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Sep 13, 2017
9:09
:23
am
Indy Coug
All-American
Can someone from a "fixed" viewpoint see the light being emitted by an object
going faster than the speed of light? Yes, this is predicated on the premise that there may actually be things that can exceed the speed of light.
This message has been modified
Originally posted on Sep 13, 2017 at 9:09:23am
Message modified by Indy Coug on Sep 13, 2017 at 9:10:14am
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Indy Coug
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Indy Coug
Joined
Dec 20, 2001
Last login
May 19, 2024
Total posts
185,044 (9,847 FO)
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Messages
Author
Time
Question for theoretical physicists
OU Cougar
9/13/17 8:48am
The answer is obvious. I'm surprised you don't get it.
Hypnotoad
9/13/17 8:54am
Can someone from a "fixed" viewpoint see the light being emitted by an object
Indy Coug
9/13/17 9:09am
I’m not a physics guy. But here is my response:
Cougar-Duck
9/13/17 9:10am
Wouldn't that just imply a negative jerk (rate of change of acceleration) that
Defenestrator
9/13/17 9:16am
So, wasn't there a theory that the Big Bang would eventually lose momentum and
BYUBandfan
9/13/17 11:47pm
There was. But then they measured
OU Cougar
9/14/17 12:37am
How many recalls of text books do they go through with all of the theories?
BYUBandfan
9/14/17 12:45am
Interesting video
Indy Coug
9/14/17 1:02am
Relativity doesn't apply to expanding space/time
shokupanmanbo
9/14/17 6:34am
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