Posted: Sat Jul 17, 2004 6:50 pm Post subject: Orthodoxy's Opposition to Theories of Superluminality
According to Dr. John G. Cramer, Professor of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, the most accurate measurements to date for the mass of an e-neutrino are too fantastic to believe. (What is actually being measured is e-neutrino mass-squared).
John G. Cramer wrote:
Of the six most recent experimental determinations of neutrino mass, all have given negative values of the mass-squared...
The measured mass-squared values are negative to an accuracy of several standard deviations in the most recent of these experiments.
These experimenters have been strangely quiet about mass-squared measurements with negative values. If the results had been positive by the same amount, the literature would be filled with claims that a non-zero value for the neutrino mass had been established. But a negative mass-squared is not something that can be easily publicized. [1].
It's perfectly understandable why the experimental verification of "imaginary mass" for the e-neutrino particle is too embarrassing for the mainstream to take seriously. They know what it means. Why is it that I never hear physicists explaining the obvious implications? Is there a cultural taboo in the mainstream against contemplating the possibility that the electron neutrino is a tachyon and in freely discussing what are the most respectable physical assumptions to avoid causality paradoxes in the light of available data? Is orthodoxy opposed to superluminality—the anticipated, upcoming, theoretical physics of motion for objects traveling faster than light?
Why doesn't the mainstream just honestly admit what the reasonable implications of superluminality would be?
Posted: Sun Jul 25, 2004 8:39 am Post subject: The Ultimate Neutrino Page
Quote:
Curiously, when taken at the face value, all results point to a negative mass squared, particularly the oldest experiment. [2].
Robert Clark adds this relevant comment:
Quote:
In all the experimental attempts to determine the mass of the neutrino in tritium beta decay, the experiments all give a negative value for the mass squared of the neutrino, which indirectly indicates a superluminal speed for the neutrino. There have been about ten such experiments so far, using more than one type of experimental technique. A conventional physics explanation would have to explain why these very different experimental methods all give the same answer. —sci.physics.relativity, 1998/01/14.
Joined: 15 Mar 2005 Posts: 8 Location: Baton Rouge, LA
Posted: Tue Mar 15, 2005 1:44 pm Post subject: Re: Orthodoxy's Opposition to Theories of Superluminality
Perfectly Innocent wrote:
According to Dr. John G. Cramer, Professor of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, the most accurate measurements to date for the mass of an e-neutrino are too fantastic to believe. (What is actually being measured is e-neutrino mass-squared).
John G. Cramer wrote:
Of the six most recent experimental determinations of neutrino mass, all have given negative values of the mass-squared...
The measured mass-squared values are negative to an accuracy of several standard deviations in the most recent of these experiments.
These experimenters have been strangely quiet about mass-squared measurements with negative values. If the results had been positive by the same amount, the literature would be filled with claims that a non-zero value for the neutrino mass had been established. But a negative mass-squared is not something that can be easily publicized. [1].
It's perfectly understandable why the experimental verification of "imaginary mass" for the e-neutrino particle is too embarrassing for the mainstream to take seriously.
You forgot the first sentence in your first quoted paragraph:
"And this is where the interesting, although statistically shaky, results appear: "
And you left out this one:
" It is far more likely that the negative values found in the neutrino mass-squared measurements originate in some unsuspected experimental effect."
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum