Miles Edgeworth (
jurisimpudent) wrote in
ataraxion2012-11-02 02:27 pm
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Entry tags:
- angela montenegro,
- auggie anderson,
- claudius,
- connor temple,
- franziska von karma,
- josias st. john,
- larry butz,
- laughing beauty,
- loki laufeyson (616),
- manfred von karma,
- miles edgeworth,
- niall o corcoráin,
- sebastian moran (d'urbervilles),
- stannis baratheon,
- takeshi,
- taylor "tyke" kee,
- the doctor (eleventh)
[voice]
[The broadcast is audio only, and the voice that comes across is quiet and more than a little bit ragged. But he speaks evenly.]
Good day. This is Miles Edgeworth.
These past days have been chaotic, and as such it has been easy to lose track of time; however, it must be remembered that in spite of everything that has happened we have received no indication that the jump will not go forward as scheduled. It will occur in five days. Please bear this impending deadline in mind; there will be more reminders as we approach the event, but be sure that you are prepared.
I manage a service, in which I recommend that all individuals on board to take part. It is a "buddy system," in which you are assigned someone to check to ensure that you have made it safely to the jump. For more details, please inquire here.
Additionally, if any are interested in joining the security force, please speak with me; I should be glad to direct you the right way.
[A slight pause. He's searching frantically for distraction, but this isn't enough - so he adds more.]
What languages does everyone speak? I should like to find a conversational partner; my skills are becoming rusty.
[And:]
I should also like someone with whom I might be able to discuss certain aspects of physics.
[And then another pause, and then quietly:]
Quite.
Good day. This is Miles Edgeworth.
These past days have been chaotic, and as such it has been easy to lose track of time; however, it must be remembered that in spite of everything that has happened we have received no indication that the jump will not go forward as scheduled. It will occur in five days. Please bear this impending deadline in mind; there will be more reminders as we approach the event, but be sure that you are prepared.
I manage a service, in which I recommend that all individuals on board to take part. It is a "buddy system," in which you are assigned someone to check to ensure that you have made it safely to the jump. For more details, please inquire here.
Additionally, if any are interested in joining the security force, please speak with me; I should be glad to direct you the right way.
[A slight pause. He's searching frantically for distraction, but this isn't enough - so he adds more.]
What languages does everyone speak? I should like to find a conversational partner; my skills are becoming rusty.
[And:]
I should also like someone with whom I might be able to discuss certain aspects of physics.
[And then another pause, and then quietly:]
Quite.
video » TEMPLE encryption » 100%
I'm not sure how the ship is piloted [ he's not sure about a lot of the ship, actually ] but I suppose so. We'd have to avoid entering anything's orbit, or getting dragged into a black hole. That's kind of Sci-Fi 101.
I think we're in pretty deep space, though. So there's not... much to navigate.
voice » TEMPLE encryption » 100%
So then what's special relativity?
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Essentially, you've got three dimensions you can move in. Up and down, side to side, and forwards and backwards. But you've also got a time dimension—the fourth dimension—in order to unify space and time, creating the space-time continuum. Special relativity's more to do with relative motion between objects using the space-time continuum. [ for example... ] If you were traveling in a car, and your friend were also traveling in a car, and you guys wanted to compare what you saw out the windows—all that really matters is how fast you're moving with respect to one another, and how that affects what you see. But it only applies to constant motion—that's why it's called special relativity, because it's a special case. As soon as you stop traveling in a straight line at a constant speed, the "special" part doesn't apply anymore. You'd want general relativity to explain curved or accelerated motion.
[ and yet.
he looks down, biting the inside of his cheek. principles first, details later. ]
Relativity's based on two important things. First, being that the laws of physics don't change at all for the two objects moving. Second, that the speed of light doesn't change to an observer, no matter how close they are to the source of that light. Basically, two principles what've held scientifically steady up until today. [ pause. ] Well, mostly. I'm still trying to figure out how this ship moves through spacetime when it jumps, but that's... yeah, totally different. I'll just not get into it. [ casually nopes out of that line of thought for now, aaand: ]
—On second thought, the car analogy's isn't all that great. Warped perceptions of light or other observations you and other people make about spacetime are pretty much only affected if you're moving really fast, like—approaching the speed of light fast. Physicists have done some experiments that prove time dilation, but nobody's actually seen it with their own eyes, because there's only so fast a human being can go before our bodies just... can't take it anymore.
[ is there a quick and easy example to give AH YES. ] If you've heard of the Global Positioning System, that's a constant experiment in special and general relativity, specifically time dilation—the clocks in orbit around the Earth have to be working at the same rate as the clocks on the surface, so the GPS constantly compensates for time dilation effects. The closer you are to the source of a gravitation pull, the slower time goes. So, for example, the closer you get to a black hole, the slower time passes. The closer you are to the core of the Earth, the slower time passes. And if you're in orbit, like Earth's satellites, time's gonna go a tiny bit faster.
[ connor takes a moment to drink from his (now lukewarm) cup of coffee; he makes a face, but downs the rest of it anyway. ] Sorry. I've had, like... I dunno how many. Lots. Work.
Anyway, where was I—oh, okay, you've probably heard of E=mc2, right? Energy equals mass times acceleration to the speed of light. That's Einstein's most famous equation. Basically, the more you try and accelerate an object to the speed of light, the heavier it becomes. Its mass will increase the faster it goes. That means it's physically impossible to make anything but massless particles go the speed of light, because anything else's mass will get too difficult to speed up.
[ he sets the now-empty cup down with a small tink and gazes off somewhere in the direction of the coffee maker, before returning his eyes to the feed. and then, down to his other scattered papers, covered with equations. sometimes, he has to remind himself that currently-accepted physics—especially the ones he's been trying to bend, recently—are only a jumping point into the rest of the unknown universe.
not that he's going to go on a rant about that to edgeworth. just explaining the simple things is more difficult than it should be.
science. ]
So, um. [ yeah. ] That's about it.
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The jumps. Are they at the speed of light?
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Honestly, mate, I've no idea. I've got a couple of theories, but I've not seen the jump drive. I don't even know how it works.
[ so that's... a half truth? he could mention wormholes (and probably will, at some point), but truth is, he's worked with holes in spacetime before, and he's got something of a working theory on how the jumps occur. ]
That's why Chapel and I are working on the particle collider, in the science department. We're tying to make some sense of it all.
voice » TEMPLE encryption » 100%
If you could get in to see the jump drive...That would clarify things?