Theemile wrote:SNIP
Technically, you are correct for "Sub-c", but I've never heard the phrase. The speed of light in Copper can drop to as low as 72% but coax can be as high as 83% - Earth's atmosphere at sea level drops the speed of light by a factor of 1.0003, So anything interstelllar matter can do is almost insignificant - but from a physics point of view, it is sub-c. And at the distances we're discussing, timing signals will be distorted.
I was waiting for an appt yesterday, and on the wall opposite was that famous Hubble photo of the 'Pillars of Creation'. I was sort of wondering how big they were [about 5 light years it turns out] and then how dense.
After a bit of seaching I found:
- 'standard' space is about 1 atom of hydrogen/cc [dropping down to maybe 0.1 atoms/cc in certain region
- in the Pillars - about 4,000 atoms/cc
- our atmosphere - about 2.5x10^25 molecules/cc