I was waiting for this moment for ages. :toothy
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44629271/ns/technology_and_science-science/
http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/tre78l4fh-us-light/
Amazing really. But, can we aplied it to a complex structure like a ship?
Yes, a very interesting result, as Einstein modified Newton's laws, this one has the potential to modify Einstein's work on time, distance, mass and energy.
I'm a HUGE fan of neutrinos. But, seriously, how does a scientist accurately monitor the maximum speed of a neutrino ???
I think the 'DAVE principle' applies here,...there's so much stuff that we don't know,...
...And, really,...the list of stuff that I personally don't know,...is, well,...almost infinite.
...But, seriously, Einstein was pretty cool for his day.
He made alot of sense out of fundamental physics with what we would consider primitive technology.
E != MC2
"The researchers at Cern in Switzerland and Gran Sasso in Italy have tried really hard to find what they might be doing wrong - over three years and thousands of experiments - because they can hardly believe what they are seeing."
In fact this PROVES the Italians are backwards.... What do you think JJ :lol
lol
Jochen tricked you, Peter
he is actually a German fellow living in Italy :P
you'll probably get no argument
Quote from: oex on September 23, 2011, 07:30:43 PM
In fact this PROVES the Italians are backwards.... What do you think JJ :lol
Ask Hutch what he thinks about Italian cappuccino. And that half empty bottle of Aglianico del Vulture in front of me is delicious, too.
(I couldn't care less about neutrinos, Peter :green2)
Quote from: dedndave on September 23, 2011, 08:25:42 PM
he is actually a German fellow living in Italy :P
Ah very clever, warping space AND time :wink
At first I though nuclear is the fastest matter travel universe, but now I know what X-ray had a short life span. CMIIW.