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so there is no way of estimating the speed of our galaxy?
I watched one video from a site which I can't remember and am not sure if it is accurate, that said that hubble saw galaxies moving faster than the speed of light, if this is true than It would be safe to assume that our galaxy and those galaxies are moving in opposite directions as faster than light speed is thought to be impossable, in which case we could calculate that our galaxy is going faster than a certain speed
note: this is speculation based on a questionable source
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On Earth we measure speed relative to the ground. The ground itself is very much moving, but you can't account for that in traffic court. The motion of the Earth is measured relative to the Sun, the motion of our solar system is measured relative to the galactic centre. I suppose it is possible that all the galaxies in the universe are speeding along in the same direction, but there's no way you could prove it one way or the other. We can only measure the movement of the galaxies relative to each other. Usually relative to ours, since all the light we use to detect other galaxies is collected from this one.
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I suppose we would. But how can the past exist if how we remember it differently. Surely the past is an enormous concept of thoughts and recollections. Time should be solid yes?
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You're confusing the map with the territory. Our memory of the past is a (highly questionable) recording of a tiny piece of it from the perspective of one person. It is not the actual past, insofar as there "is" one.
I have no idea what we should and shouldn't expect to observe based on the hypothesis of "solid time".
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@LDG - I think you may have got it wrong, as far as we know it is impossible to travel at the speed of light because the closer you get, the harder it becomes to reach that speed. Something like things around you slow down.
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It's nothing to do with time dilation. The energy required to move particles with mass exponentially increases as the speed of light is approached.