>The speed of dark is faster...
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>Black holes are an example of that. The gravity is so intense that even photons get sucked in within the event horizon. One has to conclude the speed of dark rules.
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John, you're stuck in the old way of looking at dark particles. Photons are the absense of dark particles - black holes stream dark partciles at what used to laughingly be called the speed of light...
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>>>That may be related to what I heard when driving home the other week. Some people were trying to calculate the speed of dark - comparing to the speed of light. Is the speed of dark faster or slower than the speed of light??
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>>It's gotta be at least c; the theory is that light appears whenever you start darksucking, so dark is being removed at the velocity that light starts to appear, more or less. It's all this particle physics crap that confuses me...
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If a tree falls in the forest, and crushes a COBOL programmer, does anyone really notice?