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guest
· 6 years ago
· FIRST
Uhm, no. That’s definitely *not* how it works.
1
timebender25
· 6 years ago
That's not quite how that works.
9
famousone
· 6 years ago
I can't even read this. What?
7
scatmandingo
· 6 years ago
Special relativistic time dilation is a proven phenomenon but I’m not sure if that’s the correct ratios.
5
engineer
· 6 years ago
Well technically you can’t travel at “Speed of Light” maybe they meant near the speed of light? Like 0.9999999c?
3
lucky11
· 6 years ago
Maybe, right now all we've got are a bunch of hypotheses and theories. Until we can actually send something out at the speed of light and have it come back we won't know for sure. It may be that nothing happens, it may be that some time back home passes, or it may be that alot of time back home passes.
scatmandingo
· 6 years ago
No, we have observed data. The ISS loses something like 0.005 seconds per year over the control clocks on the ground.
1
bethorien
· 6 years ago
It's a noticeable thing with the different extremes of altitude as well. Just go and fly all the time. You'll have less chance of dying than being on the ground and you'll live a fraction of a second longer
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Edited 6 years ago