Albert Einstein is frequently regarded as one of the
most influential scientists of all times, with brilliant insights about the
laws of nature. However, his work has one very disappointing consequence,
especially for science buffs who hope one day to travel to distant stars. His
theory demonstrated that there is a fastest speed in the Universe: the speed of
light. That means the shortest possible round-trip to the nearest star will
take nearly a decade.
But just how does that work? Even the most informed science enthusiasts often have a wrong, or at least incomplete, understanding of why you can’t go faster than light.
The textbook answer
This ultimate speed limit is a curious fact and one
that runs quite against our common intuition. After all, if you are zooming
along in your car and step on the gas, you’ll go faster. And while your car has
a top speed, we know of faster things like fighter jets and bullets.
However, speeding up eventually stops working. No
matter how hard you try, you cannot go faster than ~186,000 miles per second
(~300,000 km/sec).
There is a lot of merit to this explanation, and it
is often explained this way even in college physics classes. (Heck, even I’ve
taught that from time to time.) But it’s not the best answer.
Everything travels at the speed of light
To understand the real reason why you cannot go
faster than light requires that we learn a key idea from Einstein’s theory.
While our common experience tells us that space and time are different things,
he realized that they are more similar than different. Instead of space and time, there is a single
thing, called spacetime.
This idea is perhaps most easily understood by means
of an analogy. Look at any world map. We can identify a location on the map as
two numbers: latitude (the north/south number) and longitude (the east/west
number). While there are some minor differences (for example, it gets hotter or
colder as you move north/south), there really is no difference between the two
directions.
In spacetime, it’s much the same. Individuals can
move through time or space, just as travelers can decide to move east/west vs.
north/south.
Now for the key insight. One of Einstein’s
professors, a mathematician by the name of Hermann Minkowski, looked at
Einstein’s theory of relativity and realized that at its deepest and most
fundamental level, the theory said that any object was simply traveling through
spacetime — partially through space and partially through time. When Einstein’s
theory was pushed harder, what was revealed was that every object travels
through spacetime at a single speed — the speed of light.
To understand this more easily, suppose you are at
some location that is big and flat, like the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah.
Suppose further that you are in a car which has the accelerator locked so that
it only can go at a single speed, 60 mph (100 km/hr).
If you move at fixed speed, the bottom line is that
you can move in any direction you want, but in no direction can you move faster
than that fixed speed.
And it’s identical in spacetime. Objects move in
spacetime at the speed of light. A stationary object isn’t moving through space
at all, so the object is moving through time at the speed of light.
Furthermore, an object moving through space at the speed of light has no speed
left over to move through time.
Thus, the absolute maximum speed an object could
move through space or time individually is also the speed of light. Note that
this idea also explains the weird features of relativity, like time slowing
down for an object as its speed gets faster and faster. An object traveling
more through space is traveling less through time.
The speed limit is a harsh reality
So, that’s it. The real reason you cannot travel
through space faster than light is because you are always traveling through
spacetime at the speed of light. The best you can do is transport all your
effort into moving through space; but, once you have pushed all your motion in
the space direction, there just isn’t any more speed left. Just like the car
that can’t go faster than 60 mph, you’ve topped out.
Does this mean that the day when we finally venture
out into interstellar space that we are doomed to travel no faster than light?
A round-trip to the center of the galaxy and back takes 50,000 years traveling
at light speed. Can we do better?
Sadly, the answer is no — at least not without a new
scientific discovery. Warp drive, hyperspace, and all the faster-than-light
options from familiar science fiction are not real — or at least are unknown to
our best understanding of the laws of nature. Mind you, scientists have
discovered unknown things before, like radio waves and radioactivity, so it’s
conceivable that a discovery would change everything. So, I guess there’s hope.
On the bright side, now that you know about
spacetime, the next time your boss gets on your case for just sitting there,
you can tell them that they are being unreasonable. You’re moving as fast as
possible.
1 Comments
I mean I'd have to check the feasibility of the math but it's sort of a useful analogy. To a point. But getting there means playing with definitions a little liberally for my taste.like what does "speed" mean or "speed limit" or "travel"..... The more we have to bend words to match our meanings the less disciplined we are and frankly the less intelligent.
ReplyDeleteWords need to have universal definitions and meaning. That's part of a sort of agreement we enter into when we engage in using language to communicate. These definitions are the foundations we build on and they must remain if we are.