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by spsoto
1694 days ago
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I don’t have a physics background but I’ve always seen “c” as the speed of causality. The light happens to go at that speed in the absence of gravitational disturbances. Gravity and others fields should also move at this maximum speed. That said, I’m still trying to come to terms with the fact that breaking this speed limit just means that causality would be potentially broken. Isn’t that just something we axiomatically believed based on experience and we just haven’t observed otherwise? |
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Because of how the three dimensions of space and one dimension of time are put together, you can think of there being a balance or trade between motion in space and motion in time. If you aren't moving in space, you're moving through time at the maximum possible "rate". The more rapidly you move through space, the slower you move through time. This trade bottoms out at "c", at which point you're not moving through time at all. (Since motion is impossible without time passing, "c" itself is unachievable; you can only approach it asymptotically. Something about massless particles makes "motion" not a thing in the first place, I think, meaning they can actually propagate at exactly "c" as seen by an observer.)
You can visualize this as a dial on an X-Y graph which starts out pointing in the Y direction, and as you speed up, it turns more toward the X direction. When you're pointing completely in the X direction, you're moving "at the speed of light", purely in space and not at all through time. If you turn the dial even further, you're trading some of that speed back for motion in time... but in the opposite direction.
Of course, this is all super-handwavey; most importantly, velocity has to be measured relative to an observer, so all of this about rates has to be anchored relative to an observer. (But this is also precisely why massless particles propagate at the same rate regardless of observer -- insert timey-wimey Doctor Who reference.)
Greg Egan has a lovely trilogy, Orthogonal, set in a universe where space and time don't have this trade (formally, the sign on the time variable in some critical equation is flipped to match the spatial dimensions). He has some great material on the exact physics of such a world. [0]
[0] https://www.gregegan.net/ORTHOGONAL/00/PM.html