superweirdo
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does negative mass exists?
The discussion centers around the concept of negative mass and its potential existence in the universe, exploring theoretical implications, the nature of antiparticles, and the relationship between mass and charge. Participants engage in a mix of theoretical and conceptual reasoning, with references to quantum mechanics and particle physics.
Participants express multiple competing views regarding the existence and properties of negative mass and antiparticles. The discussion remains unresolved, with no consensus on the validity of claims about negative mass or the nature of antiparticles.
Some claims rely on theoretical assumptions and definitions that may not be universally accepted. The discussion includes references to complex concepts in quantum mechanics and particle physics that are not fully resolved within the thread.
This discussion may be of interest to individuals exploring advanced topics in theoretical physics, particularly those focused on the nature of mass, antimatter, and the implications of particle physics theories.
actionintegral said:An antiparticle would have a negative rest mass
superweirdo said:but we aren't sure that antiparticle exists either. As far as I know, the only reason we even believe in antiparticles is b/c of them, we laws make sense b/c when you exclude them from theory, our physics seems flawed, still a lot of physicist don't believe in it though coz we don't have a brute evidence for it.
We are sure they exist. CERN even has an antimatter factory. :!)superweirdo said:but we aren't sure that antiparticle exists either. As far as I know, the only reason we even believe in antiparticles is b/c of them, we laws make sense b/c when you exclude them from theory, our physics seems flawed, still a lot of physicist don't believe in it though coz we don't have a brute evidence for it.
actionintegral said:According to the feynman's theory of positrons, the proper time for an antiparticle the reverse of the proper time for matter. The proper mass would be reversed as well. All invariant quantities would be reversed for
antiparticles.
actionintegral said:Hi Norman,
Sorry to appear obtuse, but once I learned that antiparticles were reversed in time, I jumped to the conclusion that all invariant quantities were reversed for antiparticles. Please follow me to the QM forum where I
re-posed my question.
superweirdo said:I didnt even know that antiproton exist, I guess I shouldn't argue you guys about these things, so far, I am only aware of 3 anti things, antimatter, antiparticle, and anti proton. Are there anymore?
superweirdo said:What you said completely made sense to me selfadjoint but the analogy you gave didn't sound right to me, rather I'd like to use the analogy that every equation has an inverse but for the equation that don't, here though, their inverse is the same equation.(this isn't mathematically correct but seems more logical to me)
btw, I also heard something about antiparticles that they have inverse time and space(guessing this one) too which didn't make sense to me, could you guys explain this to me?
Being meaningless, that's a question that can not be answered.superweirdo said:so you don't believe that it have has inverse time and maybe space?
superweirdo said:I am not sure if I follow your metaphor Gokul.
Gokul43201 said:Sadly, the most commonly observed occurrence of a "negative mass", the effective mass of charge carriers in a crystal, has gone unmentioned.
Gokul43201 said:Being meaningless, that's a question that can not be answered.
Sure. Seeactionintegral said:There is an old paper by Bondi about negative mass. Since I only have negative money, can someone send it to me?