deo
Emperor
So, is it possible? 

Generally FTL refers to the speed in a vacuum.Warman17 said:Didn't the freeze light? So technically you're going faster than it when you do that.
But the total uncertainty of the particle would be such that you can't get any information out of it. See my post above.Bluemofia said:You know, after thinking about it, I'll cave, quantum mechanics allows it.
But only temperarily.
EX:
A black hole, since it is a singularity, you are very certain of a particle's location. (that freaking singularity) Thus, you are extreemly uncertain about it's velocity, and it can temperarily travel faster than light. But, it can't do that very long, so they would fall back to sub-light speeds and fall back to the singularity.
Thus, larger black holes evaporate slower than smaller ones, because the particles need to travel at FTL Speed for longer times.
This is how black holes evaporate. (along with the virtual particles giving the black holes negative mass, and the positive mass escaping)
IIRC from Stephen Hawking's book "A Universe in a Nutshell". (or "A Brief History of Time")
Hawking later changed his mind about this (not that reality is dictated by a what Hawking says).Cheezy the Wiz said:He's right, according to Mr. Hawking's book, information does not escape a singularity.