Myuncle Posted August 17, 2014 Posted August 17, 2014 Imagine a Ferris wheel on space, made of carbon nanotubes, the diameter of the wheel is about the distance between Sun and Earth, rotational speed is 8 RPM. So can the wheel go faster than light without breaking?
Enthalpy Posted August 17, 2014 Posted August 17, 2014 Here neither. Forget carbon nanotubes until someone observes decent properties in a full-scale composite. Think graphite composite meanwhile. A rod of graphite composite achieves about 1000m/s at the tip, whatever its length.
dimreepr Posted August 17, 2014 Posted August 17, 2014 Whatever the material, the energy requirement to achieve the speed of light, at the edge, would be a similar asymptote to that of any other acceleration of matter.
swansont Posted August 17, 2014 Posted August 17, 2014 Whatever the material, the energy requirement to achieve the speed of light, at the edge, would be a similar asymptote to that of any other acceleration of matter. You wouldn't get close, though. The structure would fail long before you approached c on the perimeter. 1
Myuncle Posted August 18, 2014 Author Posted August 18, 2014 (edited) Here neither. Forget carbon nanotubes until someone observes decent properties in a full-scale composite. Think graphite composite meanwhile. A rod of graphite composite achieves about 1000m/s at the tip, whatever its length. thanks, interesting. Ooops, I meant 0.125 RPM, not 8 RPM (1/8=0.125)., sunlight takes 8 minutes and 20 seconds to arrive on earth. Edited August 18, 2014 by Myuncle
Strange Posted August 18, 2014 Posted August 18, 2014 You wouldn't get close, though. The structure would fail long before you approached c on the perimeter. This. But also this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ehrenfest_paradox
Cosmobrain Posted August 27, 2014 Posted August 27, 2014 If you said in your post that the wheel is made out of carbon nanotubes, the strongest material, you probably already knew that it was going to break.
Nicholas Kang Posted August 31, 2014 Posted August 31, 2014 To spin faster than light is nearly impossible, at least you know Einstein's theory of general relativity tells you you can globally, not locally. But you need new maths description then.
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