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Tachyon

A tachyon (/ˈtækiɒn/) or tachyonic particle is a hypothetical particle that always travels faster than light. Physicists believe that faster-than-light particles cannot exist because they are inconsistent with the known laws of physics.[1][2] If such particles did exist they could be used to send signals faster than light. According to the theory of relativity this would violate causality, leading to logical paradoxes such as the grandfather paradox.[1] Tachyons would exhibit the unusual property of increasing in speed as their energy decreases, and would require infinite energy to slow to the speed of light. No verifiable experimental evidence for the existence of such particles has been found.

Tachyon
ClassificationElementary particle
StatusHypothetical
Theorized1967

In the 1967 paper that coined the term, Gerald Feinberg proposed that tachyonic particles could be made from excitations of a quantum field with imaginary mass.[3] However, it was soon realized that Feinberg's model did not in fact allow for superluminal (faster-than-light) particles or signals and that tachyonic fields merely give rise to instabilities, not causality violations.[4] The term tachyonic field refers to imaginary mass fields rather than to faster-than-light particles.[2][5]

The term comes from the Greek: ταχύ, tachy, meaning swift. The complementary particle types are called luxons (which always move at the speed of light) and bradyons (which always move slower than light); both of these particle types are known to exist.

History edit

The term tachyon was coined by Gerald Feinberg in a 1967 paper titled "Possibility of faster-than-light particles".[3] He had been inspired by the science-fiction story "Beep" by James Blish.[6] Feinberg studied the kinematics of such particles according to special relativity. In his paper, he also introduced fields with imaginary mass (now also referred to as tachyons) in an attempt to understand the microphysical origin such particles might have.

The first hypothesis regarding faster-than-light particles is sometimes attributed to physicist Arnold Sommerfeld, who, in 1904, named them "meta-particles".[7][8] Bilanuik, Deshpande and Sudarshan discussed this more recently in their 1962 paper on the topic[9] and in 1969.[10]

The possibility of existence of faster-than-light particles was also proposed by Lev Yakovlevich Shtrum [ru] in 1923.[11]

In September 2011, it was reported, in a major release by CERN, that a tau neutrino had traveled faster than the speed of light; however, later updates from CERN on the OPERA experiment indicate that the faster-than-light readings were due to a faulty element of the experiment's fibre optic timing system.[12]

Special relativity edit

In special relativity, a faster-than-light particle would have space-like four-momentum,[3] in contrast to ordinary particles that have time-like four-momentum. Although in some theories the mass of tachyons is regarded as imaginary, in some modern formulations the mass is considered real,[13][14][15] the formulas for the momentum and energy being redefined to this end. Moreover, since tachyons are constrained to the spacelike portion of the energy–momentum graph, they could not slow down to subluminal (meaning slower-than-light) speeds.[3]

Mass edit

In a Lorentz invariant theory, the same formulas that apply to ordinary slower-than-light particles (sometimes called "bradyons" in discussions of tachyons) must also apply to tachyons. In particular, the energy–momentum relation:

 

(where p is the relativistic momentum of the bradyon and m is its rest mass) should still apply, along with the formula for the total energy of a particle:

 

This equation shows that the total energy of a particle (bradyon or tachyon) contains a contribution from its rest mass (the "rest mass–energy") and a contribution from its motion, the kinetic energy. When   (the particle's velocity) is larger than   (the speed of light), the denominator in the equation for the energy is imaginary, as the value under the square root is negative. Because the total energy of the particle must be real (and not a complex or imaginary number) in order to have any practical meaning as a measurement, the numerator must also be imaginary (i.e. the rest mass m must be imaginary, as a pure imaginary number divided by another pure imaginary number is a real number).

In some modern formulations of the theory, the mass of tachyons is regarded as real.[13][14][15]

Speed edit

One curious effect is that, unlike ordinary particles, the speed of a tachyon increases as its energy decreases. In particular,   approaches zero when   approaches infinity. (For ordinary baryonic matter,   increases with increasing speed, becoming arbitrarily large as   approaches  , the speed of light.) Therefore, just as bradyons are forbidden to break the light-speed barrier, so too are tachyons forbidden from slowing down to below c, because infinite energy is required to reach the barrier from either above or below.

As noted by Albert Einstein, Tolman, and others, special relativity implies that faster-than-light particles, if they existed, could be used to communicate backwards in time.[16]

Neutrinos edit

In 1985, Chodos proposed that neutrinos can have a tachyonic nature.[17] The possibility of standard model particles moving at faster-than-light speeds can be modeled using Lorentz invariance violating terms, for example in the Standard-Model Extension.[18][19][20] In this framework, neutrinos experience Lorentz-violating oscillations and can travel faster than light at high energies. This proposal was strongly criticized.[21]

Cherenkov radiation edit

A tachyon with an electric charge would lose energy as Cherenkov radiation—just as ordinary charged particles do when they exceed the local speed of light in a medium (other than a hard vacuum). A charged tachyon traveling in a vacuum, therefore, undergoes a constant proper time acceleration and, by necessity, its world line forms a hyperbola in space-time. However reducing a tachyon's energy increases its speed, so that the single hyperbola formed is of two oppositely charged tachyons with opposite momenta (same magnitude, opposite sign) which annihilate each other when they simultaneously reach infinite speed at the same place in space. (At infinite speed, the two tachyons have no energy each and finite momentum of opposite direction, so no conservation laws are violated in their mutual annihilation. The time of annihilation is frame dependent.)

Even an electrically neutral tachyon would be expected to lose energy via gravitational Cherenkov radiation (unless gravitons are themselves tachyons), because it has a gravitational mass, and therefore increases in speed as it travels, as described above. If the tachyon interacts with any other particles, it can also radiate Cherenkov energy into those particles. Neutrinos interact with the other particles of the Standard Model, and Andrew Cohen and Sheldon Glashow used this to argue that the 2011 faster-than-light neutrino anomaly cannot be explained by making neutrinos propagate faster than light, and must instead be due to an error in the experiment.[22] Further investigation of the experiment showed that the results were indeed erroneous.

Superluminal information edit

 
Spacetime diagram showing that moving faster than light implies time travel in the context of special relativity. A spaceship departs from Earth from A to C slower than light. At B, Earth emits a tachyon, which travels faster than light but forward in time in Earth's reference frame. It reaches the spaceship at C. The spaceship then sends another tachyon back to Earth from C to D. This tachyon also travels forward in time in the spaceship's reference frame. This effectively allows Earth to send a signal from B to D, back in time.

If tachyons can transmit information faster than light, then, according to relativity, they violate causality, leading to logical paradoxes of the "kill your own grandfather" type. This is often illustrated with thought experiments such as the "tachyon telephone paradox"[16] or "logically pernicious self-inhibitor."[23]

The problem can be understood in terms of the relativity of simultaneity in special relativity, which says that different inertial reference frames will disagree on whether two events at different locations happened "at the same time" or not, and they can also disagree on the order of the two events (technically, these disagreements occur when the spacetime interval between the events is 'space-like', meaning that neither event lies in the future light cone of the other).[24]

If one of the two events represents the sending of a signal from one location and the second event represents the reception of the same signal at another location, then, as long as the signal is moving at the speed of light or slower, the mathematics of simultaneity ensures that all reference frames agree that the transmission-event happened before the reception-event.[24] However, in the case of a hypothetical signal moving faster than light, there would always be some frames in which the signal was received before it was sent, so that the signal could be said to have moved backward in time. Because one of the two fundamental postulates of special relativity says that the laws of physics should work the same way in every inertial frame, if it is possible for signals to move backward in time in any one frame, it must be possible in all frames. This means that if observer A sends a signal to observer B which moves faster than light in A's frame but backwards in time in B's frame, and then B sends a reply which moves faster than light in B's frame but backwards in time in A's frame, it could work out that A receives the reply before sending the original signal, challenging causality in every frame and opening the door to severe logical paradoxes.[25] This is known as the tachyonic antitelephone.

Reinterpretation principle edit

The reinterpretation principle[3][9][25] asserts that a tachyon sent back in time can always be reinterpreted as a tachyon traveling forward in time, because observers cannot distinguish between the emission and absorption of tachyons. The attempt to detect a tachyon from the future (and violate causality) would actually create the same tachyon and send it forward in time (which is causal).

However, this principle is not widely accepted as resolving the paradoxes.[16][25][26] Instead, what would be required to avoid paradoxes is that, unlike any known particle, tachyons do not interact in any way and can never be detected or observed, because otherwise a tachyon beam could be modulated and used to create an anti-telephone[16] or a "logically pernicious self-inhibitor".[23] All forms of energy are believed to interact at least gravitationally, and many authors state that superluminal propagation in Lorentz invariant theories always leads to causal paradoxes.[27][28]

Fundamental models edit

In modern physics, all fundamental particles are regarded as excitations of quantum fields. There are several distinct ways in which tachyonic particles could be embedded into a field theory.

Fields with imaginary mass edit

In the paper that coined the term "tachyon", Gerald Feinberg studied Lorentz invariant quantum fields with imaginary mass.[3] Because the group velocity for such a field is superluminal, naively it appears that its excitations propagate faster than light. However, it was quickly understood that the superluminal group velocity does not correspond to the speed of propagation of any localized excitation (like a particle). Instead, the negative mass represents an instability to tachyon condensation, and all excitations of the field propagate subluminally and are consistent with causality.[29] Despite having no faster-than-light propagation, such fields are referred to simply as "tachyons" in many sources.[5][30][31][32][2]

Tachyonic fields play an important role in modern physics. Perhaps the most famous is the Higgs boson of the Standard Model of particle physics, which has an imaginary mass in its uncondensed phase. In general, the phenomenon of spontaneous symmetry breaking, which is closely related to tachyon condensation, plays an important role in many aspects of theoretical physics, including the Ginzburg–Landau and BCS theories of superconductivity. Another example of a tachyonic field is the tachyon of bosonic string theory.[30][33]

Tachyons are predicted by bosonic string theory and also the Neveu-Schwarz (NS) and NS-NS sectors, which are respectively the open bosonic sector and closed bosonic sector, of RNS superstring theory prior to the GSO projection. However such tachyons are not possible due to the Sen conjecture, also known as tachyon condensation. This resulted in the necessity for the GSO projection.

Lorentz-violating theories edit

In theories that do not respect Lorentz invariance, the speed of light is not (necessarily) a barrier, and particles can travel faster than the speed of light without infinite energy or causal paradoxes.[27] A class of field theories of that type is the so-called Standard Model extensions. However, the experimental evidence for Lorentz invariance is extremely good, so such theories are very tightly constrained.[34][35]

Fields with non-canonical kinetic term edit

By modifying the kinetic energy of the field, it is possible to produce Lorentz invariant field theories with excitations that propagate superluminally.[29][28] However, such theories, in general, do not have a well-defined Cauchy problem (for reasons related to the issues of causality discussed above), and are probably inconsistent quantum mechanically.

In fiction edit

Tachyons have appeared in many works of fiction. They have been used as a standby mechanism upon which many science fiction authors rely to establish faster-than-light communication, with or without reference to causality issues. The word tachyon has become widely recognized to such an extent that it can impart a science-fictional connotation even if the subject in question has no particular relation to superluminal travel (a form of technobabble, akin to positronic brain).[36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Tipler, Paul A.; Llewellyn, Ralph A. (2008). Modern Physics (5th ed.). New York, NY: W.H. Freeman & Co. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-7167-7550-8. ... so existence of particles v > c ... Called tachyons ... would present relativity with serious ... problems of infinite creation energies and causality paradoxes.
  2. ^ a b c Randall, Lisa (2005). Warped Passages: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions. Harper Collins. p. 286. ISBN 9780060531089. People initially thought of tachyons as particles traveling faster than the speed of light ... But we now know that a tachyon indicates an instability in a theory that contains it. Regrettably, for science fiction fans, tachyons are not real physical particles that appear in nature.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Feinberg, G. (1967). "Possibility of faster-than-light particles". Physical Review. 159 (5): 1089–1105. Bibcode:1967PhRv..159.1089F. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.159.1089.
    Feinberg, G. (1978). "[no title cited]". Physical Review D. 17: 1651. doi:10.1103/physrevd.17.1651.
  4. ^ Aharonov, Y.; Komar, A.; Susskind, L. (25 June 1969). "Superluminal behavior, causality, and instability". Physical Review. 182 (5): 1400–1403. Bibcode:1969PhRv..182.1400A. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.182.1400.
  5. ^ a b Sen, Ashoke (2002). "Rolling tachyon". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2002 (4): 048. arXiv:hep-th/0203211. Bibcode:2002JHEP...04..048S. doi:10.1088/1126-6708/2002/04/048. S2CID 12023565.
  6. ^ Benford, Gregory (6 July 2013). Old Legends. p. 276. He told me years later that he had begun thinking about tachyons because he was inspired by James Blish's [1954] short story, "Beep". In it, a faster-than-light communicator plays a crucial role in a future society but has an annoying final beep at the end of every message. The communicator necessarily allows sending of signals backward in time, even when that's not your intention. Eventually, the characters discover that all future messages are compressed into that beep, so the future is known, more or less by accident. Feinberg had set out to see if such a gadget was theoretically possible.
  7. ^ Sommerfeld, A. (1904). "Simplified Deduction of the Field and the Forces of an Electron Moving in Any Given Way". KNKL. Acad. Wetensch. 7: 345–367.
  8. ^ Davidson, Mark P. (2001). "Tachyons, Quanta, and Chaos". arXiv:quant-ph/0103143.
  9. ^ a b Bilaniuk, O.-M.P.; Deshpande, V.K.; Sudarshan, E.C.G. (1962). "'Meta' Relativity". American Journal of Physics. 30 (10): 718. Bibcode:1962AmJPh..30..718B. doi:10.1119/1.1941773.
  10. ^ Bilaniuk, O.-M.P.; Sudarshan, E.C.G. (1969). "Particles beyond the Light Barrier". Physics Today. 22 (5): 43–51. Bibcode:1969PhT....22e..43B. doi:10.1063/1.3035574.
  11. ^ Chashchina, Olga; Silagadze, Zurab (13 April 2022). "Relativity 4-ever?". Physics. 4 (2): 421–439. arXiv:2107.10739. doi:10.3390/physics4020028. ISSN 2624-8174.
  12. ^ (Press release). CERN. 8 June 2012. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 8 June 2012.
  13. ^ a b Recami, E. (16 October 2007). "Classical tachyons and possible applications". Rivista del Nuovo Cimento. 9 (6): 1–178. Bibcode:1986NCimR...9e...1R. doi:10.1007/BF02724327. ISSN 1826-9850. S2CID 120041976.
  14. ^ a b Vieira, R. S. (2011). "An introduction to the theory of tachyons". Rev. Bras. Ens. Fis. 34 (3). arXiv:1112.4187. Bibcode:2011arXiv1112.4187V.
  15. ^ a b Hill, James M.; Cox, Barry J. (8 December 2012). "Einstein's special relativity beyond the speed of light". Proceedings of the Royal Society A. 468 (2148): 4174–4192. Bibcode:2012RSPSA.468.4174H. doi:10.1098/rspa.2012.0340. ISSN 1364-5021.
  16. ^ a b c d Benford, G.; Book, D.; Newcomb, W. (1970). "The Tachyonic Antitelephone". Physical Review D. 2 (2): 263–265. Bibcode:1970PhRvD...2..263B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.2.263.
  17. ^ Chodos, A. (1985). "The neutrino as a tachyon". Physics Letters B. 150 (6): 431–435. Bibcode:1985PhLB..150..431C. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(85)90460-5. hdl:2022/20737.
  18. ^ Colladay, D.; Kostelecky, V.A. (1997). "CPT Violation and the Standard Model". Physical Review D. 55 (11): 6760–6774. arXiv:hep-ph/9703464. Bibcode:1997PhRvD..55.6760C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.55.6760. S2CID 7651433.
  19. ^ Colladay, D.; Kostelecky, V. A. (1998). "Lorentz-Violating Extension of the Standard Model". Physical Review D. 58 (11): 116002. arXiv:hep-ph/9809521. Bibcode:1998PhRvD..58k6002C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.58.116002. S2CID 4013391.
  20. ^ Kostelecky, V. A. (2004). "Gravity, Lorentz Violation, and the Standard Model". Physical Review D. 69 (10): 105009. arXiv:hep-th/0312310. Bibcode:2004PhRvD..69j5009K. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.69.105009. S2CID 55185765.
  21. ^ Hughes, Richard J.; Stephenson, G. J. (1990). "Against Tachyonic Neutrinos". Physics Letters B. 244 (1): 95–100. Bibcode:1990PhLB..244...95H. doi:10.1016/0370-2693(90)90275-B.
  22. ^ Cohen, Andrew G. & Glashow, Sheldon L. (2011). "Pair creation constrains superluminal neutrino propagation". Phys. Rev. Lett. 107 (18): 181803. arXiv:1109.6562. Bibcode:2011PhRvL.107r1803C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.107.181803. PMID 22107624. S2CID 56198539.
  23. ^ a b Fitzgerald, P. (1970). "Tachyons, backwards causation, and freedom". Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association vol. 1970. The Philosophy of Science Association, 1970 Biennial Meeting. PSA. Vol. 1970. pp. 425–426. A more powerful argument to show that retrocausal tachyons involve an intolerable conceptual difficulty is illustrated by the 'Case of the Logically Pernicious Self-Inhibitor' ...
  24. ^ a b Jarrell, Mark. (PDF). Electrodynamics course, chapter 11. University of Cincinnati. pp. 7–11. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 September 2006. Retrieved 27 October 2006.
  25. ^ a b c Grøn, Ø.; Hervik, S. (2007). Einstein's General Theory of Relativity: With Modern Applications in Cosmology. Springer. p. 39. ISBN 978-0-387-69199-2. The tachyon telephone paradox cannot be resolved by means of the reinterpretation principle.
  26. ^ Recami, Erasmo; Fontana, Flavio; Garavaglia, Roberto (2000). "Special Relativity and Superluminal Motions: A Discussion of Some Recent Experiments". International Journal of Modern Physics A. 15 (18): 2793–2812. arXiv:0709.2453. doi:10.1142/S0217751X00001403. it is possible ... to solve also the known causal paradoxes, devised for [refuting] 'faster than light' motion, although this is not widely recognized yet.
  27. ^ a b Barceló, Carlos; Finazzi, Stefano; Liberati, Stefano (2010). "On the impossibility of superluminal travel: The warp drive lesson". arXiv:1001.4960 [gr-qc]. As a matter of fact, any mechanism for superluminal travel can be easily turned into a time machine and hence lead to the typical causality paradoxes ...
  28. ^ a b Adams, Allan; Arkani-Hamed, Nima; Dubovsky, Sergei; Nicolis, Alberto; Rattazzi, Riccardo (2006). "Causality, analyticity and an IR obstruction to UV completion". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2006 (10): 014. arXiv:hep-th/0602178. Bibcode:2006JHEP...10..014A. doi:10.1088/1126-6708/2006/10/014. S2CID 2956810.
  29. ^ a b Aharonov, Y.; Komar, A.; Susskind, L. (1969). "Superluminal Behavior, Causality, and Instability". Phys. Rev. 182 (5): 1400–1403. Bibcode:1969PhRv..182.1400A. doi:10.1103/PhysRev.182.1400.
  30. ^ a b Greene, Brian (2000). The Elegant Universe. Vintage Books.
  31. ^ Kutasov, David; Mariño, Marcos; Moore, Gregory (2000). "Some exact results on tachyon condensation in string field theory". Journal of High Energy Physics. 2000 (10): 045. arXiv:hep-th/0009148. Bibcode:2000JHEP...10..045K. doi:10.1088/1126-6708/2000/10/045. S2CID 15664546.
  32. ^ Gibbons, G.W. (13 June 2002). "Cosmological evolution of the rolling tachyon". Physics Letters B. 537 (1–2): 1–4. arXiv:hep-th/0204008. Bibcode:2002PhLB..537....1G. doi:10.1016/S0370-2693(02)01881-6. S2CID 119487619.
  33. ^ Polchinski, J. (1998). "String Theory". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 95 (19). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press: 11039–11040. Bibcode:1998PNAS...9511039G. doi:10.1073/pnas.95.19.11039. PMC 33894. PMID 9736684.
  34. ^ Glashow, Sheldon Lee (2004). "Atmospheric Neutrino Constraints on Lorentz Violation". arXiv:hep-ph/0407087.
  35. ^ Coleman, Sidney R. & Glashow, Sheldon L. (1999). "High-energy tests of Lorentz invariance". Physical Review D. 59 (11): 116008. arXiv:hep-ph/9812418. Bibcode:1999PhRvD..59k6008C. doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.59.116008. S2CID 1273409.
  36. ^ Wagstaff, Keith (15 July 2018). "The Science Behind Star Trek Technobabble". Mashable. Retrieved 12 February 2021.

External links edit

tachyon, this, article, about, hypothetical, faster, than, light, particles, quantum, fields, with, imaginary, mass, field, other, uses, disambiguation, tachyon, tachyonic, particle, hypothetical, particle, that, always, travels, faster, than, light, physicist. This article is about hypothetical faster than light particles For quantum fields with imaginary mass see Tachyonic field For other uses see Tachyon disambiguation A tachyon ˈ t ae k i ɒ n or tachyonic particle is a hypothetical particle that always travels faster than light Physicists believe that faster than light particles cannot exist because they are inconsistent with the known laws of physics 1 2 If such particles did exist they could be used to send signals faster than light According to the theory of relativity this would violate causality leading to logical paradoxes such as the grandfather paradox 1 Tachyons would exhibit the unusual property of increasing in speed as their energy decreases and would require infinite energy to slow to the speed of light No verifiable experimental evidence for the existence of such particles has been found TachyonClassificationElementary particleStatusHypotheticalTheorized1967In the 1967 paper that coined the term Gerald Feinberg proposed that tachyonic particles could be made from excitations of a quantum field with imaginary mass 3 However it was soon realized that Feinberg s model did not in fact allow for superluminal faster than light particles or signals and that tachyonic fields merely give rise to instabilities not causality violations 4 The term tachyonic field refers to imaginary mass fields rather than to faster than light particles 2 5 The term comes from the Greek taxy tachy meaning swift The complementary particle types are called luxons which always move at the speed of light and bradyons which always move slower than light both of these particle types are known to exist Contents 1 History 2 Special relativity 2 1 Mass 2 2 Speed 2 3 Neutrinos 2 4 Cherenkov radiation 2 5 Superluminal information 2 5 1 Reinterpretation principle 3 Fundamental models 3 1 Fields with imaginary mass 3 2 Lorentz violating theories 3 3 Fields with non canonical kinetic term 4 In fiction 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe term tachyon was coined by Gerald Feinberg in a 1967 paper titled Possibility of faster than light particles 3 He had been inspired by the science fiction story Beep by James Blish 6 Feinberg studied the kinematics of such particles according to special relativity In his paper he also introduced fields with imaginary mass now also referred to as tachyons in an attempt to understand the microphysical origin such particles might have The first hypothesis regarding faster than light particles is sometimes attributed to physicist Arnold Sommerfeld who in 1904 named them meta particles 7 8 Bilanuik Deshpande and Sudarshan discussed this more recently in their 1962 paper on the topic 9 and in 1969 10 The possibility of existence of faster than light particles was also proposed by Lev Yakovlevich Shtrum ru in 1923 11 In September 2011 it was reported in a major release by CERN that a tau neutrino had traveled faster than the speed of light however later updates from CERN on the OPERA experiment indicate that the faster than light readings were due to a faulty element of the experiment s fibre optic timing system 12 Special relativity editIn special relativity a faster than light particle would have space like four momentum 3 in contrast to ordinary particles that have time like four momentum Although in some theories the mass of tachyons is regarded as imaginary in some modern formulations the mass is considered real 13 14 15 the formulas for the momentum and energy being redefined to this end Moreover since tachyons are constrained to the spacelike portion of the energy momentum graph they could not slow down to subluminal meaning slower than light speeds 3 Mass edit Main articles Mass Tachyonic particles and imaginary complex mass and Tachyonic field In a Lorentz invariant theory the same formulas that apply to ordinary slower than light particles sometimes called bradyons in discussions of tachyons must also apply to tachyons In particular the energy momentum relation E2 pc 2 mc2 2 displaystyle E 2 pc 2 mc 2 2 nbsp where p is the relativistic momentum of the bradyon and m is its rest mass should still apply along with the formula for the total energy of a particle E mc21 v2c2 displaystyle E frac mc 2 sqrt 1 frac v 2 c 2 nbsp This equation shows that the total energy of a particle bradyon or tachyon contains a contribution from its rest mass the rest mass energy and a contribution from its motion the kinetic energy When v displaystyle v nbsp the particle s velocity is larger than c displaystyle c nbsp the speed of light the denominator in the equation for the energy is imaginary as the value under the square root is negative Because the total energy of the particle must be real and not a complex or imaginary number in order to have any practical meaning as a measurement the numerator must also be imaginary i e the rest mass m must be imaginary as a pure imaginary number divided by another pure imaginary number is a real number In some modern formulations of the theory the mass of tachyons is regarded as real 13 14 15 Speed edit One curious effect is that unlike ordinary particles the speed of a tachyon increases as its energy decreases In particular E displaystyle E nbsp approaches zero when v displaystyle v nbsp approaches infinity For ordinary baryonic matter E displaystyle E nbsp increases with increasing speed becoming arbitrarily large as v displaystyle v nbsp approaches c displaystyle c nbsp the speed of light Therefore just as bradyons are forbidden to break the light speed barrier so too are tachyons forbidden from slowing down to below c because infinite energy is required to reach the barrier from either above or below As noted by Albert Einstein Tolman and others special relativity implies that faster than light particles if they existed could be used to communicate backwards in time 16 Neutrinos edit In 1985 Chodos proposed that neutrinos can have a tachyonic nature 17 The possibility of standard model particles moving at faster than light speeds can be modeled using Lorentz invariance violating terms for example in the Standard Model Extension 18 19 20 In this framework neutrinos experience Lorentz violating oscillations and can travel faster than light at high energies This proposal was strongly criticized 21 Cherenkov radiation edit A tachyon with an electric charge would lose energy as Cherenkov radiation just as ordinary charged particles do when they exceed the local speed of light in a medium other than a hard vacuum A charged tachyon traveling in a vacuum therefore undergoes a constant proper time acceleration and by necessity its world line forms a hyperbola in space time However reducing a tachyon s energy increases its speed so that the single hyperbola formed is of two oppositely charged tachyons with opposite momenta same magnitude opposite sign which annihilate each other when they simultaneously reach infinite speed at the same place in space At infinite speed the two tachyons have no energy each and finite momentum of opposite direction so no conservation laws are violated in their mutual annihilation The time of annihilation is frame dependent Even an electrically neutral tachyon would be expected to lose energy via gravitational Cherenkov radiation unless gravitons are themselves tachyons because it has a gravitational mass and therefore increases in speed as it travels as described above If the tachyon interacts with any other particles it can also radiate Cherenkov energy into those particles Neutrinos interact with the other particles of the Standard Model and Andrew Cohen and Sheldon Glashow used this to argue that the 2011 faster than light neutrino anomaly cannot be explained by making neutrinos propagate faster than light and must instead be due to an error in the experiment 22 Further investigation of the experiment showed that the results were indeed erroneous Superluminal information edit nbsp Spacetime diagram showing that moving faster than light implies time travel in the context of special relativity A spaceship departs from Earth from A to C slower than light At B Earth emits a tachyon which travels faster than light but forward in time in Earth s reference frame It reaches the spaceship at C The spaceship then sends another tachyon back to Earth from C to D This tachyon also travels forward in time in the spaceship s reference frame This effectively allows Earth to send a signal from B to D back in time If tachyons can transmit information faster than light then according to relativity they violate causality leading to logical paradoxes of the kill your own grandfather type This is often illustrated with thought experiments such as the tachyon telephone paradox 16 or logically pernicious self inhibitor 23 The problem can be understood in terms of the relativity of simultaneity in special relativity which says that different inertial reference frames will disagree on whether two events at different locations happened at the same time or not and they can also disagree on the order of the two events technically these disagreements occur when the spacetime interval between the events is space like meaning that neither event lies in the future light cone of the other 24 If one of the two events represents the sending of a signal from one location and the second event represents the reception of the same signal at another location then as long as the signal is moving at the speed of light or slower the mathematics of simultaneity ensures that all reference frames agree that the transmission event happened before the reception event 24 However in the case of a hypothetical signal moving faster than light there would always be some frames in which the signal was received before it was sent so that the signal could be said to have moved backward in time Because one of the two fundamental postulates of special relativity says that the laws of physics should work the same way in every inertial frame if it is possible for signals to move backward in time in any one frame it must be possible in all frames This means that if observer A sends a signal to observer B which moves faster than light in A s frame but backwards in time in B s frame and then B sends a reply which moves faster than light in B s frame but backwards in time in A s frame it could work out that A receives the reply before sending the original signal challenging causality in every frame and opening the door to severe logical paradoxes 25 This is known as the tachyonic antitelephone Reinterpretation principle edit The reinterpretation principle 3 9 25 asserts that a tachyon sent back in time can always be reinterpreted as a tachyon traveling forward in time because observers cannot distinguish between the emission and absorption of tachyons The attempt to detect a tachyon from the future and violate causality would actually create the same tachyon and send it forward in time which is causal However this principle is not widely accepted as resolving the paradoxes 16 25 26 Instead what would be required to avoid paradoxes is that unlike any known particle tachyons do not interact in any way and can never be detected or observed because otherwise a tachyon beam could be modulated and used to create an anti telephone 16 or a logically pernicious self inhibitor 23 All forms of energy are believed to interact at least gravitationally and many authors state that superluminal propagation in Lorentz invariant theories always leads to causal paradoxes 27 28 Fundamental models editIn modern physics all fundamental particles are regarded as excitations of quantum fields There are several distinct ways in which tachyonic particles could be embedded into a field theory Fields with imaginary mass edit Main article Tachyonic field In the paper that coined the term tachyon Gerald Feinberg studied Lorentz invariant quantum fields with imaginary mass 3 Because the group velocity for such a field is superluminal naively it appears that its excitations propagate faster than light However it was quickly understood that the superluminal group velocity does not correspond to the speed of propagation of any localized excitation like a particle Instead the negative mass represents an instability to tachyon condensation and all excitations of the field propagate subluminally and are consistent with causality 29 Despite having no faster than light propagation such fields are referred to simply as tachyons in many sources 5 30 31 32 2 Tachyonic fields play an important role in modern physics Perhaps the most famous is the Higgs boson of the Standard Model of particle physics which has an imaginary mass in its uncondensed phase In general the phenomenon of spontaneous symmetry breaking which is closely related to tachyon condensation plays an important role in many aspects of theoretical physics including the Ginzburg Landau and BCS theories of superconductivity Another example of a tachyonic field is the tachyon of bosonic string theory 30 33 Tachyons are predicted by bosonic string theory and also the Neveu Schwarz NS and NS NS sectors which are respectively the open bosonic sector and closed bosonic sector of RNS superstring theory prior to the GSO projection However such tachyons are not possible due to the Sen conjecture also known as tachyon condensation This resulted in the necessity for the GSO projection Lorentz violating theories edit In theories that do not respect Lorentz invariance the speed of light is not necessarily a barrier and particles can travel faster than the speed of light without infinite energy or causal paradoxes 27 A class of field theories of that type is the so called Standard Model extensions However the experimental evidence for Lorentz invariance is extremely good so such theories are very tightly constrained 34 35 Fields with non canonical kinetic term edit By modifying the kinetic energy of the field it is possible to produce Lorentz invariant field theories with excitations that propagate superluminally 29 28 However such theories in general do not have a well defined Cauchy problem for reasons related to the issues of causality discussed above and are probably inconsistent quantum mechanically In fiction editMain article Tachyons in fiction Tachyons have appeared in many works of fiction They have been used as a standby mechanism upon which many science fiction authors rely to establish faster than light communication with or without reference to causality issues The word tachyon has become widely recognized to such an extent that it can impart a science fictional connotation even if the subject in question has no particular relation to superluminal travel a form of technobabble akin to positronic brain 36 See also editLorentz violating neutrino oscillations Massive particle bradyon aka tardyon Massless particle luxon Retrocausality Tachyonic antitelephone Virtual particle Wheeler Feynman absorber theoryReferences edit a b Tipler Paul A Llewellyn Ralph A 2008 Modern Physics 5th ed New York NY W H Freeman amp Co p 54 ISBN 978 0 7167 7550 8 so existence of particles v gt c Called tachyons would present relativity with serious problems of infinite creation energies and causality paradoxes a b c Randall Lisa 2005 Warped Passages Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe s Hidden Dimensions Harper Collins p 286 ISBN 9780060531089 People initially thought of tachyons as particles traveling faster than the speed of light But we now know that a tachyon indicates an instability in a theory that contains it Regrettably for science fiction fans tachyons are not real physical particles that appear in nature a b c d e f Feinberg G 1967 Possibility of faster than light particles Physical Review 159 5 1089 1105 Bibcode 1967PhRv 159 1089F doi 10 1103 PhysRev 159 1089 Feinberg G 1978 no title cited Physical Review D 17 1651 doi 10 1103 physrevd 17 1651 Aharonov Y Komar A Susskind L 25 June 1969 Superluminal behavior causality and instability Physical Review 182 5 1400 1403 Bibcode 1969PhRv 182 1400A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 182 1400 a b Sen Ashoke 2002 Rolling tachyon Journal of High Energy Physics 2002 4 048 arXiv hep th 0203211 Bibcode 2002JHEP 04 048S doi 10 1088 1126 6708 2002 04 048 S2CID 12023565 Benford Gregory 6 July 2013 Old Legends p 276 He told me years later that he had begun thinking about tachyons because he was inspired by James Blish s 1954 short story Beep In it a faster than light communicator plays a crucial role in a future society but has an annoying final beep at the end of every message The communicator necessarily allows sending of signals backward in time even when that s not your intention Eventually the characters discover that all future messages are compressed into that beep so the future is known more or less by accident Feinberg had set out to see if such a gadget was theoretically possible Sommerfeld A 1904 Simplified Deduction of the Field and the Forces of an Electron Moving in Any Given Way KNKL Acad Wetensch 7 345 367 Davidson Mark P 2001 Tachyons Quanta and Chaos arXiv quant ph 0103143 a b Bilaniuk O M P Deshpande V K Sudarshan E C G 1962 Meta Relativity American Journal of Physics 30 10 718 Bibcode 1962AmJPh 30 718B doi 10 1119 1 1941773 Bilaniuk O M P Sudarshan E C G 1969 Particles beyond the Light Barrier Physics Today 22 5 43 51 Bibcode 1969PhT 22e 43B doi 10 1063 1 3035574 Chashchina Olga Silagadze Zurab 13 April 2022 Relativity 4 ever Physics 4 2 421 439 arXiv 2107 10739 doi 10 3390 physics4020028 ISSN 2624 8174 Neutrinos Sent from CERN to Gran Sasso Respect the Cosmic Speed Limit Press release CERN 8 June 2012 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 8 June 2012 a b Recami E 16 October 2007 Classical tachyons and possible applications Rivista del Nuovo Cimento 9 6 1 178 Bibcode 1986NCimR 9e 1R doi 10 1007 BF02724327 ISSN 1826 9850 S2CID 120041976 a b Vieira R S 2011 An introduction to the theory of tachyons Rev Bras Ens Fis 34 3 arXiv 1112 4187 Bibcode 2011arXiv1112 4187V a b Hill James M Cox Barry J 8 December 2012 Einstein s special relativity beyond the speed of light Proceedings of the Royal Society A 468 2148 4174 4192 Bibcode 2012RSPSA 468 4174H doi 10 1098 rspa 2012 0340 ISSN 1364 5021 a b c d Benford G Book D Newcomb W 1970 The Tachyonic Antitelephone Physical Review D 2 2 263 265 Bibcode 1970PhRvD 2 263B doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 2 263 Chodos A 1985 The neutrino as a tachyon Physics Letters B 150 6 431 435 Bibcode 1985PhLB 150 431C doi 10 1016 0370 2693 85 90460 5 hdl 2022 20737 Colladay D Kostelecky V A 1997 CPT Violation and the Standard Model Physical Review D 55 11 6760 6774 arXiv hep ph 9703464 Bibcode 1997PhRvD 55 6760C doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 55 6760 S2CID 7651433 Colladay D Kostelecky V A 1998 Lorentz Violating Extension of the Standard Model Physical Review D 58 11 116002 arXiv hep ph 9809521 Bibcode 1998PhRvD 58k6002C doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 58 116002 S2CID 4013391 Kostelecky V A 2004 Gravity Lorentz Violation and the Standard Model Physical Review D 69 10 105009 arXiv hep th 0312310 Bibcode 2004PhRvD 69j5009K doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 69 105009 S2CID 55185765 Hughes Richard J Stephenson G J 1990 Against Tachyonic Neutrinos Physics Letters B 244 1 95 100 Bibcode 1990PhLB 244 95H doi 10 1016 0370 2693 90 90275 B Cohen Andrew G amp Glashow Sheldon L 2011 Pair creation constrains superluminal neutrino propagation Phys Rev Lett 107 18 181803 arXiv 1109 6562 Bibcode 2011PhRvL 107r1803C doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 107 181803 PMID 22107624 S2CID 56198539 a b Fitzgerald P 1970 Tachyons backwards causation and freedom Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association vol 1970 The Philosophy of Science Association 1970 Biennial Meeting PSA Vol 1970 pp 425 426 A more powerful argument to show that retrocausal tachyons involve an intolerable conceptual difficulty is illustrated by the Case of the Logically Pernicious Self Inhibitor a b Jarrell Mark The Special Theory of Relativity PDF Electrodynamics course chapter 11 University of Cincinnati pp 7 11 Archived from the original PDF on 13 September 2006 Retrieved 27 October 2006 a b c Gron O Hervik S 2007 Einstein s General Theory of Relativity With Modern Applications in Cosmology Springer p 39 ISBN 978 0 387 69199 2 The tachyon telephone paradox cannot be resolved by means of the reinterpretation principle Recami Erasmo Fontana Flavio Garavaglia Roberto 2000 Special Relativity and Superluminal Motions A Discussion of Some Recent Experiments International Journal of Modern Physics A 15 18 2793 2812 arXiv 0709 2453 doi 10 1142 S0217751X00001403 it is possible to solve also the known causal paradoxes devised for refuting faster than light motion although this is not widely recognized yet a b Barcelo Carlos Finazzi Stefano Liberati Stefano 2010 On the impossibility of superluminal travel The warp drive lesson arXiv 1001 4960 gr qc As a matter of fact any mechanism for superluminal travel can be easily turned into a time machine and hence lead to the typical causality paradoxes a b Adams Allan Arkani Hamed Nima Dubovsky Sergei Nicolis Alberto Rattazzi Riccardo 2006 Causality analyticity and an IR obstruction to UV completion Journal of High Energy Physics 2006 10 014 arXiv hep th 0602178 Bibcode 2006JHEP 10 014A doi 10 1088 1126 6708 2006 10 014 S2CID 2956810 a b Aharonov Y Komar A Susskind L 1969 Superluminal Behavior Causality and Instability Phys Rev 182 5 1400 1403 Bibcode 1969PhRv 182 1400A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 182 1400 a b Greene Brian 2000 The Elegant Universe Vintage Books Kutasov David Marino Marcos Moore Gregory 2000 Some exact results on tachyon condensation in string field theory Journal of High Energy Physics 2000 10 045 arXiv hep th 0009148 Bibcode 2000JHEP 10 045K doi 10 1088 1126 6708 2000 10 045 S2CID 15664546 Gibbons G W 13 June 2002 Cosmological evolution of the rolling tachyon Physics Letters B 537 1 2 1 4 arXiv hep th 0204008 Bibcode 2002PhLB 537 1G doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 02 01881 6 S2CID 119487619 Polchinski J 1998 String Theory Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 95 19 Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press 11039 11040 Bibcode 1998PNAS 9511039G doi 10 1073 pnas 95 19 11039 PMC 33894 PMID 9736684 Glashow Sheldon Lee 2004 Atmospheric Neutrino Constraints on Lorentz Violation arXiv hep ph 0407087 Coleman Sidney R amp Glashow Sheldon L 1999 High energy tests of Lorentz invariance Physical Review D 59 11 116008 arXiv hep ph 9812418 Bibcode 1999PhRvD 59k6008C doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 59 116008 S2CID 1273409 Wagstaff Keith 15 July 2018 The Science Behind Star Trek Technobabble Mashable Retrieved 12 February 2021 External links edit nbsp Look up tachyon in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tachyon The faster than light FTL FAQ Iowa State University Archived from the original on 21 November 2000 Weisstein Eric Wolfgang ed Tachyon ScienceWorld Tachyons Mathematics Physics FAQ Particle and Nuclear Riverside California University of California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tachyon amp oldid 1212724097, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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