If a photon had a mass, time travels would be possible

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The discussion centers on the hypothetical scenario of photons having mass and its implications for time travel. It asserts that if photons had mass, it would not enable time travel, as particles with mass cannot reach light speed, which is essential for time dilation effects. The conversation references the complexities of mass in relation to relativity, emphasizing that massless particles like photons do not experience time in the same way as massive particles. The idea of time travel remains tied to theoretical constructs, such as hypothetical tachyons, which could exceed light speed but are not detectable with current technology. Ultimately, the consensus is that the mass of photons, as defined in quantum electrodynamics (QED), is zero, and any deviation from this would not fundamentally alter the principles of relativity or enable time travel.
  • #31


DaleSpam said:
Yes, I agree that it is frivolous, but I don't understand the connection. Usually, with common mistakes (e.g. twin paradox or fast-moving things turning into black holes) I at least understand the train of thought that gets them to the erroneous conclusion. Here, I just don't even have a guess as to what the reasoning would be that would lead from massive photons to time travel.

Hmmm... if I were to guess, maybe the OP thinks that a photon with mass would avoid some forms of chronology protection because they couldn't reach arbitrarily high energy densities through multiple passage. Another idea might be that the OP ran for the hills as soon as they were shot down and the thread, um... "stepped sideways from the sun".

I find that digging through the thin veneer of speculation rarely unEarth's anything of value (on the net at least).
 
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  • #32
Frame Dragger said:
I find that digging through the thin veneer of speculation rarely unEarth's anything of value (on the net at least).
:smile: yes, too true.
 
  • #33


DaleSpam said:
:smile: yes, too true.

:wink:

That said, I'm a little curious as to the OP's thinking myself. Like you, the title is so... baffling.
 
  • #34


DaleSpam said:
Yes, I agree that it is frivolous, but I don't understand the connection. Usually, with common mistakes (e.g. twin paradox or fast-moving things turning into black holes) I at least understand the train of thought that gets them to the erroneous conclusion. Here, I just don't even have a guess as to what the reasoning would be that would lead from massive photons to time travel.

I think the OP was suffering from a misconception that if we (made of massive particles) could travel at the speed of light then we could time travel and then reasoned that if photons had some minuscule rest mass then in principle massive particles could travel at the speed of light and then in principle time travel would be possible.

However, if photons had a vanishingly small rest mass they would be traveling slightly slower than c and so even if photons had miniscule rest mass it would still be true that nothing with rest mass can travel at exactly c (including photons in this case). However this raises the disturbing problem that if the speed of photons was 0.9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999c then ordinary massive particles would in principle be able to exceed the speed of photons (without exceeding c). In fact a vanishingly small mass for photons raises the possibility that photons could be slowed in a vacuum, to a relative velocity of much less than c which has never been observed to occur. Another problem with photons having vanishingly small rest mass and velocity slightly less than c is that the speed of photons would not be invariant.

I know people do not like to consider what happens IF we could travel at the speed of light of light (or photons) because it is physically impossible but I think it is reasonable to conjecture that even IF we could then it does not open the door to time travel, in the sense that photons are not considered to time travel because they take finite amount of coordinate time to traverse space and never go backwards in time.
 
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  • #35


bcrowell said:
No, it's purely an experimental question. We used to think neutrinos were massless, but experiments ended up showing that they had nonvanishing rest mass. It's not a matter of theory or definition, it's simply an empirical observation. The same holds for photons.

As I understand it neutrinos don't travel at c.
 
  • #36


Flatland said:
As I understand it neutrinos don't travel at c.

Correct, they don't, precisely because their mass is non-zero.
 
  • #37


At the speed of light, clocks stop, there is no time!
You don't travel in time, back or forth.
 
  • #38


phyti said:
At the speed of light, clocks stop, there is no time!
You don't travel in time, back or forth.

That is the same as asking how a photon experiences time... and the answer is... who knows?
 
  • #39


At the speed of light, clocks stop, there is no time!
You don't travel in time, back or forth.

this explains why we can see light from billions of years ago.
the photon leaving the far galaxy experiences no time so arrives here instantly unless slowed by gravity of a massive object
 
  • #40


piersdad said:
this explains why we can see light from billions of years ago.
the photon leaving the far galaxy experiences no time so arrives here instantly unless slowed by gravity of a massive object

I believe you have this a bit confused. Photons travel at light speed and therefore can't possibly travel instantaneously to Earth from a far galaxy. You see the light from the far galaxy because the photons have been traveling for, in your example at least, billions of years.

Since light is not instantaneous, when you look at the night sky you are seeing things as they appeared at some point in the past (how far into the past depends on how distant the object is which you are observing).
 
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  • #41


piersdad said:
this explains why we can see light from billions of years ago.
the photon leaving the far galaxy experiences no time so arrives here instantly unless slowed by gravity of a massive object

Ok, One, do NOT teach your kid physics, because you have no idea what you're talking about. Two, the notion that gravity imposes a light speed barrier is just... silly. Gravity is about the geometry of spacetime, and even in a black hole light isn't "slowed" below its local speed in that medium.

Distance in ly = years it takes for light from that ditance to reach the observer. There is nothing instantaneous about it.
 
  • #42


gravity bends light

a recent observation of a very old gamma ray burst lasted several seconds or more because of some effect that stretched the waves over time and distance .
what i wanted to decribe is
that if you were a- photon -travelling over distance you will not experience any time even to us as an observer billions of years go by.
 
  • #43


piersdad said:
gravity bends light

a recent observation of a very old gamma ray burst lasted several seconds or more because of some effect that stretched the waves over time and distance .
what i wanted to decribe is
that if you were a- photon -travelling over distance you will not experience any time even to us as an observer billions of years go by.

You need to do some research on Gravitional Lensing, The Doppler Effect, Lightspeed, and as for the rest, no one knows what the experience of time (or not) would be for a photon.
 
  • #44


If you wanted to consider a lagrangian with a nonzero photon mass in e&m, you could modify the lagrangian density from

L = - \frac{1}{16 \pi} F_{\alpha \beta} F^{\alpha \beta} - \frac{1}{c} J_{\alpha} A^{\beta}

by just adding a mass term:

L = - \frac{1}{16 \pi} F_{\alpha \beta} F^{\alpha \beta} - \frac{1}{c} J_{\alpha} A^{\beta} + \frac{\mu^{2}}{8 \pi} A_{\alpha} A^{\alpha}

where \mu = m_{\gamma} c /\hbar.

The new eq of motion becomes \partial ^{\beta} F_{\alpha \beta} + \mu^{2} A_{\alpha} = \frac{4 \pi}{c} J_{\alpha}.

The potential A is actually observable, because of the nonzero photon mass.

If you have a point charge at rest here, then the static potential will look like a Yukawa potential instead of just 1/r:
\phi(x) = q \frac{e^{-\mu r}}{r}. This is why potentials would decay more rapidly with distance if photons had mass.

In reply to piersdad. You made an oversight in your statement. Maybe this will help: In a reference frame moving at speed c, time will still progress at a normal rate for an observer in that frame. Also, an observer in an inertial frame moving at speed c will still see that light will travel at velocity c (this just comes from normal sr velocity addition). However, due to the effects of time dilation, an observer on the Earth will see that time in the other frame progresses at the rate \Delta t' = \frac{\Delta t}{\sqrt(1-v^2/c^2)}. As the relative velocity v \rightarrow c, this time dilation becomes infinite. But this doesn't mean that time in the other reference frame stops relative to an observer in that frame.
 
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  • #45


i always question any established science
gravity to me is an outward acceleration -- not an inwards pull.
while centripetal force is an inward acceleration not an out ward pull.

so a photon in our frame or observation has time, but itself, from its frame, has no time -- and no mass-- so it can not experience time.
would this explan why light can travel for billions of years to our frame of time, when for it, there is no time.
 

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