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Does new brand of invented forces based Electromagnetic power could forcing object movement accelerately gradually to the near lightspeed?
Hi guys, i miss Y!A Astronomy 😊 i miss you all 😁 i'm back.
Recently.. i make an engineering project for school to levitate an object and try to move it in any direction using electromagnetic power that i invented with my team accidentally last month 😄 controlled by microcontroller and some sensors and reversing Earth gravity and stabilize it on its initial position and it seems to quite works, (almost haha) but still need some improvement. i'm so exicted by now 😄 and i can't explain how it works in here in details because it's classified 😆 but Just like drone manipulating the Air, what i can say... i do it basically by manipulating the electromagnetic power programmatically with help of some sensors and freeing an object againts gravity to levitate it and move it in any direction that we wants. the difficulties issues in here is.... the modules needs to be weightless to be success or needs to gain its electromagnetic power as it forces for flying heavy objects which is needs more battery or power sources for that, and it would be so much expensive 😫
i just wondering... since any kind of Electromagnetic Radiation always moved in lightspeed, is it possible that any force produced or invented by electromagnetic radiation also possible to accelerate an object gradually to the near lightspeed?
Thanks in advance.
7 Answers
- PaulaLv 73 years agoFavorite Answer
No
There is no "new" type of Electromagnetic power
Of course there is no way to accelerate solid objects using electromagnetic force
Well ... there is, but it requires a conventional power source to power the electromagnetic power
- Anonymous3 years ago
The use of magnetic levitation to overcome gravity and accelerate metal objects isn't new -- we have railways that use that principle?
- Anonymous3 years ago
So in other words, you "invented" something that has been around for decades.
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- LucaLv 63 years ago
The first part looks like either you haven't understood much of the project you're working on, or it's based on pure magic...
Moving to the actual question: "ANY" (well, not exactly all forces, but many) force applied for long enough time could move objects to "almost the speed of light" in theory (obviously not exacly c, since you cant reach that with massive objects), but this doesn't depend in any way on the fact the the EM field moves at the speed of light or that the force you're using moves at that speed.
- Anonymous3 years ago
No. You’ve written a load of pseudoscientific guff but the last bit is all that’s relevant.
Einstein’s theory of Special Relativity makes very clear that objects with mass require infinite energy to travel at lightspeed and the energy bill rapidly shoots up towards infinity as the object gets closer to lightspeed.