No, once the brick passed through, blood would start pouring every where though.
2006-10-06 17:43:19
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answer #1
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answered by kittycat_cc14 3
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No. If a brick could be brought up to the speed of light, it would have all new properties that would make it interact with the world in a whole new way. You should check out some of the theories of Einstein and see what Steven Hawkins may have to say on the subject.
Now if a brick were to hit me in the head at a considerably slower speed of say Mach 20, that is twenty times the speed of sound, there will be no blood. That is because my head would be in the atmosphere and the brick would surely be pretty hot if it can stay in one piece. When it gets close to my head it will cook my brains till they are hard and then lop off my head leaving nothing but char and ash.
Is that what you were looking for?
Regards
Jon
2006-10-06 17:49:09
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answer #2
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answered by ĴΩŋ 5
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If a brick hits absolutely everyone in the top on the fee of sunshine, a similar brick could hit all of us in the top on a similar time, so there does not be absolutely everyone left to renowned if any blood splattered.
2016-10-18 23:12:22
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yes it would, and the pattern would be indicative of force you were hit with (and therefore of the speed of the brick). Also, someone above me said something about the blood travelling at the speed of light and therefore becoming light. That is incorrect. The friction, among other things, would slow the blood down enough that it would still splatter.
2006-10-06 17:42:49
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answer #4
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answered by cyanne2ak 7
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Of course, a brick cannot be accelerated anywhere close to the speed of light, but a brick traveling even at a fraction of that speed would vaporize what it hit.
2006-10-06 17:43:07
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answer #5
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answered by ChazS 2
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In theory, an object moving at the speed of light would have to have so much force it might vaporize on contact taking you with it.
However, it is also possible it might pass right through you traveling in a different time and space dimension.
2006-10-06 17:45:08
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answer #6
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answered by shapsjo 3
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There wouldn't be a brick left to hit anything.
2006-10-06 17:44:29
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answer #7
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answered by gemma 4
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no, if it could move that fast, friction would bake you as fast as it hit, it would congeal/bake solid.
and I beleive that to make something move that fast, it would convert to energy anyway.....
( no longer squishing you, but rather being conducted by you)
killing you none-the-less, but I think you'd still be fried.
2006-10-06 17:43:38
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answer #8
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answered by papeche 5
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At the speed of light, It would become light, so: no.
2006-10-06 17:42:37
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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puts a square hlole in your head and splat
2006-10-06 17:41:41
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answer #10
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answered by barry r 6
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