1699.
F. E.
[Broesel]
(2011-05-06 8:23 PM)
+1
Well, you have to consider the following: According to Einstein, if you are accelerating the paper to the speed of light, it will not only have an immense high speed, but also a super high increase of its weight. As the physicist knows p=v*m, and F=p/t and W=F*s you will receive an enormous Energylevel turning the paper into an deadly axe. Ok that was the theorie. Now check what happens in reality. We cannot accelerate anything to the same speed as light. But according to W=mc²/squareroot of(1-(v²/c²)) the effect as described above will happen because the weight of the paper is very low its easy to reach high speeds and so we got that deadly axe without the same speedlevel as light and it will cut everything, including stone. A stone by contrast is very heavy, so you cant accelerate him well, so no deadly axe and it loses against the deadly paper axe. The scissor is already sharpend and so its not needed to waste time on reaching a high speed, but instead you can immediatly cut the paper before it becomes a deadly axe. And its pretty obvious that scissors loses against stone.
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