e=mc2: 103 years later, Einstein's proven right
On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 13:52:11 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq."
wrote:
Tom Francis - SWSports wrote:
On Tue, 25 Nov 2008 06:35:43 -0500, Boater
wrote:
In other words, energy and mass are equivalent, as Einstein proposed in
his Special Theory of Relativity in 1905.
Which is true as far as it goes. In this universe anyway.
There have been recent experiments that prove we may live in more than
one universe and up to as many as six at the same time.
Einstein never accounted for those rules. :)
I think Quantum Mechanics says there are an infinite number of universes.
The fact that Einstein General Theory of Relativity does not agree with
QM's is the reason physicists are looking for a Unified theory that
would work on the grand scale and the atomic scale.
I know the answer, but i am not telling.
Newtonian physics exists in a two dimensional world - what Einstein
did was extend Newtonian physics into three dimensions the third being
time. In the Newtonian world, the laws were considered the same at
any reference point in terms of time - it takes X time for Object A to
travel to Object B or to put it another way, time is the same for all
observers of an event no matter at which end of the observational
platform one is observing from. Einstein proved that in fact,
observers will and can experience time dilation depending on where the
event is being observed from (think Doppler Shift) and a couple of
other interesting effects such as length contraction and simultaneous
relatively.
Einstein didn't account for the possibility that instead of living in
a three dimensional universe, we may actually live in a
muti-dimensional universe. There have been several published
experiments in which particles have been in two places at the same
time and one of the more interesting ones, which has been duplicated,
the particle appeared at it's destination before it left it's origin
point.
This would seem to indicate that there are more universes operating
under more than Newtonian/Einsteinian laws than thought.
Next time you want to ponder the universe, ponder this. Wormholes are
theoritically possible -given enough power that is. It's pretty much
strictly an engineering problem, not a problem with the theory.
So, let's say you want to establish a worm hole from your living room
to a high plateau on Omicron Persei 8 - a distance of one million
light years.
Now think about this - once the worm hole is established and you look
through it, are you looking at the future or at the past?
I'll wait. :)
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