- #1
THE 1
- 20
- 0
do antiparticles really go back in time?
THE 1 said:do antiparticles really go back in time?
I agree with the "toy universe"-vision but if models give correct predictions then we know they are right (within a certain physical regime). So, in that case, if the mathematics suggest that "particles go back in time" we can/must conclude that they actually do this, no ? At least that is how i look at this. Of course, i agree that "going back in time" has a somewhat mysterious aura to it but the mathematics involved clearly show what "going back in time" is supposed to mean.vanesch said:It is not because a formula is suggestive of something, that things have to be that way. After all, physical theories are models of reality, and we like to think of them as "toy universes", but nothing tells us that these models are reality.
marlon said:I agree with the "toy universe"-vision but if models give correct predictions then we know they are right (within a certain physical regime). So, in that case, if the mathematics suggest that "particles go back in time" we can/must conclude that they actually do this, no ? At least that is how i look at this. Of course, i agree that "going back in time" has a somewhat mysterious aura to it but the mathematics involved clearly show what "going back in time" is supposed to mean.
3trQN said:Will a letter written in anti-Ink on Anti-paper arive yesterday by first class anti-royal mail?
Gelsamel Epsilon said:I think he is being facetious, pointing out the illogicity of the situation.
vanesch said:Maybe, but then it misses the point. It is not the anti-matter that goes back in time, it is matter going back in time that appears to us as anti-matter (if you follow the mathematical formulae).
3trQN said:Yes i understand you, thanks for that.
So to correct that statement:
A letter written in on paper that arives yesterday by 0th class royal mail (this is the new class stamp that will be developed in 2142) will be seen by mail workers as an anti-letter?
Antiparticles are subatomic particles that have the same mass and spin as their corresponding regular particles, but with opposite electrical charge. For example, the antiparticle of an electron is a positron, which has a positive charge instead of a negative one.
According to the theory of relativity, time and space are interconnected and can be affected by a particle's speed and direction. When a particle and its antiparticle collide, they can annihilate each other and release energy. Some scientists theorize that this energy could potentially create a wormhole, a path through space-time that could allow for time travel.
There is currently no scientific evidence to support the idea that antiparticles can physically travel back in time. The theory of time travel through wormholes is still hypothetical and has not been proven. Additionally, the concept of time is complex and not fully understood, so it is difficult to definitively say if antiparticles can go back in time.
No experiments have been conducted that show antiparticles traveling back in time. The Large Hadron Collider, a particle accelerator in Switzerland, has detected antiparticles and their behavior has been studied extensively, but there is no evidence of them traveling back in time.
The majority of scientists agree that there is no evidence to support the idea that antiparticles can physically travel back in time. While the concept of time travel is intriguing and is still being explored, the idea that antiparticles could be used as a means of time travel is not widely accepted in the scientific community.