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Author Topic: CERN has accidentally the everything.  (Read 65329 times)

palsch

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #465 on: December 09, 2011, 11:37:31 am »

Two ways around all this photon stuff;

Spoiler: "1: MOAR POWER" (click to show/hide)

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MaximumZero

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #466 on: December 09, 2011, 12:49:39 pm »

Wait, is it a Hail Mary, or an End Around. Those are two completely different things that are mutually exclusive.
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Holy crap, why did I not start watching One Punch Man earlier? This is the best thing.
probably figured an autobiography wouldn't be interesting

palsch

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #467 on: December 09, 2011, 01:19:27 pm »

Wait, is it a Hail Mary, or an End Around. Those are two completely different things that are mutually exclusive.
It's an end run by ducking the problem, but a Hail Mary in that it's a last gasp for realism with no other positive points compared to other models.

The idea of hidden variables is attractive for those who hold quantum mechanics is incomplete and there is some more fundamental, objective, deterministic scheme governing apparently indeterminate quantum variables. The problem is Bell's Theorem has effectively killed any sort of local realism (eg, local hidden variables) and has enough experimental backing that few are willing to bet against it. That means you can have locality or you can have realism.
Spoiler (click to show/hide)
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Virex

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #468 on: December 09, 2011, 02:15:15 pm »

The interesting thing is, imagine that the laser is on the moon. You're on a vast plain with a very fast camera.

The laser dot is moved, FTL, from west to east past you. You film it approaching and departing with the fast camera.

What does the dot look like to the camera? What do you actually see, assuming that you could perceive the dot moving?

I presume that you would first see the dot appear in front of you and then split. One dot will be distorted and twice as long as it should be, moving east. One dot will be half as long and will move west.

Assuming that the dot appears to move at 2c from the lunar perspective, the eastward-moving dot will appear to the camera to be moving at 2c, while the westward-moving dot will appear to be 0.5. I'm not certain of this.

Hmmm. I would like to see mythbusters try this. Perhaps they could model it with sound waves.


I think you can test it on earth using a laser:

C = 3*105 km/s

V = r*omega

C/r = omega

Say, we have a distance of 10 km to work with (well within the range of laser range finders. We'll stage the test in a salt flat at night, so we don't get any interference), that would mean:

3*104 = omega

Now 3*104 rad/s is roughly 3*105 rpm, which is the angular velocity of a dentists drill and an angular velocity that's regularly attained by high-grade magnetic engines. I would be surprised if you can't spin a continuous laser that's visible over 10 km at that speed. Modern semiconductor lasers are damn bright and damn small too. (Though  3*105 rpm  is damn fast, so I don't know if the laser may get damaged by it)



So we can create a dot that is moving faster than the speed of light. How about the camera?

The fastest high-speed cameras available can take 200 million frames per second (the guys at Rhode Island use one for research), which is one frame per 5 nanoseconds. In that time, the dot will have moved roughly 2 meters, maybe more if we're working well above the speed of light. Assuming for the moment that we can measure sensible data over a distance of 100 meters, we could get about 30 to 50 frames of data, more than enough to see what's happening (plus, the laser is, you know, spinning. We're going to get more than one chance). We just need a white wall 200 meters long, two top-of-the-line high-speed cameras, a laser and a really fast engine. The biggest problem is probably fixing the laser so that it doesn't get damaged at such a speed and powering while it's spinning. We could go lower with the angular velocity if we increase the distance between the laser and the wall, but then we also need a stronger laser.
« Last Edit: December 09, 2011, 02:45:07 pm by Virex »
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Starver

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #469 on: December 09, 2011, 05:42:13 pm »

Put a mirror on the tip of the 'drill', 45-degrees off, positioned and/or counterweighted so as to have negligible eccentricity and thus vibration, if you don't think it'll hold together otherwise.  Shine a fixed laser along the axis, rotating 'lighthouse' effect spills out along plane of rotation to give effect so desired.

For a demonstration piece, I'd actually be tempted to use a mirror with a distinct curve at the point of interception, by the way (convex and curved around the axis that is co-perpendicular to both the rotational axis and the 'spraying' one, IYSWIM) so that the laser (when the drill-mirror is stationary) is given the opportunity to apply illumination in a line over the floor from close in all the way to the arbitrary distance out at which the demonstrable effect is to be seen.  Set the item spinning and take a photo from overhead, to observe the "curved water-jet" pattern.


(What are we trying to prove again?  I'm slightly lost as to why we're 'testing' this.  But, again, I've been awake for far too long, this day.)
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PTTG??

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #470 on: December 09, 2011, 06:06:35 pm »

Science!
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Starver

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #471 on: December 09, 2011, 06:44:27 pm »

Sounds like the wrong way round to me.  Don't forget that science is a methodology, rather than a conclusion in and of itself.
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forsaken1111

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #472 on: December 09, 2011, 06:48:16 pm »

Or, for a top-of-the-line model, every bit of wire that is actually connecting anything is replaced by a pair of wormholes.
Eh, the Enterprise computer from star trek TNG used FTL subspace relays to communicate among its various internal parts because it was so large that signal lag would have degraded its performance.
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PTTG??

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #473 on: December 09, 2011, 06:56:52 pm »

Sounds like the wrong way round to me.  Don't forget that science is a methodology, rather than a conclusion in and of itself.
HERETIC! BURN THEM! FOR SCIENCE!
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Osmosis Jones

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #474 on: December 09, 2011, 07:15:10 pm »

What are we trying to prove again?  I'm slightly lost as to why we're 'testing' this.  But, again, I've been awake for far too long, this day.

It's an interesting thought experiment that uses LASORZ, we don't really need to prove anything. Sometimes, SCIENCE! really is performed just for shits and giggles.
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Virex

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #475 on: December 09, 2011, 07:58:02 pm »

Put a mirror on the tip of the 'drill', 45-degrees off, positioned and/or counterweighted so as to have negligible eccentricity and thus vibration, if you don't think it'll hold together otherwise.  Shine a fixed laser along the axis, rotating 'lighthouse' effect spills out along plane of rotation to give effect so desired.

For a demonstration piece, I'd actually be tempted to use a mirror with a distinct curve at the point of interception, by the way (convex and curved around the axis that is co-perpendicular to both the rotational axis and the 'spraying' one, IYSWIM) so that the laser (when the drill-mirror is stationary) is given the opportunity to apply illumination in a line over the floor from close in all the way to the arbitrary distance out at which the demonstrable effect is to be seen.  Set the item spinning and take a photo from overhead, to observe the "curved water-jet" pattern.


(What are we trying to prove again?  I'm slightly lost as to why we're 'testing' this.  But, again, I've been awake for far too long, this day.)
PTTG? Had an interesting theory as to what you see if a spot of light is moving towards you at superluminal velocity:
The interesting thing is, imagine that the laser is on the moon. You're on a vast plain with a very fast camera.

The laser dot is moved, FTL, from west to east past you. You film it approaching and departing with the fast camera.

What does the dot look like to the camera? What do you actually see, assuming that you could perceive the dot moving?

I presume that you would first see the dot appear in front of you and then split. One dot will be distorted and twice as long as it should be, moving east. One dot will be half as long and will move west.

Assuming that the dot appears to move at 2c from the lunar perspective, the eastward-moving dot will appear to the camera to be moving at 2c, while the westward-moving dot will appear to be 0.5. I'm not certain of this.

Hmmm. I would like to see mythbusters try this. Perhaps they could model it with sound waves.
I decided to do a back-of-the envelope design to see if you can actually do the required experiments on Earth (in the atmosphere because using a medium to slow things down enough would just be impractical) instead of needing to put a camera on the moon. Turns out that the laser intensity is probably going to be the biggest bottleneck. It has to span 10 KM and then still be visible at 100 meters distance to a high-speed camera. Oh and the camera you need costs as much as a house.
« Last Edit: December 09, 2011, 08:00:16 pm by Virex »
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Starver

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #476 on: December 09, 2011, 08:44:41 pm »

Sometimes, SCIENCE! really is performed just for shits and giggles.

So... are the shits and giggles correlated?  And if correlated, is this because of a direct causation?  In either direction.  Or perhaps in both by way of a bistable feedback mechanism.  Or are they both merely the observed phenomena that are the macroscopic expressiveness of some thing more fundamental than a 'mere' Giggles and Undesirables Theory?  Something that has dominion over both the mental processes arising from your basic Humour quanta and the physical excretions that may derive from bodily processing of The Humours.

I'm trying to reconcile a possible common unit of measurement, in case that might give us a clue on how to record such comparisons, but while there's a wide choice of quantities possibly applicable the former (weight, mass, volume, density? ...or perhaps something like either gravimetric or volumetric measures of water content is more relevant), I can't seem to match it to the decibels which would seem to be the latter's only obvious measure, but which aren't even properly SI and don't even have an absolute value and instead remain a fully relative measure.  This would not matter too much if it is a linear match, of course, but causes issues if it becomes clear that power- and/or log-law equations predominantly apply.



Hmmm. This time yesterday... it was still 'today', for me, figuratively speaking.  Perhaps (later) in the morning I shall have the answer, after some sleep.  All hail SCIENCE!
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Shinotsa

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #477 on: December 09, 2011, 10:42:38 pm »

Heard this joke today and then saw this thread. Figured it was slightly relevant.

The bartender says "We don't allow faster-than-light neutrinos in here!"
A neutrino walks into a bar.

Don't know where it's from, I just heard it from my family.
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Osmosis Jones

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #478 on: December 09, 2011, 11:12:39 pm »

Heard this joke today and then saw this thread. Figured it was slightly relevant.

The bartender says "We don't allow faster-than-light neutrinos in here!"
A neutrino walks into a bar.

Don't know where it's from, I just heard it from my family.

Good joke, but sadly it's cropped up in this thread a few times before.
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The Marx generator will produce Engels-waves which should allow the inherently unstable isotope of Leninium to undergo a rapid Stalinisation in mere trockoseconds.

Shinotsa

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Re: CERN has accidentally the everything.
« Reply #479 on: December 09, 2011, 11:16:53 pm »

That's a crying shame, I even used the search bar. Welp, back to google 101.

Anyhow, anyone want to toss out their theories on gravity? It's the force we're the most familiar with AND know the least about. Or so says my physics professor. Any theories on what causes it? (SCIENCE! theories welcome)
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