On Fri, Aug 05, 2016 at 12:17:10PM +0300, Georgi Guninski wrote: > This confuses me: > https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tachyonic_field&oldid=730595004 > | A tachyonic field, or simply tachyon, is a quantum field with an imaginary > mass. > > "imaginary" links to imaginary number, using i^2= -1. > > > So far, as I read it, this means the mass can be say 1i > grams.
Wow. That's very cool. But they can't detect them. But they must exist? If so, that's really wild. Sounds like physicist are on some serious psycho visual stimulants. > Later comes the confusion, wiki explains "imaginary" as real > (in the math sense). > > | The "imaginary mass" really means that the system becomes unstable. Sounds like a different meaning for the term 'imaginary'... and that Wikipedia may need to be updated to reflect this imaginary fact. > IIRC relativity has formulas with factors of the form > sqrt(1-v^2/c^2) which go imaginary when v>c and without > doubt scientists know this. > > Someone knows what "imaginary" means in this context? > > AFAICT Tachyonic fields exist unconditionally. You know, soon we'll be tapping subspace with polymorphic entangled photonic array DNA implants into the 98% junk or "non coding" pairs, and then they'll be telling us our DNA was actually better all along and just requires a few histone induced nucleotide activations. After all, DNA stores information so perhaps twins have a number of entangled photon pairs shared between their medalla strands which allow them to each observe the other simultaneously, but only when the other is also observing...
