taoist
New member
Clete,
That made me chuckle! :chuckle:
taoist,
Too bad that clown smiley's already got a name.
Clete,
Okay, so now for a follow up question.
Assuming that you guys are right about it taking an infinite amount of energy to get from a particle of any size to the speed of light, how is it that you can do the reverse without an infinite amount of excess energy?
taoist,
Well, on the one hand, from a particle to the speed of light, we don't. We never do get particles up to the speed of light because we can't get enough energy pumped into them. But you can turn a particle into something that travels at the speed of light by avoiding the mass blowup. Just convert all the mass to energy. No mass means no mass blowup from relativity.
In the other direction, from the speed of light to a particle, photons don't have an infinite amount of energy. I think the ones we see because they're in our frequency range are only worth a couple eV. Cosmic rays go up to about 10^20 eV, according to a fast google, so if you put a few million of them together you can run your nightlight for an hour. Not very energetic individually, even the harshest photons.
Clete,
I'm not necessarily presenting this as a real problem or contradiction; I'm just displaying my ignorance here for the fun of it.
Resting in Him,
Clete
taoist,
There's a quote from one of the dudes who invented quantum mechanics, who said anybody who said they knew quantum mechanics was wrong, paraphrased of course.
None of us live in wildly different velocity frames, or gravitational potential fields, so we just can't develop intuition on it except by studying equations and drawing graphs.
I think they're fun, but hell, I'm a math dude.
Good night, Clete ... I'm sacking out.
That made me chuckle! :chuckle:
taoist,
Too bad that clown smiley's already got a name.
Clete,
Okay, so now for a follow up question.
Assuming that you guys are right about it taking an infinite amount of energy to get from a particle of any size to the speed of light, how is it that you can do the reverse without an infinite amount of excess energy?
taoist,
Well, on the one hand, from a particle to the speed of light, we don't. We never do get particles up to the speed of light because we can't get enough energy pumped into them. But you can turn a particle into something that travels at the speed of light by avoiding the mass blowup. Just convert all the mass to energy. No mass means no mass blowup from relativity.
In the other direction, from the speed of light to a particle, photons don't have an infinite amount of energy. I think the ones we see because they're in our frequency range are only worth a couple eV. Cosmic rays go up to about 10^20 eV, according to a fast google, so if you put a few million of them together you can run your nightlight for an hour. Not very energetic individually, even the harshest photons.
Clete,
I'm not necessarily presenting this as a real problem or contradiction; I'm just displaying my ignorance here for the fun of it.
Resting in Him,
Clete
taoist,
There's a quote from one of the dudes who invented quantum mechanics, who said anybody who said they knew quantum mechanics was wrong, paraphrased of course.
None of us live in wildly different velocity frames, or gravitational potential fields, so we just can't develop intuition on it except by studying equations and drawing graphs.
I think they're fun, but hell, I'm a math dude.
Good night, Clete ... I'm sacking out.