A Level Physics Notes: Particle Physics – The Tachyon
A hypothetical particle that travels
faster than the speed of light (and therefore also travels back in
time). The existence of tachyons is allowed by the equations of
Einstein's special theory of relativity. From the Greek word for
'swift', particles that travel slower than light are called tardyons
(or bradyons in more modern usage) and particles, such as photons,
that travel exactly at the speed of light are called luxons. The
existence of tachyons is allowed by the mathematics of special
relativity, one of the basic equations of which is
where
is
the mass-energy of a particle,
its
rest mass,
its
velocity, and is the speed of light. This shows that for tardyons
(particles of ordinary matter),
increases
as
increases
and becomes infinite when
thus
preventing an initially slower-than-light particle from being
accelerated up to the speed of light and beyond. What about a
particle for which
In
this case,
so that the denominator in the equation above is an imaginary number
– the square root of a negative real number. If
has
a real value,
is
imaginary, which is hard for physicists to swallow because
is
a measurable quantity. If
takes
an imaginary value, however,
is
real. Tachyons are allowed, therefore, providing
(a) they never cross the light barrier from above and
(b) they have an imaginary rest mass
(which is physically more acceptable since the rest mass of an object
that never stops is not directly measurable).
Bizarrely, tachyons
would slow down if they gained energy, and accelerate if they lost
energy. This leads to a problem in the case of charged tachyons
because charged particles that move faster than the speed of light in
the surrounding medium give off energy in the form of Cerenkov
radiation. Charged tachyons would continuously lose energy, even in a
vacuum, through Cerenkov emission. This would cause them to gain
speed, thus lose energy at even greater rate, thus accelerate even
more, and so on, leading to a runaway reaction and the release of an
arbitrarily large amount of energy.
More worryingly, as the
physicist Gregory Benford and his colleagues first pointed out,
tachyons seem to lead to a time paradox because of their ability to
send messages into the past. Suppose Alice on Earth and Boole on a
planet circling around Sirius can communicate using what has been
called a tachyon "antitelephone." They agree in advance
that when Boole receives a message from Alice, he will reply
immediately. Alice promises to send a message to Boole at noon her
time, if and only if she has not received a message from Boole by 10
a.m. The snag is that both messages, being superluminal, travel back
in time. If Alice sends her message at noon, Boole's reply could not
reach her before 10 a.m. "Then," as Benford and colleagues
wrote in their 1970 paper called The Tachyonic Antitelephone, "the
exchange of messages will take place if and only if it does not take
place..."
Despite numerous searches, no tachyon has so far
been detected. The same is true of another hypothetical
faster-than-light particle called a dybbuk (Hebrew for a "roving
spirit"), which would have imaginary mass, energy, and momentum.
Dybbuks, proposed by Raymond Fox of the Israel Institute of
Technology, are so strange that some of their odd properties cancel
out to an observer yet, interestingly, they avoid the causality
problem of tachyons.