Square-root of negative mass? Surely a quantity of mass that is the square of a negative number would merely be a positive amount of mass?t00fri wrote:No, tachyons have negative mass squared, i.e. imaginary mass!
Grant
Square-root of negative mass? Surely a quantity of mass that is the square of a negative number would merely be a positive amount of mass?t00fri wrote:No, tachyons have negative mass squared, i.e. imaginary mass!
t00fri wrote:chrisr wrote:...
Since time stops at the speed of light i would imagine it would speed up again when its past by and object of negatiive mass (im supposing the tachyon is a particle of negative mass?).
...
No, tachyons have negative mass squared, i.e. imaginary mass! Negative mass is physically indistinguishable from positive mass, i.e. that sign is not measurable. It's taken positive by convention in particle physics.
Bye Fridger
granthutchison wrote:Square-root of negative mass? Surely a quantity of mass that is the square of a negative number would merely be a positive amount of mass?t00fri wrote:No, tachyons have negative mass squared, i.e. imaginary mass!
Grant
Ah, the simple matter of a hyphen. "Negative mass-squared" would have made it unambiguous, whereas what you wrote is more readily interpreted as meaning that the negative value of the mass is squared ... which is what I understood you to be saying. Sorry!t00fri wrote:That's what I said.
Cham wrote:
Hmmm! Sorry t00fri, but this is an eresy !
Cham wrote:The problem with tachyons is they may violate causality. So coherence of the universe cannot accept them
granthutchison wrote:Ah, the simple matter of a hyphen. "Negative mass-squared" would have made it unambiguous, whereas what you wrote is more readily interpreted as meaning that the negative value of the mass is squared ... which is what I understood you to be saying. Sorry!t00fri wrote:That's what I said.
(Perhaps it's easier to be unambiguous in German, where you can pile all the related words into one big word?)
Grant
That's "ambiguity-resolving", as I suspect you already know.t00fri wrote:But "imaginary" should have been ambiguity resolving.
t00fri wrote:Cham,
I am confused about what you wanted to say.
I particle physics & quantum field theory in general, we frequently encounter particles
with p*p <>m^2 (units c=hbar=1). Notably particles that have spacelike momenta p*p <0, but m^2>0. These are as we say not on their mass shell. This happens as a consequence of quantum physics and is nothing special. Certainly such particles are NOT tachyons and did not appear at all in your above discussion. Therefore I have trouble following it. It seems much too restricted.
Tachyons cannot be discussed consistently in a purely classical framework.
Quantities that are measurable classically, often cease to be measurable quantum mechanically or in quantum field theory.
Bye Fridger
Cham wrote:t00fri, I just realised that the word "tachyons" may have two very different meanings. This may be the source of the confusion here. In some of my quantum fields books, tachyons refer to particles for which m^2 < 0. In some other books, "tachyons" are associated with p * p < 0. These are two completely distinct things.
In the classical regime, m^2 < 0 doesn't have any sense at all. Those particles just doesn't exist on a classical theoretical sense. However, the classical tachyons are the particles for which p * p < 0. Those particles (space-like) may exist, in a classical theory.
In quantum theory, the m^2 < 0 idea contains a lot of confusion. I think it isn't related to mass. The "tachyon" mass "m" (for which m^2 < 0) isn't really a mass, it's just a parameter in the lagrangian. We should write m^2 == - lambda, instead.
Is it what you were talking about ?