BeastMaster wrote:hillhunter one of the questions i asked was, if two cars were traveling behind one another both just faster than the speed of light; would the front car see the headlights of the car behind it??
No, it would not. Actually it would be more likely that the second car would see the front car's lights. If they are traveling at or faster than the speed of light, the front car car wouldn't see his own lights projected in front of the car, neither would the second car. The only possibility for light to be seen by either driver would be the second driver seeing the light from the front car as he passed them by, due to being faster than the speed of light.

so i'm still asking... how do you tell direction in space... ?
It may be possible that there is no "direction" in space, i.e. north, south east, west, only vectors. The only possibly stable thing to constantly measure a direction from (in degrees or whatever) would be the ship itself, which itself is in motion and at any given moment may be skewed from it's previous position, which would throw off any calculation of direction. I guess that's why there is no autopilot on a space craft, no way for the computer to judge direction. That and the fact that it's probably way cool to fly one so there's no need for autopilot.

is it turkey season yet?
No.


