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What is the speed of dark ?. Is it affected by vacuum...total or partial.... gravity, atmospheric density.
Over to you
Does that not implyThe speed of dark is faster as it is not affected by gravity
The speed of dark is faster as it is not affected by gravity
The speed of dark is zeroBut we all know that light is affected by gravity....black holes ?....so it should also affect the dark. Gravity has a known velocity as confirmed by NASA (check out the NASA website for further details) so that would imply that it should also affect the dark.
Newton stated in one of his famous laws that for every action, there is an equal and opposite re-action. So....would a balck hole slow down the dark or would it also speed it up ?
Personally I reckon that dark is faster cos if you switch the light off in a room and it goes dark, its instant. Its not like...'oh, its getting a bit darker...and darker still...ok, now its dark !', its instantaneous, so therefore the dark has to be faster to get where the light was the exact instant its no longer there.
The speed of dark is zero
If gravity cannot influence it, it can have no mass and if it has no mass it can retain no energy.
Gravity by the way, is a form of acceleration, not velocity - 9.8m/s/s
Have a think GaryGravity travels at the speed of light...
...Light cannot move or travel
Jan is the one to answer this question. As we all know, he drinks Guinness, which, of course, is very dark. I do believe it comes out faster than it went in, and produces a distinctive noise, presumably a sonic 'boom' (so I've been told), therfore it must be at least faster than the speed of sound.....
Yes but you say it so much nicerDoes that not imply
that it has no mass? No mass, no scalar value, no means of carrying energy ergo no 'speed of dark'
Jan is the one to answer this question. As we all know, he drinks Guinness, which, of course, is very dark. I do believe it comes out faster than it went in, and produces a distinctive noise, presumably a sonic 'boom' (so I've been told), therfore it must be at least faster than the speed of sound.....
What is the speed of dark ?. Is it affected by vacuum...total or partial.... gravity, atmospheric density.
Over to you
Jan is the one to answer this question. As we all know, he drinks Guinness, which, of course, is very dark. I do believe it comes out faster than it went in, and produces a distinctive noise, presumably a sonic 'boom' (so I've been told), therfore it must be at least faster than the speed of sound.....