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  1. So there might be a particle that can move faster than light? What's it made out of, Rainbow Dash?

    Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:14:44 UTC from TTYtter
    1. @ceruleanspark Is it tachyons?

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:15:26 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
      1. @starlightbolt whatever the hay a "Tachyonic Neutrino" is. I don't really...get quantum physics.

        Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:16:44 UTC from TTYtter
    2. @scribus "If you are wondering about theories that allow tachyonic [faster than light] neutrinos the least wacky one I can find is that neutrinos can take 'shortcuts off the brane through large extra dimensions.'" Oh god how did I get here I am not good with computer.

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:19:13 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
      1. @ceruleanspark They exist in imaginary time, so they do not use the same time reference that we do. Thus they can move faster than light... which I do not agree with the theory of the speed of light being a limit on velocity myself. Some theories say they even move backwards in time so it appears they are moving faster than the speed of light

        Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:23:48 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
        1. @starlightbolt I looked up "Imaginary Time" and now I'm more confused that I was before. Imaginary time is a form of time that runs perpendicular to regular time? The X to Time's Y on a cartesian grid? Or is it the Z?

          Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:31:43 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
          1. @ceruleanspark It's the Y axis... I'm a control engineer so I am used to things being in the imaginary plane a lot. You can pretty much think of this in the Laplase domain, but I don't think that is gonna help you very much either XD

            Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:36:06 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
            1. @starlightbolt It's some kind of... dimensional conversion formula?

              Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:39:18 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
              1. @ceruleanspark It's something that you can use instead of time. If you have a function based on time domain, that is too complex, you can convert it to the Laplase domain, which is pretty much imaginary time, then solve it... I'm not sure why imaginary time is easier to use it just is XD

                Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:44:28 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
                1. @starlightbolt You lost me at "Something" So is imaginary time actually imaginary, or does it have defined rules based on some constants?

                  Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:46:46 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
                  1. @ceruleanspark it means √(-1) which is i... so the imaginary part squared is in the negative plane... if that helps at all... this is an extremely hard concept to explain I am realizing XD

                    Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:51:25 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
          2. @ceruleanspark Another theory is that they have imaginary mass, and so the square of their mass is a negative number. So their slowest speed is the speed of light and as they lose energy they actually speed up. I don't know why I am so interested in dumb things like particle physics that don't affect me XD

            Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:38:45 UTC from StatusNet Desktop
    3. @scribus I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT ANYTHING ANYMORE. UP IS DOWN, TIME IS LEFT. BLACK IS UP

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:32:46 UTC from TTYtter
    4. @scribus Time Cube is my favourite thing on the internet.

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:47:36 UTC from TTYtter
    5. @scribus Wasn't that what Cube 2: Hypercube was about? A tesseract?

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:53:53 UTC from TTYtter
    6. @scribus 60659

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 08:57:07 UTC from TTYtter
    7. @scribus You'd probably enjoy Primer, if you haven't seen it.

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 09:05:54 UTC from TTYtter
    8. @scribus It's a really good, if mind-buggeringly confusing movie.

      Friday, 23-Sep-11 09:12:45 UTC from TTYtter