So do they go back in time, or is there a privileged refernce frame? Or what about Inertial reference frame translations of Special Reletivity is wrong?
A tachyon going forward in time on a reference frame can be going back in time on another. Someone who knows about spacetime diagrams can convince himself with this:
The world line of the tachyon is the green line. In the black reference frame it is going forward in time with speed greater than c. In the red reference frame, the point labelled B has a negative time coordinate, t'
B. So the tachyon is going back in time in R'.
If you don't know about this diagrams you are going to have a hard time with this one. The vertical axis is time, the horizontal axis space. Time is measured in meters (or c =1), so a light ray travels with a 45º slope. Something travelling faster than light would cross more distance in the same time, so it would have a less steep worldline. Ordinary matter, travelling v < c, has a slope greater than 45º. You can find the coordinates (x,t) of an event in the usual way.
If we add a new frame, with the same origin but travelling with v < c with respect to the first, we must draw slanted axes to use the same diagram. Now, to find the t' coordinate of a point we draw a line parallel to the x' axis and notice the point of intersection with the t' axis. This is the generalisation of what you do with normal, perpendicular axes. The coordinates of A are (0,0) in both systems. The coordinates of B are both positive in R, while in R' the time is negative.
This seems to violate causality, but if one were to do all the calculations for an attempt at FTL communication, he would probably find that it is not possible (something like a received tachyon going backwards in time is indistinguishable from an emitted tachyon going forward in time). I think the FAQ article I linked discusses this a bit.
Anyway, my point in the earlier post was
- They have never been found, so their existence is very unlikely.
- However, they can be accommodated in our current theories, provided they can only travel FTL and never cross the c barrier