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{{Redirect|Faster than the speed of light|other uses|Faster than the speed of light (disambiguation)}} {{Short description|Propagation of information or matter faster than the speed of light}}
{{Other uses}}
{{Refimprove|date=September 2009}}
]
'''Faster-than-light''' ('''superluminal''' or '''supercausal''') ] and ] are the conjectural propagation of ] or ] faster than the ] in vacuum ({{mvar|'''c'''}}). The ] implies that only particles with zero ] (i.e., ]) may travel ''at'' the speed of light, and that nothing may travel faster.


Particles whose speed exceeds that of light (]s) have been hypothesized, but their existence would violate ] and would imply ]. The ] is that they do not exist.
'''Faster-than-light''' (also '''superluminal''' or '''FTL''') ] and ] refer to the propagation of ] or ] faster than the ].
Under the ], a particle (that has mass) with subluminal velocity needs infinite energy to accelerate to the speed of light, although special relativity does not forbid the existence of particles that travel faster than light at all times (see ]s).


According to all observations and current scientific theories, matter travels at '''slower-than-light''' ('''subluminal''') speed with respect to the locally distorted spacetime region. Speculative faster-than-light concepts include the ], ]s, ], and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://physicsworld.com/a/quantum-tunnelling-time-is-measured-using-ultracold-atoms/ |title=Quantum-tunnelling time is measured using ultracold atoms |website=Physics World |date=22 July 2020 |format= |accessdate=}}</ref><ref name="urlQuanta Magazine">{{cite web |url=https://www.quantamagazine.org/quantum-tunnel-shows-particles-can-break-the-speed-of-light-20201020/ |title=Quanta Magazine |date=20 October 2020 |format= |accessdate=}}</ref> Some of these proposals find loopholes around general relativity, such as by expanding or contracting space to make the object appear to be travelling greater than ''c''. Such proposals are still widely believed to be impossible as they still violate current understandings of causality, and they all require fanciful mechanisms to work (such as requiring ]).
On the other hand, what some physicists refer to as "apparent" or "effective" FTL<ref>{{cite journal | last = Gonzalez-Diaz | first = Pedro F. | title = Warp drive space-time | journal = Physical Review D | volume = 62 | year = 2000 | pages = 044005–1–044005–7 | url = http://omnis.if.ufrj.br/~mbr/warp/etc/PRD62_44005.pdf | doi = 10.1103/PhysRevD.62.044005 |format=PDF}} {{arxiv | archive = gr-qc | id = 9907026}}</ref><ref>http://arxiv.org/pdf/gr-qc/0107097</ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> is the hypothesis that unusually distorted regions of ] might permit matter to reach distant locations faster than what it would take light in the "normal" route (though still moving subluminally through the distorted region).


{{TOC limit|3}}
Apparent FTL is not excluded by ]. Examples of apparent FTL proposals are the ] and the ], although the physical plausibility of these solutions is uncertain.


==Superluminal travel of non-information==
==Travel==
{{Main|Superluminal motion}}
In the context of this article, FTL is transmitting information or matter faster than ''c'', a constant equal to the ] in a vacuum, 299,792,458 meters per second, or about 186,282.4 miles per second. This is not quite the same as traveling faster than light, since:
* Some processes propagate faster than ''c'', but cannot carry information (See ]).
* Light travels at speed ''c/n'' when not in a vacuum but ] through a medium with ] = ''n'' (causing ]), and in some materials other particles can travel faster than ''c/n'' (but still slower than ''c''), leading to ]
Neither of these phenomena violates ] or creates problems with ], and thus neither qualifies as ''FTL'' as described here.


In the context of this article, "faster-than-light" means the transmission of information or matter faster than ''c'', a constant equal to the ] in vacuum, which is 299,792,458&nbsp;m/s (by definition of the metre)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/17/1/|title=The 17th Conférence Générale des Poids et Mesures (CGPM) : Definition of the metre|website=bipm.org|access-date=July 5, 2020|archive-date=May 27, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200527104823/https://www.bipm.org/en/CGPM/db/17/1/|url-status=dead}}</ref> or about 186,282.397 miles per second. This is not quite the same as traveling faster than light, since:
==Possibility==
*Some processes propagate faster than ''c'', but cannot carry information (see examples in the sections immediately following).
Faster-than-light communication is, by ]'s ], equivalent to ]. According to Einstein's theory of ], what we measure as the ] in a vacuum is actually the fundamental physical constant ''c''. This means that all ] observers, regardless of their relative ], will always measure zero-mass particles such as ]s traveling at ''c'' in a vacuum. This result means that measurements of time and velocity in different frames are no longer related simply by constant shifts, but are instead related by ]s. These transformations have important implications:
*In some materials where light travels at speed ''c/n'' (where ''n'' is the ]) other particles can travel faster than ''c/n'' (but still slower than ''c''), leading to ] (see ]).
*The relativistic momentum of a ]ive particle would increase with speed in such a way that at the speed of light an object would have infinite momentum.
Neither of these phenomena violates ] or creates problems with ], and thus neither qualifies as faster-than-light as described here.
*To accelerate an object of non-zero ] to ''c'' would require infinite time with any finite acceleration, or infinite acceleration for a finite amount of time.
*Either way, such acceleration requires infinite energy. Going beyond the speed of light in a homogeneous space would hence require more than infinite energy, which is not generally considered to be a sensible notion.
*Some observers with sub-light relative motion will disagree about which occurs first of any two events that are separated by a ].<ref>Einstein, A, ''Relativity:the special and the general theory'', pp25-27, Methuen & Co, 1927.</ref> In other words, any travel that is faster-than-light will be seen as traveling backwards in time in some other, equally valid, frames of reference, or need to assume the speculative hypothesis of possible Lorentz violations at a presently unobserved scale (for instance the Planck scale). Therefore any theory which permits "true" FTL also has to cope with ] and all its associated paradoxes,<ref>{{cite journal | first = J. Richard | last = Gott | title = Time Travel in Einstein's Universe | year = 2002}} pp82-83</ref> or else to assume the ] to be a symmetry of thermodynamical statistical nature (hence a symmetry broken at some presently unobserved scale).
*While special and general relativity do not allow superluminal speeds locally, non-local means may be possible, which means moving with space rather than moving through space.


In the following examples, certain influences may appear to travel faster than light, but they do not convey energy or information faster than light, so they do not violate special relativity.
==Justifications==
Despite the established conclusion that relativity precludes FTL travel, some have proposed ways to justify FTL behaviour:


===Daily sky motion===
===Faster light (Casimir vacuum and quantum tunnelling)===
For an earth-bound observer, objects in the sky complete one revolution around the Earth in one day. ], the nearest star outside the ], is about four and a half ]s away.<ref name="A2 Student Book">
Einstein's equations of ] postulate that the speed of light in a vacuum is invariant in ]. That is, it will be the same from any frame of reference moving at a constant speed. The equations do not specify any particular value for the speed of the light, which is an experimentally determined quantity for a fixed unit of length. Since 1983, the unit of length (the ]) has been defined using the ].
{{cite book
|author=University of York Science Education Group
|year=2001
|title=Salter Horners Advanced Physics A2 Student Book
|publisher=Heinemann
|pages=302–303
|isbn=978-0435628925
}}</ref> In this frame of reference, in which Proxima Centauri is perceived to be moving in a circular trajectory with a radius of four light years, it could be described as having a speed many times greater than ''c'' as the rim speed of an object moving in a circle is a product of the radius and angular speed.<ref name="A2 Student Book"/> It is also possible on a ] view, for objects such as comets to vary their speed from subluminal to superluminal and vice versa simply because the distance from the Earth varies. Comets may have orbits which take them out to more than 1000 ].<ref>
{{cite web
|date=15 April 1996
|title=The Furthest Object in the Solar System
|url=http://www.oarval.org/furthest.htm
|work=Information Leaflet No. 55
|publisher=Royal Greenwich Observatory
}}</ref> The circumference of a circle with a radius of 1000 AU is greater than one light day. In other words, a comet at such a distance is superluminal in a geostatic, and therefore non-inertial, frame.


===Light spots and shadows===
The experimental determination has been made in vacuum. However, the vacuum we know is not the only possible vacuum which can exist. The vacuum has energy associated with it, called the ]. This vacuum energy can perhaps be changed in certain cases.<ref>{{cite web | title=What is the 'zero-point energy' (or 'vacuum energy') in quantum physics? Is it really possible that we could harness this energy?| url= http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=follow-up-what-is-the-zer| publisher= Scientific American| date= 1997-08-18| accessdate=2009-05-27}}</ref> When vacuum energy is lowered, light itself has been predicted to go faster than the standard value 'c'. This is known as the ]. Such a vacuum can be produced by bringing two perfectly smooth metal plates together at near atomic diameter spacing. It is called a ]. Calculations imply that light will go faster in such a vacuum by a minuscule amount: a photon traveling between two plates that are 1 micrometer apart would increase the photon's speed by only about one part in 10<sup>36</sup>.<ref>{{cite web |author= Klaus Scharnhorst|title= Secret of the vacuum: Speedier light| date= 1990-05-12 |accessdate=2009-05-27|url= http://www.nat.vu.nl/~scharnh/m16scine.htm }}</ref> Accordingly there has as yet been no experimental verification of the prediction. A recent analysis<ref name="lib">{{cite web | title= Faster-than-c signals, special relativity, and causality| url= http://arxiv.org/abs/gr-qc/0107091| author= Matt Visser| coauthors= Stefano Liberati, Sebastiano Sonego| publisher= Annals Phys| date= 2001-07-27| accessdate=2009-05-27}}</ref> argued that the Scharnhorst effect cannot be used to send information backwards in time with a single set of plates since the plates' rest frame would define a "preferred frame" for FTL signalling. However, with multiple pairs of plates in motion relative to one another the authors noted that they had no arguments that could "guarantee the total absence of causality violations", and invoked Hawking's speculative ] which suggests that feedback loops of virtual particles would create "uncontrollable singularities in the renormalized quantum stress-energy" on the boundary of any potential time machine, and thus would require a theory of quantum gravity to fully analyze. Other authors argue that Scharnhorst's original analysis which seemed to show the possibility of faster-than-c signals involved approximations which may be incorrect, so that it is not clear whether this effect could actually increase signal speed at all.<ref></ref>
If a laser beam is swept across a distant object, the spot of laser light can seem to move across the object at a speed greater than ''c''.<ref name="Gibbs"/> Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object seems to move across the object faster than ''c''.<ref name="Gibbs">
{{cite web
|last=Gibbs |first=P.
|year=1997
|url=http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SpeedOfLight/FTL.html
|title=Is Faster-Than-Light Travel or Communication Possible?
|work=The Original Usenet Physics FAQ
|access-date=20 August 2008
}}</ref> In neither case does the light travel from the source to the object faster than ''c'', nor does any information travel faster than light. No object is moving in these examples. For comparison, consider water squirting out of a garden hose as it is swung side to side: water does not instantly follow the direction of the hose.<ref name="Gibbs"/><ref>
{{cite book
|last1=Salmon |first1=W. C.
|year=2006
|title=Four Decades of Scientific Explanation
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FHqOXCd06e8C&pg=PA107
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0-8229-5926-7
|page=107
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book
|last1=Steane |first1=A.
|year=2012
|title=The Wonderful World of Relativity: A Precise Guide for the General Reader
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4m14K1PpJwMC&pg=PA180
|page=180
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0-19-969461-7
}}</ref>


===Closing speeds===
The physicists ] and Alfons Stahlhofen, of the University of Koblenz, claim to have violated relativity experimentally by transmitting photons faster than the speed of light.<ref></ref> They say they have conducted an experiment in which microwave photons—relatively low energy packets of light—travelled "instantaneously" between a pair of prisms that had been moved up to {{convert|3|ft|0|abbr=on}} apart, using a phenomenon known as ]. Nimtz told '']'' magazine: "For the time being, this is the only violation of special relativity that I know of." However, other physicists say that this phenomenon does not allow information to be transmitted faster than light. Aephraim Steinberg, a quantum optics expert at the University of Toronto, Canada, uses the analogy of a train traveling from Chicago to New York, but dropping off train cars at each station along the way, so that the center of the train moves forward at each stop; in this way, the speed of the center of the train exceeds the speed of any of the individual cars.<ref name="nimtz">{{Citation | last = Anderson | first = Mark | title=Light seems to defy its own speed limit | magazine = ] | volume = 195 | issue = 2617 | pages= 10 | year = 2007 | date = August 18-24, 2007 | url = http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2007-08/ns-lst081607.php }}</ref>
The rate at which two objects in motion in a single frame of reference get closer together is called the mutual or closing speed. This may approach twice the speed of light, as in the case of two particles travelling at close to the speed of light in opposite directions with respect to the reference frame.


Imagine two fast-moving particles approaching each other from opposite sides of a ] of the collider type. The closing speed would be the rate at which the distance between the two particles is decreasing. From the point of view of an observer standing at rest relative to the accelerator, this rate will be slightly less than twice the speed of light.
Expert Steinberg's tunneling analogy is not correct. Because the train (a photon, an electron or an evanescent signal for example) enters in Chicago the barrier and is tunneling with the same amplitude and length to the barrier's end in New York. For example, 99 trains from a 100 are reflected at the barrier entrance. Only one train has entered the barrier and is leaving not deformed the barrier. A tunneling particle is not reshaped during the barrier passage. The evanescent signal has to have a narrow frequency band in order to neglect the dispersion of the barrier reflection. This claim was fulfilled with digital microwave and infrared faster than light signals.<ref>G.Nimtz, A.Enders and H.Spieker,"Photonic tunneling times", ''J.Phys.I'' ''France'', '''4''', 565-570,1994</ref><ref>S.Longhi et al., "Superluminal optical pulse propagation at 1.5 μm wave length in periodic fiber Bragg gratings", ''Phys. Rev. E'', '''64''', 055602,1-4, 2001.</ref>. Tunneling is an elastic process. Only the number of particles of an ensemble is reduced by reflection at the barrier front and not the tunneling particle or signal. This behavior differs from the attenuation along a lossy wave guide, where the attenuation increases continuously with increasing guide length. Tunneling can violate the Einstein causality; however, the primitive causality, i.e. effect follows cause, is still valid.<ref>G.Nimtz, "Do evanescent modes violate relativistic causality?", "Lecture Notes in Physics", '''702''', 506-531,2006.</ref> Incidentally, the tunneling time seems to be a universal property independent of field. There are experimental data of phonons, of photons and electrons available supporting this claim of universality.<ref>G.Nimtz, "On virtual phonons, photons and electrons", ''Found. Phys.'' DOI 10.1007/s10701-009-9356-z,2010</ref>


] does not prohibit this. It tells us that it is wrong to use ] to compute the velocity of one of the particles, as would be measured by an observer traveling alongside the other particle. That is, special relativity gives the correct ] for computing such ].
===Give up causality===
Another approach is to accept ], but to posit that mechanisms allowed by ] (e.g., ]s) will allow traveling between two points without going through the intervening space. While this gets around the infinite acceleration problem, it still would lead to ]s (i.e., ]) and ] violations. Causality is not required by special or general relativity, but is nonetheless generally considered a basic property of the universe that cannot be sensibly dispensed with. Because of this, most physicists{{Who|date=January 2010}} expect that ] effects will preclude this option.{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} An alternative is to conjecture that, while time travel is possible, it never leads to paradoxes; this is the ].


It is instructive to compute the relative velocity of particles moving at ''v'' and −''v'' in accelerator frame, which corresponds to the closing speed of 2''v''&nbsp;>&nbsp;''c''. Expressing the speeds in units of ''c'', ''β''&nbsp;=&nbsp;''v''/''c'':
An important point to note is that in general relativity it is possible for objects to be moving apart faster than light because of the expansion of the universe, in some reasonable choice of cosmological coordinates. This is understood to be due to the expansion of the space between the objects, and general relativity still reduces to special relativity in a "local" sense, meaning that two objects passing each other in a small local region of spacetime cannot have a relative velocity greater than c, and will move more slowly than a light beam passing through the region. (See Option F below)
:<math>\beta_\text{rel} = \frac{\beta + \beta}{1 + \beta ^2} = \frac{2\beta}{1 + \beta^2} \leq 1.</math>


===Proper speeds===
===Give up (absolute) relativity===
If a spaceship travels to a planet one light-year (as measured in the Earth's rest frame) away from Earth at high speed, the time taken to reach that planet could be less than one year as measured by the traveller's clock (although it will always be more than one year as measured by a clock on Earth). The value obtained by dividing the distance traveled, as determined in the Earth's frame, by the time taken, measured by the traveller's clock, is known as a proper speed or a ]. There is no limit on the value of a proper speed as a proper speed does not represent a speed measured in a single inertial frame. A light signal that left the Earth at the same time as the traveller would always get to the destination before the traveller would.
Because of the strong empirical support for ], any modifications to it must necessarily be quite subtle and difficult to measure. The best-known attempt is ], which posits that the ] is also the same in all reference frames, and is associated with the work of ] and ]. One consequence of this theory is a ], where photon speed would vary with energy, and some zero-mass particles might possibly travel faster than ''c''. {{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} However, even if this theory is accurate, it is still very unclear whether it would allow information to be communicated, and appears not in any case to allow massive particles to exceed ''c''.


===Phase velocities above ''c''===
There are speculative theories that claim inertia is produced by the combined mass of the universe (e.g., ]), which implies that the rest frame of the universe might be ''preferred'' by conventional measurements of natural law. If confirmed, this would imply ] is an approximation to a more general theory, but since the relevant comparison would (by definition) be outside the observable universe, it is difficult to imagine (much less construct) experiments to test this hypothesis.
The ] of an ], when traveling through a medium, can routinely exceed ''c'', the vacuum velocity of light. For example, this occurs in most glasses at ] frequencies.<ref>
{{cite book
|last=Hecht |first=E.
|year=1987
|title=Optics
|page=62 |edition=2nd
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0-201-11609-0
}}</ref> However, the phase velocity of a wave corresponds to the propagation speed of a theoretical single-frequency (purely ]) component of the wave at that frequency. Such a wave component must be infinite in extent and of constant amplitude (otherwise it is not truly monochromatic), and so cannot convey any information.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last=Sommerfeld |first=A.
|year=1907
|title=An Objection Against the Theory of Relativity and its Removal
|journal=]
|volume=8 |issue=23 |pages=841–842
|title-link=s:Translation:An Objection Against the Theory of Relativity and its Removal
}}</ref>
Thus a phase velocity above ''c'' does not imply the propagation of ] with a velocity above ''c''.<ref name="phase">
{{cite journal
|title=Phase, Group, and Signal Velocity
|url=https://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath210/kmath210.htm
|journal=American Journal of Physics
|bibcode=1954AmJPh..22..618W
|access-date=2007-04-30
|last1=Weber
|first1=J.
|year=1954
|volume=22
|issue=9
|page=618
|doi=10.1119/1.1933858
}}</ref>


===Group velocities above ''c''===
===Non-physical realms===
The ] of a wave may also exceed ''c'' in some circumstances.<ref>
A very popular option in ] is to assume the existence of some other realm (typically called ], ], or ]) which is accessible from this universe, in which the laws of relativity are usually distorted, bent, or nonexistent, facilitating rapid transport between distant points in this universe, sometimes with acceleration differences—that is, not requiring as much energy or ] to go faster. To accomplish rapid transport between points in hyperspace/subspace, special relativity is often assumed not to apply in this other realm, or that the speed of light is higher. Another solution is to posit that distant points in the mundane universe correspond to points that are close together in hyperspace.
{{cite journal
|last1=Wang |first1=L. J.
|last2=Kuzmich |first2=A.
|last3=Dogariu |first3=A.
|year=2000
|title=Gain-assisted superluminal light propagation
|journal=]
|volume=406 |issue=6793 |pages=277–279
|doi=10.1038/35018520
|pmid=10917523
|doi-access= |bibcode=2000Natur.406..277W|s2cid=4358601
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Bowlan |first1=P.
|last2=Valtna-Lukner |first2=H.
|last3=Lõhmus |first3=M.
|last4=Piksarv |first4=P.
|last5=Saari |first5=P.
|last6=Trebino |first6=R.
|s2cid=122056218
|year=2009
|title=Measurement of the spatiotemporal electric field of ultrashort superluminal Bessel-X pulses
|journal=]
|volume=20 |issue=12 |page=42
|bibcode=2009OptPN..20...42M
|doi=10.1364/OPN.20.12.000042
}}</ref> In such cases, which typically at the same time involve rapid attenuation of the intensity, the maximum of the envelope of a pulse may travel with a velocity above ''c''. However, even this situation does not imply the propagation of ] with a velocity above ''c'',<ref>
{{cite book |last=Brillouin |first=L. |url=https://archive.org/details/wavepropagationg00bril_0 |title=Wave Propagation and Group Velocity |publisher=] |year=1960 |url-access=registration}}</ref> even though one may be tempted to associate pulse maxima with signals. The latter association has been shown to be misleading, because the information on the arrival of a pulse can be obtained before the pulse maximum arrives. For example, if some mechanism allows the full transmission of the leading part of a pulse while strongly attenuating the pulse maximum and everything behind (distortion), the pulse maximum is effectively shifted forward in time, while the information on the pulse does not come faster than ''c'' without this effect.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Withayachumnankul |first1=W.
|last2=Fischer |first2=B. M.
|last3=Ferguson |first3=B.
|last4=Davis |first4=B. R.
|last5=Abbott |first5=D.
|year=2010
|title=A Systemized View of Superluminal Wave Propagation
|url=http://www.eleceng.adelaide.edu.au/personal/dabbott/publications/PIE_withayachumnankul2010.pdf
|journal=]
|volume=98 |issue=10 |pages=1775–1786
|doi=10.1109/JPROC.2010.2052910
|s2cid=15100571
}}</ref> However, group velocity ] ''c'' in some parts of a ] in vacuum (without attenuation). The ] causes the peak of the pulse to propagate faster, while overall power does not.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Horváth |first1=Z. L.
|last2=Vinkó |first2=J.
|last3=Bor |first3=Zs.
|last4=von der Linde |first4=D.
|year=1996
|title=Acceleration of femtosecond pulses to superluminal velocities by Gouy phase shift
|url=http://www.ilp.physik.uni-essen.de/vonderLinde/Publikationen/APB96_gouy.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030403070745/http://www.ilp.physik.uni-essen.de/vonderLinde/Publikationen/APB96_gouy.pdf |archive-date=2003-04-03 |url-status=live
|journal=]
|volume=63 |issue=5 |pages=481–484
|bibcode=1996ApPhB..63..481H
|doi=10.1007/BF01828944
|s2cid=54757568
}}</ref>


===Cosmic expansion===
The possibility of other universes following distinct physics permitting for this type of travel is the crux of serious scientific conjecture along these lines.


According to ], the ] causes distant galaxies to appear to recede from us faster than the speed of light. However, the recession speed associated with ], defined as the rate of increase in ] per interval of ], is not a velocity in a relativistic sense. Moreover, in ], velocity is a local notion, and there is not even a unique definition for the relative velocity of a cosmologically distant object.<ref>
===Space-time distortion===
{{cite web |last=Wright |first=E. L. |date=12 June 2009 |title=Cosmology Tutorial – Part 2 |url=http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmo_02.htm#MD |access-date=2011-09-26 |work=Ned Wright's Cosmology Tutorial |publisher=]}}</ref> Faster-than-light cosmological recession speeds are entirely a ] effect.
Although the theory of ] forbids objects to have a relative velocity greater than light speed, and ] reduces to special relativity in a local sense (in small regions of spacetime where curvature is negligible), general relativity does allow the space between distant objects to expand in such a way that they have a "]" which exceeds the speed of light, and it is thought that galaxies which are at a distance of more than about 14 billion light years from us today have a recession velocity which is faster than light.<ref name="misconceptions">{{cite news | author = Charles H. Lineweaver and Tamara M. Davis | title = Misconceptions about the Big Bang | publisher = Scientific American | date = March 2005 | url = http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=misconceptions-about-the-2005-03 }}</ref> ] that it would be possible to create an ], in which a ship would be enclosed in a "warp bubble" where the space at the front of the bubble is rapidly contracting and the space at the back is rapidly expanding, with the result that the bubble can reach a distant destination much faster than a light beam moving outside the bubble, but without objects inside the bubble locally traveling faster than light. However, ] raised against the Alcubierre drive appear to rule out the possibility of actually using it in any practical fashion. Another possibility predicted by general relativity is the ], which could create a shortcut between arbitrarily distant points in space. As with the Alcubierre drive, travelers moving through the wormhole would not ''locally'' move faster than light which travels through the wormhole alongside them, but they would be able to reach their destination (and return to their starting location) faster than light traveling outside the wormhole.


There are many galaxies visible in telescopes with ] numbers of 1.4 or higher. All of these have cosmological recession speeds greater than the speed of light. Because the ] is decreasing with time, there can actually be cases where a galaxy that is receding from us faster than light does manage to emit a signal which reaches us eventually.<ref>See the last two paragraphs in {{cite web
Dr. Gerald Cleaver, associate professor of physics at ], and Richard Obousy, a Baylor graduate student, theorize that by manipulating the extra spatial dimensions of ] around a spaceship with an extremely large amount of energy, it would create a "bubble" that could cause the ship to travel faster than the speed of light. To create this bubble, the physicists believe manipulating the 10th spatial dimension would alter the ] in three large spatial dimensions: height, width and length. Cleaver said positive dark energy is currently responsible for speeding up the expansion rate of our universe as time moves on.<ref> Newswise, Retrieved on August 24, 2008.</ref>
|last1=Rothstein |first1=D.
|date=10 September 2003
|title=Is the universe expanding faster than the speed of light?
|url=http://curious.astro.cornell.edu/the-universe/cosmology-and-the-big-bang/104-the-universe/cosmology-and-the-big-bang/expansion-of-the-universe/616-is-the-universe-expanding-faster-than-the-speed-of-light-intermediate
|website=Ask an Astronomer
}}</ref><ref name="ly93">
{{cite web
|last1=Lineweaver |first1=C.
|last2=Davis |first2=T. M.
|date=March 2005
|title=Misconceptions about the Big Bang
|url=http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~charley/papers/LineweaverDavisSciAm.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060527202701/http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/%7Echarley/papers/LineweaverDavisSciAm.pdf |archive-date=2006-05-27 |url-status=live
|work=]
|pages=36–45
|access-date=2008-11-06
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite journal |last1=Davis |first1=T. M. |last2=Lineweaver |first2=C. H. |year=2004 |title=Expanding Confusion: common misconceptions of cosmological horizons and the superluminal expansion of the universe |journal=] |volume=21 |issue=1 |pages=97–109 |arxiv=astro-ph/0310808 |bibcode=2004PASA...21...97D |doi=10.1071/AS03040 |s2cid=13068122}}</ref>


However, because ], it is projected that most galaxies will eventually cross a type of cosmological ] where any light they emit past that point will never be able to reach us at any time in the infinite future,<ref>
===Heim theory===
{{cite journal
|last=Loeb |first=A.
|year=2002
|title=The Long-Term Future of Extragalactic Astronomy
|journal=]
|volume=65 |issue=4 |pages=047301
|arxiv=astro-ph/0107568
|bibcode=2002PhRvD..65d7301L
|doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.65.047301
|s2cid=1791226
}}</ref> because the light never reaches a point where its "peculiar velocity" towards us exceeds the expansion velocity away from us (these two notions of velocity are also discussed in {{Section link|Comoving and proper distances|Uses of the proper distance}}). The current distance to this cosmological event horizon is about 16 billion light-years, meaning that a signal from an event happening at present would eventually be able to reach us in the future if the event was less than 16 billion light-years away, but the signal would never reach us if the event was more than 16 billion light-years away.<ref name="ly93"/>


===Astronomical observations===
In 1977, a controversial paper on ] theorized that it may be possible to travel faster than light by using magnetic fields to enter a higher-dimensional space, and the paper received some media attention in January 2006.<ref>http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg18925331.200-take-a-leap-into-hyperspace.html</ref> However, due to the many unproven assumptions in the paper, there have been few serious attempts to conduct further experiments.
Apparent ] is observed in many ], ]s, ]s, and recently also in ]s. The effect was predicted before it was observed by ]{{clarify|Was it predicted by Rees or observed by Rees?|date=March 2012}} and can be explained as an ] caused by the object partly moving in the direction of the observer,<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Rees |first1=M. J.
|year=1966
|title=Appearance of relativistically expanding radio sources
|journal=]
|volume=211 |issue=5048 |pages=468–470
|bibcode=1966Natur.211..468R
|doi=10.1038/211468a0
|s2cid=41065207
}}</ref> when the speed calculations assume it does not. The phenomenon does not contradict the theory of ]. Corrected calculations show these objects have velocities close to the speed of light (relative to our reference frame). They are the first examples of large amounts of mass moving at close to the speed of light.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Blandford |first1=R. D. |author-link=Roger Blandford
|last2=McKee |first2=C. F.
|last3=Rees |first3=M. J.
|year=1977
|title=Super-luminal expansion in extragalactic radio sources
|journal=]
|volume=267 |pages=211–216 |issue=5608
|bibcode=1977Natur.267..211B
|doi=10.1038/267211a0
|s2cid=4260167 }}</ref> Earth-bound laboratories have only been able to accelerate small numbers of elementary particles to such speeds.


===Lorentz symmetry violation=== ===Quantum mechanics===
Certain phenomena in ], such as ], might give the superficial impression of allowing communication of information faster than light. According to the ] these phenomena do not allow true communication; they only let two observers in different locations see the same system simultaneously, without any way of controlling what either sees. ] can be viewed as an ] of quantum decoherence, which in turn is nothing more than an effect of the underlying local time evolution of the wavefunction of a system and ''all'' of its environment. Since the underlying behavior does not violate local causality or allow FTL communication, it follows that neither does the additional effect of wavefunction collapse, whether real ''or'' apparent.
The possibility that Lorentz symmetry be violated has been seriously considered in the last two decades, and can be partially tested by ultra-high energy cosmic-ray experiments.<ref name="Gonzalez-Mestres2009b">See, for instance, Luis González-Mestres (February 2009), ''AUGER-HiRes results and models of Lorentz symmetry violation'', http://arxiv.org/abs/0902.0994 , Proceedings of CRIS (Cosmic Ray International Seminar), La Malfa, September 15-19, 2008, Nuclear Physics B - Proc. Suppl., Volume 190, May 2009, Pages 191-197 , and references therein</ref> If special relativity can cease to be a fundamental symmetry at Planck scale or at some other fundamental scale, it is conceivable that particles with a critical speed different from the speed of light be the ultimate constituents of matter. The ] hypothesis considers the possibility that conventional particles be similar to phonons in a condensed medium (the physical vacuum of our Universe), with a critical speed much smaller than the actual fundamental critical speed.


The ] implies that individual photons may travel for short distances at speeds somewhat faster (or slower) than ''c'', even in vacuum; this possibility must be taken into account when enumerating ]s for a particle interaction.<ref>
In current models of Lorentz symmetry violation, the phenomenological parameters are expected to be energy-dependent. Therefore, as widely recognized,<ref name="CERNCourrier">Nick E. Mavromatos (August 2002), ''Testing models for quantum gravity'', ''CERN Courier'', http://cerncourier.com/cws/article/cern/28696</ref><ref name="NYT">Dennis Overbye (December 2002), ''Interpreting the Cosmic Rays'', ''The New York Times'', December 31, 2002, http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/31/science/interpreting-the-cosmic-rays.html?n=Top/News/Science/Topics/Space</ref> existing low-energy bounds cannot be applied to high-energy phenomena. Lorentz symmetry violation is expected to become stronger as one gets closer to the fundamental scale.
{{cite book
|last1=Grozin |first1=A.
|year=2007
|title=Lectures on QED and QCD
|url=https://archive.org/details/lecturesonqedqcd00groz |url-access=limited |page=
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-981-256-914-1
}}</ref> However, it was shown in 2011 that a single photon may not travel faster than ''c''.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Zhang |first1=S.
|last2=Chen |first2=J. F.
|last3=Liu |first3=C.
|last4=Loy |first4=M. M. T.
|last5=Wong |first5=G. K. L.
|last6=Du |first6=S.
|year=2011
|title=Optical Precursor of a Single Photon
|journal=]
|volume=106 |issue=24 |pages=243602
|bibcode=2011PhRvL.106x3602Z
|doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.106.243602
|pmid=21770570
|url=http://repository.ust.hk/ir/bitstream/1783.1-7246/1/PhysRevLett.106.243602.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191205034808/http://repository.ust.hk/ir/bitstream/1783.1-7246/1/PhysRevLett.106.243602.pdf |archive-date=2019-12-05 |url-status=live
}}</ref>


There have been various reports in the popular press of experiments on faster-than-light transmission in optics — most often in the context of a kind of ] phenomenon. Usually, such reports deal with a ] or ] faster than the vacuum velocity of light.<ref>
==Tachyons==
{{cite book
{{Main|Tachyon}}
|last1=Kåhre |first1=J.
In special relativity, while it is impossible in an inertial frame to accelerate an object ''to'' the ], or for a massive object to move ''at'' the speed of light, it is not impossible for an object to exist which always moves faster than light. The hypothetical ]s that have this property are called ]s. Their existence has neither been proven nor disproven, but even so, attempts to ] them show that they may not be used for faster-than-light communication.<ref>{{cite journal | first = Gerald | last = Feinberg | authorlink = Gerald Feinberg | title = Possibility of Faster-Than-Light Particles | journal = Physical Review | volume = 159 | year = 1967 | pages = 1089–1105 | doi = 10.1103/PhysRev.159.1089}}</ref> Physicists sometimes regard the existence of mathematical structures similar to tachyons arising from theoretical models and theories as signs of an inconsistency or that the theory needs further refining.<ref>{{cite journal | first = S. James | last = Gates | authorlink = S. James Gates | title = Superstring Theory: The DNA of Reality}}</ref>
|year=2012
|title=The Mathematical Theory of Information
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ozlBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA425
|page=425 |edition=Illustrated
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-1-4615-0975-2
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite thesis
|last1=Steinberg |first1=A. M.
|year=1994
|title=When Can Light Go Faster Than Light?
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E25MAQAAMAAJ
|page=100
|publisher=]
|bibcode=1994PhDT.......314S
}}</ref> However, as stated above, a superluminal phase velocity cannot be used for faster-than-light transmission of information<ref>
{{cite book
|last1=Chubb |first1=J.
|last2=Eskandarian |first2=A.
|last3=Harizanov |first3=V.
|year=2016
|title=Logic and Algebraic Structures in Quantum Computing
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mWVbCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA61
|page=61 |edition=Illustrated
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-1-107-03339-9
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite book
|last1=Ehlers |first1=J.
|last2=Lämmerzahl |first2=C.
|year=2006
|title=Special Relativity: Will it Survive the Next 101 Years?
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=avy6BQAAQBAJ&pg=PA506
|page=506 |edition=Illustrated
|publisher=Springer
|isbn=978-3-540-34523-7
}}</ref>


==General relativity== ====Hartman effect====
{{Main|Hartman effect}}
] was developed after ] to include concepts like ]. It maintains the principle that no object can accelerate to the speed of light in the reference frame of any coincident observer.{{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}{{Clarify|date=October 2009}} However, it permits distortions in ] that allow an object to move faster than light from the point of view of a distant observer. One such ] is the ], which can be thought of as producing a ] in ] that carries an object along with it. Another possible system is the ], which connects two distant locations as though by a shortcut. Both distortions would need to create a very strong curvature in a highly localized region of space-time and their gravity fields would be immense. To counteract the unstable nature, and prevent the distortions from collapsing under their own 'weight', one would need to introduce hypothetical ] or negative energy.


The Hartman effect is the tunneling effect through a barrier where the tunneling time tends to a constant for large barriers.<ref>
] also agrees that any technique for faster-than-light ] could also be used for ]. This raises problems with ]. Many physicists believe that the above phenomena are in fact impossible, and that future theories of ] will prohibit them. One theory states that stable wormholes are possible, but that any attempt to use a network of wormholes to violate causality would result in their decay. In ] Eric Gimon and ] have argued<ref>{{cite web| url=http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/hep-th/0405019| title=Over-rotating black holes, Gödel holography and the hypertube| first=Eric G.| last=Gimon| coauthors=Petr Horava| accessdate=2006-06-05| month=May | year=2004| id=hep-th/0405019}}</ref> that in a ] five-dimensional ] quantum corrections to general relativity effectively cut off regions of spacetime with causality-violating closed timelike curves. In particular, in the quantum theory a smeared supertube is present that cuts the spacetime in such a way that, although in the full spacetime a closed timelike curve passed through every point, no complete curves exist on the interior region bounded by the tube.
{{cite journal
|last1=Martinez |first1=J. C.
|last2=Polatdemir |first2=E.
|year=2006
|title=Origin of the Hartman effect
|journal=]
|volume=351 |issue=1–2 |pages=31–36
|bibcode=2006PhLA..351...31M
|doi=10.1016/j.physleta.2005.10.076
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Hartman |first1=T. E.
|year=1962
|title=Tunneling of a Wave Packet
|journal=]
|volume=33 |issue=12 |pages=3427–3433
|bibcode=1962JAP....33.3427H
|doi=10.1063/1.1702424
}}</ref> This could, for instance, be the gap between two prisms. When the prisms are in contact, the light passes straight through, but when there is a gap, the light is refracted. There is a non-zero probability that the photon will tunnel across the gap rather than follow the refracted path.


However, it has been claimed that the Hartman effect cannot actually be used to violate relativity by transmitting signals faster than ''c'', also because the tunnelling time "should not be linked to a velocity since evanescent waves do not propagate".<ref>
==FTL phenomena==
{{cite journal
In these examples, certain influences may appear to travel faster than light, but they do not convey energy or information faster than light, so they do not violate special relativity.
|last1=Winful |first1=H. G.
|year=2006
|title=Tunneling time, the Hartman effect, and superluminality: A proposed resolution of an old paradox
|journal=]
|volume=436 |issue=1–2 |pages=1–69
|bibcode=2006PhR...436....1W
|doi=10.1016/j.physrep.2006.09.002
}}</ref> The evanescent waves in the Hartman effect are due to virtual particles and a non-propagating static field, as mentioned in the sections above for gravity and electromagnetism.


====Casimir effect====
=== Daily motion of the Heavens===
{{Main|Casimir effect}}
For an earthbound observer objects in the sky complete one revolution around the earth in 1 day. Proxima Centauri, which is the nearest star outside the Solar system, is about 4 light years away.<ref>See Salters Horners Advanced Physics A2 student Book, Oxford etc (Heinemann) 2001, pp 302 and 303</ref> On a geostationary view Alpha Centauri has a speed many times greater than "c" as the rim speed of an object moving in a circle is a product of the radius and angular speed.<ref>See Salters Horners Advanced Physics A2 student Book, Oxford etc (Heinemann) 2001, pp 175, 302 and 303</ref> It is also possible on a geostatic view for objects such as comets to vary their speed from subluminal to superluminal and vice versa simply because the distance from the earth varies. Comets may have orbits which take them out to more than 1000 AU.<ref>see http://www.oarval.org/furthest.htm</ref> Circumference of a circle radius 1000 AU is greater than one light day. In other words, a comet at such a distance is superluminal in a geostatic frame.


In physics, the ] is a physical force exerted between separate objects due to resonance of ] in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, owing to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the strength of the effect. Because the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance, it is only measurable when the distance between the objects is extremely small. Because the effect is due to virtual particles mediating a static field effect, it is subject to the comments about static fields discussed above.
===Light spots and shadows===
If a laser is swept across a distant object, the spot of light can easily be made to move at a speed greater than ''c''.<ref name=Gibbs>{{citation | last = Gibbs | first = Philip | year = 1997 | url = http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/SpeedOfLight/FTL.html | title = Is Faster-Than-Light Travel or Communication Possible? | publisher = University of California, Riverside | accessdate = 20 August 2008}}</ref> Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object can be made to move faster than ''c''.<ref>{{citation | title = The Shadow Goes | author = Wertheim, M. | newspaper = New York Times | date = June 20, 2007 | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/20/opinion/20wertheim.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=%27the%20shadow%20goes%27&st=cse&oref=slogin}}</ref> In neither case does any information travel faster than light.


===Closing speeds=== ====EPR paradox====
{{Main|EPR paradox}}
An observer may conclude that two objects are moving faster than the speed of light relative to each other, by ] according to the principle of ].


The EPR paradox refers to a famous ] of ], ] and ] that was realized experimentally for the first time by ] in 1981 and 1982 in the ]. In this experiment, the two measurements of an ] state are correlated even when the measurements are distant from the source and each other. However, no information can be transmitted this way; the answer to whether or not the measurement actually affects the other quantum system comes down to which ] one subscribes to.
For example, two fast-moving particles approaching each other from opposite sides of a ] will appear to be moving at slightly less than twice the speed of light, relative to each other, from the point of view of an observer standing at rest relative to the accelerator. This correctly reflects the rate at which the distance between the two particles is decreasing, from the observer's point of view and is called the closing speed. However, it is not the same as the velocity of one of the particles as would be measured by a hypothetical fast-moving observer traveling alongside the other particle. To obtain this, the calculation must be done according to the principle of ]. If the two particles are moving at velocities v and −v, or expressed in units of ''c'', β and −β, where
:<math>\beta \equiv v/c \,\!</math>
then this relative velocity (again in units of the speed of light ''c'') is
:<math>\beta_{rel} = { \beta - (-\beta) \over 1 + \beta ^2 } = { 2\beta \over 1 + \beta^2 }</math>,
which will always turn out to be less than the speed of light, regardless of the velocities of the two particles.


An experiment performed in 1997 by ] has demonstrated quantum correlations between particles separated by over 10 kilometers.<ref>
===Proper speeds===
{{cite web
If a spaceship travels to a planet one light year (as measured in the Earth's rest frame) away from Earth at high speed, the time taken to reach that planet could be less than one year as measured by the traveller's clock (although it will always be more than one year as measured by a clock on Earth). The value obtained by dividing the distance travelled, as determined in the Earth's frame, by the time taken, measured by the traveller's clock, is known as a proper speed or a ]. There is no limit on the value of a proper speed as a proper speed does not represent a speed measured in a single inertial frame. A light signal that left the Earth at the same time as the traveller would always get to the destination before the traveller.
|last=Suarez |first=A.
|date=26 February 2015
|title=History
|url=http://www.quantumphil.org/history.htm
|publisher=Center for Quantum Philosophy
|access-date=2017-06-07
}}</ref> But as noted earlier, the non-local correlations seen in entanglement cannot actually be used to transmit classical information faster than light, so that relativistic causality is preserved. The situation is akin to sharing a synchronized coin flip, where the second person to flip their coin will always see the opposite of what the first person sees, but neither has any way of knowing whether they were the first or second flipper, without communicating classically. See ] for further information. A 2008 quantum physics experiment also performed by Nicolas Gisin and his colleagues has determined that in any hypothetical ], the speed of the ] (what Einstein called "spooky action at a distance") is at least 10,000 times the speed of light.<ref>
{{cite journal
|last1=Salart |first1=D.
|last2=Baas |first2=A.
|last3=Branciard |first3=C.
|last4=Gisin |first4=N.
|last5=Zbinden |first5=H.
|year=2008
|title=Testing spooky action at a distance
|journal=]
|volume=454 |issue=7206 |pages=861–864
|arxiv=0808.3316
|bibcode=2008Natur.454..861S
|doi=10.1038/nature07121
|pmid=18704081
|s2cid=4401216
}}</ref>


===Phase velocities above ''c''=== ====Delayed choice quantum eraser====
{{Main|Delayed-choice quantum eraser}}
The ] of an ], when traveling through a medium, can routinely exceed ''c'', the vacuum velocity of light. For example, this occurs in most glasses at ] frequencies.<ref>{{cite book | first=Eugene|last=Hecht|year=1987|title=Optics|edition=2nd|publisher=Addison Wesley|isbn=0-201-11609-X|pages=62}}</ref> However, the phase velocity of a wave corresponds to the propagation speed of a theoretical single-frequency (purely ]) component of the wave at that frequency. Such a wave component must be infinite in extent and of constant amplitude (otherwise it is not truly monochromatic), and so cannot convey any information.<ref name="phase">{{cite web | title = MathPages - Phase, Group, and Signal Velocity | url = http://www.mathpages.com/home/kmath210/kmath210.htm | accessdate = 2007-04-30}}</ref>
Thus a phase velocity above ''c'' does not imply the propagation of ] with a velocity above ''c''.


The ] is a version of the EPR paradox in which the observation (or not) of interference after the passage of a photon through a ] depends on the conditions of observation of a second photon entangled with the first. The characteristic of this experiment is that the observation of the second photon can take place at a later time than the observation of the first photon,<ref>
===Group velocities above ''c''===
{{cite journal
The ] of a wave (e.g. a light beam) may also exceed ''c'' in some circumstances. In such cases, which typically at the same time involve rapid attenuation of the intensity, the maximum of the envelope of a pulse may travel with a velocity above ''c''. However, even this situation does not imply the propagation of ] with a velocity above ''c'', even though one may be tempted to associate pulse maxima with signals. The latter association has been shown to be misleading, basically because the information on the arrival of a pulse can be obtained before the pulse maximum arrives. For example, if some mechanism allows the full transmission of the leading part of a pulse while strongly attenuating the pulse maximum and everything behind, the pulse maximum is effectively shifted forward in time, while the information on the pulse does not come faster than without this effect.
|last1=Kim |first1=Yoon-Ho
|last2=Yu |first2=Rong
|last3=Kulik |first3=Sergei P.
|last4=Shih |first4=Yanhua
|last5=Scully |first5=Marlan O.
|year=2000
|title=Delayed "Choice" Quantum Eraser
|journal=]
|volume=84 |issue=1 |pages=1–5
|arxiv=quant-ph/9903047
|bibcode=2000PhRvL..84....1K
|doi=10.1103/PhysRevLett.84.1
|pmid=11015820
|s2cid=5099293
}}</ref> which may give the impression that the measurement of the later photons "retroactively" determines whether the earlier photons show interference or not, although the interference pattern can only be seen by correlating the measurements of both members of every pair and so it cannot be observed until both photons have been measured, ensuring that an experimenter watching only the photons going through the slit does not obtain information about the other photons in an faster-than-light or backwards-in-time manner.<ref>
{{cite web
|last1=Hillmer |first1=R.
|last2=Kwiat |first2=P.|author2-link=Paul Kwiat
|date=16 April 2017
|title=Delayed-Choice Experiments
|url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/quantum-eraser-delayed-choice-experiments/
|website=]
}}</ref><ref>
{{cite web
|last=Motl |first=L.
|date=November 2010
|title=Delayed choice quantum eraser
|url=https://motls.blogspot.com/2010/11/delayed-choice-quantum-eraser.html
|website=]
}}</ref>


==Superluminal communication==
===Universal expansion===
{{Main|Superluminal communication}}
The expansion of the ] causes distant galaxies to recede from us faster than the speed of light, if ] and cosmological time are used to calculate the speeds of these galaxies. However, in ], velocity is a local notion, so velocity calculated using comoving coordinates does not have any simple relation to velocity calculated locally.<ref></ref> Rules that apply to relative velocities in special relativity, such as the rule that relative velocities cannot increase past the speed of light, do not apply to relative velocities in comoving coordinates, which are often described in terms of the "expansion of space" between galaxies. This expansion rate is thought to have been at its peak during the ] thought to have occurred in a tiny fraction of the second after the ] (models suggest the period would have been from around 10<sup>−36</sup> seconds after the Big Bang to around 10<sup>−33</sup> seconds), when the universe may have rapidly expanded by a factor of around 10<sup>20</sup> – 10<sup>30</sup>.<ref></ref>
Faster-than-light communication is, according to relativity, equivalent to ]. What we measure as the ] in vacuum (or near vacuum) is actually the fundamental physical constant ''c''. This means that all ] and, for the coordinate speed of light, non-inertial observers, regardless of their relative ], will always measure zero-mass particles such as ]s traveling at ''c'' in vacuum. This result means that measurements of time and velocity in different frames are no longer related simply by constant shifts, but are instead related by ]s. These transformations have important implications:
*The relativistic momentum of a ]ive particle would increase with speed in such a way that at the speed of light an object would have infinite momentum.
*To accelerate an object of non-zero ] to ''c'' would require infinite time with any finite acceleration, or infinite acceleration for a finite amount of time.
*Either way, such acceleration requires infinite energy.
*Some observers with sub-light relative motion will disagree about which occurs first of any two events that are separated by a ].<ref>
{{cite book
|last=Einstein |first=A.
|year=1927
|title=Relativity:the special and the general theory
|publisher=Methuen & Co
|pages=25–27
}}</ref> In other words, any travel that is faster-than-light will be seen as traveling backwards in time in some other, equally valid, frames of reference,<ref>
{{cite web
|last=Odenwald |first=S.
|title=If we could travel faster than light, could we go back in time?
|url=http://einstein.stanford.edu/content/relativity/q295.html
|work=NASA Astronomy Café
|access-date=7 April 2014
}}</ref> or need to assume the speculative hypothesis of possible Lorentz violations at a presently unobserved scale (for instance the Planck scale).{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} Therefore, any theory which permits "true" FTL also has to cope with ] and all its associated paradoxes,<ref>
{{cite book
|last=Gott |first=J. R.
|year=2002
|title=Time Travel in Einstein's Universe
|pages=82–83
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0618257355
}}</ref> or else to assume the ] to be a symmetry of thermodynamical statistical nature (hence a symmetry broken at some presently unobserved scale).
*In special relativity the coordinate speed of light is only guaranteed to be ''c'' in an ]; in a non-inertial frame the coordinate speed may be different from ''c''.<ref>
{{cite book
|last=Petkov |first=V.
|year=2009
|title=Relativity and the Nature of Spacetime
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AzfFo6A94WEC&pg=PA219
|page=219
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-3642019623
}}</ref> In general relativity no coordinate system on a large region of curved spacetime is "inertial", so it is permissible to use a global coordinate system where objects travel faster than ''c'', but in the local neighborhood of any point in curved spacetime we can define a "local inertial frame" and the local speed of light will be ''c'' in this frame,<ref>
{{cite book
|last1=Raine |first1=D. J.
|last2=Thomas |first2=E. G.
|year=2001
|title=An Introduction to the Science of Cosmology
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RK8qDGKSTPwC&pg=PA94
|page=94
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0750304054
}}</ref> with massive objects moving through this local neighborhood always having a speed less than ''c'' in the local inertial frame.


==Justifications==
===Astronomical observations===
Apparent ] is observed in many ], ]s, ]s and recently also in ]s. The effect was predicted before it was observed by ] and can be explained as an ] caused by the object partly moving in the direction of the observer,<ref>Rees, M. J., "Appearance of relativistically expanding radio sources", ''Nature'' '''211''', 468, 1966.</ref> when the speed calculations assume it does not. The phenomenon does not contradict the theory of ]. Interestingly, corrected calculations show these objects have velocities close to the speed of light (relative to our reference frame). They are the first examples of large amounts of mass moving at close to the speed of light.<ref>], C. F. McKee and M. J. Rees, "Super-luminal expansion in extragalactic radio sources", ''Nature'' '''267''', 211, 1977.</ref> Earth-bound laboratories have only been able to accelerate small numbers of elementary particles to such speeds.


===Casimir vacuum and quantum tunnelling===
===Quantum mechanics===
] postulates that the speed of light in vacuum is invariant in ]s. That is, it will be the same from any frame of reference moving at a constant speed. The equations do not specify any particular value for the speed of light, which is an experimentally determined quantity for a fixed unit of length. Since 1983, the ] unit of length (the ]) has been defined using the ].
Certain phenomena in ], such as ], appear to transmit information faster than light. According to the ] these phenomena do not allow true communication; they only let two observers in different locations see the same event simultaneously, without any way of controlling what either sees. ] can be viewed as an epiphenomenon of quantum decoherence, which in turn is nothing more than an effect of the underlying local time evolution of the wavefunction of a system and ''all'' of its environment. Since the ''underlying'' behaviour doesn't violate local causality or allow FTL it follows that neither does the additional effect of wavefunction collapse, whether real ''or'' apparent.


The experimental determination has been made in vacuum. However, the vacuum we know is not the only possible vacuum which can exist. The vacuum has energy associated with it, called simply the ], which could perhaps be altered in certain cases.<ref>{{cite magazine |title=What is the 'zero-point energy' (or 'vacuum energy') in quantum physics? Is it really possible that we could harness this energy? |url=https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/follow-up-what-is-the-zer/ |magazine=Scientific American |date=1997-08-18 |access-date=2009-05-27}}</ref> When vacuum energy is lowered, light itself has been predicted to go faster than the standard value ''c''. This is known as the ]. Such a vacuum can be produced by bringing two perfectly smooth metal plates together at near atomic diameter spacing. It is called a ]. Calculations imply that light will go faster in such a vacuum by a minuscule amount: a photon traveling between two plates that are 1 micrometer apart would increase the photon's speed by only about one part in 10<sup>36</sup>.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Scharnhorst |first=Klaus |date=1990-05-12 |title=Secret of the vacuum: Speedier light |url=http://www.nat.vu.nl/~scharnh/m16scine.htm |access-date=2009-05-27 |website=]}}</ref> Accordingly, there has as yet been no experimental verification of the prediction. A recent analysis<ref name="lib">{{Cite journal |last1=Liberati |first1=Stefano |last2=Sonego |first2=Sebastiano |last3=Visser |first3=Matt |year=2002 |title=Faster-than-c Signals, Special Relativity, and Causality |journal=] |language=en |volume=298 |issue=1 |pages=167–185 |arxiv=gr-qc/0107091 |bibcode=2002AnPhy.298..167L |doi=10.1006/aphy.2002.6233 |s2cid=48166}}</ref> argued that the Scharnhorst effect cannot be used to send information backwards in time with a single set of plates since the plates' rest frame would define a "]" for FTL signaling. However, with multiple pairs of plates in motion relative to one another the authors noted that they had no arguments that could "guarantee the total absence of causality violations", and invoked Hawking's speculative ] which suggests that feedback loops of virtual particles would create "uncontrollable singularities in the renormalized quantum stress-energy" on the boundary of any potential time machine, and thus would require a theory of quantum gravity to fully analyze. Other authors argue that Scharnhorst's original analysis, which seemed to show the possibility of faster-than-''c'' signals, involved approximations which may be incorrect, so that it is not clear whether this effect could actually increase signal speed at all.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Fearn |first=H. |year=2007 |title=Can light signals travel faster than ''c'' in nontrivial vacua in flat space-time? Relativistic causality II |journal=Laser Physics |language=en |volume=17 |issue=5 |pages=695–699 |arxiv=0706.0553 |bibcode=2007LaPhy..17..695F |doi=10.1134/S1054660X07050155 |issn=1054-660X |s2cid=61962}}</ref>
The ] implies that individual photons may travel for short distances at speeds somewhat faster (or slower) than ''c'', even in a vacuum; this possibility must be taken into account when enumerating ]s for a particle interaction. .<ref>{{cite book| last=Feynman| title=QED| chapter=Chapter 3| pages=89}}</ref> However, macroscopically these fluctuations average out, so that photons do travel in straight lines over long (i.e., non-quantum) distances, and they do travel at the speed of light on average. Therefore, this does not imply the possibility of superluminal information transmission.


It was later claimed by Eckle ''et al.'' that particle tunneling does indeed occur in zero real time.<ref name="Eckle">{{cite journal |last1=Eckle |first1=P. |last2=Pfeiffer |first2=A. N. |last3=Cirelli |first3=C. |last4=Staudte |first4=A. |last5=Dorner |first5=R. |last6=Muller |first6=H. G. |last7=Buttiker |first7=M. |last8=Keller |first8=U. |title=Attosecond Ionization and Tunneling Delay Time Measurements in Helium |journal=Science |date=5 December 2008 |volume=322 |issue=5907 |pages=1525–1529 |doi=10.1126/science.1163439|pmid=19056981 |bibcode=2008Sci...322.1525E|s2cid=206515239 }}</ref> Their tests involved tunneling electrons, where the group argued a relativistic prediction for tunneling time should be 500–600 attoseconds (an ] is one quintillionth (10<sup>&minus;18</sup>) of a second). All that could be measured was 24 attoseconds, which is the limit of the test accuracy. Again, though, other physicists believe that tunneling experiments in which particles appear to spend anomalously short times inside the barrier are in fact fully compatible with relativity, although there is disagreement about whether the explanation involves reshaping of the wave packet or other effects.<ref name="WinfulHartman">{{cite journal |last=Winful |first=Herbert G. |title=Tunneling time, the Hartman effect, and superluminality: A proposed resolution of an old paradox |journal=Physics Reports |volume=436 |issue=1–2 |pages=1–69 |date=December 2006 |url=http://sitemaker.umich.edu/herbert.winful/files/physics_reports_review_article__2006_.pdf |doi=10.1016/j.physrep.2006.09.002 |bibcode=2006PhR...436....1W |access-date=2010-06-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111218061131/http://sitemaker.umich.edu/herbert.winful/files/physics_reports_review_article__2006_.pdf |archive-date=2011-12-18 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref name="WinfulArticle">For a summary of Herbert G. Winful's explanation for apparently superluminal tunneling time which does not involve reshaping, see {{cite journal|last1=Winful|first1=Herbert|title=New paradigm resolves old paradox of faster-than-light tunneling|journal=SPIE Newsroom|date=2007|doi=10.1117/2.1200711.0927}}</ref><ref name="Sokolovski">{{cite journal |last=Sokolovski |first=D. |title=Why does relativity allow quantum tunneling to 'take no time'? |journal=Proceedings of the Royal Society A |volume=460 |issue=2042 |pages=499–506 |date=8 February 2004 |doi=10.1098/rspa.2003.1222 |bibcode=2004RSPSA.460..499S|s2cid=122620657 }}</ref>
There have been various reports in the popular press of experiments on faster-than-light transmission in optics—most often in the context of a kind of ] phenomenon. Usually, such reports deal with a ] or ] faster than the vacuum velocity of light. But, recall from above, that a superluminal ''phase velocity'' cannot be used for faster-than-light transmission of information. There has sometimes been confusion concerning the latter point.


===Give up (absolute) relativity===
] transmits quantum information at whatever speed is used to transmit the same amount of classical information, likely the speed of light. This quantum information may theoretically be used in ways that classical information can not, such as in quantum computations involving quantum information only available to the recipient. In science fiction, quantum teleportation is either used as a basis for teleportation of physical objects at the speed of light, presumably preserving some important aspect of the entanglement between the particles of the object, or else is misrepresented as allowing faster-than-light communication.
Because of the strong empirical support for ], any modifications to it must necessarily be quite subtle and difficult to measure. The best-known attempt is ], which posits that the ] is also the same in all reference frames, and is associated with the work of ] and ].<ref>{{cite book|first=Giovanni|last=Amelino-Camelia|date=1 November 2009|arxiv=1003.3942|volume=9|pages=123–170|doi=10.1142/9789814287333_0006|chapter=Doubly-Special Relativity: Facts, Myths and Some Key Open Issues|title = Recent Developments in Theoretical Physics|series = Statistical Science and Interdisciplinary Research|isbn = 978-981-4287-32-6|s2cid=118855372}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|title=Doubly Special Relativity|first=Giovanni|last=Amelino-Camelia|date=1 July 2002|journal=Nature|volume=418|issue=6893|pages=34–35|doi=10.1038/418034a|arxiv=gr-qc/0207049|bibcode=2002Natur.418...34A|pmid=12097897|s2cid=16844423}}</ref>
There are speculative theories that claim inertia is produced by the combined mass of the universe (e.g., ]), which implies that the rest frame of the universe might be ''preferred'' by conventional measurements of natural law. If confirmed, this would imply ] is an approximation to a more general theory, but since the relevant comparison would (by definition) be outside the ], it is difficult to imagine (much less construct) experiments to test this hypothesis. Despite this difficulty, such experiments have been proposed.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Chang|first=Donald C.|title=Is there a resting frame in the universe? A proposed experimental test based on a precise measurement of particle mass|journal=The European Physical Journal Plus|doi=10.1140/epjp/i2017-11402-4|date=March 22, 2017|volume=132|issue=3|page=140|arxiv=1706.05252|bibcode=2017EPJP..132..140C|doi-access=free}}</ref>


====Hartman effect==== ===Spacetime distortion===
Although the theory of ] forbids objects to have a relative velocity greater than light speed, and ] reduces to special relativity in a local sense (in small regions of spacetime where curvature is negligible), general relativity does allow the space between distant objects to expand in such a way that they have a "]" which exceeds the speed of light, and it is thought that galaxies which are at a distance of more than about 14 billion light-years from us today have a recession velocity which is faster than light.<ref name="ly93" /> ] theorized that it would be possible to create a ], in which a ship would be enclosed in a "warp bubble" where the space at the front of the bubble is rapidly contracting and the space at the back is rapidly expanding, with the result that the bubble can reach a distant destination much faster than a light beam moving outside the bubble, but without objects inside the bubble locally traveling faster than light.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Alcubierre |first1=Miguel |title=The warp drive: hyper-fast travel within general relativity |journal=Classical and Quantum Gravity |date=1 May 1994 |volume=11 |issue=5 |pages=L73–L77 |doi=10.1088/0264-9381/11/5/001|arxiv=gr-qc/0009013 |citeseerx=10.1.1.338.8690 |bibcode=1994CQGra..11L..73A|s2cid=4797900 }}</ref> However, ] raised against the Alcubierre drive appear to rule out the possibility of actually using it in any practical fashion. Another possibility predicted by general relativity is the ], which could create a shortcut between arbitrarily distant points in space. As with the Alcubierre drive, travelers moving through the wormhole would not ''locally'' move faster than light travelling through the wormhole alongside them, but they would be able to reach their destination (and return to their starting location) faster than light traveling outside the wormhole.
{{Main|Hartman effect}}


Gerald Cleaver and Richard Obousy, a professor and student of ], theorized that manipulating the extra spatial dimensions of ] around a spaceship with an extremely large amount of energy would create a "bubble" that could cause the ship to travel faster than the speed of light. To create this bubble, the physicists believe manipulating the 10th spatial dimension would alter the ] in three large spatial dimensions: height, width and length. Cleaver said positive dark energy is currently responsible for speeding up the expansion rate of our universe as time moves on.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Traveling Faster Than the Speed of Light: A New Idea That Could Make It Happen |url=https://www.newswise.com/articles/traveling-faster-than-the-speed-of-light-a-new-idea-that-could-make-it-happen |access-date=2023-08-24 |website=www.newswise.com |language=en}}</ref>
The Hartman effect is the tunnelling effect through a barrier where the tunnelling time tends to a constant for large barriers.<ref>J.C. Martinez, and E. Polatdemir, "Origin of the Hartman effect", ''Physics Letters A'', Vol 351, Iss 1-2, 20 February 2006, pp31-36.</ref> This was first described by ] in 1962.<ref>T. E. Hartman, "Tunneling of a wave packet", ''J. Appl. Phys.'' 33, 3427 (1962).</ref> This could, for instance, be the gap between two prisms. When the prisms are in contact, the light passes straight through, but when there is a gap, the light is refracted. There is a finite probability that the photon will tunnel across the gap rather than follow the refracted path. For large gaps between the prisms the tunnelling time approaches a constant and thus the photons appear to have crossed with a superluminal speed.<ref>G. Nimtz, A. A. Stahlhofen, "Macroscopic violation of special relativity", 5 August 2007 available as eprint </ref>


===Lorentz symmetry violation===
However, an analysis by Herbert Winful from the University of Michigan suggests that the Hartman effect cannot actually be used to violate relativity by transmitting signals faster than c, because the tunnelling time "should not be linked to a velocity since evanescent waves do not propagate".<ref>Winful, H, "Tunneling time, the Hartman effect, and superluminality: A proposed resolution of an old paradox", ''Physics Reports'', Vol 436, Iss 1-2, December 2006, pp1-69.</ref> Winful means by this that the photons crossing the barrier are virtual photons only existing in the interaction and could not be propagated into the outside world.
{{Main|Modern searches for Lorentz violation|Standard-Model Extension}}


The possibility that Lorentz symmetry may be violated has been seriously considered in the last two decades, particularly after the development of a realistic effective field theory that describes this possible violation, the so-called ].<ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=hep-ph/9703464 |bibcode=1997PhRvD..55.6760C |doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.55.6760 |title=CPT violation and the standard model |year=1997 |last1=Colladay |first1=Don |last2=Kostelecký |first2=V. Alan |journal=Physical Review D |volume=55 |issue=11 |pages=6760–6774|s2cid=7651433 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=hep-ph/9809521 |bibcode=1998PhRvD..58k6002C |doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.58.116002 |title=Lorentz-violating extension of the standard model |year=1998 |last1=Colladay |first1=Don |last2=Kostelecký |first2=V. Alan |journal=Physical Review D |volume=58 |issue=11 |pages=116002|s2cid=4013391 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=hep-th/0312310 |bibcode=2004PhRvD..69j5009K |doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.69.105009 |title=Gravity, Lorentz violation, and the standard model |year=2004 |last1=Kostelecký |first1=V. Alan |journal=Physical Review D |volume=69 |issue=10 |pages=105009|s2cid=55185765 }}</ref> This general framework has allowed experimental searches by ultra-high energy cosmic-ray experiments<ref name="Gonzalez-Mestres2009b">{{Cite journal |last=Gonzalez-Mestres |first=Luis |year=2009 |title=AUGER-HiRes results and models of Lorentz symmetry violation |journal=Nuclear Physics B - Proceedings Supplements |language=en |volume=190 |pages=191–197 |arxiv=0902.0994 |bibcode=2009NuPhS.190..191G |doi=10.1016/j.nuclphysbps.2009.03.088 |s2cid=14848782}}</ref> and a wide variety of experiments in gravity, electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, mesons, and photons.<ref name="autogenerated1">{{cite journal |arxiv=0801.0287 |bibcode=2011RvMP...83...11K |doi=10.1103/RevModPhys.83.11 |title=Data tables for Lorentz and CPT violation |year=2011 |last1=Kostelecký |first1=V. Alan |last2=Russell |first2=Neil |journal=Reviews of Modern Physics |volume=83 |issue=1 |pages=11–31|s2cid=3236027 }}</ref>
====Casimir effect====
The breaking of rotation and boost invariance causes direction dependence in the theory as well as unconventional energy dependence that introduces novel effects, including ] and modifications to the dispersion relations of different particle species, which naturally could make particles move faster than light.
In physics, the ] or Casimir-Polder force is a physical force exerted between separate objects due to resonance of ] in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, due to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the strength of the effect. Because the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance, it is only measurable when the distance between the objects is extremely small.


In some models of broken Lorentz symmetry, it is postulated that the symmetry is still built into the most fundamental laws of physics, but that ] of Lorentz invariance<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Kostelecký |first1=V. A. |last2=Samuel |first2=S. |title=Spontaneous breaking of Lorentz symmetry in string theory |journal=Physical Review D |date=15 January 1989 |volume=39 |issue=2 |pages=683–685 |doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.39.683|pmid=9959689 |bibcode=1989PhRvD..39..683K|hdl=2022/18649 |url=https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/18649/PhysRevD.39.683.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713090335/https://scholarworks.iu.edu/dspace/bitstream/handle/2022/18649/PhysRevD.39.683.pdf |archive-date=2021-07-13 |url-status=live | hdl-access=free }}</ref> shortly after the ] could have left a "relic field" throughout the universe which causes particles to behave differently depending on their velocity relative to the field;<ref>{{cite web |date=2004-04-05 |title=PhysicsWeb – Breaking Lorentz symmetry |url=http://physicsweb.org/article/world/17/3/7 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040405031103/http://physicsweb.org/article/world/17/3/7 |archive-date=2004-04-05 |access-date=2011-09-26 |publisher=PhysicsWeb}}</ref> however, there are also some models where Lorentz symmetry is broken in a more fundamental way. If Lorentz symmetry can cease to be a fundamental symmetry at the Planck scale or at some other fundamental scale, it is conceivable that particles with a critical speed different from the speed of light be the ultimate constituents of matter.
====EPR Paradox====
We can also quote the spectacular case of the ] of Einstein, Podolski and Rosen (]) which could be realized in experiments for the first time by ] in 1981 and 1982 in the ]. In this case, the measurement of the state on one of the quantum systems of an ] pair forces the other system to be measured in the complementary state. Thus functions ].


In current models of Lorentz symmetry violation, the phenomenological parameters are expected to be energy-dependent. Therefore, as widely recognized,<ref name="CERNCourrier">{{cite web|last=Mavromatos |first=Nick E. |title=Testing models for quantum gravity |work=CERN Courier |url=http://cerncourier.com/cws/article/cern/28696 |date=15 August 2002}}</ref><ref name="NYT">{{Cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis |date=2002-12-31 |title=Interpreting the Cosmic Rays |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/31/science/interpreting-the-cosmic-rays.html |access-date=2023-08-24 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> existing low-energy bounds cannot be applied to high-energy phenomena; however, many searches for Lorentz violation at high energies have been carried out using the ].<ref name="autogenerated1"/>
An experiment performed in 1997 by Nicolas Gisin at the University of Geneva has demonstrated nonlocal quantum correlations between particles separated by over 10 kilometers.<ref></ref> But as noted earlier, the nonlocal correlations seen in entanglement cannot actually be used to transmit classical information faster than light, so that relativistic causality is preserved; see ] for further information. A 2008 quantum physics experiment also performed by Nicolas Gisin and his colleagues in ] has determined that the "speed" of the ''quantum non-local connection'' (what Einstein called ''spooky action at a distance'') is at least 10,000 times the speed of light.<ref></ref>
Lorentz symmetry violation is expected to become stronger as one gets closer to the fundamental scale.


===Superfluid theories of physical vacuum===
====Delayed choice quantum eraser====
{{Main|Superfluid vacuum theory}}


In this approach, the physical ] is viewed as a quantum ] which is essentially non-relativistic, whereas ] is not an exact symmetry of nature but rather the approximate description valid only for the small fluctuations of the superfluid background.<ref name="volovik03">{{cite journal |last1=Volovik |first1=G. E. |year=2003 |title=The Universe in a helium droplet |journal=International Series of Monographs on Physics |volume=117 |pages=1–507}}</ref> Within the framework of the approach, a theory was proposed in which the physical vacuum is conjectured to be a ] whose ground-state ] is described by the ]. It was shown that the ] arises as the small-amplitude ] mode<ref>{{cite journal |title=Spontaneous symmetry breaking and mass generation as built-in phenomena in logarithmic nonlinear quantum theory |last1=Zloshchastiev |first1=Konstantin G. |year=2011 |doi=10.5506/APhysPolB.42.261 |journal=Acta Physica Polonica B |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=261–292 |arxiv=0912.4139 |bibcode= 2011AcPPB..42..261Z|s2cid=118152708 }}</ref> whereas relativistic ]s can be described by the ] in the limit of low momenta.<ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=1108.0847 |bibcode=2011JPhB...44s5303A |doi=10.1088/0953-4075/44/19/195303 |title=Quantum Bose liquids with logarithmic nonlinearity: Self-sustainability and emergence of spatial extent |year=2011 |last1=Avdeenkov |first1=Alexander V. |last2=Zloshchastiev |first2=Konstantin G. |journal=Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics |volume=44 |issue=19 |page=195303|s2cid=119248001 }}</ref> The important fact is that at very high velocities the behavior of the particle-like modes becomes distinct from the ] one – they can reach the ] at finite energy; also, faster-than-light propagation is possible without requiring moving objects to have ].<ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=0906.4282 |bibcode=2010AIPC.1206..112Z |doi=10.1063/1.3292518 |title=Logarithmic nonlinearity in theories of quantum gravity: Origin of time and observational consequences |journal=American Institute of Physics Conference Series |volume=1206 |pages=288–297 |series=AIP Conference Proceedings |year=2010 |last1=Zloshchastiev |first1=Konstantin G. |last2=Chakrabarti |first2=Sandip K. |last3=Zhuk |first3=Alexander I. |last4=Bisnovatyi-Kogan |first4=Gennady S.}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=1003.0657 |bibcode=2011PhLA..375.2305Z |doi=10.1016/j.physleta.2011.05.012 |title=Vacuum Cherenkov effect in logarithmic nonlinear quantum theory |year=2011 |last1=Zloshchastiev |first1=Konstantin G. |journal=Physics Letters A |volume=375 |issue=24 |pages=2305–2308|s2cid=118152360 }}</ref>
{{Main|Delayed choice quantum eraser}}


==FTL neutrino flight results==
] (an experiment of ]) is a version of the EPR paradox in which the observation or not of interference after the passage of a photon through a ] depends on the conditions of observation of a second photon entangled with the first. The characteristic of this experiment is that the observation of the second photon can take place at a later time than the observation of the first photon,
<ref></ref> which may give the impression that the measurement of the later photons "retroactively" determines whether the earlier photons show interference or not, although the interference pattern can only be seen by correlating the measurements of both members of every pair and so it can't be observed until both photons have been measured, ensuring that an experimenter watching only the photons going through the slit does not obtain information about the other photons in an FTL or backwards-in-time manner.


===MINOS experiment===
==Variable speed of light==
{{Main|Variable speed of light}} {{Main|MINOS}}
In 2007 the ] collaboration reported results measuring the flight-time of 3 ] ] yielding a speed exceeding that of light by 1.8-sigma significance.<ref>{{cite journal |arxiv=0706.0437 |bibcode=2007PhRvD..76g2005A |doi=10.1103/PhysRevD.76.072005 |title=Measurement of neutrino velocity with the MINOS detectors and NuMI neutrino beam |year=2007 |last1=Adamson |first1=P. |last2=Andreopoulos |first2=C. |last3=Arms |first3=K. |last4=Armstrong |first4=R. |last5=Auty |first5=D. |last6=Avvakumov |first6=S. |last7=Ayres |first7=D. |last8=Baller |first8=B. |last9=Barish |first9=B. |display-authors=8 |journal=Physical Review D |volume=76 |issue=7 |pages=072005|s2cid=14358300 }}</ref> However, those measurements were considered to be statistically consistent with neutrinos traveling at the speed of light.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis |date=22 September 2011 |title=Tiny neutrinos may have broken cosmic speed limit |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/23/science/23speed.html |url-access=limited |url-status=live |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220102/https://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/23/science/23speed.html |archive-date=2022-01-02 |work=] |quote=That group found, although with less precision, that the neutrino speeds were consistent with the speed of light.}}{{cbignore}}</ref> After the detectors for the project were upgraded in 2012, MINOS corrected their initial result and found agreement with the speed of light. Further measurements are going to be conducted.<ref>{{cite web|title=MINOS reports new measurement of neutrino velocity |publisher=Fermilab today|url=http://www.fnal.gov/pub/today/archive_2012/today12-06-08.html|date=June 8, 2012|access-date= June 8, 2012}}</ref>


===OPERA neutrino anomaly===
In conventional ], the speed of light in a ] is assumed to be a constant. There exist ] which postulate that the ] is not a constant. The interpretation of this statement is as follows.
{{Main|Faster-than-light neutrino anomaly}}
On September 22, 2011, a preprint<ref>{{cite arXiv|eprint=1109.4897v1|class=hep-ex|first1=T.|last1=Adam|title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam|collaboration=]|date=22 September 2011|display-authors=etal.}}<!-- published version is {{cite journal |last1=Adam |first1=T. |display-authors=etal. |collaboration=] |title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam |journal=Journal of High Energy Physics |date=12 October 2012 |volume=2012 |issue=10 |arxiv=1109.4897 |doi=10.1007/JHEP10(2012)093 |bibcode=2012JHEP...10..093A}}--></ref> from the ] indicated detection of 17 and 28 GeV muon neutrinos, sent 730 kilometers (454 miles) from ] near ] to the ] in Italy, traveling faster than light by a relative amount of {{val|2.48|e=-5}} (approximately 1 in 40,000), a statistic with 6.0-sigma significance.<ref>Cho, Adrian; , Science NOW, 22 September 2011</ref> On 17 November 2011, a second follow-up experiment by OPERA scientists confirmed their initial results.<ref name="Opera-20111118">{{cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis |title=Scientists Report Second Sighting of Faster-Than-Light Neutrinos |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/19/science/space/neutrino-finding-is-confirmed-in-second-experiment-opera-scientists-say.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220102/https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/19/science/space/neutrino-finding-is-confirmed-in-second-experiment-opera-scientists-say.html |archive-date=2022-01-02 |url-access=limited |url-status=live |date=18 November 2011 |work=The New York Times|access-date=2011-11-18}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref name="Opera-arxiv">{{cite arXiv|eprint=1109.4897v2|class=hep-ex|first1=T.|last1=Adam|title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam|collaboration=]|date=17 November 2011|display-authors=etal.}}<!-- published version is {{cite journal |last1=Adam |first1=T. |display-authors=etal. |collaboration=] |title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the OPERA detector in the CNGS beam |journal=Journal of High Energy Physics |date=2012 |volume=2012 |issue=10 |arxiv=1109.4897 |doi=10.1007/JHEP10(2012)093 |bibcode=2012JHEP...10..093A}}--></ref> However, scientists were skeptical about the results of these experiments, the significance of which was disputed.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2011-11-20 |title=Study rejects "faster than light" particle finding |language=en |work=Reuters |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-science-neutrinos-idUSTRE7AJ0ZX20111120 |access-date=2023-08-24}}</ref> In March 2012, the ] failed to reproduce the OPERA results with their equipment, detecting neutrino travel time from CERN to the Gran Sasso National Laboratory indistinguishable from the speed of light.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Antonello|first1=M.|display-authors=etal.|date=15 March 2012|title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the ICARUS detector at the CNGS beam|journal=Physics Letters B|volume=713|issue=1|pages=17–22|arxiv=1203.3433|bibcode=2012PhLB..713...17A|doi=10.1016/j.physletb.2012.05.033|s2cid=55397067|ref={{SfnRef|ICARUS|2012}}|collaboration=]}}<!-- published version {{cite journal |last1=Antonello |first1=M. |display-authors=etal. |collaboration=] |title=Measurement of the neutrino velocity with the ICARUS detector at the CNGS beam |journal=Physics Letters B |date=2012 |volume=713 |issue=1 |pages=17–22 |doi=10.1016/j.physletb.2012.05.033 |bibcode=2012PhLB..713...17A}}--></ref> Later the OPERA team reported two flaws in their equipment set-up that had caused errors far outside their original ]: a ] attached improperly, which caused the apparently faster-than-light measurements, and a clock oscillator ticking too fast.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Strassler |first=M. |author-link=Matt Strassler |date=2012-04-02 |title=OPERA: What Went Wrong |url=https://profmattstrassler.com/articles-and-posts/particle-physics-basics/neutrinos/neutrinos-faster-than-light/opera-what-went-wrong/ |access-date=2023-08-24 |website=Of Particular Significance |language=en-US}}</ref>


==Tachyons==
The speed of light is a dimensional quantity and so, as has been emphasized in this context by ], it cannot be measured.<ref>{{cite web| authorlink=João Magueijo| first=João| last=Magueijo| url=http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/9811018| title=A time varying speed of light as a ] to ] puzzles| year=1999| accessdate=2006-06-05}}</ref> Measurable quantities in physics are, without exception, dimensionless, although they are often constructed as ratios of dimensional quantities. For example, when you measure the height of a mountain you really measure the ratio of its height to the length of a meterstick. The conventional ] system of units is based on seven basic dimensional quantities, namely ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite web| url=http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html| title=SI base units}}</ref> These ] are defined to be ] and so cannot be described in terms of each other. As an alternative to using a particular system of units, one can reduce all measurements to dimensionless quantities expressed in terms of ratios between the quantities being measured and various fundamental constants such as ], the ] and ]; physicists can define at least 26 dimensionless constants which can be expressed in terms of these sorts of ratios and which are currently thought to be independent of one another.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/constants.html| title=constants}}</ref> By manipulating the basic dimensional constants one can also construct the ], ] and ] which make a good system of units for expressing dimensional measurements, known as ].
{{Main|Tachyon}}
In special relativity, it is impossible to accelerate an object {{em|to}} the speed of light, or for a massive object to move {{em|at}} the speed of light. However, it might be possible for an object to exist which {{em|always}} moves faster than light. The hypothetical ]s with this property are called tachyons or tachyonic particles. Attempts ] failed to produce faster-than-light particles, and instead illustrated that their presence leads to an instability.<ref name="Randall">Randall, Lisa; ''Warped Passages: Unraveling the Mysteries of the Universe's Hidden Dimensions'', p. 286: "People initially thought of tachyons as particles travelling faster than the speed of light...But we now know that a tachyon indicates an instability in a theory that contains it. Regrettably for ], tachyons are not real physical particles that appear in nature."</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Gates |first1=S.James |author-link=S. James Gates |last2=Nishino |first2=Hitoshi |date=October 2000 |title=Will the real 4D, N=1 SG limit of superstring/M-theory please stand up? |url=https://archive.org/details/arxiv-hep-th0008206 |journal=Physics Letters B |language=en |volume=492 |issue=1–2 |pages=178–186 |arxiv=hep-th/0008206 |doi=10.1016/S0370-2693(00)01073-X |doi-access=free|bibcode=2000PhLB..492..178G }}</ref>


Various theorists have suggested that the ] might have a tachyonic nature,<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chodos |first1=A. |last2=Hauser |first2=A. I. |last3=Alan Kostelecký |first3=V. |title=The neutrino as a tachyon |journal=Physics Letters B |date=1985 |volume=150 |issue=6 |pages=431–435 |doi=10.1016/0370-2693(85)90460-5|bibcode=1985PhLB..150..431C|hdl=2022/20737 |hdl-access=free }}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Chodos |first1=Alan |last2=Alan Kostelecký |first2=V. |last3=IUHET 280 |year=1994 |title=Nuclear null tests for spacelike neutrinos |journal=Physics Letters B |language=en |volume=336 |issue=3–4 |pages=295–302 |arxiv=hep-ph/9409404 |bibcode=1994PhLB..336..295C |doi=10.1016/0370-2693(94)90535-5 |s2cid=16496246}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chodos |first1=A. |last2=Kostelecký |first2=V. A. |last3=Potting |first3=R. |last4=Gates |first4=Evalyn |title=Null experiments for neutrino masses |journal=] |date=1992 |volume=7 |issue=6 |pages=467–476 |doi=10.1142/S0217732392000422|bibcode=1992MPLA....7..467C}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Chang |first1=Tsao |title=Parity Violation and Neutrino Mass |journal=Nuclear Science and Techniques |arxiv=hep-ph/0208239 |date=2002 |volume=13 |pages=129–133|bibcode=2002hep.ph....8239C}}</ref> while others have disputed the possibility.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hughes |first1=R. J. |last2=Stephenson |first2=G. J. |title=Against tachyonic neutrinos |journal=Physics Letters B |date=1990 |volume=244 |issue=1 |pages=95–100 |doi=10.1016/0370-2693(90)90275-B|bibcode=1990PhLB..244...95H|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1258487 }}</ref>
Magueijo's proposal used a different set of ], a choice which he justifies with the claim that some equations will be simpler in these new units. In the new units he fixes the ], a quantity which some people, using units in which the speed of light is fixed, have claimed is time dependent. Thus in the system of units in which the fine structure constant is fixed, the observational claim is that the speed of light is time-dependent.


==General relativity==
While it may be ]ly possible to construct such a system, it is not clear what additional explanatory power or physical insight such a system would provide, assuming that it does indeed accord with existing empirical data.
] was developed after ] to include concepts like ]. It maintains the principle that no object can accelerate to the speed of light in the reference frame of any coincident observer.{{citation needed|date=October 2009}} However, it permits distortions in ] that allow an object to move faster than light from the point of view of a distant observer.{{citation needed|date=March 2012}} One such ] is the ], which can be thought of as producing a ripple in ] that carries an object along with it. Another possible system is the ], which connects two distant locations as though by a shortcut. Both distortions would need to create a very strong curvature in a highly localized region of space-time and their gravity fields would be immense. To counteract the unstable nature, and prevent the distortions from collapsing under their own 'weight', one would need to introduce hypothetical ] or negative energy.


General relativity also recognizes that any means of faster-than-light ] could also be used for ]. This raises problems with ]. Many physicists believe that the above phenomena are impossible and that future theories of ] will prohibit them. One theory states that stable wormholes are possible, but that any attempt to use a network of wormholes to violate causality would result in their decay.{{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} In ], Eric G. Gimon and ] have argued<ref>{{Cite arXiv |eprint=hep-th/0405019 |first1=Eric G. |last1=Gimon |first2=Petr |last2=Hořava |title=Over-rotating black holes, Gödel holography and the hypertube |year=2004}}</ref> that in a ] five-dimensional ], quantum corrections to general relativity effectively cut off regions of spacetime with causality-violating closed timelike curves. In particular, in the quantum theory a smeared supertube is present that cuts the spacetime in such a way that, although in the full spacetime a closed timelike curve passed through every point, no complete curves exist on the interior region bounded by the tube.
==Notes==

{{Reflist|2}}
== In fiction and popular culture ==
{{see also|Space travel in science fiction}}
FTL travel is a common ] in ].<ref>{{Cite web|title=Themes : Faster Than Light : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia|url=http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/entry/faster_than_light|access-date=2021-09-01|website=www.sf-encyclopedia.com}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Physics|Space|Science fiction|Astronomy}}
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==References== ==Further reading==
*{{cite journal
*D F Falla and M J Floyd, "Superluminal motion in astronomy", ''Eur. J. Phys.'' '''23''' 69-81, 2002
|last1=Falla |first1=D. F.
* ]: Faster than Light; in ''Physics of the impossible.'' pages 197–215, Allen Lane, London 2008, ISBN 978-0-7139-9992-1,
|last2=Floyd |first2=M. J.
* ] (et al.): ''Zero time space&thinsp;—&thinsp;how quantum tunneling broke the light speed barrier.'' Wiley-VCH, Weinheim 2008, ISBN 978-3-527-40735-4
|year=2002
* John G. Cramer: ''Faster-than-Light Implications of Quantum Entanglement and Nonlocality.'' in: Marc G. Millis (et al.): ''Frontiers of Propulsion Science.'' pages 509–529, American Inst. of Aeronautics & Astronautics, Reston 2009, ISBN 1-56347-956-7
|title=Superluminal motion in astronomy
|journal=]
|volume=23 |issue= 1|pages=69–81
|bibcode= 2002EJPh...23...69F
|doi= 10.1088/0143-0807/23/1/310
|s2cid=250863474
}}
*{{cite book
|last=Kaku |first=Michio
|author-link=Michio Kaku
|year=2008
|chapter=Faster than Light
|title=Physics of the Impossible
|pages=197–215
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-0-7139-9992-1
|title-link=Physics of the Impossible
}}
*{{cite book
|last=Nimtz |first=Günter
|year=2008
|author-link=Günter Nimtz
|title=Zero Time Space
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-3-527-40735-4
}}
*{{cite book
|last=Cramer |first=J. G.
|year=2009
|chapter=Faster-than-Light Implications of Quantum Entanglement and Nonlocality
|editor=Millis, M. G.
|title=Frontiers of Propulsion Science
|pages=509–529
|publisher=]
|isbn=978-1-56347-956-4
|display-editors=etal}}
*{{Cite journal |last=Alcubierre |first=Miguel |date=1994-05-01 |title=The warp drive: hyper-fast travel within general relativity |journal=Classical and Quantum Gravity |volume=11 |issue=5 |pages=L73–L77 |doi=10.1088/0264-9381/11/5/001 |bibcode=1994CQGra..11L..73A |issn=0264-9381|arxiv=gr-qc/0009013 }}
*{{cite journal |bibcode = 2006PrGeo..21...38Y|title = The tendency analytical equations of stable nuclides and the superluminal velocity motion laws of matter in geospace|last1 = Yan|first1 = Kun|journal = Progress in Geophysics |year = 2006|volume = 21|pages = 38}}
*{{cite journal | doi = 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.173902 | volume=108 | title=Stimulated Generation of Superluminal Light Pulses via Four-Wave Mixing | year=2012 | journal=Physical Review Letters | last1 = Glasser | first1 = Ryan T.| issue=17 | pages=173902 | pmid=22680868 | arxiv=1204.0810 | bibcode=2012PhRvL.108q3902G | s2cid=46458102 }}
*{{Cite journal |last1=Withayachumnankul |first1=Withawat |last2=Fischer |first2=Bernd M |last3=Ferguson |first3=Bradley |last4=Davis |first4=Bruce R |last5=Abbott |first5=Derek |date=October 2010 |title=A Systemized View of Superluminal Wave Propagation |url=http://www.eleceng.adelaide.edu.au/personal/dabbott/publications/PIE_withayachumnankul2010.pdf |journal=] |volume=98 |issue=10 |pages=1775–1786 |doi=10.1109/JPROC.2010.2052910 |issn=0018-9219}}


==External links== ==External links==
{{Commons category|Faster-than-light travel}}
===Scientific links===
*
*, with more details on phase and group velocity, and on causality *, with more details on phase and group velocity, and on causality
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100123191247/http://www.aei-potsdam.mpg.de/~mpoessel/Physik/FTL/tunnelingftl.html |date=2010-01-23 }}
*
*
*
*
* *
*
* *
*
*— ''Java applet demonstrating group velocity information limits''

===Proposed FTL Methods links===
*
* *
{{Extreme motion}}
* How to Travel Extreme Distances in Space. Past, Present and Proposed ideas of interstellar travel.
{{Science fiction}}
{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 00:21, 9 January 2025

Propagation of information or matter faster than the speed of light For other uses, see Faster-than-light (disambiguation).
Because the sphere travels faster than light, the observer sees nothing until it has already passed. Then, two images appear: one of the sphere arriving (on the right) and one of it departing (on the left).

Faster-than-light (superluminal or supercausal) travel and communication are the conjectural propagation of matter or information faster than the speed of light in vacuum (c). The special theory of relativity implies that only particles with zero rest mass (i.e., photons) may travel at the speed of light, and that nothing may travel faster.

Particles whose speed exceeds that of light (tachyons) have been hypothesized, but their existence would violate causality and would imply time travel. The scientific consensus is that they do not exist.

According to all observations and current scientific theories, matter travels at slower-than-light (subluminal) speed with respect to the locally distorted spacetime region. Speculative faster-than-light concepts include the Alcubierre drive, Krasnikov tubes, traversable wormholes, and quantum tunneling. Some of these proposals find loopholes around general relativity, such as by expanding or contracting space to make the object appear to be travelling greater than c. Such proposals are still widely believed to be impossible as they still violate current understandings of causality, and they all require fanciful mechanisms to work (such as requiring exotic matter).

Superluminal travel of non-information

Main article: Superluminal motion

In the context of this article, "faster-than-light" means the transmission of information or matter faster than c, a constant equal to the speed of light in vacuum, which is 299,792,458 m/s (by definition of the metre) or about 186,282.397 miles per second. This is not quite the same as traveling faster than light, since:

  • Some processes propagate faster than c, but cannot carry information (see examples in the sections immediately following).
  • In some materials where light travels at speed c/n (where n is the refractive index) other particles can travel faster than c/n (but still slower than c), leading to Cherenkov radiation (see phase velocity below).

Neither of these phenomena violates special relativity or creates problems with causality, and thus neither qualifies as faster-than-light as described here.

In the following examples, certain influences may appear to travel faster than light, but they do not convey energy or information faster than light, so they do not violate special relativity.

Daily sky motion

For an earth-bound observer, objects in the sky complete one revolution around the Earth in one day. Proxima Centauri, the nearest star outside the Solar System, is about four and a half light-years away. In this frame of reference, in which Proxima Centauri is perceived to be moving in a circular trajectory with a radius of four light years, it could be described as having a speed many times greater than c as the rim speed of an object moving in a circle is a product of the radius and angular speed. It is also possible on a geostatic view, for objects such as comets to vary their speed from subluminal to superluminal and vice versa simply because the distance from the Earth varies. Comets may have orbits which take them out to more than 1000 AU. The circumference of a circle with a radius of 1000 AU is greater than one light day. In other words, a comet at such a distance is superluminal in a geostatic, and therefore non-inertial, frame.

Light spots and shadows

If a laser beam is swept across a distant object, the spot of laser light can seem to move across the object at a speed greater than c. Similarly, a shadow projected onto a distant object seems to move across the object faster than c. In neither case does the light travel from the source to the object faster than c, nor does any information travel faster than light. No object is moving in these examples. For comparison, consider water squirting out of a garden hose as it is swung side to side: water does not instantly follow the direction of the hose.

Closing speeds

The rate at which two objects in motion in a single frame of reference get closer together is called the mutual or closing speed. This may approach twice the speed of light, as in the case of two particles travelling at close to the speed of light in opposite directions with respect to the reference frame.

Imagine two fast-moving particles approaching each other from opposite sides of a particle accelerator of the collider type. The closing speed would be the rate at which the distance between the two particles is decreasing. From the point of view of an observer standing at rest relative to the accelerator, this rate will be slightly less than twice the speed of light.

Special relativity does not prohibit this. It tells us that it is wrong to use Galilean relativity to compute the velocity of one of the particles, as would be measured by an observer traveling alongside the other particle. That is, special relativity gives the correct velocity-addition formula for computing such relative velocity.

It is instructive to compute the relative velocity of particles moving at v and −v in accelerator frame, which corresponds to the closing speed of 2v > c. Expressing the speeds in units of c, β = v/c:

β rel = β + β 1 + β 2 = 2 β 1 + β 2 1. {\displaystyle \beta _{\text{rel}}={\frac {\beta +\beta }{1+\beta ^{2}}}={\frac {2\beta }{1+\beta ^{2}}}\leq 1.}

Proper speeds

If a spaceship travels to a planet one light-year (as measured in the Earth's rest frame) away from Earth at high speed, the time taken to reach that planet could be less than one year as measured by the traveller's clock (although it will always be more than one year as measured by a clock on Earth). The value obtained by dividing the distance traveled, as determined in the Earth's frame, by the time taken, measured by the traveller's clock, is known as a proper speed or a proper velocity. There is no limit on the value of a proper speed as a proper speed does not represent a speed measured in a single inertial frame. A light signal that left the Earth at the same time as the traveller would always get to the destination before the traveller would.

Phase velocities above c

The phase velocity of an electromagnetic wave, when traveling through a medium, can routinely exceed c, the vacuum velocity of light. For example, this occurs in most glasses at X-ray frequencies. However, the phase velocity of a wave corresponds to the propagation speed of a theoretical single-frequency (purely monochromatic) component of the wave at that frequency. Such a wave component must be infinite in extent and of constant amplitude (otherwise it is not truly monochromatic), and so cannot convey any information. Thus a phase velocity above c does not imply the propagation of signals with a velocity above c.

Group velocities above c

The group velocity of a wave may also exceed c in some circumstances. In such cases, which typically at the same time involve rapid attenuation of the intensity, the maximum of the envelope of a pulse may travel with a velocity above c. However, even this situation does not imply the propagation of signals with a velocity above c, even though one may be tempted to associate pulse maxima with signals. The latter association has been shown to be misleading, because the information on the arrival of a pulse can be obtained before the pulse maximum arrives. For example, if some mechanism allows the full transmission of the leading part of a pulse while strongly attenuating the pulse maximum and everything behind (distortion), the pulse maximum is effectively shifted forward in time, while the information on the pulse does not come faster than c without this effect. However, group velocity can exceed c in some parts of a Gaussian beam in vacuum (without attenuation). The diffraction causes the peak of the pulse to propagate faster, while overall power does not.

Cosmic expansion

According to Hubble's law, the expansion of the universe causes distant galaxies to appear to recede from us faster than the speed of light. However, the recession speed associated with Hubble's law, defined as the rate of increase in proper distance per interval of cosmological time, is not a velocity in a relativistic sense. Moreover, in general relativity, velocity is a local notion, and there is not even a unique definition for the relative velocity of a cosmologically distant object. Faster-than-light cosmological recession speeds are entirely a coordinate effect.

There are many galaxies visible in telescopes with redshift numbers of 1.4 or higher. All of these have cosmological recession speeds greater than the speed of light. Because the Hubble parameter is decreasing with time, there can actually be cases where a galaxy that is receding from us faster than light does manage to emit a signal which reaches us eventually.

However, because the expansion of the universe is accelerating, it is projected that most galaxies will eventually cross a type of cosmological event horizon where any light they emit past that point will never be able to reach us at any time in the infinite future, because the light never reaches a point where its "peculiar velocity" towards us exceeds the expansion velocity away from us (these two notions of velocity are also discussed in Comoving and proper distances § Uses of the proper distance). The current distance to this cosmological event horizon is about 16 billion light-years, meaning that a signal from an event happening at present would eventually be able to reach us in the future if the event was less than 16 billion light-years away, but the signal would never reach us if the event was more than 16 billion light-years away.

Astronomical observations

Apparent superluminal motion is observed in many radio galaxies, blazars, quasars, and recently also in microquasars. The effect was predicted before it was observed by Martin Rees and can be explained as an optical illusion caused by the object partly moving in the direction of the observer, when the speed calculations assume it does not. The phenomenon does not contradict the theory of special relativity. Corrected calculations show these objects have velocities close to the speed of light (relative to our reference frame). They are the first examples of large amounts of mass moving at close to the speed of light. Earth-bound laboratories have only been able to accelerate small numbers of elementary particles to such speeds.

Quantum mechanics

Certain phenomena in quantum mechanics, such as quantum entanglement, might give the superficial impression of allowing communication of information faster than light. According to the no-communication theorem these phenomena do not allow true communication; they only let two observers in different locations see the same system simultaneously, without any way of controlling what either sees. Wavefunction collapse can be viewed as an epiphenomenon of quantum decoherence, which in turn is nothing more than an effect of the underlying local time evolution of the wavefunction of a system and all of its environment. Since the underlying behavior does not violate local causality or allow FTL communication, it follows that neither does the additional effect of wavefunction collapse, whether real or apparent.

The uncertainty principle implies that individual photons may travel for short distances at speeds somewhat faster (or slower) than c, even in vacuum; this possibility must be taken into account when enumerating Feynman diagrams for a particle interaction. However, it was shown in 2011 that a single photon may not travel faster than c.

There have been various reports in the popular press of experiments on faster-than-light transmission in optics — most often in the context of a kind of quantum tunnelling phenomenon. Usually, such reports deal with a phase velocity or group velocity faster than the vacuum velocity of light. However, as stated above, a superluminal phase velocity cannot be used for faster-than-light transmission of information

Hartman effect

Main article: Hartman effect

The Hartman effect is the tunneling effect through a barrier where the tunneling time tends to a constant for large barriers. This could, for instance, be the gap between two prisms. When the prisms are in contact, the light passes straight through, but when there is a gap, the light is refracted. There is a non-zero probability that the photon will tunnel across the gap rather than follow the refracted path.

However, it has been claimed that the Hartman effect cannot actually be used to violate relativity by transmitting signals faster than c, also because the tunnelling time "should not be linked to a velocity since evanescent waves do not propagate". The evanescent waves in the Hartman effect are due to virtual particles and a non-propagating static field, as mentioned in the sections above for gravity and electromagnetism.

Casimir effect

Main article: Casimir effect

In physics, the Casimir–Polder force is a physical force exerted between separate objects due to resonance of vacuum energy in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, owing to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the strength of the effect. Because the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance, it is only measurable when the distance between the objects is extremely small. Because the effect is due to virtual particles mediating a static field effect, it is subject to the comments about static fields discussed above.

EPR paradox

Main article: EPR paradox

The EPR paradox refers to a famous thought experiment of Albert Einstein, Boris Podolsky and Nathan Rosen that was realized experimentally for the first time by Alain Aspect in 1981 and 1982 in the Aspect experiment. In this experiment, the two measurements of an entangled state are correlated even when the measurements are distant from the source and each other. However, no information can be transmitted this way; the answer to whether or not the measurement actually affects the other quantum system comes down to which interpretation of quantum mechanics one subscribes to.

An experiment performed in 1997 by Nicolas Gisin has demonstrated quantum correlations between particles separated by over 10 kilometers. But as noted earlier, the non-local correlations seen in entanglement cannot actually be used to transmit classical information faster than light, so that relativistic causality is preserved. The situation is akin to sharing a synchronized coin flip, where the second person to flip their coin will always see the opposite of what the first person sees, but neither has any way of knowing whether they were the first or second flipper, without communicating classically. See No-communication theorem for further information. A 2008 quantum physics experiment also performed by Nicolas Gisin and his colleagues has determined that in any hypothetical non-local hidden-variable theory, the speed of the quantum non-local connection (what Einstein called "spooky action at a distance") is at least 10,000 times the speed of light.

Delayed choice quantum eraser

Main article: Delayed-choice quantum eraser

The delayed-choice quantum eraser is a version of the EPR paradox in which the observation (or not) of interference after the passage of a photon through a double slit experiment depends on the conditions of observation of a second photon entangled with the first. The characteristic of this experiment is that the observation of the second photon can take place at a later time than the observation of the first photon, which may give the impression that the measurement of the later photons "retroactively" determines whether the earlier photons show interference or not, although the interference pattern can only be seen by correlating the measurements of both members of every pair and so it cannot be observed until both photons have been measured, ensuring that an experimenter watching only the photons going through the slit does not obtain information about the other photons in an faster-than-light or backwards-in-time manner.

Superluminal communication

Main article: Superluminal communication

Faster-than-light communication is, according to relativity, equivalent to time travel. What we measure as the speed of light in vacuum (or near vacuum) is actually the fundamental physical constant c. This means that all inertial and, for the coordinate speed of light, non-inertial observers, regardless of their relative velocity, will always measure zero-mass particles such as photons traveling at c in vacuum. This result means that measurements of time and velocity in different frames are no longer related simply by constant shifts, but are instead related by Poincaré transformations. These transformations have important implications:

  • The relativistic momentum of a massive particle would increase with speed in such a way that at the speed of light an object would have infinite momentum.
  • To accelerate an object of non-zero rest mass to c would require infinite time with any finite acceleration, or infinite acceleration for a finite amount of time.
  • Either way, such acceleration requires infinite energy.
  • Some observers with sub-light relative motion will disagree about which occurs first of any two events that are separated by a space-like interval. In other words, any travel that is faster-than-light will be seen as traveling backwards in time in some other, equally valid, frames of reference, or need to assume the speculative hypothesis of possible Lorentz violations at a presently unobserved scale (for instance the Planck scale). Therefore, any theory which permits "true" FTL also has to cope with time travel and all its associated paradoxes, or else to assume the Lorentz invariance to be a symmetry of thermodynamical statistical nature (hence a symmetry broken at some presently unobserved scale).
  • In special relativity the coordinate speed of light is only guaranteed to be c in an inertial frame; in a non-inertial frame the coordinate speed may be different from c. In general relativity no coordinate system on a large region of curved spacetime is "inertial", so it is permissible to use a global coordinate system where objects travel faster than c, but in the local neighborhood of any point in curved spacetime we can define a "local inertial frame" and the local speed of light will be c in this frame, with massive objects moving through this local neighborhood always having a speed less than c in the local inertial frame.

Justifications

Casimir vacuum and quantum tunnelling

Special relativity postulates that the speed of light in vacuum is invariant in inertial frames. That is, it will be the same from any frame of reference moving at a constant speed. The equations do not specify any particular value for the speed of light, which is an experimentally determined quantity for a fixed unit of length. Since 1983, the SI unit of length (the meter) has been defined using the speed of light.

The experimental determination has been made in vacuum. However, the vacuum we know is not the only possible vacuum which can exist. The vacuum has energy associated with it, called simply the vacuum energy, which could perhaps be altered in certain cases. When vacuum energy is lowered, light itself has been predicted to go faster than the standard value c. This is known as the Scharnhorst effect. Such a vacuum can be produced by bringing two perfectly smooth metal plates together at near atomic diameter spacing. It is called a Casimir vacuum. Calculations imply that light will go faster in such a vacuum by a minuscule amount: a photon traveling between two plates that are 1 micrometer apart would increase the photon's speed by only about one part in 10. Accordingly, there has as yet been no experimental verification of the prediction. A recent analysis argued that the Scharnhorst effect cannot be used to send information backwards in time with a single set of plates since the plates' rest frame would define a "preferred frame" for FTL signaling. However, with multiple pairs of plates in motion relative to one another the authors noted that they had no arguments that could "guarantee the total absence of causality violations", and invoked Hawking's speculative chronology protection conjecture which suggests that feedback loops of virtual particles would create "uncontrollable singularities in the renormalized quantum stress-energy" on the boundary of any potential time machine, and thus would require a theory of quantum gravity to fully analyze. Other authors argue that Scharnhorst's original analysis, which seemed to show the possibility of faster-than-c signals, involved approximations which may be incorrect, so that it is not clear whether this effect could actually increase signal speed at all.

It was later claimed by Eckle et al. that particle tunneling does indeed occur in zero real time. Their tests involved tunneling electrons, where the group argued a relativistic prediction for tunneling time should be 500–600 attoseconds (an attosecond is one quintillionth (10) of a second). All that could be measured was 24 attoseconds, which is the limit of the test accuracy. Again, though, other physicists believe that tunneling experiments in which particles appear to spend anomalously short times inside the barrier are in fact fully compatible with relativity, although there is disagreement about whether the explanation involves reshaping of the wave packet or other effects.

Give up (absolute) relativity

Because of the strong empirical support for special relativity, any modifications to it must necessarily be quite subtle and difficult to measure. The best-known attempt is doubly special relativity, which posits that the Planck length is also the same in all reference frames, and is associated with the work of Giovanni Amelino-Camelia and João Magueijo. There are speculative theories that claim inertia is produced by the combined mass of the universe (e.g., Mach's principle), which implies that the rest frame of the universe might be preferred by conventional measurements of natural law. If confirmed, this would imply special relativity is an approximation to a more general theory, but since the relevant comparison would (by definition) be outside the observable universe, it is difficult to imagine (much less construct) experiments to test this hypothesis. Despite this difficulty, such experiments have been proposed.

Spacetime distortion

Although the theory of special relativity forbids objects to have a relative velocity greater than light speed, and general relativity reduces to special relativity in a local sense (in small regions of spacetime where curvature is negligible), general relativity does allow the space between distant objects to expand in such a way that they have a "recession velocity" which exceeds the speed of light, and it is thought that galaxies which are at a distance of more than about 14 billion light-years from us today have a recession velocity which is faster than light. Miguel Alcubierre theorized that it would be possible to create a warp drive, in which a ship would be enclosed in a "warp bubble" where the space at the front of the bubble is rapidly contracting and the space at the back is rapidly expanding, with the result that the bubble can reach a distant destination much faster than a light beam moving outside the bubble, but without objects inside the bubble locally traveling faster than light. However, several objections raised against the Alcubierre drive appear to rule out the possibility of actually using it in any practical fashion. Another possibility predicted by general relativity is the traversable wormhole, which could create a shortcut between arbitrarily distant points in space. As with the Alcubierre drive, travelers moving through the wormhole would not locally move faster than light travelling through the wormhole alongside them, but they would be able to reach their destination (and return to their starting location) faster than light traveling outside the wormhole.

Gerald Cleaver and Richard Obousy, a professor and student of Baylor University, theorized that manipulating the extra spatial dimensions of string theory around a spaceship with an extremely large amount of energy would create a "bubble" that could cause the ship to travel faster than the speed of light. To create this bubble, the physicists believe manipulating the 10th spatial dimension would alter the dark energy in three large spatial dimensions: height, width and length. Cleaver said positive dark energy is currently responsible for speeding up the expansion rate of our universe as time moves on.

Lorentz symmetry violation

Main articles: Modern searches for Lorentz violation and Standard-Model Extension

The possibility that Lorentz symmetry may be violated has been seriously considered in the last two decades, particularly after the development of a realistic effective field theory that describes this possible violation, the so-called Standard-Model Extension. This general framework has allowed experimental searches by ultra-high energy cosmic-ray experiments and a wide variety of experiments in gravity, electrons, protons, neutrons, neutrinos, mesons, and photons. The breaking of rotation and boost invariance causes direction dependence in the theory as well as unconventional energy dependence that introduces novel effects, including Lorentz-violating neutrino oscillations and modifications to the dispersion relations of different particle species, which naturally could make particles move faster than light.

In some models of broken Lorentz symmetry, it is postulated that the symmetry is still built into the most fundamental laws of physics, but that spontaneous symmetry breaking of Lorentz invariance shortly after the Big Bang could have left a "relic field" throughout the universe which causes particles to behave differently depending on their velocity relative to the field; however, there are also some models where Lorentz symmetry is broken in a more fundamental way. If Lorentz symmetry can cease to be a fundamental symmetry at the Planck scale or at some other fundamental scale, it is conceivable that particles with a critical speed different from the speed of light be the ultimate constituents of matter.

In current models of Lorentz symmetry violation, the phenomenological parameters are expected to be energy-dependent. Therefore, as widely recognized, existing low-energy bounds cannot be applied to high-energy phenomena; however, many searches for Lorentz violation at high energies have been carried out using the Standard-Model Extension. Lorentz symmetry violation is expected to become stronger as one gets closer to the fundamental scale.

Superfluid theories of physical vacuum

Main article: Superfluid vacuum theory

In this approach, the physical vacuum is viewed as a quantum superfluid which is essentially non-relativistic, whereas Lorentz symmetry is not an exact symmetry of nature but rather the approximate description valid only for the small fluctuations of the superfluid background. Within the framework of the approach, a theory was proposed in which the physical vacuum is conjectured to be a quantum Bose liquid whose ground-state wavefunction is described by the logarithmic Schrödinger equation. It was shown that the relativistic gravitational interaction arises as the small-amplitude collective excitation mode whereas relativistic elementary particles can be described by the particle-like modes in the limit of low momenta. The important fact is that at very high velocities the behavior of the particle-like modes becomes distinct from the relativistic one – they can reach the speed of light limit at finite energy; also, faster-than-light propagation is possible without requiring moving objects to have imaginary mass.

FTL neutrino flight results

MINOS experiment

Main article: MINOS

In 2007 the MINOS collaboration reported results measuring the flight-time of 3 GeV neutrinos yielding a speed exceeding that of light by 1.8-sigma significance. However, those measurements were considered to be statistically consistent with neutrinos traveling at the speed of light. After the detectors for the project were upgraded in 2012, MINOS corrected their initial result and found agreement with the speed of light. Further measurements are going to be conducted.

OPERA neutrino anomaly

Main article: Faster-than-light neutrino anomaly

On September 22, 2011, a preprint from the OPERA Collaboration indicated detection of 17 and 28 GeV muon neutrinos, sent 730 kilometers (454 miles) from CERN near Geneva, Switzerland to the Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy, traveling faster than light by a relative amount of 2.48×10 (approximately 1 in 40,000), a statistic with 6.0-sigma significance. On 17 November 2011, a second follow-up experiment by OPERA scientists confirmed their initial results. However, scientists were skeptical about the results of these experiments, the significance of which was disputed. In March 2012, the ICARUS collaboration failed to reproduce the OPERA results with their equipment, detecting neutrino travel time from CERN to the Gran Sasso National Laboratory indistinguishable from the speed of light. Later the OPERA team reported two flaws in their equipment set-up that had caused errors far outside their original confidence interval: a fiber-optic cable attached improperly, which caused the apparently faster-than-light measurements, and a clock oscillator ticking too fast.

Tachyons

Main article: Tachyon

In special relativity, it is impossible to accelerate an object to the speed of light, or for a massive object to move at the speed of light. However, it might be possible for an object to exist which always moves faster than light. The hypothetical elementary particles with this property are called tachyons or tachyonic particles. Attempts to quantize them failed to produce faster-than-light particles, and instead illustrated that their presence leads to an instability.

Various theorists have suggested that the neutrino might have a tachyonic nature, while others have disputed the possibility.

General relativity

General relativity was developed after special relativity to include concepts like gravity. It maintains the principle that no object can accelerate to the speed of light in the reference frame of any coincident observer. However, it permits distortions in spacetime that allow an object to move faster than light from the point of view of a distant observer. One such distortion is the Alcubierre drive, which can be thought of as producing a ripple in spacetime that carries an object along with it. Another possible system is the wormhole, which connects two distant locations as though by a shortcut. Both distortions would need to create a very strong curvature in a highly localized region of space-time and their gravity fields would be immense. To counteract the unstable nature, and prevent the distortions from collapsing under their own 'weight', one would need to introduce hypothetical exotic matter or negative energy.

General relativity also recognizes that any means of faster-than-light travel could also be used for time travel. This raises problems with causality. Many physicists believe that the above phenomena are impossible and that future theories of gravity will prohibit them. One theory states that stable wormholes are possible, but that any attempt to use a network of wormholes to violate causality would result in their decay. In string theory, Eric G. Gimon and Petr Hořava have argued that in a supersymmetric five-dimensional Gödel universe, quantum corrections to general relativity effectively cut off regions of spacetime with causality-violating closed timelike curves. In particular, in the quantum theory a smeared supertube is present that cuts the spacetime in such a way that, although in the full spacetime a closed timelike curve passed through every point, no complete curves exist on the interior region bounded by the tube.

In fiction and popular culture

See also: Space travel in science fiction

FTL travel is a common plot device in science fiction.

See also

Notes

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