How are all the gravitational effects calculated, especially with the Alps sitting above the path?
Neutrinos do have mass, correct?
What would going faster than the speed of light do to that mass?
Do you mean gravitational effects on the neutrinos? I think those are negligible - they're relativistic, so there will just be a tiny curvature of the path due to the gravity of the earth.
If you have a good model of the Earth's gravitational potential (they exist), then you can talk about the gravitational time dilation between the emitter and the detector, which may affect measurements. But Φ/c² ~ 7E-10 on Earth's surface, so it's hard to see what kind of kind of relevance gravitational time dilation would have to a discrepancy of the claimed magnitude.I think I let myself get a little confused about somethings, and the question really was coming from a position of ignorance. The reference frame is the Earth, so the observed speed of the neutrino isn't bothered by any gravitational time-dilation effects the neutrino might experience. Correct?
I think I let myself get a little confused about somethings, and the question really was coming from a position of ignorance. The reference frame is the Earth, so the observed speed of the neutrino isn't bothered by any gravitational time-dilation effects the neutrino might experience. Correct?
But Φ/c² ~ 7E-10 on Earth's surface, so it's hard to see what kind of kind of relevance gravitational time dilation would have to a discrepancy of the claimed magnitude.
Do you care to explain how this is any different than electrons exceeding c in dielectric water?
It is hard to see, but you do have to be a little careful - the difference could accumulate over time. That's why it matters for the GPS satellites - their clocks are adjusted to run at a different rate than earth clocks, to compensate for the combination of gravitational and Lorentz time dilation, and even so I think they have to be re-synced periodically.
That's what the standard answer is, but in the program I saw, music was transmitted and the researcher said, he thought the music was indeed information.According to the known laws of physics, quantum effects cannot transmit information of any kind faster than light, full stop.
That's what the standard answer is, but in the program I saw, music was transmitted and the researcher said, he thought the music was indeed information.
http://www.livescience.com/16183-faster-speed-light-physics-breakthrough.html
The article describes neutrinos moving faster than 15c or 15 times the speed of light in a vacuum. I don't know why they are reporting that special relativity must be violated here because it simply could be tachyons depending on how the experiments were conducted.