From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Faster-than-light (also
superluminal or
FTL)
communication and
travel are the conjectural propagation of
information or
matter faster than the
speed of light.
The
special theory of relativity implies that only particles with zero
rest mass may travel at the speed of light.
Tachyons, particles whose speed exceeds that of light, have been hypothesized, but their existence would violate
causality,
and the consensus of physicists is that they cannot exist. On the other
hand, what some physicists refer to as "apparent" or "effective" FTL
[1][2][3][4] depends on the hypothesis that unusually distorted regions of
spacetime might permit matter to reach distant locations in less time than light could in normal or undistorted spacetime.
According to the current scientific theories, matter is required to travel at
slower-than-light (also
subluminal or
STL) speed with respect to the locally distorted spacetime region.
Apparent FTL is not excluded by
general relativity; however, any apparent FTL physical plausibility is speculative. Examples of apparent FTL proposals are the
Alcubierre drive and the
traversable wormhole.
FTL travel of non-information
In the context of this article, FTL is the transmission of information or matter faster than
c, a constant equal to the
speed of light
in a vacuum, which is 299,792,458 m/s (by definition of the meter) or
about 186,282.397 miles per second. This is not quite the same as
traveling faster than light, since:
- Some processes propagate faster than c, but cannot carry information (see examples in the sections immediately following).
- Light travels at speed c/n when not in a vacuum but traveling through a medium with refractive index = n (causing refraction), and in some materials other particles can travel faster than c/n (but still slower than c), leading to Cherenkov radiation (see phase velocity below).
Neither of these phenomena violates
special relativity or creates problems with
causality, and thus neither qualifies as
FTL as described here.
In the following examples, certain influences may appear to
travel faster than light, but they do not convey energy or information
faster than light, so they do not violate special relativity.
Daily sky motion
For an earth-bound observer, objects in the sky complete one revolution around the Earth in one day.
Proxima Centauri, the nearest star outside the
solar system, is about four
light-years away.
[5]
In this frame of reference, in which Proxima Centauri is perceived to
be moving in a circular trajectory with a radius of four light years, it
could be described as having a speed many times greater than
c as the rim speed of an object moving in a circle is a product of the radius and angular speed.
[5] It is also possible on a
geostatic
view, for objects such as comets to vary their speed from subluminal to
superluminal and vice versa simply because the distance from the Earth
varies. Comets may have orbits which take them out to more than 1000
AU.
[6]
The circumference of a circle with a radius of 1000 AU is greater than
one light day. In other words, a comet at such a distance is
superluminal in a geostatic, and therefore non-inertial, frame.
Light spots and shadows
If
a laser beam is swept across a distant object, the spot of laser light
can easily be made to move across the object at a speed greater than
c.
[7] Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object can be made to move across the object faster than
c.
[7] In neither case does the light travel from the source to the object faster than
c, nor does any information travel faster than light.
[7][8][9]
Apparent FTL propagation of static field effects
Since there is no "retardation" (or
aberration) of the apparent position of the source of a
gravitational or
electric static field
when the source moves with constant velocity, the static field "effect"
may seem at first glance to be "transmitted" faster than the speed of
light. However, uniform motion of the static source may be removed with a
change in reference frame, causing the direction of the static field to
change immediately, at all distances. This is not a change of position
which "propagates", and thus this change cannot be used to transmit
information from the source. No information or matter can be
FTL-transmitted or propagated from source to receiver/observer by an
electromagnetic field.
Closing speeds
The
rate at which two objects in motion in a single frame of reference get
closer together is called the mutual or closing speed. This may approach
twice the speed of light, as in the case of two particles travelling at
close to the speed of light in opposite directions with respect to the
reference frame.
Imagine two fast-moving particles approaching each other from opposite sides of a
particle accelerator
of the collider type. The closing speed would be the rate at which the
distance between the two particles is decreasing. From the point of view
of an observer standing at rest relative to the accelerator, this rate
will be slightly less than twice the speed of light.
Special relativity does not prohibit this. It tells us that it is wrong to use
Galilean relativity
to compute the velocity of one of the particles, as would be measured
by an observer traveling alongside the other particle. That is, special
relativity gives the
right formula for computing such
relative velocity.
It is instructive to compute the relative velocity of particles moving at
v and −
v in accelerator frame, which corresponds to the closing speed of 2
v >
c. Expressing the speeds in units of
c, β =
v/
c:
Proper speeds
If
a spaceship travels to a planet one light-year (as measured in the
Earth's rest frame) away from Earth at high speed, the time taken to
reach that planet could be less than one year as measured by the
traveller's clock (although it will always be more than one year as
measured by a clock on Earth). The value obtained by dividing the
distance traveled, as determined in the Earth's frame, by the time
taken, measured by the traveller's clock, is known as a proper speed or a
proper velocity.
There is no limit on the value of a proper speed as a proper speed does
not represent a speed measured in a single inertial frame. A light
signal that left the Earth at the same time as the traveller would
always get to the destination before the traveller.
Possible distance away from Earth
Since one might not travel faster than light, one might conclude that
a human can never travel further from the Earth than 40 light-years if
the traveler is active between the age of 20 and 60. A traveler would
then never be able to reach more than the very few star systems which
exist within the limit of 20–40 light-years from the Earth. This is a
mistaken conclusion: because of
time dilation,
the traveler can travel thousands of light-years during their 40 active
years. If the spaceship accelerates at a constant 1 g (in its own
changing frame of reference), it will, after 354 days, reach speeds a
little under the
speed of light
(for an observer on Earth), and time dilation will increase their
lifespan to thousands of Earth years, seen from the reference system of
the
Solar System,
but the traveler's subjective lifespan will not thereby change. If the
traveler returns to the Earth, she or he will land thousands of years
into the Earth's future. Their speed will not be seen as higher than the
speed of light by observers on Earth, and the traveler will not measure
their speed as being higher than the speed of light, but will see a
length contraction of the universe in their direction of travel. And as
the traveler turns around to return, the Earth will seem to experience
much more time than the traveler does. So, while their (ordinary)
coordinate speed cannot exceed
c, their
proper speed (distance as seen by Earth divided by their
proper time) can be much greater than
c. This is seen in statistical studies of
muons traveling much further than
c times their
half-life (at rest), if traveling close to
c.
[10]
Phase velocities above c
The
phase velocity of an
electromagnetic wave, when traveling through a medium, can routinely exceed
c, the vacuum velocity of light. For example, this occurs in most glasses at
X-ray frequencies.
[11] However, the phase velocity of a wave corresponds to the propagation speed of a theoretical single-frequency (purely
monochromatic)
component of the wave at that frequency. Such a wave component must be
infinite in extent and of constant amplitude (otherwise it is not truly
monochromatic), and so cannot convey any information.
[12]
Thus a phase velocity above
c does not imply the propagation of
signals with a velocity above
c.
[13]
Group velocities above c
The
group velocity of a wave (e.g., a light beam) may also exceed
c in some circumstances.
[14][15]
In such cases, which typically at the same time involve rapid
attenuation of the intensity, the maximum of the envelope of a pulse may
travel with a velocity above
c. However, even this situation does not imply the propagation of
signals with a velocity above
c,
[16]
even though one may be tempted to associate pulse maxima with signals.
The latter association has been shown to be misleading, because the
information on the arrival of a pulse can be obtained before the pulse
maximum arrives. For example, if some mechanism allows the full
transmission of the leading part of a pulse while strongly attenuating
the pulse maximum and everything behind (distortion), the pulse maximum
is effectively shifted forward in time, while the information on the
pulse does not come faster than
c without this effect.
[17] However, group velocity can exceed
c in some parts of a
Gaussian beam in vacuum (without attenuation). The
diffraction causes that the peak of pulse propagates faster, while overall power does not.
[18]
Universal expansion
The expansion of the
universe causes distant galaxies to recede from us faster than the speed of light, if
proper distance and
cosmological time are used to calculate the speeds of these galaxies. However, in
general relativity,
velocity is a local notion, so velocity calculated using comoving
coordinates does not have any simple relation to velocity calculated
locally.
[22] (See
comoving distance
for a discussion of different notions of 'velocity' in cosmology.)
Rules that apply to relative velocities in special relativity, such as
the rule that relative velocities cannot increase past the speed of
light, do not apply to relative velocities in comoving coordinates,
which are often described in terms of the "expansion of space" between
galaxies. This expansion rate is thought to have been at its peak during
the
inflationary epoch thought to have occurred in a tiny fraction of the second after the
Big Bang (models suggest the period would have been from around 10
−36 seconds after the Big Bang to around 10
−33 seconds), when the universe may have rapidly expanded by a factor of around 10
20 to 10
30.
[23]
There are many galaxies visible in telescopes with
red shift
numbers of 1.4 or higher. All of these are currently traveling away
from us at speeds greater than the speed of light. Because the
Hubble parameter
is decreasing with time, there can actually be cases where a galaxy
that is receding from us faster than light does manage to emit a signal
which reaches us eventually.
[24][25]
According to Tamara M. Davis, "Our effective particle horizon is
the cosmic microwave background (CMB), at redshift z ∼ 1100, because we
cannot see beyond the surface of last scattering. Although the last
scattering surface is not at any fixed comoving coordinate, the current
recession velocity of the points from which the CMB was emitted is 3.2c.
At the time of emission their speed was 58.1c, assuming (ΩM,ΩΛ) =
(0.3,0.7). Thus we routinely observe objects that are receding faster
than the speed of light and the Hubble sphere is not a horizon."
[26]
However, because
the expansion of the universe is accelerating, it is projected that most galaxies will eventually cross a type of cosmological
event horizon where any light they emit past that point will never be able to reach us at any time in the infinite future,
[27]
because the light never reaches a point where its "peculiar velocity"
towards us exceeds the expansion velocity away from us (these two
notions of velocity are also discussed in
Comoving distance#Uses of the proper distance).
The current distance to this cosmological event horizon is about 16
billion light-years, meaning that a signal from an event happening at
present would eventually be able to reach us in the future if the event
was less than 16 billion light-years away, but the signal would never
reach us if the event was more than 16 billion light-years away.
[25]
Astronomical observations
Apparent
superluminal motion is observed in many
radio galaxies,
blazars,
quasars and recently also in
microquasars. The effect was predicted before it was observed by
Martin Rees[clarification needed] and can be explained as an
optical illusion caused by the object partly moving in the direction of the observer,
[28] when the speed calculations assume it does not. The phenomenon does not contradict the theory of
special relativity.
Corrected calculations show these objects have velocities close to the
speed of light (relative to our reference frame). They are the first
examples of large amounts of mass moving at close to the speed of light.
[29] Earth-bound laboratories have only been able to accelerate small numbers of elementary particles to such speeds.
Quantum mechanics
Certain phenomena in
quantum mechanics, such as
quantum entanglement, might give the superficial impression of allowing communication of information faster than light. According to the
no-communication theorem
these phenomena do not allow true communication; they only let two
observers in different locations see the same system simultaneously,
without any way of controlling what either sees.
Wavefunction collapse can be viewed as an
epiphenomenon
of quantum decoherence, which in turn is nothing more than an effect of
the underlying local time evolution of the wavefunction of a system and
all of its environment. Since the underlying behavior does not
violate local causality or allow FTL communication, it follows that
neither does the additional effect of wavefunction collapse, whether
real
or apparent.
The
uncertainty principle implies that individual photons may travel for short distances at speeds somewhat faster (or slower) than
c, even in a vacuum; this possibility must be taken into account when enumerating
Feynman diagrams for a particle interaction.
[30] However, it was shown in 2011 that a single photon may not travel faster than
c.
[31] In quantum mechanics,
virtual particles
may travel faster than light, and this phenomenon is related to the
fact that static field effects (which are mediated by virtual particles
in quantum terms) may travel faster than light (see section on static
fields above). However, macroscopically these fluctuations average out,
so that photons do travel in straight lines over long (i.e.,
non-quantum) distances, and they do travel at the speed of light on
average. Therefore, this does not imply the possibility of superluminal
information transmission.
There have been various reports in the popular press of
experiments on faster-than-light transmission in optics — most often in
the context of a kind of
quantum tunnelling phenomenon. Usually, such reports deal with a
phase velocity or
group velocity faster than the vacuum velocity of light.
[32][33] However, as stated above, a superluminal phase velocity cannot be used for faster-than-light transmission of information.
[34][35]
Hartman effect
The Hartman effect is the tunneling effect through a barrier where the tunneling time tends to a constant for large barriers.
[36] This was first described by
Thomas Hartman in 1962.
[37]
This could, for instance, be the gap between two prisms. When the
prisms are in contact, the light passes straight through, but when there
is a gap, the light is refracted. There is a non-zero probability that
the photon will tunnel across the gap rather than follow the refracted
path. For large gaps between the prisms the tunnelling time approaches a
constant and thus the photons appear to have crossed with a
superluminal speed.
[38]
However, an analysis by Herbert G. Winful from the University of
Michigan suggests that the Hartman effect cannot actually be used to
violate relativity by transmitting signals faster than
c, because the tunnelling time "should not be linked to a velocity since evanescent waves do not propagate".
[39]
The evanescent waves in the Hartman effect are due to virtual particles
and a non-propagating static field, as mentioned in the sections above
for gravity and electromagnetism.
Casimir effect
In physics, the
Casimir effect or Casimir-Polder force is a physical force exerted between separate objects due to resonance of
vacuum energy
in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes
described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects,
owing to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the
strength of the effect. Because the strength of the force falls off
rapidly with distance, it is only measurable when the distance between
the objects is extremely small. Because the effect is due to virtual
particles mediating a static field effect, it is subject to the comments
about static fields discussed above.
EPR paradox
The EPR paradox refers to a famous
thought experiment of Einstein, Podolski and Rosen that was realized experimentally for the first time by
Alain Aspect in 1981 and 1982 in the
Aspect experiment. In this experiment, the measurement of the state of one of the quantum systems of an
entangled
pair apparently instantaneously forces the other system (which may be
distant) to be measured in the complementary state. However, no
information can be transmitted this way; the answer to whether or not
the measurement actually affects the other quantum system comes down to
which
interpretation of quantum mechanics one subscribes to.
An experiment performed in 1997 by Nicolas Gisin at the
University of Geneva has demonstrated non-local quantum correlations
between particles separated by over 10 kilometers.
[40]
But as noted earlier, the non-local correlations seen in entanglement
cannot actually be used to transmit classical information faster than
light, so that relativistic causality is preserved; see
no-communication theorem for further information. A 2008 quantum physics experiment also performed by Nicolas Gisin and his colleagues in
Geneva, Switzerland has determined that in any hypothetical
non-local hidden-variables theory
the speed of the quantum non-local connection (what Einstein called
"spooky action at a distance") is at least 10,000 times the speed of
light.
[41]
Delayed choice quantum eraser
Delayed choice quantum eraser (an experiment of
Marlan Scully) is a version of the EPR paradox in which the observation (or not) of interference after the passage of a photon through a
double slit experiment
depends on the conditions of observation of a second photon entangled
with the first. The characteristic of this experiment is that the
observation of the second photon can take place at a later time than the
observation of the first photon,
[42]
which may give the impression that the measurement of the later photons
"retroactively" determines whether the earlier photons show
interference or not, although the interference pattern can only be seen
by correlating the measurements of both members of every pair and so it
can't be observed until both photons have been measured, ensuring that
an experimenter watching only the photons going through the slit does
not obtain information about the other photons in an FTL or
backwards-in-time manner.
[43][44]
Superluminal communication
Faster-than-light communication is, by
Einstein's
theory of relativity, equivalent to
time travel. According to Einstein's theory of
special relativity, what we measure as the
speed of light in a vacuum (or near vacuum) is actually the fundamental physical constant
c. This means that all
inertial observers, regardless of their relative
velocity, will always measure zero-mass particles such as
photons traveling at
c
in a vacuum. This result means that measurements of time and velocity
in different frames are no longer related simply by constant shifts, but
are instead related by
Poincaré transformations. These transformations have important implications:
- The relativistic momentum of a massive particle would increase with speed in such a way that at the speed of light an object would have infinite momentum.
- To accelerate an object of non-zero rest mass to c would require infinite time with any finite acceleration, or infinite acceleration for a finite amount of time.
- Either way, such acceleration requires infinite energy.
- Some observers with sub-light relative motion will disagree about which occurs first of any two events that are separated by a space-like interval.[45]
In other words, any travel that is faster-than-light will be seen as
traveling backwards in time in some other, equally valid, frames of
reference,[46]
or need to assume the speculative hypothesis of possible Lorentz
violations at a presently unobserved scale (for instance the Planck
scale).[citation needed] Therefore, any theory which permits "true" FTL also has to cope with time travel and all its associated paradoxes,[47] or else to assume the Lorentz invariance to be a symmetry of thermodynamical statistical nature (hence a symmetry broken at some presently unobserved scale).
- In special relativity the coordinate speed of light is only guaranteed to be c in an inertial frame; in a non-inertial frame the coordinate speed may be different from c.[48]
In general relativity no coordinate system on a large region of curved
spacetime is "inertial", so it's permissible to use a global coordinate
system where objects travel faster than c, but in the local
neighborhood of any point in curved spacetime we can define a "local
inertial frame" and the local speed of light will be c in this frame,[49] with massive objects moving through this local neighborhood always having a speed less than c in the local inertial frame.
Justifications
Relative permittivity or permeability less than 1
The
speed of light
is related to the
vacuum permittivity ε0 and the
vacuum permeability μ0. Therefore, not only the
phase velocity,
group velocity and
energy flow velocity of electromagnetic waves but also the
velocity of a
photon can be faster than
c in a special material has the constant
permittivity or
permeability whose value is less than that in vacuum.
[50]
Casimir vacuum and quantum tunnelling
Einstein's equations of
special relativity postulate that the speed of light in vacuum is invariant in
inertial frames.
That is, it will be the same from any frame of reference moving at a
constant speed. The equations do not specify any particular value for
the speed of the light, which is an experimentally determined quantity
for a fixed unit of length. Since 1983, the
SI unit of length (the
meter) has been defined using the
speed of light.
The experimental determination has been made in vacuum. However,
the vacuum we know is not the only possible vacuum which can exist. The
vacuum has energy associated with it, called simply the
vacuum energy, which could perhaps be altered in certain cases.
[51] When vacuum energy is lowered, light itself has been predicted to go faster than the standard value
c. This is known as the
Scharnhorst effect.
Such a vacuum can be produced by bringing two perfectly smooth metal
plates together at near atomic diameter spacing. It is called a
Casimir vacuum.
Calculations imply that light will go faster in such a vacuum by a
minuscule amount: a photon traveling between two plates that are 1
micrometer apart would increase the photon's speed by only about one
part in 10
36.
[52] Accordingly, there has as yet been no experimental verification of the prediction. A recent analysis
[53]
argued that the Scharnhorst effect cannot be used to send information
backwards in time with a single set of plates since the plates' rest
frame would define a "preferred frame" for FTL signalling. However, with
multiple pairs of plates in motion relative to one another the authors
noted that they had no arguments that could "guarantee the total absence
of causality violations", and invoked Hawking's speculative
chronology protection conjecture
which suggests that feedback loops of virtual particles would create
"uncontrollable singularities in the renormalized quantum stress-energy"
on the boundary of any potential time machine, and thus would require a
theory of quantum gravity to fully analyze. Other authors argue that
Scharnhorst's original analysis, which seemed to show the possibility of
faster-than-
c signals, involved approximations which may be
incorrect, so that it is not clear whether this effect could actually
increase signal speed at all.
[54]
The physicists
Günter Nimtz and Alfons Stahlhofen, of the
University of Cologne, claim to have violated relativity experimentally by transmitting photons faster than the speed of light.
[38]
They say they have conducted an experiment in which microwave photons —
relatively low-energy packets of light — travelled "instantaneously"
between a pair of prisms that had been moved up to 3 ft (1 m) apart.
Their experiment involved an optical phenomenon known as
"evanescent modes", and they claim that since evanescent modes have an imaginary wave number, they represent a "mathematical analogy" to
quantum tunnelling.
[38] Nimtz has also claimed that "evanescent modes are not fully describable by the
Maxwell equations and quantum mechanics have to be taken into consideration."
[55]
Other scientists such as Herbert G. Winful and Robert Helling have
argued that in fact there is nothing quantum-mechanical about Nimtz's
experiments, and that the results can be fully predicted by the
equations of
classical electromagnetism (Maxwell's equations).
[56][57]
Nimtz told
New Scientist
magazine: "For the time being, this is the only violation of special
relativity that I know of." However, other physicists say that this
phenomenon does not allow information to be transmitted faster than
light. Aephraim Steinberg, a quantum optics expert at the
University of Toronto,
Canada, uses the analogy of a train traveling from Chicago to New York,
but dropping off train cars at each station along the way, so that the
center of the ever-shrinking main train moves forward at each stop; in
this way, the speed of the center of the train exceeds the speed of any
of the individual cars.
[58]
Herbert G. Winful argues that the train analogy is a variant of
the "reshaping argument" for superluminal tunneling velocities, but he
goes on to say that this argument is not actually supported by
experiment or simulations, which actually show that the transmitted
pulse has the same length and shape as the incident pulse.
[56] Instead, Winful argues that the
group delay
in tunneling is not actually the transit time for the pulse (whose
spatial length must be greater than the barrier length in order for its
spectrum to be narrow enough to allow tunneling), but is instead the
lifetime of the energy stored in a
standing wave
which forms inside the barrier. Since the stored energy in the barrier
is less than the energy stored in a barrier-free region of the same
length due to destructive interference, the group delay for the energy
to escape the barrier region is shorter than it would be in free space,
which according to Winful is the explanation for apparently superluminal
tunneling.
[59][60]
A number of authors have published papers disputing Nimtz's claim
that Einstein causality is violated by his experiments, and there are
many other papers in the literature discussing why quantum tunneling is
not thought to violate causality.
[61]
It was later claimed by the Keller group in Switzerland that
particle tunneling does indeed occur in zero real time. Their tests
involved tunneling electrons, where the group argued a relativistic
prediction for tunneling time should be 500-600 attoseconds (an
attosecond is one quintillionth (10
−18) of a second). All that could be measured was 24 attoseconds, which is the limit of the test accuracy.
[62]
Again, though, other physicists believe that tunneling experiments in
which particles appear to spend anomalously short times inside the
barrier are in fact fully compatible with relativity, although there is
disagreement about whether the explanation involves reshaping of the
wave packet or other effects.
[59][60][63]
Give up (absolute) relativity
Because of the strong empirical support for
special relativity, any modifications to it must necessarily be quite subtle and difficult to measure. The best-known attempt is
doubly special relativity, which posits that the
Planck length is also the same in all reference frames, and is associated with the work of
Giovanni Amelino-Camelia and
João Magueijo.
There are speculative theories that claim inertia is produced by the combined mass of the universe (e.g.,
Mach's principle), which implies that the rest frame of the universe might be
preferred by conventional measurements of natural law. If confirmed, this would imply
special relativity is an approximation to a more general theory, but since the relevant comparison would (by definition) be outside the
observable universe, it is difficult to imagine (much less construct) experiments to test this hypothesis.
Spacetime distortion
Although the theory of
special relativity forbids objects to have a relative velocity greater than light speed, and
general relativity
reduces to special relativity in a local sense (in small regions of
spacetime where curvature is negligible), general relativity does allow
the space between distant objects to expand in such a way that they have
a "
recession velocity"
which exceeds the speed of light, and it is thought that galaxies which
are at a distance of more than about 14 billion light-years from us
today have a recession velocity which is faster than light.
[64] Miguel Alcubierre theorized that it would be possible to create an
Alcubierre drive,
in which a ship would be enclosed in a "warp bubble" where the space at
the front of the bubble is rapidly contracting and the space at the
back is rapidly expanding, with the result that the bubble can reach a
distant destination much faster than a light beam moving outside the
bubble, but without objects inside the bubble locally traveling faster
than light. However,
several objections
raised against the Alcubierre drive appear to rule out the possibility
of actually using it in any practical fashion. Another possibility
predicted by general relativity is the
traversable wormhole,
which could create a shortcut between arbitrarily distant points in
space. As with the Alcubierre drive, travelers moving through the
wormhole would not
locally move faster than light travelling
through the wormhole alongside them, but they would be able to reach
their destination (and return to their starting location) faster than
light traveling outside the wormhole.
Dr. Gerald Cleaver, associate professor of physics at
Baylor University, and Richard Obousy, a Baylor graduate student, theorized that manipulating the extra spatial dimensions of
string theory
around a spaceship with an extremely large amount of energy would
create a "bubble" that could cause the ship to travel faster than the
speed of light. To create this bubble, the physicists believe
manipulating the 10th spatial dimension would alter the
dark energy
in three large spatial dimensions: height, width and length. Cleaver
said positive dark energy is currently responsible for speeding up the
expansion rate of our universe as time moves on.
[65]
Heim theory
In 1977, a paper on
Heim theory theorized that it may be possible to travel faster than light by using magnetic fields to enter a higher-dimensional space.
[66]
Lorentz symmetry violation
The possibility that Lorentz symmetry may be violated has been
seriously considered in the last two decades, particularly after the
development of a realistic effective field theory that describes this
possible violation, the so-called
Standard-Model Extension.
[67][68][69] This general framework has allowed experimental searches by ultra-high energy cosmic-ray experiments
[70] and a wide variety of experiments in gravity, electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, mesons, and photons.
[71]
The breaking of rotation and boost invariance causes direction
dependence in the theory as well as unconventional energy dependence
that introduces novel effects, including
Lorentz-violating neutrino oscillations
and modifications to the dispersion relations of different particle
species, which naturally could make particles move faster than light.
In some models of broken Lorentz symmetry, it is postulated that
the symmetry is still built into the most fundamental laws of physics,
but that
spontaneous symmetry breaking of Lorentz invariance
[72] shortly after the
Big Bang
could have left a "relic field" throughout the universe which causes
particles to behave differently depending on their velocity relative to
the field;
[73]
however, there are also some models where Lorentz symmetry is broken in
a more fundamental way. If Lorentz symmetry can cease to be a
fundamental symmetry at Planck scale or at some other fundamental scale,
it is conceivable that particles with a critical speed different from
the speed of light be the ultimate constituents of matter.
In current models of Lorentz symmetry violation, the
phenomenological parameters are expected to be energy-dependent.
Therefore, as widely recognized,
[74][75]
existing low-energy bounds cannot be applied to high-energy phenomena;
however, many searches for Lorentz violation at high energies have been
carried out using the
Standard-Model Extension.
[71]
Lorentz symmetry violation is expected to become stronger as one gets closer to the fundamental scale.
Superfluid theories of physical vacuum
In this approach the physical
vacuum is viewed as the quantum
superfluid which is essentially non-relativistic whereas the
Lorentz symmetry
is not an exact symmetry of nature but rather the approximate
description valid only for the small fluctuations of the superfluid
background.
[76] Within the framework of the approach a theory was proposed in which the physical vacuum is conjectured to be the
quantum Bose liquid whose ground-state
wavefunction is described by the
logarithmic Schrödinger equation. It was shown that the
relativistic gravitational interaction arises as the small-amplitude
collective excitation mode
[77] whereas relativistic
elementary particles can be described by the
particle-like modes in the limit of low momenta.
[78] The important fact is that at very high velocities the behavior of the particle-like modes becomes distinct from the
relativistic one - they can reach the
speed of light limit at finite energy; also, faster-than-light propagation is possible without requiring moving objects to have
imaginary mass.
[79][80]
Time of flight of neutrinos
MINOS experiment
In 2007 the
MINOS collaboration reported results measuring the flight-time of 3
GeV neutrinos yielding a speed exceeding that of light by 1.8-sigma significance.
[81] However, those measurements were considered to be statistically consistent with neutrinos traveling at the speed of light.
[82]
After the detectors for the project were upgraded in 2012, MINOS
corrected their initial result and found agreement with the speed of
light. Further measurements are going to be conducted.
[83]
OPERA neutrino anomaly
On September 22, 2011, a preprint
[84] from the
OPERA Collaboration indicated detection of 17 and 28 GeV muon neutrinos, sent 730 kilometers (454 miles) from
CERN near
Geneva, Switzerland to the
Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy, traveling faster than light by a relative amount of 2.48×10
−5 (approximately 1 in 40,000), a statistic with 6.0-sigma significance.
[85] On 17 November 2011, a second follow-up experiment by OPERA scientists confirmed their initial results.
[86][87] However, scientists were skeptical about the results of these experiments, the significance of which was disputed.
[88] In March 2012, the
ICARUS collaboration
failed to reproduce the OPERA results with their equipment, detecting
neutrino travel time from CERN to the Gran Sasso National Laboratory
indistinguishable from the speed of light.
[89] Later the OPERA team reported two flaws in their equipment set-up that had caused errors far outside their original
confidence interval: a
fiber optic cable attached improperly, which caused the apparently faster-than-light measurements, and a clock oscillator ticking too fast.
[90]
Tachyons
In special relativity, it is impossible to accelerate an object
to the
speed of light, or for a massive object to move
at the speed of light. However, it might be possible for an object to exist which
always moves faster than light. The hypothetical
elementary particles with this property are called
tachyonic particles. Attempts to
quantize them failed to produce faster-than-light particles, and instead illustrated that their presence leads to an instability.
[91][92]
Various theorists have suggested that the
neutrino might have a
tachyonic nature,
[93][94][95][96] while others have disputed the possibility.
[97]
Exotic matter
Mechanical equations to describe hypothetical
exotic matter which possesses a
negative mass,
negative momentum,
negative pressure and
negative kinetic energy are
[98]
- ,
Considering
and
, the
energy-momentum relation of the particle is corresponding to the following
dispersion relation
- ,
of a wave that can propagate in the
negative index metamaterial. The pressure of
radiation pressure in the
metamaterial is negative
[99] and
negative refraction,
inverse Doppler effect and
reverse Cherenkov effect imply that the
momentum is also negative. So the wave in a
negative index metamaterial can be applied to test the theory of
exotic matter and
negative mass. For example, the velocity equals
- ,
- ,
That is to say, such a wave can break the
light barrier under certain conditions.
General relativity
General relativity was developed after
special relativity to include concepts like
gravity.
It maintains the principle that no object can accelerate to the speed
of light in the reference frame of any coincident observer. However, it permits distortions in
spacetime that allow an object to move faster than light from the point of view of a distant observer. One such
distortion is the
Alcubierre drive, which can be thought of as producing a
ripple in
spacetime that carries an object along with it. Another possible system is the
wormhole,
which connects two distant locations as though by a shortcut. Both
distortions would need to create a very strong curvature in a highly
localized region of space-time and their gravity fields would be
immense. To counteract the unstable nature, and prevent the distortions
from collapsing under their own 'weight', one would need to introduce
hypothetical
exotic matter or negative energy.
General relativity also recognizes that any means of faster-than-light
travel could also be used for
time travel. This raises problems with
causality. Many physicists believe that the above phenomena are impossible and that future theories of
gravity
will prohibit them. One theory states that stable wormholes are
possible, but that any attempt to use a network of wormholes to violate
causality would result in their decay.
[citation needed] In
string theory, Eric G. Gimon and
Petr Hořava have argued
[100] that in a
supersymmetric five-dimensional
Gödel universe,
quantum corrections to general relativity effectively cut off regions
of spacetime with causality-violating closed timelike curves. In
particular, in the quantum theory a smeared supertube is present that
cuts the spacetime in such a way that, although in the full spacetime a
closed timelike curve passed through every point, no complete curves
exist on the interior region bounded by the tube.
Variable speed of light
In
physics, the speed of light in a
vacuum is assumed to be a constant. However,
hypotheses exist that the
speed of light is variable.
The speed of light is a dimensional quantity and so, as has been emphasized in this context by
João Magueijo, it cannot be measured.
[101]
Measurable quantities in physics are, without exception, dimensionless,
although they are often constructed as ratios of dimensional
quantities. For example, when the height of a mountain is measured, what
is really measured is the ratio of its height to the length of a meter
stick. The conventional
SI system of units is based on seven basic dimensional quantities, namely
distance,
mass, time,
electric current,
thermodynamic temperature,
amount of substance, and
luminous intensity.
[102] These
units are defined to be
independent
and so cannot be described in terms of each other. As an alternative to
using a particular system of units, one can reduce all measurements to
dimensionless quantities expressed in terms of ratios between the
quantities being measured and various fundamental constants such as
Newton's constant, the speed of light and
Planck's constant;
physicists can define at least 26 dimensionless constants which can be
expressed in terms of these sorts of ratios and which are currently
thought to be independent of one another.
[103] By manipulating the basic dimensional constants one can also construct the
Planck time,
Planck length and
Planck energy which make a good system of units for expressing dimensional measurements, known as
Planck units.
Magueijo's proposal used a different set of
units,
a choice which he justifies with the claim that some equations will be
simpler in these new units. In the new units he fixes the
fine structure constant,
a quantity which some people, using units in which the speed of light
is fixed, have claimed is time-dependent. Thus in the system of units in
which the fine structure constant is fixed, the observational claim is
that the speed of light is time-dependent.