Two-Body Interactions Through Tachyon Exchange (') .: Summary.
Two-Body Interactions Through Tachyon Exchange (') .: Summary.
Two-Body Interactions Through Tachyon Exchange (') .: Summary.
1 1 Maggio 1980
E . RECAIV~
I s t i t ~ t o di F i s i c a Teorica dell'Universith - Catania, I t a l i a
I s t i t u t o .Nazionale di F i s i c a .Nucleate - Sezione di Catania, I t a l i a
C . S . F . N . e S . d . M . - Catania, I t a l i a
PART I : Introduction.
1. - Introduction.
I t is k n o w n since l o n g t h a t , w h e n i n v e s t i g a t i n g t a c h y o n d y n a m i c s , i t is
a l w a y s n e c e s s a r y t o t a k e i n t o p r o p e r a c c o u n t t h e t a c h y o n together w i t h i t s
e m i t t e r A a n d a b s o r b e r B (1).
85
~ G.D. MACCARRONE and E. RECAMI
2. - T a c h y o n e m i s s i o n (description o f ~r intrinsic e m i s s i o n , , as s e e n in t h e
rest f r a m e and in g e n e r i c f r a m e s ) .
(1) (rest f r a m e ) ,
i.e.
so t h a t
(3) - - M 2 < A < - - p2 < _ m ~ (emission).
(s) E. RECAMI: ref. (1); E. RECAMI: Zett. N u o v o Cimento, 21, 208 (1978); 22, 591 (1978);
E. RECAMI and M. PAV~I~: I n t . J . Theor. P h y s . , 17, 77 (1978) ; M. PArdI5 and E. RECA~I :
~ett. N u o v o Cimento, 18, 134 (1977); 19, 72 (1977); Nceovo Cimento A , 36, 171 (1976);
46, 298 (1978); M. PArdI6, E. RECAMI and G. ZIINO: ~ett. N u o v o Cimento, 17, 257 (1976).
(7) E. R~CAMI: ~ett. N u o v o Cimento, 22, 591 (1978). See Mso M. PAV~tI~and E. Rv,CAMI:
_~uovo Cimento A, 46, 298 (1978).
88 G.D. 1IACCARRONE a I l d E. RECAMI
3. - Tachyon absorption.
1
(7) IPI = ~ V ( m2 + A) ~ + 4m2M2 (rest f r a m e ) ,
which corresponds to
so t h a t
(8') (absorption).
E q u a t i o n (7) tells us t h a t body C (in its rest frame) can absorb the t a c h y o n
(or antitaehyon) T, emitted b y the second b o d y D, only when the t a c h y o n
speed V is (1,")
(9) V = V1 + 4m2.M2/(m 2 + A) ~ .
I t should be explicitly noticed t h a t eq. (8) differs from eq. (2). On the con-
trary, eqs. (7), (9) f o r m a l l y coincide with eqs. (1'), (1"), respectively; but t h e y
refer to different domains of A ; in fact, e.g., in eq. (1") we have A ~ - - m 2,
whilst in eq. (9) we have A ~ - m 2.
I n particular, from eq. (9) one observes t h a t C can absorb (in its rest frame)
infinite-speed tachyons only when m ~ ~- A ~ O, i.e.
2 A]/-E,r = - m 2 (A = 0) .
4. - Some remarks.
i) emission-absorption,
ii) absorption-emission,
(12)
iii) emission-emission,
iv) a b s o r p t i o n - a b s o r p t i o n .
I t is noticeable t h a t the possible cases are not only i) a n d ii). Case iii) c a n
h a p p e n when the t a c h y o n exchange takes place in the recession phase (i.e. while
bodies A, B are receding one f r o m the other); case iv) can h a p p e n when the
t a c h y o n exchange takes place in the approaching phase (i.e. when A, B are
a p p r o a c h i n g one another). F o r instance, let us consider an elastic scattering
b e t w e e n two (different) particles a, b. I n the c.m.s., as is well known, a a n d b
exchange m o m e n t u m b u t no energy. An infinite-speed t a c h y o n T can, there-
fore, be a suitable carrier of t h a t interaction (T will a p p e a r as a ]inite-speed
t a c h y o n in the rest frames of a, b).
H o w e v e r , if a, b h a v e to r e t a i n their rest mass during the process, t h e n
a t a c h y o n exchange can describe t h a t elastic process only when we h a v e (~in-
trinsic a b s o r p t i o n ~) b o t h at a a n d a t b (this can h a p p e n only when a, b are
a p p r o a c h i n g one another).
9 WO-BODY INTEI~ACTIOTNS THROUGI::I T A C H Y O N EXCItA~TG~. 91
Notice t h a t the descriptions i)-iv) above do not refer to one and the same
observer, since t h e y on the contrary add together the <(local ,> descriptions of
observers A and B.
5. - Case o f ~( i n t r i n s i c e m i s s i o n ~ at A .
where now we called M~, M'~ the initial and final rest mass of b o d y A, respec-
tively. According to eq. (5), in a generic frame ], the q u a n t i t y AA can be
written in explicitly covariant f o r m as follows:
(14) Aa = - - m 2 - - 2pt,-P ~ ,
wherefrom
(14') -- M] < A~<--m 2 (intrinsic emission),
(*) For instance, this includes tachyon exchanges in the (~approaching phase ~) (for
intrinsic T emission at A) and in the (~receding phase ~)(for intrinsic T absorption at A).
~ G.D. MACCARRONE and S. R E C A M I
(17) A. : -- m 2 + 2p~P~,
(21)
IPl - - 2 M i
m [E~Vm~ + 4M~ i mlP~l] ( P ~ l l ( ~ p ) ; A~ = 0 ) .
6. - C a s e o f {{ i n t r i n s i c a b s o r p t i o n ~ a t A .
wherefrom
(29) 3B = -- m 2 - - 2pt, P ~ ,
wherefrom
(3O) -- M~ < AB< -- m 2 (intrinsic emission).
L e t us observe that, in a frame 1, relation (30) holds i] and only i / the process
at B (no m a t t e r how it m a y appear to ]) is (( intrinsically ))--i.e. in the B
rest f r a m e - - a t a e h y o n emission. W e have already seen t h a t it would be an
(~intrinsic absorption )~ only if we had A . > - - m ~ ; t h a t is to say, in general,
[ A,------m ~2M.E T
(32)
AB-~-- - - m 2 - 2ETEB(1-- u.V) (- ~<A~<-m~).
TWO-BODY INTERACTIONS THROUGH TACHYON ~XCHANGE 95
where a t t e n t i o n should be paid to the f a c t t h a t the signs in the r.h.s, of eq. (33)
are opposite to the ones entering eq. (20), as it should be also for self-evident
s y m m e t r y reasons.
W h e n B is a t rest with respect to A, so t h a t PB ---- 0, the second one of
eqs. (33) t r a n s f o r m s into
1
(34) [P] = 2-~B q ( m 2 + zlz)2 + 4m2M~ (PB = 0)
PAI~T I I I : T a c h y o n e x c h a n g e w h e n u . V > c ~.
7. - Case o f a intrinsic e m i s s i o n , at A .
I n the B rest frame, however, one would observe an ((~ intrinsic ~)) T emission,
so t h a t w h a t we s t a t e d between eqs. (31) a n d (32) is here in order. N a m e l y ,
relation (30) has to hold in this case (even if it is now associated to eq. (15)
a n d n o t to eq. (27), in the A rest frame). Notice t h a t , when passing f r o m the
A rest f r a m e to the B rest f r a m e (and a p p l y i n g the r e i n t e r p r e t a t i o n proce-
d u r e (1.~)), in eq. (15) one has t h a t : i) Q u a n t i t y E T changes its sign, so t h a t
q u a n t i t y % / p 2 m 2 appears a d d e d to the r.h.s. (and no longer to the 1.h.s.);
ii) the t a c h y o n t h r e e - m o m e n t u m p changes its sign (since we go f r o m a
t a c h y o n T with impulse p to its a n t i t a c h y o n T with impulse - - p ) .
I n a n y case, / t o m eq. (15) with the condition u . V ~ c ~ it d i r e c t l y / o l l o w s
which can r e a d
(36) As = -- m ~ q- 2p~,P~<--m ~.
(39)
8. - C a s e o f c~ i n t r i n s i c absorption ~ at A.
I n the B rest frame, however, one would observe an (<( intrinsic )>) T absorption,
so t h a t it m u s t be
(40) - - m s < AB < oo (intrinsic a b s o r p t i o n ) .
which can r e a d
(45)
I A~:--ms+2M~E T ( A a > -- m 2) ,
7 - II Nuovo Cimento A.
98 G. D. ~AeCARRONE and E. RECAMI
2 E T E B ( u . V - - ~1) = m 2 (AB = 0 ) ,
A t t h i s p o i n t l e t us r e m e m b e r t h a t , w h e n e l e m e n t a r y i n t e r a c t i o n s a r e con-
s i d e r e d t o b e m e d i a t e d b y t h e s t r o n g - f i e l d q u a n t a , no ((~ r e a l i s t i c ))) o r d i n a r y
p a r t i c l e s c a n a c t u a l l y b e t h e c a r r i e r s of t h e t r a n s f e r r e d e n e r g y - m o m e n t u m (s).
O n t h e c o n t r a r y , t a c h y o n s ( i n s t e a d of t h e s o - c a l l e d v i r t u a l p a r t i c l e s ) can a priori
w o r k as t h e a c t u a l c a r r i e r s of t h e s t r o n g i n t e r a c t i o n s (s,9)(*).
{ E T=m212M~,
(48) (A~ : A~ = 0);
EB = i . l / ( u " V - - 1),
we are n e g l e c t i n g t h e a n g u l a r - m o m e n t u m c o n s e r v a t i o n .
I n t h e e . m . s . , for i n s t a n c e , we w o u l d h a v e tP~I : [PB[ ~- [PI, a n d
m 2
(49) cos 0.... = 1 - - - - (elastic s c a t t e r i n g ) ,
function of [P]. Such naive considerations are neglecting the mass width of
the tachyonic ((~ mesonic ~)) resonances (s,9). L e t us recall t h a t in the c.m.s.
a n y elastic scattering a p p e a r s classically as m e d i a t e d b y an infinite-speed
t a c h y o n h a v i n g p , ~ (0, p ) , where IPl ~--m. Moreover, eqs. (48) impose a
link b e t w e e n m a n d the direction of p , i.e. between m a n d ~ - - p ' P (where,
e.g., we can choose P = P~; r e m e m b e r t h a t PB------ P~):
~t
(50) cos a = --2IFI;
again we find t h a t (once ]PI is fixed), if the t a c h y o n - m e s o n masses are discrete,
t h e n also the exchanged t h r e e - m o m e n t u m results to be (classically) (( quan-
tized ~) in b o t h its m a g n i t u d e and direction.
This m e a n s again t h a t , for each discrete value of m, also the exchanged
t h r e e - m o m e n t u m assumes one discrete direction (except for a cylindrical sym-
m e t r y ) , which is a function only of IPI. Notice t h a t such a result cannot be
o b t a i n e d at the classical level when confining ourselves only to bradyons, since
o r d i n a r y particles cannot, f r o m the k i n e m a t i c a l viewpoint, be the interaction
carriers.
Of course, also nonelastic scatteriugs can be considered as m e d i a t e d b y
suitable t a c h y o n exchanges (s).
9. - Final considerations.
(52) u . V ~ c ~ ~ A z <>--m~.
(lO) Cf. ref. (L~), and P. CALDI~OLAand E. R]~CAMI: Causality and tachyons in relativity,
in Italian Studies in the Philosophy o] Science, edited by M. D~z~LA CHIARA (Boston,
Mass., 1980); E. R]~eAMI: in Annuario '73, Enciclopedia EST-Mondadori (Milano,
1973), p. 85.
TWO-BODY INT]gRACTIOI~S Tttl~OUGIt TACttYON EXCHANGE 101
9 RIASSUNT0
A causa della sun possibile rilevanza per le applieazioni alla fisica delle particelle e ai
problemi causali, in questo articolo si analizza dettagliatamente la cinematica dello
scambio di un tachione t r a due corpi A, B, per t u t t e le velocith relative possibili. I a
particolare si studiano accuratamente i due casi u" V X c2, dove u, V sono rispettivamente
le velocits del corpo B e del taehione rispetto ad A.
PeamMe (*). - - H c x o ~
n3 BO3MO)KltblX npnMeHenn~ r qbri3riKe qaCTnIl H rlpo6JieMaM
IIpHHHHHOCTH, MbI I/pOBO~HM aaaan3 rnHeMaTnrn (KaaccnqecKoro) 06Mesa TaxnouaMH
MeeKly RByM~I TeYlaMH A , B , ~ J ~ Bcex BO3MO)KHblX OTHOCHTeYlbHblX CKOpOCTe~. B ~IaCT-
HOCTH, n c c n e ~ y r o T c a ~ B a c~iyqafl u . V ~ e e, r ~ e u , V CKOpOCTH T e n a /~ n T a x n o l t a OTHO-
CHTeJIbHO A .