omegabeta
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Can anyone think of an empirical reason the neutrino could not possibly have a negative mass; that is any of its states?
The discussion centers around the concept of negative mass in relation to neutrinos, exploring theoretical implications, empirical evidence, and the nature of mass itself. Participants engage in a mix of theoretical exploration and speculative reasoning regarding the properties and potential existence of negative mass states.
Participants do not reach a consensus on the possibility of negative mass for neutrinos. Multiple competing views are presented, with some arguing for the empirical positivity of neutrino mass while others explore theoretical implications and the nature of mass itself.
The discussion highlights limitations in empirical evidence regarding neutrino mass, the ambiguity in definitions of mass types, and the unresolved nature of the implications of negative mass in theoretical frameworks.
omegabeta said:Can anyone think of an empirical reason the neutrino could not possibly have a negative mass; that is any of its states?
Simon Bridge said:It's unclear what negative mass would mean but empirically the experimentally determined masses indicate that the neutrino mass is positive.
jtbell said:Is it possible for anything to have a negative mass?
No worries - when you have imagined an experiment, let us know aye. ;)I don't mind embarrassing myself or you by looking, and wondering, and imagining an experiment to test the conjecture.