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Do particles or anti particles experience retrocausalty?


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You can model antiparticles as particles moving backward in time. At that level there is usually time-reversal symmetry, so the reaction looks just fine whether the clock is running forward or backward. There are some rare reactions that violate this; they all involve weak interactions.

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The maths is identical for matter going back in time and antimatter.
You can model antiparticles as particles moving backward in time. There is usually time-reversal symmetry. There are some rare reactions that violate this.

 

So there are some rare cases where time-reversal symmetry doesn't apply to anti-matter and anti-matter is matter going back in time?

This means there are some rare cases where time-reversal symmetry doesn't apply to matter going back in time?

Edited by alan2here
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So there are some rare cases where time-reversal symmetry doesn't apply to anti-matter and anti-matter is matter going back in time?

This means there are some rare cases where time-reversal symmetry doesn't apply to matter going back in time?

 

so what is it that in reality goes back in time?

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  • 2 weeks later...

Richard Feyman described the antiparticle mathematically as a particle moving back in time. This was taken quite literal, but it merely represents the ability to have a symetry in the equations, since symmetry is a very important factor. Such examples may involve the absorber theory which uses the idea of a time symmetry, which gave rise to the Transctional Interpretation which does involve retrocausal events.

 

So perhaps causality is broken, in very special cases. These cases however purely cannot be physical.

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