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 Posted by Rik Wasmus on 12/05/07 14:40 
On Wed, 05 Dec 2007 14:38:32 +0100, Marc Christiansen   
<usenet@solar-empire.de> wrote: 
 
> Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@attglobal.net> wrote: 
>> Marc Christiansen wrote: 
>>> Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@attglobal.net> wrote: 
>>>> Marc Christiansen wrote: 
>>>>> Jerry Stuckle <jstucklex@attglobal.net> wrote: 
>>>>>> Toby A Inkster wrote: 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> ____ 
>>>>>>> 1. It is noteworthy that the UK's motorway speed limit (70 
>>>>>>> miles/hour) is almost exactly 4 millilightyears per fortnight 
>                                        ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 
>>>>>>> (it's about 4.0009353). 
> [...] 
>>>> But you're wrong - you need to divide 5.87849981×10^12 by 365 to get   
>>>> the 
>>>> number of miles in a light day, then multiply by 14 days. 
>>> 
>>> Only if you want the length of a light fortnight in miles. Which is not 
>>> the same as lightyear / fortnight.  Light fortnight is a length, 
>>> lightyear / fortnight is a velocity. 
>>> 
>>>> I have no idea where you got 5.87849981×10^12 / (14 * 24).  But one 
>>>> light hour is 670,616,629 miles or so. 
>>> 
>>> 14 * 24 is the number of hours in a fortnight, so dividing the length   
>>> of 
>>> one lightyear in miles by this number gives me one lightyear /   
>>> fortnight 
>>> in miles / hour. 
>> 
>> OK, but he wasn't looking at one lightyear per fortnight (which violates 
>> most current laws of physics).  He was looking at a light fortnight - 
>> the distance light travels in a fortnight. 
> 
> Huh? Diving a length by a time span violates laws of physics, just 
> because the length is expressed in lightyears or the time span in 
> fortnights? 
 
Euhm, 200km / 1,5 hours = 133km/h, it's called speed, and the only law it   
broke was the speedlimit... 
 
> And he was talking about "millilightyears per fortnight" and 
> the speed limit on UK's motorways, so he definitely did not mean a 
> distance. 
 
He did indeed mention a speed. 
Once and for all: 
70 miles / hour 
23520 miles / fortnight (be very aware of DST...) 
4.0010208 × 10-9 lightyear / fortnight 
4.0010208 nanolightyear / fortnight 
 
We could ofcourse just have fuckin' googled it: 
<http://www.google.com/search?q=70miles+per+hour+in+lightyear+per+fortnight> 
--  
Rik Wasmus
 
  
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