Stormyweathers wrote:
I'm a chemist, not a physicist, so I choose to explain it in more layman terms.
Energy cannot propel anything faster than energy can itself go. In a vacuum, energy travels at the speed of light, so that's as fast as anything can go.
While it is possible in a great big universe that there are other circumstances beyond the presence of matter which might alter the speed of light, our solar system is a tiny spec of dust in a field so large that even light finds it to be big.
So, the speed of light is probably the maximum speed of everything, but we don't have a reliable way to check ... yet.
Not exactly, everything, actually. The speed of light is the limit at which
information can travel. If you were to point a laser pointer at the moon, (assuming the atmosphere doesn't nullify it), and were to move it from one side to the other, you would technically be breaking the light barrier.
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