S
SyntaxVorlon
Guest
:o
Do you know what would happen to lorentz transformations if you changed c? Time, space and matter are all contingent on the constant c. Change c, make it bigger and the universe is FUNDAMENTALLY different. Moving clocks aren't ticking as slowly, moving rods aren't as short, and moving reactions are closer to simultaneous.
"[Bekenstein] postulates a Lorentz invariant based on [electric charge changing over time], which does not conserve electric charge"(Magueijo and Albrecht, "A time varying speed of light as a solution to cosmological puzzles." pg 2)
Fundamentally different laws of electrodynamics.
I'm afraid I couldn't really go any further in the article as my knowledge of calculus is held back at mechanics, I only learned special relativity two weeks ago, and gen rel last week. Freaky stuff. You don't want c to be arbitrarily variant if you want life to exist.
[edit]Almost forgot, here's his article it's a PDF so you need acrobat:
VSL[/edit]
Do you know what would happen to lorentz transformations if you changed c? Time, space and matter are all contingent on the constant c. Change c, make it bigger and the universe is FUNDAMENTALLY different. Moving clocks aren't ticking as slowly, moving rods aren't as short, and moving reactions are closer to simultaneous.
"[Bekenstein] postulates a Lorentz invariant based on [electric charge changing over time], which does not conserve electric charge"(Magueijo and Albrecht, "A time varying speed of light as a solution to cosmological puzzles." pg 2)
Fundamentally different laws of electrodynamics.
I'm afraid I couldn't really go any further in the article as my knowledge of calculus is held back at mechanics, I only learned special relativity two weeks ago, and gen rel last week. Freaky stuff. You don't want c to be arbitrarily variant if you want life to exist.
[edit]Almost forgot, here's his article it's a PDF so you need acrobat:
VSL[/edit]