyte5316 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Very interesting questions in this one.

  • @Njkk500
    @Njkk500 ปีที่แล้ว

    The "i want to give it a nickname," 12:55 "the twin guillotine scissor hypothesis" absolutely brilliant. That's an intriguing perspective I've never thought of. Apply that to an interplanetary orbital energy structure self sustaining at high enegy. Global orbital vortex. Imagine how crazy i sound haha, even if im wrong, Co-Scissors Faster than light flashlight travel. Relativistic speaking of course. Is fantastic.
    Very good tough Q's and i absolutely love it. Heres a rhought experiment,
    If we could travel faster than light, would the hypothetical lady "galaxy" look at us with beautiful gleeming eyes and walk away expecting us to follow? One can only dream. ❤

  • @marvinmauldin4361
    @marvinmauldin4361 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Since everything is transparent to gravitational waves, which cannot be slowed by anything, the universal speed limit should be the speed of gravitational waves, not the speed of light.

  • @UnrepentantWolf
    @UnrepentantWolf ปีที่แล้ว

    Already out of stock with Amazon UK, making a note for later.

  • @marvinmauldin4361
    @marvinmauldin4361 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    When light travels through a medium such as glass or water, the speed that is being measured is the speed of the light wave. Individual photons might bounce around like pinballs, increasing their travel distance, or hit something which after a finite period emits another photon. Whether bouncing or being emitted, the photon is always moving at the speed of light in a vacuum.

  • @darthjarwood7943
    @darthjarwood7943 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Light and geometry really fuck with the human brain

  • @jamesvickers3266
    @jamesvickers3266 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I had never thought about the gravity produced by photons which have spread out in all directions as being a cause of 'dark matter'. If it's photons that cause it, it's neither dark nor is it matter. Maybe the gravitational attraction of photons is one aspect of the 'dark matter' mystery. I suppose it would be quite difficult to take into account the photons or photon fields when calculating gravity acting on objects.

    • @fredg.sanford634
      @fredg.sanford634 ปีที่แล้ว

      I have a question similar to yours. Not even photons can escape from the "infinite" gravity of a black hole, but isn't the gravitational attraction between two objects a result of them both having mass? Do black holes become more massive when they "swallow" light?
      Maybe I'm just a dummy.

  • @marvinmauldin4361
    @marvinmauldin4361 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Think of the laser pointer as firing a string of individual photons like a paintball gun firing a string of paintballs. When being swung across the wall, the string of spots can lengthen FTL, but nothing physical is moving, only the geometry of the end. The next photon hits the wall before a photon from the previous spot has time to reach the last spot.
    I'm tempted to say that everything is an illusion anyway, but I won't.

  • @douglaswilkinson5700
    @douglaswilkinson5700 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Superluminal velocities are not necessary for human interstellar travel. At relativistic speeds time dilates per Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity. At 99%c the time dilation (Lorentz factor) is 7. A 4.3 light-year trip to Proxima Centauri would take 224 days (excluding the time to accelerate & decelerate.)

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 ปีที่แล้ว

      The radiation exposure would kill you before you reached Pluto.

    • @douglaswilkinson5700
      @douglaswilkinson5700 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@sentientflower7891The comment was meant to simply point out that relativistic velocities make human interstellar travel *possible under known physics.* The design and construction of such a spacecraft is far beyond our ability today. At 99%c the cosmic microwave background radiation is blue-shifted into lethal gamma rays, colliding with a 1-ounce asteroid would produce a multi-megaton nuclear blast, etc. There was a good video by a physicist explaining each of these challenges and possible solutions. Just don't recall what channel. One of the biggest challenges is producing the thrust needed for 99%c. Even fusion drives won't. It will take some sort of anti-matter drive to produce the energy required ....

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@douglaswilkinson5700 well, supposing such a technology existed if you did happen to attain 99% light speed you have exceeded the escape velocity for both the galaxy and the local group so you aren't going to get wherever you intend to go. Beyond that it is literally impossible to navigate at any speed approaching light speed. Finally suppose you did get so fast you will have to decelerate so as to attain orbit around your destination star and your orbital insertion around that star will require an initial orbit of at least 100,000 years.

    • @douglaswilkinson5700
      @douglaswilkinson5700 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sentientflower7891 A comfortable deceleration from 99%c is estimated take about a month. Then you'd be at Proxima Centauri. Orbital insertion wouldn't take 100,000 years. What formula did you use to come up with that number? Of course small course corrections are possible at relativistic velocities. The spacecraft's FMS (flight management system) would handle that as well as other critical processes such as deceleration and accounting for time dilation. Also, at 99%c, the time dilation is only 7 so you'd never exit the galaxy.

    • @sentientflower7891
      @sentientflower7891 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@douglaswilkinson5700 you want to decelerate from 99% c to less than .001% c in less than a month? Fine. You are going to need to decelerate before you get to Proxima Centauri. That means that you complete your deceleration at least half a light year from Proxima Centauri.
      As such you are approaching your destination star from the distance of the comets and therefore you will have a comet's orbit. A comet approaching a star at orbital velocity from that distance will have a 100,000 year orbit. If you have successfully attained orbit. If you miscalculate you will spend 100,000 years and discover that you still have escape velocity from Proxima Centauri.

  • @kevinwilson1228
    @kevinwilson1228 ปีที่แล้ว

    RICK Beato is, seemingly indecisive on a " best Songs" Farewell to Kings with the Irish writer or Xanadu

  • @astrophysicist137
    @astrophysicist137 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Several wrong informations in the video from Nemiroff. You really say these thing to your students?

  • @Luminious789
    @Luminious789 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This one's a trip not gonna lie...

  • @tristanbackup2536
    @tristanbackup2536 ปีที่แล้ว

    They need to do an experiment of this. Go back to moon & have a kilometre long mirror & back on earth, have that laser flick across the moon on the mirror to see the affects.

    • @michaelpettersson4919
      @michaelpettersson4919 ปีที่แล้ว

      You only need a small mirror and good aim. Mirrors WAS placed on the Moon for essentially this purpose.

    • @tristanbackup2536
      @tristanbackup2536 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@michaelpettersson4919
      Saying a longer one. Up the experiment.

  • @ozne_2358
    @ozne_2358 ปีที่แล้ว

    The Cool Worlds channel has a nice piece about faster than light communications exploiting entanglement and how none has managed to come up with a scheme that works. It's called " Does Quantum Entanglement Allow for Faster-Than-Light Communication? ".

    • @damianp7313
      @damianp7313 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Lol stoped tp decide weather to re click pn that one or this one 😅

  • @videosofnomeaningjusttopas2657
    @videosofnomeaningjusttopas2657 ปีที่แล้ว

    Your scissors example is why the universe is expanding faster than the speed of light. The universe sized scissors are the same as a universe sized cell growing in size. The speed of this growth tears across space at unbelievable speeds. We are the microscopic eyes viewing a larger cell growing outwards from us at speeds exceeding the speed of light.

  • @CaliforniaBushman
    @CaliforniaBushman ปีที่แล้ว

    The difference of volume level between John & the guest (dichotomy between John's expensive microphone and the guests cheap computer mic in their echoey, bathroomish reverby office) makes this a difficult podcast to listen to at night, sometimes. Equalizing the audio any way you can in editing may help a lot. Some people have a loud high voice (compared to John), so sometimes there's nothing you can do except ask the guest to move back, or closer to their mic. Not lying. This guy here was very enthusiastic, close to his mic & about five times louder than John. So I gave up 1/3 through.

  • @Roguescienceguy
    @Roguescienceguy ปีที่แล้ว

    Now add to all of this that time is not a constant throughout the universe and💥 goes brain

  • @jmfp21jp
    @jmfp21jp ปีที่แล้ว

    Loving the new logo!

  • @overwatch1774
    @overwatch1774 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Have there been experiments trying to find the point where quantum physics take over? I.e.: shoot larger and larger particles, then molecules at a double slit and see which ones pass through as a wave or a particle.
    Similarly, have there been experiments to see what size the slits have to be and what the distance between needs to be for it to work?

    • @loopmantra8314
      @loopmantra8314 ปีที่แล้ว

      The largest entities for which the double-slit experiment has been performed were molecules that each comprised 2000 atoms (whose total mass was 25,000 atomic mass units)
      Amazing what you can find out in literally five seconds on Google 🤷

  • @JackSmith-kp2vs
    @JackSmith-kp2vs ปีที่แล้ว

    I watched a video on fast forward thus I watched light travelling faster than light

  • @videosofnomeaningjusttopas2657
    @videosofnomeaningjusttopas2657 ปีที่แล้ว

    The amount of energy required for humanity to travel faster than the speed of light is equivalent to the following equation. First, calculate the amount of energy required for a person to carry a petri dish to the moon. Second, divide the amount of times it would take for life in the Petri dish to equal the size of the human holding the dish and thirdly, multiply that number by the amount of energy required for said human to travel to the moon.

  • @patrickwest2288
    @patrickwest2288 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I hope that we learn how to fold space

    • @theoldman5896
      @theoldman5896 ปีที่แล้ว

      Right, because demons running in and out of hell-portals all over the place is EXACTLY what we need right now.

  • @jillengland3277
    @jillengland3277 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    A second is not a sacred measurement.
    The speed of light is not about light.
    A second is distance just like the rest of space.
    s = 186k miles
    c = 1
    e = m

    • @jillengland3277
      @jillengland3277 ปีที่แล้ว

      The only weird thing about this is that “now” is not “real”. Now is a 3D manifold you draw through 4D space time. (Reference frame)
      Changing your velocity tilts your reference frame in the direction you accelerated in. So one side of the sky shifts into the future, and the opposing side of the sky is now further in the past than it would have been.
      Unruh effect 😳

  • @AnthonyGiallourakis
    @AnthonyGiallourakis ปีที่แล้ว

    "Nothing that creates the information can transfer that information faster than light." - If this is true for all information which participates in three dimensional space plus time, then when we learn to negate one of the physical dimensions, allowing (restricting) information to participate in two spatial dimensions plus time, that information can and will be able to be transferred faster than light (by a power of two). To do this, we will need to learn how to modulate information's vibrations so that one of the dimensional participations is negated (canceled out).

    • @daveadalian4116
      @daveadalian4116 ปีที่แล้ว

      Except information doesn't actually exist. Other than that, sure.

    • @AnthonyGiallourakis
      @AnthonyGiallourakis ปีที่แล้ว

      @@daveadalian4116 All matter and energy and all negative matter and negative energy is by definition information. That is non-negotiable or the statement I addressed from the video would be deemed non-sequator.

    • @daveadalian4116
      @daveadalian4116 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@AnthonyGiallourakisNope. If that's true, then where was all that alleged information prior to the formation of the universe? Information is perceptual, relative and always incomplete. Where will all the information go at the heat death of the universe? Back in its box? While we're at it, define information.

    • @AnthonyGiallourakis
      @AnthonyGiallourakis ปีที่แล้ว

      @@daveadalian4116 It is true that one of the laws of the Universe is the conservation of information. I want you to understand something important. The Universe and all information participates in three spatial dimensions and one we call time. Information is created when at least two of these four coordinates are assigned. Two at a time is pure energy. Three at a time is matter. If T is one of the coordinates, then the information is in what we call a waveform. If it is not, then is a particle. The coordinates of all information vibrates between any three of these four assignments. Now comes the fun part. Think of the time coordinate as scaffolding, that supports the other three dimensions. And just like the three spatial dimensions we are all familiar with, time can be a value that is both positive or negative. Now imagine what everyone calls the Big Bang. Everything is assigned one dimension and time is zero. At the moment time is introduced, and information is created.... let's assume inflation and the whole narrative we hear from the experts is true. Skip to the point where information is created, first energy, then matter.... as the scaffolding of time unfolds, the lines of time begin to become curled based the effects of the laws of gravity as mass grows (matter comes together). Einstein called it spacetime. The scaffolding is altered. Fast forward to black holes. The scaffolding (time lines) are at a 180 degree angle to the original timeline (big bang) at the event horizon of a black hole. So from the original timeline, the scaffolding that information participates on can be anything in-between 0 and 360 degrees, depending on the mass and gravity. This is why we call time relativistic, and why you would age much slower than your friends if you were traveling a decent fraction of the speed of light around the Earth for a day and then came back home. The greater the mass, the more vibration between (X,Y,Z coordinates, the less T is included). Once past the event horizon of a black hole, the angle of the scaffolding of time is negative. This is real meaningful. By definition, this means that the information is now participating on a negative timeline and is therefore negative information. Being on a negative timeline is not the same as moving backward in time. The properties of that information are unique to what we know. First, by definition it moves through the Universe towards a singularity, the opposite of inflation. Second, it does not interact with any positive information. Third, it is not attracted to itself like positive information - it repels. As negative information moves closer to the center of a black hole, the timeline it participates on forces greater deflation. So if you think of all the black holes that ever were, are, and will be, and you think of all the positive information they take in, invert to negative information and from that point in time, it all moves via deflation until it all collects at one point...... but because it resists itself (opposite of mass as we know it), eventually even the scaffolding of time itself can no longer resist that repelling force and it all converts back to positive information and there you go... the big bang. So there is no end to information and time is only a coordinate, it never started and it never ends. When we learn to modulate the vibration of information between X,Y,Z and T, so that we will gain control of both time and space. Tesla said it clearly, and that knowledge will unlock the unification theory of all things (gravity and the quantum). Right now, where you stand, negative information that participated on a positive timeline, entered a black hole, and was inverted to negative information is participating on a negative timeline, moving right through the space you are in, and (in simplistic terms) heading back to become part of what created the irresistible force that initiated the big bang. Dark matter/dark energy solved. We can't interact with it, but it does warp space/time in such a way as to account for the anomalies we see in our observations. It cannot be measured or interacted with because the time lines are negative. E=M(C*C) becomes -E=-M(-C*-C).

  • @idorion9096
    @idorion9096 ปีที่แล้ว

    Any "professor" that dismissed the idea of relativistic image double doesn't deserve that tittle. The way he explained it makes it obvious 🤷

    • @idorion9096
      @idorion9096 ปีที่แล้ว

      I wonder if you could shape a "wall" so that as you sweep a laser across the "dot" makes a line appear as the reflected light all arrives back at the same time?
      How much could you manipulate the shape of the "wall" to control how the lasers for appears to reflect back?
      This was a very intriguing episode 😊

  • @TheCuban86
    @TheCuban86 ปีที่แล้ว

    You should speak bout it with prof Andrzej Dragan, he has some interesting view on it :)

  • @CaptainHarris-ip2kg
    @CaptainHarris-ip2kg ปีที่แล้ว

    The real issue is moving masses faster than light without suffering time dilation so we can go to other worlds. Going faster than light, to me, isn't the issue, nor is time dilation. It's how do you protect yourself from radiation of all kinds that propagates when you approach or even breach C. C is the natural speed limit, but to me that doesn't mean you can't go faster than light.

  • @annoythedonkey
    @annoythedonkey ปีที่แล้ว

    Serious question: Would a high powered UV light bulb put off energy in zero gravity allowing for some sort of propulsion?

  • @SphenForTheWin
    @SphenForTheWin ปีที่แล้ว

    I am having trouble locating the Event Horizon Book Club on Amazon. Is there a link I am missing?

  • @Soupy_loopy
    @Soupy_loopy ปีที่แล้ว

    Asking some good questions, but we don't know the answers

  • @igorshingelevich7627
    @igorshingelevich7627 ปีที่แล้ว

    thx for this dialog

  • @patrickleitzen9752
    @patrickleitzen9752 ปีที่แล้ว

    What if you had a dowel rod (with insane levels of structural integrity), say, 1.001 light-years long, and you twisted it one direction or the other? The whole thing isn't turning very fast at all, but information would be conveyed at both ends, wouldn't it?

  • @ulfhedtyrsson
    @ulfhedtyrsson ปีที่แล้ว

    Excellent

  • @lildonnie1232
    @lildonnie1232 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hey I been watching your videos for soo long but I find myself not understanding a lot of things but I’m so interested in space and astrology would anyone recommend an entry level book to get more educated about things that are talked about with these super geniuses lol ?

    • @crisstryna_mma1622
      @crisstryna_mma1622 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Live The Lizzo Way: 100% that book you need.

  • @fredericderouand8666
    @fredericderouand8666 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi there and thanks for the job. Question : i like vers much the piece of music that you use at the end of the show. May it has a name ? Where could I fond the full version ? Yours

  • @JamesWilliams-eg1gm
    @JamesWilliams-eg1gm 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I think John nailed it on dark matter. I've said for years it's the weight of light.

  • @hispanicvs15
    @hispanicvs15 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    one idea is faster than light 😅

  • @cordatusscire344
    @cordatusscire344 ปีที่แล้ว

    Photons.. actually nothing at all can ever go "c". Time stops at c. If Time has stopped, so to has causality, which means from our perspective the object would.. just vanish from reality. That is because you can never get information to it nor from it. So it would quite literally vanish from existence.

  • @aceundead4750
    @aceundead4750 ปีที่แล้ว

    If we really did cut paper at the speed of light would there be some type of energy transfer beyond what there already is when cutting paper at sub-light speeds? If so depending on what the result was that effect itself could be used as a signal, like if it creates bright bursts of light, as long as it isnt too resource/time intensive to cut paper at light speed.

  • @shanastroskyphazer8172
    @shanastroskyphazer8172 ปีที่แล้ว

    wow epic graphics, discussion, and video thanks. Its funny just the other day I was thinking Is consciousness or my consciousness faster than light ? I can imagine going very fast in my mind over extremely large distances because correct me if I'm wrong, It takes 8 minutes for light to travel from the sun to the earth. But with extensive training I would aim for the maximum 480 trips to the sun and back "' In my mind "'. before the first light photons hit earth... therefore I conclude consciousness is faster than the speed of light. Funny that. Thank You !

  • @dadsongamer2653
    @dadsongamer2653 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Even if the point was going faster then light which i doubt, soon as you introduce paper the energy transfer wouldcalone reduce the speed of the point

  • @Xexorian
    @Xexorian ปีที่แล้ว

    can you timestamp the questions or individual topics or something

  • @abhilashassariparambilraja2534
    @abhilashassariparambilraja2534 ปีที่แล้ว

    whether there is any event horizon for quantum entalgement?

  • @uppal123g
    @uppal123g ปีที่แล้ว

    Jmg awsome

  • @PwncakeOW
    @PwncakeOW ปีที่แล้ว

    @6:32 great quesrion indeed.
    Edut us ge saying information is lost?

  • @TennesseeJed
    @TennesseeJed ปีที่แล้ว

    Illumination front!!!

  • @jasonbrady3606
    @jasonbrady3606 ปีที่แล้ว

    Shouldn't the photon sphere of a blackholes completely destroy any matter as it crosses it's path. And if all the matter is turned into mass less photons that simply orbit at various distances from the center of the blackhole. I feel we should look more into the photon sphere and tryin model it in different ways and see if the photon sphere because of its configuration as a photon sphere has some effect on spacetime. Whether reversing it increasing it extending it ...

  • @amciuam157
    @amciuam157 ปีที่แล้ว

    They say love is superluminal

  • @7sevensevern
    @7sevensevern ปีที่แล้ว

    I always imagines light coming out of a laser like water coming out of a hose so even tho you can move the laser pointer across the moon the light stream bends relative to the laser. Is this right?

  • @marcusschulze9172
    @marcusschulze9172 ปีที่แล้ว

    wait, why would the image of the redshift 3 galaxy not disappear?

  • @paulmilligan2657
    @paulmilligan2657 ปีที่แล้ว

    If the Universe is expanding then it must be doing so faster than light...possibly...maybe?

  • @BeYoND_9000
    @BeYoND_9000 ปีที่แล้ว

    JMG, JMG - JMG JUS KILLD DA CLUH

  • @jamesvickers3266
    @jamesvickers3266 ปีที่แล้ว

    About dark matter: I have heard the very basic explanation as to why it can't be cold hydrogen atoms (we don't see the expected radiation) but I'm not convinced. Would someone here please explain that more fully? If the hydrogen was very cold indeed, and moving in the same direction (outwards) as other hydrogen, they would not collide with each other, and as far as I know would not radiate anything.

  • @SergiuCosminViorel
    @SergiuCosminViorel ปีที่แล้ว

    and no one thinks these are absurd? like matter that enters a black hole never disappears from our sight?!
    i think it pretty much disappeared already

    • @KnightspaceORG
      @KnightspaceORG ปีที่แล้ว

      It doesn't. The light from the object just gets gradually red shifted, up to a point when light stretched so far, that it's no longer detectable. It didn't disappear, but just became invisible to the observer

    • @SergiuCosminViorel
      @SergiuCosminViorel ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KnightspaceORG you don't grasp the absurdity of what you are saying.
      The signal of the presence of the matter that enters a blackhole, it does not stay there forever, because that signal evolves same like the matter that enters there. Matter does not stay on that event horizon. Matter is consumed in finite time, and the signal, no matter how red shifted, it disappears completely.
      You all are contaminated with bad interpretations, and you contaminate others

  • @zazugee
    @zazugee ปีที่แล้ว

    About manipulating vacuum, isn't it possible to run a laser between 2 plates producing the casimir effect and measure the speed?
    Won't the casimir effect change the amount of virtual particles and thus the energy of vacuum and incidentally change C?

    • @daveadalian4116
      @daveadalian4116 ปีที่แล้ว

      C is the speed of causality, not light. It's constant. Always.

  • @jameswhitaker3016
    @jameswhitaker3016 ปีที่แล้ว

    Why did you stop uploading on Spotify?

    • @EventHorizonShow
      @EventHorizonShow  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Having backend issues. It’ll be fixed very soon.

    • @jameswhitaker3016
      @jameswhitaker3016 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@EventHorizonShow That makes
      Me very happy, I listen mainly on my phone, I don’t pay for TH-cam premium so Spotify makes for a much easier listen. keep up the good work. JMG rules.

  • @michaelwicks7680
    @michaelwicks7680 ปีที่แล้ว

    But surely if you change the spin of two entgaled particles one will react to the other even across the universe, isn't this transferred information? 🤔

  • @eoinoconnell185
    @eoinoconnell185 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    1st 💥