• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

When You Push A Long Pole, How Long Does It Take The Other End To Move?

December 9, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

There are a lot of areas of physics that appear counterintuitive, with some of the most famous examples including wave-particle duality and time dilation.

But you may feel like you have a pretty intuitive understanding of fairly simple macro objects, for instance, a pole. So here’s a question; when you take a long metal pole and push it at one end, how long does it take for the other end of the pole to move?

Advertisement

Well, we know that the change cannot be instant, even if that would be really useful. If the other end moved instantly, then you could communicate faster than the speed of light like sci-fi aliens, albeit with a really long pole or system of long poles used to convey meaning. And you don’t want to cause any time travel paradoxes by poking things with a big stick.

Another reasonable guess would be that it moves away at the speed of light, from a “it’s clearly very fast” perspective. But that’s not right either. As explained by material scientist Brian Haidet on his YouTube channel AlphaPhoenix, the time it takes for the other end of the pole to move is defined by the speed of sound in the metal bar.



 

When we pick up a solid object like metal it feels, well, pretty solid. It seems at our scale to be one long rigid structure with no gaps in between or compressibility. But at the small scale, the metal bar is a crystalline structure arranged from nucleons and their electrons, held in place by their bonds. 

Advertisement

When you push on the metal bar, the first layer of atoms pushes on the next, which pushes on the next, spreading through the bar like a wave, at the speed of sound in that medium. That’s not to say that it isn’t extremely fast. Sound moves at different speeds through those mediums, traveling faster through greater densities. On Earth, sound moves at 1,500 meters (4,921 feet) per second in water, and in air around 340 meters (1,115 feet) per second. In solids, sound moves much faster, though how fast depends on the solid, and all these depend on factors such as temperature and pressure.

In the video above, Haidet tested the delay by hitting a pole at one end and detecting when the signal passed down through the pole to the other end. He found that the delay matched what you would expect if it took place at the speed of sound in steel, in a neat tabletop experiment.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Soccer-West Ham win again, Leicester and Napoli falter
  4. Lacking Company, A Dolphin In The Baltic Is Talking To Himself

Source Link: When You Push A Long Pole, How Long Does It Take The Other End To Move?

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Want To “Time Travel” Back To Your Childhood? Baby Filter Image Illusion Could Unlock Lost Memories
  • The Sun Is Giving Us A Spooky Grimace Just In Time For Halloween
  • Comet 3I/ATLAS Reaches Perihelion Today – “Alien Spaceship” Hypothesis To Be Tested Once And For All
  • Search For Shackleton’s “Lost” Ship Uncovered 1,000 Dimples On The Antarctic Seafloor – What Are They?
  • Your Banana Smoothie Might Be Kind Of Self-Defeating, Health-Wise
  • What Are Those Zigzags You See In Spiders’ Webs? Study Finds They Could Be A Kind Of Alarm System
  • The Deepest Fish Ever Filmed Was Found 8,336 Meters Below The Surface In A Vast Ocean Trench
  • Supersonic Flight Without The Boom: NASA’s X-59 Experimental Aircraft Takes Flight For First Time
  • The Oldest Ice Ever Recovered Contains Antarctic Air Bubbles From 6 Million Years Ago
  • Freaky “Frankenstein” Worms Can Get Reproduction Wrong And End Up With Two Heads
  • Hedgehog, Lasagna, and Brussels Sprouts: Meet 2025’s Newly Named North Atlantic Right Whales
  • Can You Be Allergic To Other People? Yes, And It Sounds Like The Worst Thing Ever
  • Animals With “Urban Superpowers” Lurk In London’s Underground, And Some Of Them Want To Drink Your Blood
  • This Is The Largest Radio Color Image Of The Milky Way Ever Assembled – And It’s Gorgeous
  • Why We Can’t Stop Watching True Crime: The Psychological Pull And The Ethical Push
  • “Silent, Ongoing Genocide”: World’s 196 Uncontacted Tribes Are Facing Grave Threats To Their Survival
  • Golden Tigers Are Among The Rarest Big Cats In The World, But They Spell Bad News For Tigers
  • Rare 2-Million-Year-Old Infant Facial Fossils Expand What We Know About Prehistoric Human Children
  • First-Ever 3D Map Of Planet Outside Solar System Reveals Distant World’s Hot Spot And Cool Ring
  • From Chains To Forests: Working Elephants Set To Be Rehabilitated In The Wild Under New Project
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version