Answer: Do neutrinos have mass?
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John Mather the sexmachine!
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A force sets an object in motion. That object travels at a speed relative to its mass in relation to that force. So, technically, if the force is great enough and the object maintains momentum, it is possible that this object could pass another object traveling at 186,282 miles per second (the speed of light). An object traveling that fast would certainly have trouble supporting its own mass. It would be very dense and possibly smaller than any known particle we've ever seen.
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and they move faster than the speed of light! scientists going ape-shit man!!!!
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is he human
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Yet they are faster than light! Discuss it among yourselves!
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@Alchaeon1 "How can nutornoes acheive this when their rest mass is agreed to be non-zero?"
Their rest mass is non-zero? Then maybe you can't slow down neutrinos less than or equal to the speed of light?
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@Alchaeon1 Maybe it was an adolescent nuetrino just being rebellious.
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So - SOMEONE HAS TO BE wrong: Either Einstein, or CERN or he.
Or maybe nature just has't learned to adapt to our theories yet ?
Yeh. I suppose that this is the answer.
shady
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So neutrinos have a half life?
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well ive learnt something today. now back to porn
sniktun 3 months ago 34
0:33 where did he come from?
boogiebuddy01 3 months ago 9