Abstract

A review is given of hypothetical faster-than-light tachyons and the development of the author’s model of the neutrino mass states, which includes one tachyonic mass state doublet. Published empirical evidence for the model is summarized, including an interpretation of the mysterious Mont Blanc neutrino burst from SN 1987A as being due to tachyonic neutrinos having This possibility requires an 8 MeV antineutrino line from SN 1987A, which a new dark matter model has been found to support. Furthermore, this dark matter model is supported by several datasets: rays from the galactic center, and the Kamiokande-II neutrino data on the day of SN 1987A. The KATRIN experiment should serve as the unambiguous test of the model and its tachyonic mass state.

1. Tachyons

Hypothetical faster-than-light particles, now known as tachyons, were first suggested in 1962 by Bilaniuk, Deshpande, and Sudarshan as a way to extend special relativity to the realm [1]. Sudarshan and colleagues noted that if a particle was allowed to have a rest mass that was imaginary, or , one could use the usual formula to compute its real total energy , as long as the particle was never allowed to have For those concerned about the meaning of an imaginary rest mass, [1] reminds us that only energy and momentum, by virtue of their direct observability and conservation in interactions, must be real and that the hypothetical imaginary rest mass particles offend only the traditional way of thinking. In this scheme, becomes a two-way infinite energy barrier, an upper limit to normal () particles and a lower limit to hypothetical tachyons, thus allowing all matter to be divided into three classes with being positive, negative, or zero. Moreover, tachyons have the weird property as Figure 1 shows of speeding up as they lose energy, and approaching infinite speed as E approaches zero. There are, of course, cases of allowed superluminal motion. Thus, Recami and others have considered localized X-shaped solutions to Maxwell’s equations [2], quantum tunneling through two successive barriers [3], and the apparent separation speed of quasars [4]. A nice overview of these and other allowed types of superluminal motion can be found in Recami [5, 6]. However, in these cases, there is no superluminal motion of particles or information with the possibility of a violation of causality, making them outside the scope of this review.

Since the original tachyon paper [1], Recami and Mignani [7], Recami [8], and later Cohen and Glashow [9] and other theorists have suggested various ways to accommodate particles, including the adoption of nonstandard dispersion relations, which can avoid imaginary rest masses, but at the price (in the Cohen-Glashow case) of making the value of a particle’s rest mass dependent on the choice of reference frame. or “classical" tachyons are not taken seriously by most physicists because of their obnoxious theoretical properties, and the repeated failed attempts to find unambiguous evidence for their existence. These attempts include some well-known mistaken claims, most recently by the OPERA Collaboration in 2011 [10]. In fairness to OPERA, the initial paper made no discovery claim, and it merely announced their observed anomaly with the intent of promoting further inquiry and debate. As is well known, the group later found several experimental flaws and their corrected neutrino speed was consistent with c [11]. In any case, most theoretical (and experimental) physicists have little use for the faster-than-light variety of tachyon, which has been considered a violation of relativity (Lorentz Invariance) and Causality (prohibition against backward-time signalling), although it is also true that some theorists have postulated ways around such difficulties by, for example, postulating a preferred reference frame or small violations of Lorentz Invariance [1214]. Moreover, while most physicists abhor the classical tachyon, they have much greater affinity for another variety that is widely used in field theory [15]. These more reputable tachyons have imaginary mass quanta, but no propagation speed, the field associated with the Higgs particle being the best known example. In particular, the imaginary mass quanta of the Higgs field cause instabilities leading to a spontaneous decay or condensation, but again no propagation. In the rest of this paper, the word tachyon refers to the and “disreputable" variety.

Given the current state of experimental physics, the only known particle that could be a tachyon is one of the neutrinos, a possibility raised by Chodos, Kostelecky, and Hauser in a 1985 paper [16]. Since the neutrino’s observed mass is so close to zero, we cannot be certain yet whether or , although it is known that , for at least some neutrinos in order for neutrino oscillations to be possible, a connection that was explored in a 1986 paper by Giannetto et al. [17]. Considering the two types of measurements, or , it is the latter that permits us to put much tighter constraints on whether the neutrino is or is not a tachyon. Thus, if neutrinos in fact had a velocity that was slightly in excess of c by an amount say half the present experimental uncertainty, then their computed would need to be orders of magnitude above what would have been readily observed by now in direct mass experiments.

2. Direct Neutrino Mass Experiments

The most common “direct" (model independent) method of measuring the neutrino (or antineutrino) mass is to look for distortions of the decay spectrum near its endpoint. In these experiments, an antineutrino is emitted is in the electron flavor state which is a quantum mechanical mixture of states having specific masses with weights , i.e., In general, if one can ignore final state distributions, the phase space term describes the spectrum fairly well near the endpoint , and it can be expressed in terms of the effective electron neutrino mass using the square of the Kurie function:

In (1), the effective mass is defined in single decay by this weighted average of the individual :

However, if the individual could be distinguished experimentally, one would need to use a weighted sum of spectra for each of with weights [23]:

Note that when is negative, it is replaced by zero in (1) and (3) so as to avoid negative values under the square root. Given the form of (1), a massless neutrino yields a quadratic result: near the endpoint, while a neutrino having an effective mass would result in the spectrum ending a distance from the endpoint defined by the decay Q-value. Moreover, using (3) in the case of neutrinos of distinguishable mass, we would find that the spectrum shows kinks for each mass at a distance from the endpoint defined by the decay Q-value. These direct mass experiments are extraordinarily difficult in light of systematic effects that also distort the spectrun, and the very small number of electrons observed near the spectrum endpoint. As of October 2018, they have only set upper limits on [24], at least according to conventional wisdom. The possibility of observing a neutrino in direct mass experiments is discussed later, but for now we merely note that the results of nearly all such experiments that have in fact found best fit values should not be taken at face value. If they are not due to systematic errors, these results have a simple explanation within the model, as will be discussed later.

Some experiments hope to look for massive (sterile) neutrinos in oscillation experiments, but these experiments do not measure neutrino masses directly, but rather differences in the values of the states making up an oscillating pair, so they would not be sensitive to whether one or both of those states have or One could however possibly observe neutrinos from a galactic supernova. Any neutrinos having would of course arrive earlier than those having , assuming they all started out approximately simultaneously, and those having higher energy would arrive later than those with lower energy.

3. SN 1987A and the Mont Blanc Burst

Galactic supernovae are quite rare, occurring an estimated times per century, making SN 1987A a precious treasure that has deserved the very careful attention it has received, with thousands of papers written about it to date. Although many supernovae have now been observed in other galaxies, only SN 1987A was close enough to study the neutrinos it produced during the final collapse of the core of its progenitor star. In fact, four neutrino detectors then operating (see the caption of Figure 2) each observed a burst lasting 5-15 seconds, representing mere 30 neutrinos (or antineutrinos) in total. Three of the bursts occurred within a matter of seconds of each other as expected, but the fourth detector located under Mont Blanc detected its burst of 5 neutrino events almost 5 hours (16,900 sec) earlier than the others [25, 26]. As a result, most physicists with a few notable exceptions [2729] have chosen to dismiss the Mont Blanc burst as having nothing to do with SN 1978A.

3.1. Using SN 1987A to Find the Neutrino Mass

SN 1987A like all supernovae create huge numbers of neutrinos and antineutrinos having all three flavors, e, , and , but it is the electron flavor that is typically detected. Conventional wisdom has it that SN 1987A was only able to set an upper limit on the mass of the electron neutrino of 5.7 eV [24] or more depending on how the analysis is done, and that there was no hint of a mass state, assuming one ignores the Mont Blanc burst. As in the case of direct mass experiments, these standard analyses assume that the separate active mass states comprising the electron neutrino are so close in mass that one can only hope to observe a single effective mass for This assumption of only a single effective mass being observable is supported by the standard model of three active neutrinos whose values are separated from one another by two very small quantities, the solar and atmospheric mass differences: and

3.2. Origin of the 3 + 3 Model

In a 2012 paper [30], the author analyzed the SN 1987A data without making the assumption that only a single effective mass could be found, and he rediscovered a most peculiar fact that Huzita [31] and Cowsik [32] had pointed out soon after SN 1987A was observed. If one assumes near-simultaneous emissions, then all the 25 neutrinos (ignoring the five from Mont Blanc) were consistent with having one of two outlandishly large masses, eV and eV [30]. This result depends on a kinematic relation between the th neutrino energy and its travel time (relative to a photon) which in the limit can be written:

Here, T is the travel time of a photon (around 168 ky), is the mass of the th observed neutrino, and means slower (faster) than light. Essentially, (4) requires that neutrinos having a given mass should lie on or near a straight line in a plot of versus time whose slope reveals the value of Thus, the question of whether the neutrinos are consistent with a single mass is left up to the data to answer, which as can be seen from Figure 2 taken from [30] would seem to favor two separate masses and not one effective mass. Regarding the assumption of simultaneous emissions, [30] argues that most or all of the observed neutrinos from SN 1987A were emitted within an interval of Moreover, given the usual choice of for the first arriving neutrino in each of the unsynchronized detectors (except Mont Blanc) there are probably s implied horizontal error bars for the points in Figure 2.

The model was proposed in 2013 [33] based on the anomalously large values for and that are implied by Figure 2. Clearly, the only way to accommodate the very small and was to assume that and were each active-sterile doublets (see Figure 3). This model is in marked contrast to the conventional model lacking sterile neutrinos which is described by three mixing angles. If any sterile neutrinos are assumed to exist within the conventional framework, they must mix very little with the three active neutrino states so as to preserve unitarity of the matrix. Furthermore, for any model (like ) that has two active-sterile doublets each with large mixing, there must of course be a third doublet, since it is well established that there are three active states. In such a model, there are a total of 15 mixing angles and 10 phases, making it much more complex to describe oscillation phenomena than the conventional model.

3.3. The Doublet in the 3 + 3 Model

In an earlier paper [34], the author had suggested a tachyonic value for the effective flavor state mass, i.e., , and for this to be the case, (2) would require The particular choice was made after a remarkable numerical coincidence was discovered, namely, with the pair of doublet splittings and , one finds identical fractional splittings for the two doublets. The choice of the 3rd doublet mass then became obvious. Given that short baseline experiments have suggested an oscillation having if one chose , all three doublets would then have identical fractional splittings, i.e.,

3.4. Support for the 3 + 3 Model

A model as speculative as especially considering its doublet clearly needs empirical support before it deserves to be taken seriously. Previous papers [19, 35] have in fact provided such support, which is very briefly summarized here. First, it was shown that the dark matter radial distribution in the Milky Way Galaxy could be fit using a nearly degenerate gas of neutrinos having a mass very close to 21.4 eV and that for clusters of galaxies the dark matter distributions could be fit using neutrinos having a 4.0 eV mass [35], these being the masses in the model. The mass would not be associated with dark matter, but rather with dark energy, as suggested by various authors [36, 37]. More recently, it has been shown that fits to the spectrum near its endpoint for the three most precise pre-KATRIN tritium -decay experiments (by the Mainz, Troitsk, and Livermore Collaborations) could be achieved using the three masses in the model, and moreover these fits were significantly better than the fit to a single effective mass, which only gives an upper limit for the mass [19].

The most prominent spectral feature in the model is a kink 21.4 eV before the endpoint, which appears in the data from all three experiments (see Figures 4, 5, and 6 taken from [19]). The evidence for this kink in the Mainz data rests on a single data point in their 1998-99 data that is above the curve, for reasons explained in the caption of Figure 4. The Troitsk spectrum published in 1999 (Figure 5) clearly shows the kink at the up arrow in Figure 5 [20]. However, the location of that kink agrees well with the model fit (the solid curve added by the author) only after an adjustment is made to the scale of the energy axis. Such an adjustment to the data (moving the kink from 10 to 20 eV before the endpoint) might seem unwarranted if it was not actually called for in the most recent 2012 Troitsk publication (see Figure in [38]). In this newer analysis, the Troitsk authors “did not employ overly short runs and runs in which external parameters have large uncertainties." As a result of this elimination of some runs, they have withdrawn any claim of statistical significance of their unexplained anomaly. Unfortunately, in that 2012 reassessment, the authors have chosen no longer to display the spectrum, which is why the originally published Troitsk spectrum was used in Figure 5 of this paper. Moreover, despite their withdrawal of a claim of statistical significance, some evidence for a kink clearly must remain in their data, because as shown by the dashed and solid horizontal lines in Figure in [38] the amplitude of the kink averaged over all runs is about 3/4 that in the original spectrum.

The Livermore Collaboration also has chosen not to display the spectrum itself but instead the residuals from a fit to the data using the standard expected spectrum. When only residuals are plotted, the kink predicted by the model shows up not as a kink but instead as a spurious spectral line broadened by resolution near the endpoint or alternatively a best fit value for which is negative (see Figure 6). Thus, as noted earlier, the model can account for the artifactual fitted value found in nearly all direct mass experiments.

3.5. Evidence for the Mass

It has been shown in the previous section (and in more detail in [19]) that the model gives better fits than the conventional parabolic curve to three tritium beta decay experiments. However, given the sparcity of data near the endpoint, it has only been the most prominent feature of the model (the kink in the spectrum 21.4 eV before the endpoint) that the data were able to reveal. A recent paper has provided evidence for the tachyonic mass in the model by showing how it explains the mysterious Mont Blanc neutrino burst seen on the date of SN 1987A [18], a possibility first raised by Giani [29]. This burst has been a mystery, not only because of its early arrival, but also because the 5 neutrinos comprising it have virtually the same energy (8 MeV) within measurement uncertainties, something no model has previously explained [39].

Using (4), one can deduce a value for the tachyonic mass for the burst. Thus, with s and MeV, (4) yields keV2 a mass value that is within a factor of two of the originally hypothesized value keV2 [33]. One should not expect any better agreement because the mass value in the model was based on the estimated eV2 for the large oscillation claimed in short baseline experiments, which in fact is uncertain by over a factor of two [40].

It should be noted that the author initially ignored the Mont Blanc burst, assuming it could not be an evidence for a tachyon. The basis for that initial rejection follows from (4) and Figure 2 which show that neutrinos having a specific mass should lie on a negatively sloped line and be distributed over the 5 h before Thus, given the brief (7 sec) time interval of the 5 neutrinos making up the burst, the only way they could correspond to a specific mass state would be for them to have almost exactly the same energy. More specifically, the constancy of the energy of the 5 neutrinos needs to be (by (4)) constant to a precision of , which is essentially a line in the (anti)neutrino spectrum. For the tachyonic interpretation of the Mont Blanc burst to be remotely plausible, there needs to be some model of a core collapse supernova that gives rise to monochromatic 8 MeV neutrinos.

4. Model for an 8 MeV Neutrino Line

Neutrino lines are known to exist in the solar spectrum, but until now no existing model of core collapse supernovae has such a feature. In a recent paper [18], the author has proposed a new supernova model for such a 8 MeV line that invokes dark matter X particles of mass 8.4 MeV. This particular mass for dark matter is based on recently discovered isoscalar gauge bosons of mass These Z’ particles have been postulated as carriers of a fifth force which could serve as a mediator between dark matter particles and standard model leptons [41, 42]. Thus, where one to postulate cold dark matter X particles of mass that annihilate they would yield monochromatic MeV pairs via the reaction , just as required. Given that supernovae in our galaxy are quite rare, how could such a model be tested without waiting for the next one? This mediated reaction model would apply not just to supernovae but also to any place with abundant dark matter, and sufficiently high temperature, such as the the galactic center. Furthermore, it is shown in [18] that the dark matter model predicts successfully three observed properties of the of MeV rays from the galactic center (see Table 1 and Figure 7).

Additional empirical support for an 8 MeV neutrino line (the basis of the dark matter model) is provided in [18] based on Kamiokande-II data taken on the day of SN 1987A in the minutes and hours before and after the main 12-event burst in that detector. These data are consistent with there being a antineutrino spectral line centered near 8 MeV that is broadened by energy resolution (see Figure 8). The strength of the support for this claim of an 8 MeV line, of course, depends on the reliability of the background, which is discussed at length in [18].

5. The Mont Blanc Burst Again

Even though there were only 5 neutrinos in the anomalous Mont Blanc burst, and most physicists have dismissed this burst as being unrelated to SN 1987A, as the preceding sections have shown it played a very significant role in validating the model with its mass state. Many speculative explanations have been suggested for the 5-hour early Mont Blanc neutrino burst, assuming that it was not just a statistical fluctuation of the background. These include (a) a double bang involving formation of a neutron star and followed by a black hole [27], (b) a new core collapse mechanism involving dark matter balls [28], and (c) having the 5 neutrinos in the burst be a tachyon mass state, which was consistent with their equal energies within the 15% uncertainty [29]. The tachyonic explanation of the Mont Blanc burst had until recently been regarded as extremely unlikely, even by this “tachyon enthusiast" [33], given the lack of any known mechanism that would generate the required 8 MeV monochromatic neutrinos from a core collapse supernova. A radical reassessment, however, is now warranted in favor of the tachyonic mass state explanation based on the author’s 2016-2018 publications [18, 19] which showed the following:(1)A new dark matter model explains why one would expect an 8 MeV monochromatic component of SN 1987A neutrinos.(2)Empirical evidence supports the DM model based on the spectrum of galactic center rays.(3)Strong evidence () supports the existence of an 8 MeV line in the SN 1987A spectrum from the events in Kamiokande II on the day of SN 1987A.(4)The value of the mass inferred from the Mont Blanc neutrinos is consistent with that originally postulated in the earlier model.(5)The model gives excellent fits to the three most accurate pre-KATRIN direct mass experiments.

6. The KATRIN Experiment

The KATRIN experiment [43] should prove or refute the existence of a tachyonic mass (and the two other masses in the model) in a short period of data-taking. Specifically, if the model is correct, KATRIN should observe three features in the spectrum (associated with each of the three masses in the model). The most prominent of these seen in Figures 4-6 is the kink 21.4 eV before the endpoint. Figure 9 shows the two other predicted features: a kink 4.0 eV before the endpoint due to the 4.0 eV mass state, and a linear decline in the last 4 eV, a feature based on the form of (3) when The value used in generating this plot was the original mass in the model, keV2. However, the interactive spreadsheet at [44] allows the reader to see how these features in the spectrum change when one uses alternative masses including keV2. Given that KATRIN has the sensitivity to see all three spectral features predicted by the model, it should serve as an unambiguous test of the model’s validity, including the tachyonic mass state. However, even if the model should be proven incorrect, KATRIN might still be consistent with a tachyonic flavor state, and in particular the earlier noted prediction by the author for the effective mass: [34].

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper.