JaKiri Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 http://physicsweb.org/article/news/4/7/8/1if you travel at 1/2 C in one direction and your friend does the same in the opposite' date=' if you look out the window as you pass will it appear that you are traveling at C?[/quote'] No. To add speeds together (ALL SPEEDS, it's just at low speeds the ab/c^2 term is extremely close to 0), (a+b)/(1+ab/c^2), where a and b are the speeds of the objects and c is the speed of light (299792458m/s).
crAckZ Posted July 28, 2004 Posted July 28, 2004 thank you for that explanation. back when i was in high school i asked my physics teacher that and after flipping through some of his books he just brushed me off.
MadIce Posted August 30, 2004 Posted August 30, 2004 Here are the results of several superluminal signal experiments carried out by the University of Köln (Germany): Superluminal Signals & Time Tunneling Below an abstract of one of the papers: The paper elucidates the physical basis of experimental results on superluminal signal velocity. It will be made plausible that superluminal signals do not violate the principle of causality but they can shorten the luminal vacuum time span between cause and effect. This amazing behaviour is based on the property that any physical signal has a finite duration.
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