Spaceman Spiff wrote:t00fri wrote:Spiff,
you presumably mean negative mass^2, i.e. imaginary mass.
...
Anyways, I thought an imaginary mass squared would give a negative mass,
Sorry: the square of an imaginary mass gives a negative mass^2!
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(i*m)^2 = - m^2; m real
But I can see now what you and|or your former lecturer had in mind: you|he were specializing on gravity, while I considered a generic situation in particle physics, instead.
I suppose the (naive) idea was to make use of the sign of a mass to switch between gravitational attraction and repulsion...In particle physics the sign of the mass has NO physical meaning, while the sign of the mass^2 has.
The mass shell is just a kinematical configuration (E,p,m) of a particle satisfying the relativistic energy-momentum condition:
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E^2=p^2 + m^2; (h-bar=c=1) (*)
In a plot of E versus (p1,p2,p3), the mass-shell condition (*) just represents a hyperbolic shell (surface). For m=0, this surface degenerates to the so-called 'light cone' E^2=p^2. Just try and draw a respective figure yourself....
As to the rest: ...I am too tired tonight. I had a long day and leave the matter to a professional astro-physicist as required by Fightspit above
Bye Fridger