Camera catches the sonic boom of light.
I mentioned this in an thread on the old Star Trek website several years ago. It seems I was proven correct.
Just like an object moving faster than the speed of sound something is traveling faster than the speed of light to create the photonic boom.
If not an object then perhaps light itself has found a medium that increases its velocity to FTL speed. Much the same way that glass reduces the velocity of light speed something must be magnifying the velocity of light past the speed of light if no known object is able to travel faster than the speed of light.
http://www.livescience.com/57572-ul...c-booms-of-light.html?utm_source=notification
Just as aircraft flying at supersonic speeds create cone-shaped sonic booms, pulses of light can leave behind cone-shaped wakes of light. Now, a superfast camera has captured the first-ever video of these events.
I mentioned this in an thread on the old Star Trek website several years ago. It seems I was proven correct.
Just like an object moving faster than the speed of sound something is traveling faster than the speed of light to create the photonic boom.
If not an object then perhaps light itself has found a medium that increases its velocity to FTL speed. Much the same way that glass reduces the velocity of light speed something must be magnifying the velocity of light past the speed of light if no known object is able to travel faster than the speed of light.
http://www.livescience.com/57572-ul...c-booms-of-light.html?utm_source=notification
Just as aircraft flying at supersonic speeds create cone-shaped sonic booms, pulses of light can leave behind cone-shaped wakes of light. Now, a superfast camera has captured the first-ever video of these events.
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