http://www.lamonitor.com/articles/2007/ ... news02.txt...
Just like the people in a \"wave\" - where individual fans stand up to make a rapidly moving wave around a football stadium - the individual electrons and nuclei do not themselves move faster than the speed of light, but the disturbance they create can easily exceed it.
In a pulsar, these conditions are replicated by the rotation of the magnetic field of the rapidly spinning neutron star. Only a few hundred miles out from the core, this magnetic field swings through the plasma surrounding the star faster than the speed of light, creating the superluminal disturbance that emits the intense pulses of light.
...
i didn't know magnetic fields could travel faster than light. i thought they were like gravitons or something - some kindof elementary particle whatshewhozit thingymabob and could not travel faster than light.
Is that true that magnetic fields can travel faster than light? I'm amazed i havn't heard of this before. Why can we not use it to communicate (ie: move something such as data) faster than light... or maybe that's what the article is suggesting.