What if the speed of light were 100 times higher?
Imagine the speed of light is 100 times that in our universe. Light from the moon takes about 1/100th of a second, the sunlight reaches our eyes in about 4 seconds, from nearby Alpha Centauri in about 16 days, and from the galactic center in about 260 years.
Assuming the laws of relativity would be scaled up to the higher value of
Besides being awesome, would there be any other important considerations that I should keep in mind?
Edit: In light of the first few responses, if at all possible, I would like to assume scenarios where the universe does not burn down horribly. But perhaps such a fast propagation of causality leaves me with no outs...
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If you say you want to make the speed of light 100 times as high, you have to say what you want to keep constant. I'll assume you want to keep constant the sizes of things (because if light is 100 times as fast, but all things are 100 times as large, the apparent speed is again the same), and also keep the time scales of physical processes (again, because if light goes 100 times as fast, but you also live 100 times as fast, you've won nothing).
Summary
I think by carefully adjusting the constants, you could make it so that most things stay more or less the same. However, there will be inevitable changes in the details, especially forget about earth magnetic field (and associated effects, like polar lights), permanent magnets, magnetic hard disks, golden gold and liquid mercury.
Edit: As Peter Cordes mentioned in the comments, also a lot of electric technology (especially motors and generators, as well as coils for circuits) depend on magnetic fields. This would have negatively affected all electric technology, and might result in a steampunk-like world (because steam engines obviously don't rely on magnetic fields).
How would physics have to be changed?
Let's first start with Maxwell's equations, which actually determine the speed of light [note: I'll use SI units throughout; some argumentations would have to be adapted for other unit systems, because they have less constants into which to incorporate the effects, but the ultimate effects would of course be the same].
In Maxwell's equations, there are two constants,
Maxwell's equations (the parts which I omitted above) predict electromagnetic waves going with the speed
So let's now look at the condition that sizes should remain the same. Well, the relevant size is, of course, the size of atoms, which basically can be written in terms of the Bohr radius,
So what would be the result?
The most direct change would be that magnetic fields would be much weaker, by a factor of 10000. Basically, forget about the magnetic field of earth. Also, forget about permanent magnets; they will be too weak to be of any use. Also, magnetic storage will probably not be a feasible way to store information. Actually, given that the very existence of ferromagnetism depends on sufficiently strong magnetic interaction, I'm not sure if there would be any ferromagnetism; if it existed, it would be a low-temperature phenomenon.
For further effects, let's look at the most important constant in electromagnetism: The fine structure constant,
Well, given this, we come to a very visible (and surprising) effect of a much higher speed of light:
Gold would no longer be golden!
And moreover, mercury would no longer be liquid either. Note that relativistic effects are important mostly for heavy elements, so the properties of the most important elements for life (especially hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen and carbon) should not be substantially changed; life would probably not be affected.
However I'm not sure what it would do with nuclear physics which is much more dominated by relativistic effects; mass defects would certainly be much more pronounced, but it might possibly alter the whole nuclear stability properties. On the other hand, one might evade that problem by adjusting some other fundamental constants relevant for nuclear physics.
Since the energy scales would be kept constant,
Given that in General Relativity, energy and momentum are the source of gravitation, a higher energy would also imply stronger gravitation; however you've got yet again a constant you can modify to avoid this: Just make the gravitational constant smaller by an appropriate amount.
And of course, you'd only get relativistic effects at high speeds; that's after all the whole point of it. So you'd get fast communication over wide distances, and also possibly very fast space travel (although we are still far from even reaching relativistic speeds for spaceships within our "slow-light" universe).
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