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Who's Ready To Tax The Grey Matter?
Whenever we talk about aliens etc the limiting factor is always c. The usual suspects never accept that c is the speed limit and cite future invention etc. Anyway here is another very good explanation of why c is the limit. Enjoy:
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The possibility that we might discover alternative methods of travel by utilising for example wormholes or gravatational waves, has been suggested here, but I don't think I've ever seen anyone claim that we will at some time in the future be capable of exceeding the speed of light. Grannies and eggs spring to mind with your post, TTT.
I have orbiting the fringes of my acquaintances ( my ex's nephew) a nuclear/ particle physicist( never did ascertain which) he works at CERN, seems to have every expectation that while we may not travel those vast distances it may be possible to communicate I think it involved wormholes, and string theory. I just kept providing beer and snacks while trying to keep up.
I would also like to add that while he is phenomenally intelligent he never puts any one down, or is in any way patronising he is a genuinely lovely person who obviously scores high on emotional intelligence as well as the traditional measures. Just saying....
Reeves(aka 'Squeeze') thinks that grey matter is worth hitting hard when it comes taxing IP and creativity - for those who decide to remain on these shores. It well maybe that she's creating an economic 'backflow' for those immigrant boats with the number of entrpreneurs and creatives now wanting to escape these shores.... Dennis Healey, your dream is coming true!
We believe the expansion of space is greater than the speed of light in a vacuum, so there is no reason to think that it can't be possible to apparently move faster than light while actually still complying with our theories on the light speed limit. We've just not stumbled across a practical solution yet. Maybe we wont: but maybe...