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Hyper
Ensign


Joined: 07 Apr 2003
Posts: 60
Location: UK

PostTue Apr 08, 2003 9:29 am    

Nope, your lights and vehicle will be traveling at the same speed. [/quote]
How do you mean? Yes the headlights are attached to the car, but i'm on about the photons emitted from the headlight. I'm on about the light, not the lightbulbs!!



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When matter and anti-matter collide, you dont get plasma!

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Los
Commodore


Joined: 07 Jun 2002
Posts: 1336
Location: Oklahoma fa sho!

PostTue Apr 08, 2003 8:52 pm    

BlOOp = same speed. The photon travels at the same rate at the speed of light. It doesn't matter how fast you're going, the photon will travel at the same rate. You said it yourself.

Bl00p!




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Dilithium Crystals prove the existence of protoculture.

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Hyper
Ensign


Joined: 07 Apr 2003
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PostSun Apr 13, 2003 5:00 am    

Youre not making sense!


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When matter and anti-matter collide, you dont get plasma!

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One of Many
Lieutenant


Joined: 10 Nov 2002
Posts: 160
Location: Beta Tauri

PostSat Apr 19, 2003 3:30 pm    re

Alpha Cent is a twin star system and does not have any inhabitable planets.

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Kyle Reese
Cadet Gunnery Sergeant


Joined: 21 Apr 2003
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PostSat May 10, 2003 10:59 pm    

What, is everyone who posted here an astronomer? Sheesh

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Los
Commodore


Joined: 07 Jun 2002
Posts: 1336
Location: Oklahoma fa sho!

PostSun May 11, 2003 12:55 am    Re: re

One of Many wrote:
Alpha Cent is a twin star system and does not have any inhabitable planets.


WRONG.

Alpha Centrauri is a triple star system: two large stars and a white dwarve, aka Proxima.


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stv12
Lieutenant Commander


Joined: 16 May 2003
Posts: 337

PostSat May 24, 2003 9:29 pm    

PrankishSmart wrote:
PhionexAlpha wrote:
PrankishSmart wrote:
8472 wrote:
i know that the closest star to earth is about 2.3 lightyears away


no, that doesen't sound quite right. alpha centuri is 4.4 LY

alpha centari is not the closest star to our own, alpha proxima is,its 2.3 lithyears away.


i am pretty sure that the closest star is 4.4 light years away, but maybe this is alpha proxima. 2.3 light years is wrong for the closest star, no star is that close.


2.3 lightyears is too close... i think its 4.4, like PrankishSmart said. If a star was that close to us, the orbits of the planets in the Sol System would ge upset


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Los
Commodore


Joined: 07 Jun 2002
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PostTue May 27, 2003 6:38 am    

4.2

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PrankishSmart
Rear Admiral


Joined: 29 Apr 2002
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PostTue May 27, 2003 8:52 am    

Alpha Proxima = 4.2

Alpha Centuri = 4.4

There


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Los
Commodore


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PostWed May 28, 2003 11:54 am    

Alpha Centauri = 4.3

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Lt.BirdGod
Captain


Joined: 02 Jan 2002
Posts: 619
Location: Sol System, 3rd planet from the Sun

PostWed May 28, 2003 1:08 pm    

Wish I came into this conversation earlier.

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Dax Orien
Helmsman


Joined: 24 Aug 2001
Posts: 856
Location: My own little hell.

PostWed Jun 04, 2003 9:03 am    

I'm not sure it was smart to even read the conversation ::head spins around and around::

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PrankishSmart
Rear Admiral


Joined: 29 Apr 2002
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Location: Hobart, Australia.

PostWed Jun 04, 2003 9:35 am    

Los wrote:
Alpha Centauri = 4.3


Actually, it's 4.36LY


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Dax Orien
Helmsman


Joined: 24 Aug 2001
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PostThu Jun 05, 2003 9:06 am    

::pokes Prank:: Just gotta be right, right? Or is it left? Wait... I forgot the alphabet song....::sobs::

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webtaz99
Commodore


Joined: 13 Nov 2003
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Location: The Other Side

PostFri Nov 14, 2003 12:27 pm    Light year

The writers really should have done some research on this one. (Maybe they did, and the joke's on us.)

Our galaxy is approximately 100,000 lightyears across. Our stellar system is about 30,000 lightyears from the center. This puts Voyager as far from Earth as you can get and still be in our galaxy.


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Whitehero
Senior Cadet


Joined: 30 Jul 2003
Posts: 28
Location: New Brunswick, Canada

PostSat Nov 22, 2003 6:07 pm    

Quoted from: http://www.what-is-the-speed-of-light.com


"What is the speed of light?
The speed of light in vacuum is exactly 299,792,458 m/s (metres per second)

In 1983 the SI (Systeme International) defined a metre as:

The metre is the length of the path travelled by light in vacuum during a time interval of 1/299 792 458 of a second.
When people refer to the speed of light, they refer to the definition above - the speed of light in a vacuum.


The speed of light is normally rounded to 300 000 kilometers per second or 186 000 miles per second.

The speed of light depends on the material that the light moves through - for example: light moves slower in water, glass and through the atmosphere than in a vacuum. The ratio whereby light is slowed down is called the refractive index of that medium.

In general, the difference in the speed of light in other mediums is ignored."


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Whitehero
Senior Cadet


Joined: 30 Jul 2003
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Location: New Brunswick, Canada

PostSat Nov 22, 2003 6:09 pm    

Quoted from: http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/StarChild/questions/question19.html


"A light-year is a unit of distance. It is the distance that light can travel in one year. Light moves at a velocity of about 300,000 kilometers (km) each second. So in one year, it can travel about 10 trillion km. More precisely, one light-year is equal to 9,500,000,000,000 kilometers."


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