Unless they come up with some way to create a "bubble" where mass has no impact light speed will never happen.
Plus course calculations at light speed would have to be precalculated as a course correction in flight would be too late. Gotta have a map of where your going so someone would have to go out first to check the "terrain", which means slower than light speed travel for someone for a looooong time. So a couple millennia from now we may have a map to use for close to light speed travel, but not a very big one...if we start right now.
It was about a new computer simulation of the universe formation thru present day including both baryons and dark energy/matter influences and all manner of fluid dynamic considerations and the effects of black holes etc.. It really seems like they tried their best to include every major contributing factor and the results so far closely mirror the universe we see in our telescopes
yep. same as I understood.theoretically, an object can only travel up to 99.99999 % of light speed since at light speed the objects mass would be infinite.
Quote from: Whirlingdervish on May 08, 2014, 05:10:33 PMIt was about a new computer simulation of the universe formation thru present day including both baryons and dark energy/matter influences and all manner of fluid dynamic considerations and the effects of black holes etc.. It really seems like they tried their best to include every major contributing factor and the results so far closely mirror the universe we see in our telescopes Wow - pretty amazing!
Quote from: yahoo on May 09, 2014, 05:01:15 AMyep. same as I understood.theoretically, an object can only travel up to 99.99999 % of light speed since at light speed the objects mass would be infinite.An interesting corollary is that time is frozen for photons.So when we look back with Hubble at light from galaxies emitted 13 billion years ago, no time has passed for those photons during their entire trip.
An interesting corollary to the corollary is that the dual photon-wave nature of light implies that the photon was radiated in all directions from its source and is therefore seen to be everywhere in the universe all at once, from its perspective.
Quote from: quadz on May 09, 2014, 06:18:27 PMQuote from: yahoo on May 09, 2014, 05:01:15 AMyep. same as I understood.theoretically, an object can only travel up to 99.99999 % of light speed since at light speed the objects mass would be infinite.An interesting corollary is that time is frozen for photons.So when we look back with Hubble at light from galaxies emitted 13 billion years ago, no time has passed for those photons during their entire trip. An interesting corollary to the corollary is that the dual photon-wave nature of light implies that the photon was radiated in all directions from its source and is therefore seen to be everywhere in the universe all at once, from its perspective.
Futhermore, you keep saying "occupation". It's not an occupation.
http://io9.com/the-coldest-object-in-the-universe-has-been-created-in-1649359062I was wondering what did they use to cool down the material since what I know is that in most practice they use Liquid Nitro for which is about 210 °C.Also wouldn't the substance they used to cool would be more colder than the substance being cooled be the coldest object?