No. Faster than the speed of light doesn't exist. Something is invisible to us if the wavelength of light isn't within the visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum.
English
-
Edited by Solaire: 4/4/2016 10:25:14 PMHow can you tell it doesn't exist if you can see it by normal means and no ones looked for it?
-
No, you can't see it, because it doesn't exist. Light travels at the speed of light, and not faster. Light travels at the speed of light, because it has virtually no mass. Having no mass means it is symmetric in spacetime. You can't be more symmetric than symmetry. Imagine it like a Cartesian coordinate plane, and traveling a light speed means you are at zero. You can't be closer to zero than zero, so you can't travel faster than this speed.
-
And if there was a smaller particle??!!
-
The discoverer of which would win a Nobel prize. But it doesn't really make sense, because photons don't really have "size" per say.
-
Special relativity. It says c ( lightspeed in the vaccum) is the fastest speed possible in the universe.
-
And when have we been wrong before?