Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q41995> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 76 of
76
with 100 triples per page.
- Q41995 subject Q6977714.
- Q41995 subject Q7210415.
- Q41995 subject Q8443969.
- Q41995 subject Q8826024.
- Q41995 subject Q8853862.
- Q41995 abstract "A tachyon /ˈtæki.ɒn/ or tachyonic particle is a hypothetical particle that always moves faster than light. The word comes from the Greek: ταχύ pronounced tachy /ˈtɑːxi/, meaning rapid. It was coined in 1967 by Gerald Feinberg. The complementary particle types are called luxon (always moving at the speed of light) and bradyon (always moving slower than light), which both exist. The possibility of particles moving faster than light was first proposed by O. M. P. Bilaniuk, V. K. Deshpande, and E. C. G. Sudarshan in 1962, although the term they used for it was "meta-particle".Most physicists think that faster-than-light particles cannot exist because they are not consistent with the known laws of physics. If such particles did exist, they could be used to build a tachyonic antitelephone and send signals faster than light, which (according to special relativity) would lead to violations of causality. Potentially consistent theories that allow faster-than-light particles include those that break Lorentz invariance, the symmetry underlying special relativity, so that the speed of light is not a barrier.In the 1967 paper that coined the term, Feinberg proposed that tachyonic particles could be quanta of a quantum field with negative squared mass. However, it was soon realized that excitations of such imaginary mass fields do not in fact propagate faster than light, and instead represent an instability known as tachyon condensation. Nevertheless, negative squared mass fields are commonly referred to as "tachyons", and in fact have come to play an important role in modern physics.Despite theoretical arguments against the existence of faster-than-light particles, experiments have been conducted to search for them. No compelling evidence for their existence has been found. In September 2011, it was reported that a tau neutrino had travelled faster than the speed of light in a major release by CERN; however, later updates from CERN on the OPERA project indicate that the faster-than-light readings were resultant from "a faulty element of the experiment's fibre optic timing system".".
- Q41995 thumbnail Tachyon04s.gif?width=300.
- Q41995 wikiPageExternalLink tachyons.html.
- Q41995 wikiPageExternalLink FTL.html.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1042282.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1056595.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1068463.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q107420.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1093427.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1097654.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q11379.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1137903.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q11455.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1149766.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1202882.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q12916.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1309317.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q133327.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q134237.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1384866.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1428753.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1437042.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q15044673.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1548694.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q1621273.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q165301.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q17156833.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q177596.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q18338.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q192457.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q192735.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2024141.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2111.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2126.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q217361.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2488408.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q248867.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2923525.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q2943139.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q306600.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q3502299.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q3526772.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q402.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q41273.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q44207.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q461.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q471418.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q54505.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q611375.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6680494.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6977714.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q6987233.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q714440.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q7210415.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q722131.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q736716.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q7642900.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q77078.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q837505.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q8443969.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q856292.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q8826024.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q8853862.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q900905.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q9165172.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q927559.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q937.
- Q41995 wikiPageWikiLink Q99982.
- Q41995 comment "A tachyon /ˈtæki.ɒn/ or tachyonic particle is a hypothetical particle that always moves faster than light. The word comes from the Greek: ταχύ pronounced tachy /ˈtɑːxi/, meaning rapid. It was coined in 1967 by Gerald Feinberg. The complementary particle types are called luxon (always moving at the speed of light) and bradyon (always moving slower than light), which both exist. The possibility of particles moving faster than light was first proposed by O. M. P. Bilaniuk, V. K.".
- Q41995 label "Tachyon".
- Q41995 depiction Tachyon04s.gif.