home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!pipex!warwick!uknet!brunel!mt90dac
- From: mt90dac@brunel.ac.uk (Del Cotter)
- Newsgroups: sci.physics
- Subject: Massive Photons Tomorrow (was Scientists Plan...)
- Message-ID: <Bx8y2F.3wD@brunel.ac.uk>
- Date: 5 Nov 92 14:11:02 GMT
- References: <Bx5qtw.Cvw@dcs.glasgow.ac.uk> <Nov.4.13.31.48.1992.25862@ruhets.rutgers.edu> <4NOV199214241699@csa1.lbl.gov>
- Organization: Brunel University, West London, UK
- Lines: 23
-
- In article <4NOV199214241699@csa1.lbl.gov> SCOTT I CHASE writes:
- >
- >Another small thing to keep you up at night: What if a mechanism analogous
- >to electoweak symmetry breaking is eventually going to break the remaining
- >electromagnetic symmetry? As the Universe continues to cool, it might
- >reach a point when it freezes out into a state in which the photon has mass.
- >(Just like the W and Z have mass right now.) What if the range of the
- >electromagnetic interaction became .01 meters all of a sudden? My nervous
- >system might fail. Heck - atoms might not be stable. I'm not sure.
- >
- >And the neat thing is that it could happen at any time. You folks might
- >cease to exist before you ever read this post. Farewell (just in case).
-
- Someone told me once that a massive photon might not be fatal if the mass
- was low enough. The range of the electromagnetic interaction would shrink
- from infinity to a length of the order of a metre or so, with no practical
- consequences (?), and there would be a lower frequency limit to the EM spec-
- trum. Atoms, nervous systems and Usenet would be unharmed; we would simply
- wake up one morning without TV.
- --
- ',' ' ',',' | | ',' ' ',','
- ', ,',' | Del Cotter mt90dac@brunel.ac.uk | ', ,','
- ',' | | ','
-