Speed of light Essays

  • The Speed of Light Analysis

    755 Words  | 2 Pages

    his/her eyes caught them. Light is the one particle that sheds luminosity over everything, and is the only way of seeing the elusive and magnificent nature of the universe. But to understand light is too understand its speed—a speed so great that nothing with mass can ever reach it. So what is the speed of light? It is 299, 792, 458 meters per second or 186,000 miles per second, but humans didn’t always know that light was this speed—at one point in time humans thought that light could travel any distance

  • The Rise Of Einsteinian Special Relativity

    1910 Words  | 4 Pages

    could calculate relative speeds. Suppose that an observer stands on the side of the highway, and they watch two cars approach each other at 30 and 40 miles per hour. If they were to ask the question, "how fast is the 40 mile per hour car moving relative to the 30 mile per hour car?" They could solve the problem easily by adding the two speeds of the cars, which would equal 70 miles per hour. This means that the 40 mile per hour car sees the 30 mile per hour car advance at a speed of 70 miles per hour

  • Time Travel

    677 Words  | 2 Pages

    amount of time for the light from those stars to reach earth, and in that time those stars may have disappeared. It works both ways. When an inhabitant, if there is one, on a planet around the star that you are looking at looks at our sun he is also seeing the past. So here we are, at the main idea of my speech - the possibility of different times and time travel. The main question here is: How do you connect these 2 times? Well, the key is to go faster than the speed of light, which is 186,283

  • space time

    801 Words  | 2 Pages

    at constant speeds relative to each other. He explained that when two objects are moving at a constant speed as the relative motion between the two objects, instead of appealing to the other as an absolute frame of reference that defined what was going on. Einstein’s theory is based on two things: the principle of relativity and the principle of the speed of light. The principle of relativity is where the laws of physics don’t change, even for objects moving in inertial (constant speed). The principle

  • Special Relativity

    656 Words  | 2 Pages

    such as yourself because special relativity explains the observed fact that the speed of light stays and remains constant regardless of the direction or velocity of its motion. Special relativity now plays an important role in astronomical observation. Special relativity is more precisely about speed. To be even more precisely this speed deals with 299,792,458 ms-1, which is the speed of light, or the rate at which light travels (in meters) per one second. This theory, developed by the greatest genius

  • Informative Speech Scientists Einstein and Heisenberg

    1726 Words  | 4 Pages

    Informative Speech Scientists Einstein and Heisenberg A. Introduction My Speech is about the scientists who had the main influence on our current time and have shaped our contemporary view of the world (Also called in Theology the "Zeitgeist"). I have chosen two of them who were in many ways just opposites. One is extremely famous and the other is almost unknown except to specialists. The most famous is of course Albert Einstein. He has significantly altered our view of the world with his Theory

  • Kinematics Essay

    546 Words  | 2 Pages

    explaining the motion of objects.”1 In kinematics velocity plays a key role in explaining the motion that occurs. Although velocity and speed are different (Velocity includes a direction) both are used to describe a motion. There are a few different devices that can be used to measure the speed of an object or motion in sports. A radar gun can be used to clock to the speed of objects ranging from large things such as race cars or small things traveling very fast such as baseballs. Although there are different

  • Einstein's Relativity, Literature and Perception

    1277 Words  | 3 Pages

    Einstein's Relativity, Literature and Perception The effect relativity had on literature was that it gave a new way of viewing objects moving at speeds near light. What a person sees depends on their viewpoint. Relativity states that as an object moves faster from a relatively stationary point the object becomes warped, or a plane that flies 'straight" over a merry-go-round would appear curved to the rider. These are two examples of the way relativity causes someone to think. The biggest direct

  • Technology of LADS - Laser Airborne Depth Sounder

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    An aeroplane flies about 400-500 metres above the water at a speed of approximately 60 - 70 m/s. Then the aircraft will send out a pulse which is moderately reflected off the surface of the water and moderately broadcasted into the water and reflected off the oceans floor, as a result two pulses are sent back to the aircraft. The pulse which was reflected of the surface of the water is a red beam (infrared) which measures the aircraft height above the water and is directed vertically downward. The

  • time travel

    2705 Words  | 6 Pages

    travel back to see our founding fathers sign the declaration of independence. We could travel to 2999 to witness the birth of the next new millennium. Such travel would require a machine capable of withstanding great pressures and incredible amounts of speed. The act of actually traveling though time is for the most part, agreed upon, but the implications of such travel is not so decided upon. Many different theorists have different views of what could happen and some go, as far as to say that if we did

  • Albert Einstein And The Theory Of Special Relativity

    745 Words  | 2 Pages

    Mass-Energy Equivalence In 1905, Albert Einstein confirmed the Theory of Special Relativity. This stated that objects moving at a constant speed move in relation to each other. This discovery managed to unify space and time, as a concept, because of how things appear differently in space depending on the speed someone is going. This wasn’t the only concept that was a result of the Theory of Special Relativity, however. Another idea that came about as a result of the Theory of Special Relativity

  • Albert Einstein's Involvement With The Atomic Bomb

    1923 Words  | 4 Pages

    had ideas of the implications of what could be done with waves of light, which would later influence his theory of relativity (Johnshepler). This is where,

  • Albert Einstein Contributions

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    Albert Einstein was one of the most famous scientist of all time. He inspired many other young scientist today with his brilliant work. Albert Einstein was born on the 14th of March 1879 and died on the 18th of April 1955. He was born in Germany, in a jewish family. Even when he was young he had a great potential in both math and science. Einstein worked in a patent office evaluating patents for electromagnetic devices not long after he graduated. Later on he came up with many ideas and theories

  • Is it Possible to Travel at the Speed of Light?

    3324 Words  | 7 Pages

    travel at the speed of light? If so, why should humans attempt this and will they? If not, what are some of the limitations of travel at the speed of light and are researchers trying to resolve them? The possibility of light speed travel has gained the attention of researchers and brought the question to mind of how long it will be before people will be speeding between galaxies at light speed like Han Solo and Chewy. Is this being attempted? The possibility of travel at light speed has caught the

  • Special and General Relativity Essay

    797 Words  | 2 Pages

    During the nineteenth century, scientists believed that light is a wave. They reasoned that waves of light need a medium to travel through, so they invented the concept of "ether." Light was thought to transmit through the ether, which stands still while all matter moves through it. In order to measure the earth's speed through the ether, Albert A. Michelson and Edward Morley collaborated on an experiment in 1887. In the experiment, one beam of light took a route against the ether and back while the other

  • The Internet And The Internet

    600 Words  | 2 Pages

    Internet: The Internet is made up of thousands of computers from around the world, these computers are linked up together though cables and satellites. Often people think the Internet is a “cloud,” but it’s a physical object. It is made up of servers and clients, which are usually made out of plastic and metal, containing a series of electronic circuits, for example; wires, glass, fibre optics, chips and other simular parts to used make a circuit. The Internet is used for a wide range of activities;

  • Space Time Continuum Research Paper

    618 Words  | 2 Pages

    doesn’t have meaning. They cannot exist without eachother. This dependence on each other is known as the Space-Time Continuum. In the late 1800s, many scientists were searching for ‘ether’, the medium they, at the time, believed existed as a means of light waves to travel through. Ether was a medium that caused disruptions in the laws of physics, as they worked differently depending on the observer’s movement relative to the...

  • Trilateration And Global Positioning Technology

    684 Words  | 2 Pages

    Synchronization, and Time Travel…yes time travel. To begin, the basic concept of the Global Positioning system consists of having a minimum of 24 operational satellites in orbit at an altitude of about 24,000 km above the Earth and traveling at an orbital speed of around 14,000 km/hour. At any point in time, there are always at least 4 satellites that are “visible” to your receiver (ex. iPhone). The receiver then gets information from at least 3 of these 4 satellites and uses what is called Trilateration

  • The Speed of Light Through Perspex

    604 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Speed of Light Through Perspex Planning Light travels at different speeds through different mediums. The speed of light in air is 300,000,000m/s. When light enters an optically denser medium, it bends towards the normal (refracts). You can work out the refractive index of by dividing the sine of the incidence angle by the sine of the angle of refraction and then working out the ratio of the two. Sine i Sine r From this refractive index you can work out the speed of light through

  • Relativity

    1941 Words  | 4 Pages

    the speed of light is constant no matter what reference point you measure it from. This first postulate of Einstein’s theory basically means that the laws of physics do not change depending on the reference point from which they are observed. For example, if you measure how long an object is it will be the same length whether you are flying in an airplane or you are stationary. (http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/relativity6.htm) The reason why the speed of light is constant