El 25/10/2011 18:39, Magnus Danielson escribió:

The traditional formula would not make a speed difference due to the sign of the mass, but imaginary mass would. That would be a bit of extrapolation out of a single formula. Then again, so much of the quantum world is a mix of read and imaginary numbers, so why not an odd mass case. That would however change a lot, but it would indeed keep the theoretical physics occupied quite a bit. That's the definition of the experimental physics work-description... find out things for the theorists to figure out... :)


And an imaginary mass would imply and imaginary energy (in the sense of complex number with no real part... :) ) and that would imply also that lower energy neutrinos (in module value) would be faster. Sounds fun :)

Regards,

Javier

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