<p>Why is it not possible to travel faster than light, and how do we know that?</p>
<p>Are hermaphrodites able to find loooove?</p>
<p>Can transexuals reach an orgasm???</p>
<p>Can a questions thread ever exclude those questions?</p>
<p>
You have to look at the source code
class Velocity
{
double velocity;
void setVelocity(double v)
{
if(v > C)
{
throw new OverflowExecption("Velocity cannot be greater than speed of light");
}
velocity = v;
}
}
</p>
<p>What do you find in the Black Hole?</p>
<p>If the transexual was originally a female, probably. Women can just think about orgasms and BAM! It can happen. I don’t know if the same is true for males… (I’m speaking biologically male or female)</p>
<p>Personally, I have not mastered the art of spontaneous orgasm, but I know it can happen.</p>
<p>
Large amounts of matter compacted into a small space.</p>
<p>They’re not literal holes. They’re super-compressed stars.</p>
<p>“In the last 30 years, a number of Australians have been celebrating Christmas on June 25th so that they can have Christmas in winter.”</p>
<p>That blew my mind…</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>maybe. Sometime in the future if we could access something like the Alcubierre drive:
Basically we are in this bubble. The space in front of us is contacted and the space behind us is expanded —> bringing us closer to our destination. </p>
<p>I guess it falls along the lines of how the universe is thought to be expanding: it’s not that new space is being created at the “edges” of the universe, but space is being created in between the galaxies, stars, etc. On a very small scale (like between Earth and Mars) practically no space is being created. But on a very large scale (like between two super-duper clusters of galaxies) lots of space is being created…So if we learn to access how to create and destroy space on a small scale…or create space in front of us, and contact space behind us, we may be able to move faster than the speed of light.</p>
<p>So maybe the question is: how do we create space? if matter is made up of atoms, etc, then what is “space” made up of. I don’t know much about this theory stuff, but I know that there’s is probably a huge language issue with the words we try to describe this phenomena that is probably beyond our words that we have now. Because space in the literal sense is an existence filled with nothing. What is “nothing”? Can we create “nothing”?..we can’t really create matter (conservation of mass), but just move it around and form it into something we can use. So if we can’t create nothing (conservation of mass…nothing I guess is the absence of matter, mass, ect.), can we move it around and form it into something of use, just like matter. And again, the term “nothing” shouldn’t really be used here, however,
nothing" and “space” are the only words to describe a phenomena that we don’t know really exists yet. Lol, sorry. I don’t think I made sense. </p>
<p>But on the other side of the argument (if there is an argument…lol, I’m just assuming), maybe space isn’t being created as the universe expands, but the universe is stretching and that’s why it is expanding. So if we learn how to access this “stretching,” we may learn to travel very fast. All this crap may have to deal more with antimatter and the such…so we may never know.</p>
<p>Jesus, this wasn’t supposed to be this long. All this was just my own hunch on things and I got kind of carried away and I highly doubt some of this is right… :/</p>
<p>So my stupid question is: if Australians celebrate Christmas in June, is that where we get the expression “Christmas in July”…or June…or whatever?</p>
<p>What is the air-speed velocity of an unladen swallow?</p>
<p>^ African or European?</p>
<p>Science time *****es.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>We don’t actually know, since we don’t know of anything that can escape from a black hole (so no information can be transmitted back). However, it isn’t unreasonable to say that you would find nothing at all in a black hole. The current accepted theory is that all of that matter is compressed into an infinitely small space (a singularity). What’s more interesting is what you would see from inside one, looking out. Because light is bent by its gravitational field, you can reach a point where you can see not just what’s in front of you, but what’s behind the black hole as well. Check out [YouTube</a> - A Journey into a Black Hole](<a href=“http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI9CvipHl_c]YouTube”>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eI9CvipHl_c) , skip ahead to around 3min 30 seconds, but I suggest watching the whole thing.</p>
<p>
</p>
<p>Because it would take an infinite amount of energy. This “ultimate speed” is described in a postulate of relativity (on which Einstein’s theory is based), which states that the speed of light in a vacuum has the same value in all directions and in all inertial reference frames, meaning that even a spaceship traveling at .9c will still always and unequivocally measure the speed of light relative to its frame as c. </p>
<p>This postulate has been tested directly in labs. Physicists at CERN generated a beam of neutral pions (which decays into two gamma rays) at a speed very close to c with respect to the lab, then measured the speed of the emitted gamma rays. They found that the speed of these gamma rays still measured c (whereas we might’ve assumed them to be near 2c if the postulate was incorrect).</p>
<p>Where is Cognito?</p>
<p>^ <a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/high-school-life/986677-if-my-location-said.html[/url]”>http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/high-school-life/986677-if-my-location-said.html</a></p>
<p>Should the hanging end of the toilet
paper roll face towards the toilet or away?</p>
<p>^Away definitely. Not that it really matters, though.</p>
<p>Towards, damn it!</p>
<p>Away for sure… Towards is just weird…</p>
<p>^Yeah, but it is Billy after all.</p>