Faster than the speed of light

In summary, the conversation discusses the tachyon, a theoretical particle with a velocity faster than the speed of light. The particle was originally used in theories such as super string theory, but with the incorporation of super symmetry, it was no longer needed. However, tachyons and their various forms are still a topic of research in the string landscape. The tachyon's existence is based on symmetry and it can cause the instability of the spacetime vacuum.
  • #1
Arash
1
0
Howdy All
Yesterday i read an article about a particle with the velocity faster than the speed of light but as the text was not in english i couldn't understand the particles name to do research over it.
It was like " Taxion " or "Toxion" !
Does anyone have any information about this particle or any particle which its speed is faster than the speed of light?
Thanks you very very much
Arash
 
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  • #2
the theoretical (speculated) particle you are looking for is the tachyon. AFAIK there is currently no credible proof of its existence.
 
  • #3
Indeed the tachyon was used in such things as primitive versions of super string theory, however with the incorperation of the idea of super symmetry the tachyon was no longer needed.

here is a good site to get some more info on it
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tachyon
 
  • #4
Interesting Tid-Bit

Someone please correct me if I'm wrong, but if I recall correctly the tachyon would not only be faster than the speed of light, but it could also never be made to travel slower than the speed of light.

Assuming, of course, that it even exists in the first place. :wink:
 
  • #5
yup, its speed is only above the speed of light, it takes an infinite amount of energy to make it go slower than light.
 
  • #7
Nice article...like it as its very informative
 
  • #8
Hey all,

Does anyone know the orign of the tachyon "theory"? I heard/learned it was derived from noticing symmetry with so many other things, and its an anti-matter of something...

-Burg
 
  • #9
The original tachyon (back in the sixties) was created by imagining a particle with pure imaginary mass - that is, its mass squared was to be a negative number. If you plug that into the normal dilation formulas you get a real number answer for v > c. The dilation physics turned inside out, the faste a tachyon went above c the easier it was, the slower it went, approaching c from above the more energy that took, and so on. Perfectly sound mathematics but "unphysical" implications.

Then a tachyon, with mass squared less than zero, was discovered in the spectrum of the bosonic string...
 
  • #10
selfAdjoint said:
Then a tachyon, with mass squared less than zero, was discovered in the spectrum of the bosonic string...

:eek:

[Wakes up from long sleep]

When, where... I have been away from physics for awhile but when did I miss this?
 
  • #11
Ivan Seeking said:
:eek:

[Wakes up from long sleep]

When, where... I have been away from physics for awhile but when did I miss this?


Ivan, the tachyon as the lowest energy vibration of the closed bosonic string goes back as far as the graviton, twenty years, I guess. It's in all the textbooks. The "rest of the story" is that when they incorporated supersymmetry to create the superstring theories, they suppressed the tachyon and thought they were home free. But not so, tachyons, rolling tachyons, and just about every kind of tachyon you could imagine are features of the string landscape you hear so much about, and one of the hot topics in current research.
 
  • #12
Okay, so they are again expected but this is still completely theoretical, right?

You mathematicians; when you said discoveredmath I thought that you meant discoveredphysics. :biggrin:
 
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  • #13
Ivan Seeking said:
Okay, so they are again expected but this is still completely theoretical, right?

You mathematicians; when you said discoveredmath I thought that you meant discoveredphysics. :biggrin::


Surely you didn't expect a physical discovery out of string theory? :rolleyes:
 
  • #14
I don't know what I was thinking!
 
  • #15
selfAdjoint said:
But not so, tachyons, rolling tachyons, and just about every kind of tachyon you could imagine are features of the string landscape you hear so much about, and one of the hot topics in current research.

I think "imagine" is the operative word here! :)

<runs and hides>

Zz.
 
  • #16
600burger said:
Hey all,

Does anyone know the orign of the tachyon "theory"? I heard/learned it was derived from noticing symmetry with so many other things, and its an anti-matter of something...

-Burg

It's like this :

without making any exotic and "metaphysical" jumps to string-theory i will provide you with the QFT-picture...

In "our experimentally backed-up QFT" the tachyon-particle is a quantum of a field whose squared mass is negative. The tachyon exists because of symmetry-reasons. More specifically, the existence of such a particle implies the instability of the spacetime vacuum. The reason for this instability is the fact that there are more then one minimal potential-values.

Now, a little excitation of the vaccuum-state will result in spontaneous breakdown of symmetry. Imagine that you would give small impulse to the field, this will lead the field to roll down with exponentially increasing amplitudes: it will induce tachyon condensation: The tachyon will become a particle of positive mass.


Once "nature" has chosen ONE specific vaccuum-state of minimal potential energy, the tachyons will no longer exhibit negative mass. The reason for this is that symmetry-properties of the system (the Lagrangian) have changed.

regards
marlon
 

What is the speed of light and why is it considered the fastest?

The speed of light is approximately 299,792,458 meters per second in a vacuum. It is considered the fastest because it is the maximum speed at which all matter and information in the universe can travel.

Is it possible for anything to travel faster than the speed of light?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, it is not possible for anything with mass to travel faster than the speed of light. As an object approaches the speed of light, its mass would increase infinitely, making it impossible for it to reach or exceed the speed of light.

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

Some theories suggest that faster-than-light travel could be achieved through concepts such as wormholes or warp drive, which would bend space-time to allow for faster travel. However, these theories are still speculative and have not been proven to be possible.

What are the potential consequences of traveling faster than the speed of light?

If it were possible to travel faster than the speed of light, it would violate the laws of physics as we currently understand them. This could have unpredictable and potentially catastrophic effects on the fabric of space-time and the universe.

Are there any known instances of objects traveling faster than the speed of light?

No, there are no known instances of objects traveling faster than the speed of light. The speed of light has been consistently measured and verified to be the fastest speed at which anything can travel in the universe.

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