0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
It is quite easy to notice the delay in the transmission of force on the old fashioned railway signaling system where the movement of a lever pulled a long metal bar that in turn moved the signal up.The force is of course propergated at the speed of sound in the medium.
are we confusing the mass of the object reacting to the force with transmission of the force. I would imagine the long railway signal tie would resist movement due to its own mass, probably even causing some stretching or compressing of the member and this would retard the movement of the far end, but would it retard the effect of the force over the entire length of the member? For the member to stretch say, the near end must pull away from the far one, the mass at the far end of the tie must therefore be supplying equal and opposite reactions to the force at the near (at the first instant at least, until the entire member begins to move).
is the transmission of force instantaneous? if yes does this mean information travels faster than light?if I have a long stick, say 10 light years long, OK so its a really long stick. If I push on the near end of the stick, how long until the force can be measured at the far end of the stick? does it take 10 years?
Why do people instantly reach for the 'big' explanation before clearing up the conventional bits?
Quote from: f6 on 11/02/2008 22:32:28is the transmission of force instantaneous? if yes does this mean information travels faster than light?if I have a long stick, say 10 light years long, OK so its a really long stick. If I push on the near end of the stick, how long until the force can be measured at the far end of the stick? does it take 10 years?One of the main differences between newtonian mechanics and special relativity, well understood even before Einstein's theory, is the fact that in the first theory interactions can propagate at infinite speeds, in the second they have a finite limit: c.That said, in the case of a stick, as others wrote, interaction's speed is sound speed in that medium (one of the highest is in diamond: 12,000 m/s).
The speed of sound is going to be right for the bulk of the force. This makes me wonder, though, if it's like light being transmitted through a medium: the bulk of the light travels at speed v=c/n where n is the refractive index, but a tiny portion of the light travels through exactly at speed c.
Quote from: jpetruccelli on 12/02/2008 16:03:25The speed of sound is going to be right for the bulk of the force. This makes me wonder, though, if it's like light being transmitted through a medium: the bulk of the light travels at speed v=c/n where n is the refractive index, but a tiny portion of the light travels through exactly at speed c. "A tiny portion of the light travels through exactly at speed c". Don't understand the reason.
I think that most people who aren't scientists/engineers want to know the most fundamental explanation that science can currently give expressed in the simplest terms possible.
Why do we say force travels at the speed of sound in the material? It must be more than coincidence...
But I agree with the speed of sound limit. You might get a microscopic "tap" at the speed of light, and then the force would arrive at the speed of sound.
Quote from: jpetruccelli on 12/02/2008 19:17:36But I agree with the speed of sound limit. You might get a microscopic "tap" at the speed of light, and then the force would arrive at the speed of sound.I guess this is true in principle, but I feel it's the same order of magnitude as the likelihood of a pea tunneling through a table and falling onto the floor. The energy associated with the photons involved in mechanical / sound waves is very small. What sort of signal to noise ration would you need in order to detect the 'tap'?