Author Topic: E=MC² is no longer valid  (Read 2909 times)

Mass effect fields

*shades*
Warp Drives and Energy shields
Both of which are entirely fiction.

Are you sure? I'm fairly certain that E=mc2 is what was used to figure out how nuclear bombs and such would work.
Energy produced = total mass converted squared, E=MC2.
I know E=mc2 has to do with nuclear power, but I thought it was also the same equation that said that anything with mass requires infinite energy to reach the speed of light. Maybe I'm getting it mixed up with another equation.

"Time travel is possible, in theory now."

You know... nothing cool will be invented until my lifetime is over.  This being the case, forget it all.

You know... nothing cool will be invented until my lifetime is over.  This being the case, forget it all.
You don't know this.

"Time travel is possible, in theory now."

You know... nothing cool will be invented until my lifetime is over.  This being the case, forget it all.

I don't think you've been paying attention to the scientific advances over the past 30 years.

I know E=mc2 has to do with nuclear power, but I thought it was also the same equation that said that anything with mass requires infinite energy to reach the speed of light. Maybe I'm getting it mixed up with another equation.
Same equation, two different intepretations.

Anyways, the particle was accelerated to 1+1/20.000.000 times the speed of light. It has not been confirmed that this really is true.

"Time travel is possible, in theory now."

You know... nothing cool will be invented until my lifetime is over.  This being the case, forget it all.
You forgot the part where they invented the computer you are using atm.

I always had a certain doubt about light. It just seemed so ephemeral and fragile. 

I always had a certain doubt about light.
Light does not exist. It is just your imagination.

Light does not exist. It is just your imagination.

Everything is a lie

Everything is a lie

Everything we put into though is a concept, it may be a physical fact but we are truly the only ones who put it there in the first place(GAVE ITS MEANING). The universe isn't conscious and it cannot contradict, it has no meaning just as the questions to life.
We might call one thing something else and then observe it for a period of time, if no reaction is present then I can officially say the universe is a tetrahedron Cuban boy knitting a jigsaw puzzle together.

The universe's official color is beige:

Quote
What color is the universe? More precisely, if the entire sky was smeared out, what color would the final mix be? This whimsical question came up when trying to determine what stars are commonplace in nearby galaxies. The answer, depicted above, is a conditionally perceived shade of beige. To determine this, astronomers computationally averaged the light emitted by one of the largest sample of galaxies yet brown townyzed: the 200,000 galaxies of the 2dF survey. The resulting cosmic spectrum has some emission in all parts of the electromagnetic spectrum, but a single perceived composite color. This color has become much less blue over the past 10 billion years, indicating that redder stars are becoming more prevalent. In a contest to better name the color, notable entries included skyvory, univeige, and the winner: cosmic latte.

Quote from:  My Reaction Upon Finding Out
This is fantastic.

This is like Douglas Adams were alive and wrote this study:

“The Hitchhiker’s Guide has this to say on the color of the universe:

For years astronomers from all over the galaxy had wondered what color would best represent the universe.

‘A crimsonish yellow!’ said one from the golfing planet of Mullagon.
‘No, you fool, the universe is dark just as we see it, a bluish black!’ said another from Nylon 3.

So for years and years they debated until finally astronomers computationally averaged the light emitted by one of the largest sample of galaxies they knew.

Finally, the big day arrived and everyone was excited to see the vastly beautiful color that should certainly represent the universe. The answer was a conditionally perceived shade of beige.

With that in mind, the astronomers went on to bigger and better things with their lives than worrying about a silly thing like that.”

I should really get to class, actually...

Guys, untill another group of scientists with another bit of equipment confirms this all is accurate...
We can't base anything on that until then.

I can't wait to break physics!

A lot of breakthroughs in science lately.

Heard this on the news in school today.