Could the Discovery of Faster-Than-Light Speed Rewrite Physics?

In summary: They travel in straight lines.Now, as for tachyons: the problem is that they would have an imaginary mass. Since we have never observed an imaginary mass particle, we have no idea what it would do. We have observed particles with zero mass, but no particles with imaginary mass.In summary, the conversation discussed the possibility of something traveling faster than the speed of light and whether that would completely rewrite physics as we know it. The group also talked about the concept of tachyons and their potential fit into the current framework of physics, although it was mentioned that they may not be able to carry information due to their imaginary mass. The conversation also touched on the idea of time and light and their potential for new discoveries in physics
  • #1
Physics-Learner
297
0
if it was discovered that something can be made to travel faster than the speed of light, does that completely rewrite physics as we know it ?
 
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  • #2
Yes.
 
  • #3
Tachyon's might not be too bad as far as fitting into the current framework of physics, though they couldn't carry information (if they are to fit into the current framework).
 
  • #4
thank you.
 
  • #5
This is yet the least fictional theory on 'faster-than-light' I've found so far.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ergosphere

I've just created a thread regarding that, and still waiting for answers.
 
  • #6
Physics-Learner said:
Does that completely rewrite physics as we know it ?

No. Not physics. Perhaps some textbooks.
 
  • #7
I don't think that anything that we could detect could travel faster than light, but say if you fell through a wormhole, you would be traveling at the speed of light, but you would be going faster than light as you've gone through a short cut
 
  • #8
does physics think that wormholes exist ?

my understanding of a wormhole (at least from star trek) is that you travel from point a to point b through some mechanism whereby the actual distance traveled is less than what it otherwise would be ?
 
  • #9
Physics-Learner said:
does physics think that wormholes exist ?

my understanding of a wormhole (at least from star trek) is that you travel from point a to point b through some mechanism whereby the actual distance traveled is less than what it otherwise would be ?

They're hypothetical and fit in some theories. There are also theories that discount their existence.

As to the main point, if we found a particle that traveled at a speed that was able to cross the speed of light boundary (that is, not tachyons since they travel exclusively at greater than the speed of light) in any significant way, I'd imagine there would be a massive overhaul required of physics. For example, if we detected a particle accelerating from 0.5c to 1.3c, something would be seriously amiss.
 
  • #11
What are you guys calling a tachyon, to be precise? In qft/string theory, getting a tachyon just means you're doing perturbation theory around a bad ground state, ie at the top of a potential "well", not the bottom.

There's absolutely no reason why the tachyon should exist (if that is the origin).
 
  • #12
i am sure that there are many things that people are astonished by regarding the speed of light.

but if my recall is correct, someone traveling on a beam of light will measure no distance traveled, and no time elapsed, while going from A to B. while others of course measure those distances in thousands of light years, and thousands of years in time. this is just in the direction in which he is heading.

but for this to be true, there is no distance or time for the person on the light beam. no matter where A and B are from an onlooker's perspective, the light beam measures no distance and no time.

so in effect, the light beam is everywhere at once. or nowhere at never.

i do suspect that time and light both play significant roles in stuff that we have yet to discover.
 
  • #13
Physics-Learner said:
but if my recall is correct

So you've traveled on a light beam before?
 
  • #14
yes, it was quite enLIGHTening.
 
  • #15
Physics-Learner said:
if it was discovered that something can be made to travel faster than the speed of light, does that completely rewrite physics as we know it ?
Maybe it could turn out to be light which doesn't travel at the limit speed c. In that case, physics wouldn't change a lot; the complications would be for what concerns electromagnetic fields, since Proca's equations should be substituted to Maxwell's equations.
 
  • #16
pervect said:
Tachyon's might not be too bad as far as fitting into the current framework of physics, though they couldn't carry information (if they are to fit into the current framework).
Why do you think that tachyons couldn't carry information? Perhaps because of grandfather-like paradoxes?
 
  • #17
Tachyons would have imaginary mass.

Photons have zero inertial mass, they are stuck at speed c and have two degrees of polarizations.
 

What is faster than the speed of light?

The speed of light, also known as c, is the fastest speed at which energy can travel through space. As of now, no known object or particle can travel faster than this speed.

Is it possible for an object to travel faster than light?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, it is impossible for an object to travel faster than the speed of light. This is because as an object approaches the speed of light, its mass increases infinitely and it would require an infinite amount of energy to accelerate it further.

What are some theories about faster-than-light travel?

Some theories propose that wormholes or shortcuts through space and time could allow for faster-than-light travel. However, these theories are still speculative and have not been proven to be possible.

Can information travel faster than the speed of light?

No, according to the theory of relativity, information cannot travel faster than the speed of light. This is because information also has a mass and would require infinite energy to travel faster than light.

What are the potential consequences of breaking the speed of light barrier?

If it were possible to break the speed of light barrier, it would violate the laws of physics as we know them. It could potentially lead to paradoxes and disrupt the fundamental principles of our universe.

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