• Walking through walls.
    125 replies, posted
[QUOTE=Its a alien;23961866]Excuse me?[/QUOTE] ...it's a door... ...doors are pathways through walls...
Yes, when object travel at near light speed the atoms will move further from one another. So in theory you could walk through a door if you went fast enough, although the chances of you being stuck in the door are not objectionable.
[QUOTE=BlackBirdNL;23962803]Yes, when object travel at near light speed the atoms will move further from one another. So in theory you could walk through a door if you went fast enough, although the chances of you being stuck in the door are not objectionable.[/QUOTE] I think the kinetic energy of a person moving near c would less let you go through the door and more destroy the door and everything within a couple mile radius.
[QUOTE=BlackBirdNL;23962803]Yes, when object travel at near light speed the atoms will move further from one another. So in theory you could walk through a door if you went fast enough, although the chances of you being stuck in the door are not objectionable.[/QUOTE] You seem to be confused. Heat the person up/cool them down to control the rate of atomic vibration and hey presto you can walk through almost any material (except neutronium)
[QUOTE=ExplodingGuy;23952608]I'm not sure who is [B]stupider [/B][/QUOTE] :irony:
Well theoretically due to the uncertainty principle you could build a device that would help you move through solid matter by fitting in between the spaces, or just pretending that since you can't know where they are they just magically won't hit you. But moving your atoms/the wall's atoms would probably break the bonds of the molecules that make you up or just destroy the wall entirely. You wouldn't be able to do it with your mind, and I really doubt we'd be able to do it with technology, either. Moving faster than the speed of light would be kind of pointless, considering you can't really be accurate at that speed. And the bits about heating/cooling yourself/the material would most definitely kill you and most likely damage the material. I'm pretty sure with every way I can think of to do this you'd be better of building a damn door.
~snip~
Why of course! [img]http://www.comicsbulletin.com/rage/images/050401/koolaidmansm.jpg[/img]
^ :golfclap:
This kid tried to. [url]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZZXslsLDLs[/url] He kinda didn't... and did.
I would love to meet this kid.
ignoring the stupidity of the topic... that's basically teleportation (minus the computer interfacing part) which IS possible, but the most we can teleport at the moment is single subatomic particles, of which there are hundreds of trillions in a single cell, of which there are a hundred trillion in the average human body so other than the stupendous number of particles involved, your friend would also need a vast plethora of Heisenberg compensators, which have yet to be invented so FUCK YOU and FUCK YOUR FRIEND the entire discussion is BULLSHIT and yes I acknowledge the stupidity of the topic in question, I just had to respond and get somewhat technical you're still a dick, though
[QUOTE=bravehat;23962989]You seem to be confused. Heat the person up/cool them down to control the rate of atomic vibration and hey presto you can walk through almost any material (except neutronium)[/QUOTE] No it doesn't work like that.
[QUOTE=BlackBirdNL;24071717]No it doesn't work like that.[/QUOTE] Control the movement of every individual particle and you can slip through any substance you fancy as long as it syncs up correctly with the vibrations of the walls molecules.
You can calculate the chance of the molecules of your body moving to the next room overnight by themselves while you sleep in quantum physics. It's small as shit, but there's still a chance.
Seriously, how old are you?
I can do a similar act. Basically, I move the particles in the wall so far away I can walk through it. I call it C4.
This reminds me of that episode of Fringe.
I think he watched that episode from Fringe(don't remember wich one but its in season 1, the one that a group of guys get in to a bank vault using a device that kinda shakes the wall) more then once. [QUOTE=bl4h;24074214]This reminds me of that episode of Fringe.[/QUOTE] That's new we replied at the same time the same thing :buddy:
Not unless the wall is made of PAPER!
I walk through walls all the time. It's called using a door (or window).
Yo that shit easy.
I read a Justice League book a few years ago and Flash did this.
-snip-
[QUOTE=bravehat;24071840]Control the movement of every individual particle and you can slip through any substance you fancy as long as it syncs up correctly with the vibrations of the walls molecules.[/QUOTE] the mollecules of you and the wall would just keep bumping into eachother. Maybe you'd get in the door 1 nanometer but then you'd get stuck.
You can't slip through a solid for the same reason you CAN slip through a liquid. The spacing/give of the molecules is basically the only factor. In a liquid, the molecules are less tightly packed and you can easily shove them aside, but you can't just walk into a chair because it's a solid, the molecules and atoms and shit are all frozen in place to make it keep its shape. If it was unbelievably hot without catching on fire or melting, and I mean SERIOUSLY COMPLETELY UNBELIEVABLY hot, you could maybe displace a little bit of yourself if the molecules in the solid loosened up enough for you to do it, but the probability is basically impossible to comprehend.
Hey, do some old monk... stuff. "omm... I am the wall... omm... Hiyah!" *Runs into wall* *Smack*
OP how old are you?
guys stop saying it's not possible without doing any research, quantum physics is making new wall digging technology that converts brainwaves into anti-walls dumb fucks don't know jack about science
Go read "The cat who could walk though walls", Its a book about exactly this. [editline]09:04PM[/editline] Awesome, page king now everyone can read that book.
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