Speed of Causality

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I’ve only just learnt that the speed of light is really the speed of causality and I’m trying to understand it. I’m sorry if this is a stupid question but imagine I had a seesaw a lightyear long. I sit at one end and the other end lifts instantaneously. If someone was sat at the other end I would be lifting them faster than light could reach them. Their being lifted would be faster than the speed of causality. Is this wrong? Does one end of a seesaw dropping and the other end lifting not happen instantaneously with one another?

EDIT: Thank you to the people who have all responded so far. I can see that my thought that the two ends of the sawsee moving simultaneously with one another was the error in my thinking, and that the reason I thought this was due to scale and in reality a seesaw seems instantaneous but it’s not. Thanks again to those who took the time to reply and I’m grateful for your kindness.

In: Physics

10 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

With questions like this, it helps to think about “edge cases”. Change the scenario into something you understand better. What happens if you have a really really long, thin “see saw”. Maybe a ten foot long tape measure. When you lift one end, it bends. If you *snap* it up and down violently, the it’ll send a sort of wave from one end to the next.

Any seesaw a light year long will be much like this tape measure. Anything you do to one end will travel down the length at a speed significantly lower than the speed of light.

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