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Old September 30th 12, 08:06 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Painius[_1_] Painius[_1_] is offline
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Default Faster than Light Motion?

On Fri, 28 Sep 2012 12:19:22 -0700 (PDT), Double-A
wrote:

Astronomers have been observing faster than light phenomena for a long
time now.

``We see almost a dozen clouds which appear to be moving out from the
galaxy's center at between four and six times the speed of light.
These are all located in a narrow jet of gas streaming out from the
region of the black hole at the galaxy's center," said Dr. John
Biretta
of the Space Telescope Science Institute.

But then they have to always try to explain them away.

``We believe this apparent speed translates into an actual velocity
just slightly below that of light
itself." Biretta

What gives? Are things really moving faster than light?

http://www.stsci.edu/ftp/science/m87/press.txt


No, Double-A, this is just the *appearance* of superluminal speeds.
Only space itself can move (expand, contract) faster than lightspeed.

It's also possible that the jets are the movement of spatial foams. In
that case, it would be possible for them to move faster than light.
--
Indelibly yours,
Paine @ http://astronomy.painellsworth.net/
"Love almost everything; you can only learn to love by loving."